442423N1042233W

Field Notes & Collected Analysis

Observations on acoustics, ancient engineering, bioelectric phenomena, and other matters generally ignored.


Research Notes

Resonance Chambers and Intentional Acoustics in Pre-Classical Architecture

09 November 2024

A survey of structures from the Maltese Hypogeum to Chavín de Huántar that appear designed to amplify specific frequencies. The question is not whether ancient builders understood acoustics. It is why we assume they didn't.

Bioelectric Potential in Human Cardiac Tissue: Why Individual Heartbeat Frequencies May Function as Unique Identifiers

14 August 2024

Cardiac tissue generates measurable bioelectric fields that vary between individuals with the specificity of a fingerprint. The implications for identification—and interaction with sensitive materials—remain largely unexplored.

Convergent Symbology Across Closed Systems: Medici Sigils, Dynastic Egyptian Notation, and the Problem of Independent Emergence

22 March 2024

Geometric symbol systems from the Medici Papal Library bear structural similarities to dynastic Egyptian notation separated by millennia and geography. The conventional explanation—coincidence—is not an explanation at all.

Gobekli Tepe and the Inversion of the Agricultural Hypothesis

17 October 2023

If complex monumental architecture preceded agriculture by thousands of years, the foundational assumption of civilizational development is inverted. What else have we placed in the wrong order?

Hydraulic Weathering and the Sphinx: Robert Schoch's Geological Evidence Revisited

03 June 2023

Schoch's water-erosion dating of the Sphinx enclosure remains the most inconvenient dataset in Egyptology. A re-examination of his methodology alongside early 20th-century interior surveys of the Sphinx suggests the structure may predate dynastic Egypt by several thousand years.

The Systematic Destruction of Accumulated Knowledge: Alexandria, Baghdad, Nalanda, and the Pattern That Repeats

11 January 2023

Humanity has repeatedly destroyed its own accumulated knowledge—sometimes by accident, often by intention. The pattern is not random. It correlates with periods of consolidating institutional power. What was lost at each site, and what does the pattern suggest about what we are permitted to know?

The Suppression of Distributed Energy: Why Stirling Cycle Technology Never Reached Residential Scale

28 September 2022

The Stirling engine is one of the most efficient heat-to-mechanical-energy converters ever designed. Its failure to reach residential adoption is not a technological problem. It is a political one.

Material Recovery and Institutional Response: A Pattern Analysis of Post-1947 Aerospace Anomalies

06 April 2022

An analysis of institutional behavior—not objects—following anomalous aerospace events. The consistency of response protocols across decades and administrations suggests a standing framework for managing encounters with materials of unknown origin.

Frequency Encoding in the Karnak Temple Complex: A Hieroglyphic Reinterpretation

19 November 2021

Certain hieroglyphic sequences at Karnak resist standard linguistic parsing. When analyzed as frequency notation—mapping symbol geometry to acoustic wavelengths—a secondary layer of meaning emerges that corresponds to the temple's measured resonant properties.

Edgar Cayce's Hall of Records: Separating Geological Plausibility from Prophetic Tradition

04 May 2021

Cayce's claims about a subterranean Hall of Records beneath the Giza plateau are typically dismissed as mysticism. The geological record is less dismissive. A review of ground-penetrating radar surveys, subsurface anomaly data, and Cayce's specific structural predictions.

The Giza Power Plant Hypothesis: A Structural Reanalysis

15 December 2020

Christopher Dunn's proposition that the Great Pyramid functioned as an energy-generation facility. A re-examination focusing on the acoustic properties of the King's Chamber, the chemical composition of the so-called “air shafts,” and construction tolerances that exceed modern capability.

Acoustic Stimulation and Growth Response in Controlled Botanical Environments

21 March 2019

Preliminary observations from an ongoing personal experiment: the effect of sustained acoustic exposure (J.S. Bach, BWV 1007-1012) on plant growth rates in copper-pipe hydroponic systems. Results are... difficult to publish through conventional channels.


About

The author spent forty-four years as a research analyst within the federal government, the last fourteen of which were devoted to the translation and structural analysis of pre-dynastic symbol systems. His published work during that period dealt primarily with hieroglyphic parsing methodologies and acoustic archaeology. His unpublished work dealt with everything else.

He holds advanced degrees in ancient languages and applied acoustics. He is no longer affiliated with any institution, by mutual agreement.

He currently lives in the American West, where he maintains a small hydroponic greenhouse, a shortwave radio, and what his former colleagues would describe as an unreasonable number of filing cabinets. His research interests include ancient engineering, bioelectric phenomena, resonance systems, and the recurring institutional tendency to misplace inconvenient data.

He continues this work because the questions remain, even when the funding does not.


Contact

leh [at] 442423N1042233W.com

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