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Astrology of the Berchtesgaden cave accident



A team is trying to rescue a 52-year-old man injured in a rock fall in a 1000m-deep (3,280ft) cave in Germany, in an operation that could take days. The Riesending cave is Germany's deepest and it took one of the man's companions 12 hours to return to the surface to raise the alarm. Some 200 people are involved in the operation, near Berchtesgaden in southern Germany. The first four rescuers arrived at the scene in the vertical cave on Monday. The man, who was with two companions on a Whitsun-holiday trip, suffered injuries to his head and torso in the rockfall in the early hours of Sunday. BBC June 9





Shown here is the chart for the last solar eclipse [8ta52] at Berchtesgaden. The eclipse is obviously significant for the place since it makes a hard aspect to the horizon axis. It is conjunct the stars Schedar, alpha Cassiopeia [7ta59] and Hamal, alpha Aries [7ta52], the butting head of the Ram. Wilful and militant, these people  “test the edges” in their headlong rush towards success [1]. Among  events connected to these stars Diana Rosenberg lists “falls or dives from high places “into the abyss” (Ebertin)”.

Progressing the angles of the eclipse chart to June 8 by the PSSR method brings the Uranus-Pluto-Mars-Jupiter Grand Cross to the meridian axis triggering the accident.









[1] Secrets of the Ancient Skies, Diana K. Rosenberg (v.1, p.150-51)

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