Ley lines /leɪ laɪnz/ are apparent alignments of places of significance in the geography or culture of an area, often including man-made structures. They are in the older sense, ancient, straight trackways in the British landscape, or in the newer sense, spiritual and mystical alignments of land forms.
Ley lines are created through cracks in the tectonic plate, where the natural energy is released. Ley Lines can vary in width and believed to be the life blood of Mother Earth. They are thought by some, to have spiritual, healing and extraterrestrial significance. Ley Lines follow tracks or paths under the earth's surface, which can stretch for miles that cross valleys, mountains and under the sea.
Most cultures have traditions and words to describe the straight, often geometric alignments that ran across ancient landscapes, connecting both natural and sacred prehistoric structures together. Usually the names given to represent these invisible lines are translated to an equivalent of 'spirit', 'dream', or 'energy' paths. However, apart from the physical presence of the sites themselves, proving the presence of a 'connection' between them is something that researchers have found notoriously elusive.
Ley/Li/Lei : "The supposed straight line of a prehistoric track usually between hilltops"
(Concise Oxford Dictionary)
"Alignments and patterns of powerful, invisible earth energy said to connect various sacred sites, such as churches, temples, stone circles, megaliths, holy wells, burial sites, and other locations of spiritual or magical importance".
(Harper's Encyclopaedia of Mystical and Paranormal Experience)
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