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Eye of the Archer and Dua’s layer



Scientists have discovered a previously unknown layer lurking in the human eye.
The newfound body part, dubbed Dua's layer, is a skinny but tough structure measuring just 15 microns thick, where one micron is one-millionth of a meter and more than 25,000 microns equal an inch. It sits at the back of the cornea, the sensitive, transparent tissue at the very front of the human eye that helps to focus incoming light, researchers say. The feature is named for its discoverer, Harminder Dua, a professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences at the University of Nottingham.


Amongst other things   Uranus-Pluto square of 2007–2020 has been associated with  “sharply accelerated technological and scientific advance with major social and environmental repercussions.” [1]

It may  surprise readers that  the stars that form the backdrop for Uranus-Pluto can actually indicate the area where these breakthroughs can be made. I propose we look at the last solar eclipse of May 10 at Nottingham progressed to Jun 12, the date of the announcement of the discovery. Notice that the  progressed Ascendant [10ar52] is conjunct Uranus [10ar45] and square  Pluto [11cp24]



Pluto [11cp24] is conjunct the star Ain al Rami, [2] nu Sagittari, Archer’s eye [12cp38]  while Uranus [10ar45] is in an area about which Diana Rosenberg writes. “Here brilliant King Cepheus and high flying Pegasus inspire extraordinary achievements that carry humankind into new knowledge and realizations”. [3]

[1] World Transits 2000-2020, Richard Tarnas
[2] Secrets of the Ancient Skies, Diana K. Rosenberg [v.2, p.452]
[3] Secrets of the Ancient Skies, Diana K. Rosenberg [v.1, p.74]

P.S. It is also  worth noting that the waxing crescent moon [6le57 ] on Jun 12 was conjunct the star  Praesaepe that is historically connected with eyesight issues.



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