Firefighters
were still working Sunday to extinguish the last of a series of fires that
erupted when a BNSF Railway train loaded with crude oil derailed two days ago
in a rural area south of Galena, Illinois, a local official said. The incident
marked the latest in a series of derailments in North America involving trains
hauling crude oil, heightening focus on rail safety. Nobody was injured in the
fiery Thursday wreck, in which 21 cars of a 105-car BNSF train that originated
in North Dakota derailed about 3 miles outside Galena, a town of just more than
3,000 near the border with Wisconsin. Five of the 103 cars packed with Bakken
crude oil caught fire, sending plumes of black smoke and fireballs over the
area, city and company officials said. http://nbcnews.to/1AUJ7p6
The accident
took place on March 5 – the very day of the Full Moon. A chart drawn for the
Full Moon at Galen, Illinois has the luminaries aligned very significantly with
the meridian axis. The Full Moon [14vi] was conjunct the star Mizar [15vi]. In a previous post[1] on another event connected
with the Mizar Full Moon, I quoted Elsbeth Ebertin:
Supposedly, Mizar portends a Mars
nature. The reputation of Mizar, if it is in maximal position in a mundane map,
is that of being connected with fires of a catastrophic extent and mass
calamities. [Fixed Stars and Their Interpretation, Elsbeth Ebertin, 1928,
p.55.]
Nick Fiorenza
uses the phrases “raw fiery energy” and
“devastating explosions” to describe Mizar so that the picture provided by both Ebertin and
Fiorenza would fit in well in our present context.
Finally, the
Saturn-Neptune square which aligns with the Sun and MC brings in a connection
with oil related disasters [2][3].
The connection of Saturn-Neptune to oil related accidents is
well established. The Gulf of Mexico oil spill is one such . Another
important incident took place on March
24, 1989, with Saturn and Neptune conjunct in Capricorn the tanker Exxon Valdez
ran aground, spilling 240,000 barrels -- 11 million gallons -- of oil into the
ocean
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