.1. POLAR COLUMN
.2. SATURN & SUN COLORS
.1. POLAR COLUMN
GOD STAR pp. 459-460
In the beginning, as I slowly reconstructed the Saturnian model and its attendant scenario, nothing perplexed me more than this effulgent ray of light stretching between our humble abode and Saturn's glorious realm. Right from day one, David Talbott had understood it as a luminescent stream of falling debris. 1 One reason I could not accept this interpretation came from the lack of recognizable cosmic material in Earth's Arctic regions. Let's face it, if the polar column was really composed of material ejected from a stationary planet located in Earth's north celestial pole, and since the column is posited to have existed for possible millennia, such constant bombardment should have strewn Earth's Arctic regions with cosmic detritus. 2
Since then, however, such material has been found in Arctic regions. Thus, for instance, "a large fall of iron meteorites" is now believed to have occurred in northwestern Greenland and the adjacent east coast of Ellesmere Island "at some undetermined time in the past." It is now apparent that this cosmic iron "was discovered by the late Dorset people during the few centuries immediately preceding A.D. 1000 ... this is hardly the amount of cosmic material one expects to discover in Arctic regions, especially the area in and around the pole, if the debris had been raining down for millennia. Granted that no one has yet conducted a deliberate search for such material, not enough has yet come to light from this area to satisfy Talbott's interpretation.
Then, as the years went by, my interest shifted to the discovery of jets of plasma ejected by galaxies along their spin axes and, later, by similar jets ejected by stars {and later still including brown dwarf stars, which Saturn apparently was}.
.2. SATURN & SUN COLORS
METAMORPHIC STAR pp. 237-238
Like the Chinese and other ancient nations, what the Hopi did was associate the color purple with the north because that is where the primordial purple star had once resided, and the color yellow with the east because that is where the Sun that superseded proto-Saturn was eventually seen to rise.1