Two Bats
Earlier sessions read the North American continent as a single body with two wings. This session takes up two adjacent landforms — Greenland and the Canadian Arctic Archipelago — and proposes that these are not parts of the North American body but separate creatures of a different type. The working name is “bat,” and the proposal is that two of them lie next to each other at high latitude: one intact, one shattered.
Western Greenland as a Jaw
The west coast of Greenland faces Baffin Bay along a long irregular coastline marked by deep fjords and prominent capes. The session reads this coastline as a row of teeth set in a lower jaw, with the projecting headlands as conical fangs and incisors and the fjords between them as the spaces between teeth. Disko Island, with its size and prominence, is read as a major canine. The episode notes a regular spacing and a progressive size grading from front to back of the jaw, which is treated as more consistent with dentition than with a random coastal pattern.
Tooth-count and morphology are then matched against modern bat dentition. The visible projections fall in the range typical of vampire and large fruit-eating megabats — roughly fifteen to twenty-five teeth, sharp canines, a triangular gape when the jaw is open. The framework reads Greenland as a continental-scale bat lying on its side: head with mouth facing west, body in the central interior under the ice sheet, both wings folded south, short stubby tail at the northeast. The Greenland Ice Sheet is taken as covering the soft tissue of the body and obscuring whatever sat on top of the head.
The Obscured High Points
On modern satellite imagery, the highest interior plateaus of Greenland and the Canadian Arctic appear at lower resolution than the surrounding terrain — smoothed, less detailed, with uniform color where one would expect rugged surface texture. In standard mapping practice this can result from sparse coverage, persistent cloud, ice albedo, or restrictions placed on certain regions for various reasons. The session reads the smoothing as deliberate concealment of structures sitting on top of the heads — and proposes that those structures are sonic-weapon arrays.
The proposal is anchored in observable Greenland coastline geometry. The northwest coast shows roughly parallel ridge structures separated by fjord channels, oriented northwest-to-southeast, with the overall coastline showing a concave curve facing west. The session reads this as a phased acoustic array: the parallel ridges as transducer elements, the fjord channels as resonating waveguides, the curved coastline as a focusing geometry, and the obscured peak as the central emitter. Whether the surface features are actually the remnants of an array or are the natural product of glacial erosion against parallel bedrock structures is, of course, the open question.
The Vedic Sonic Weapons
The Vedic and Puranic record describes several weapons whose effects are sound-based. The Sammohana Astra renders entire armies unconscious without visible projectile — comparable in effect to modern infrasonic weapons. The Mohini Astra causes confusion and disorientation, comparable to ultrasonic disruption. The Váyavíya Astra is described as a roaring storm that can shatter stone, comparable to a focused supersonic shockwave. The Shabdavedi Bana is a sound-seeking arrow. The session takes these descriptions as candidate matches for the proposed array’s functional modes — not as proof, but as a reason to take the textual record seriously alongside the geographic reading.
The Second Bat
West of the Greenland bat, the Canadian Arctic Archipelago — Banks, Victoria, Prince Patrick, Melville, and the surrounding islands — is read as a second bat of the same general type, but smaller and badly damaged. The westernmost projection is read as the destroyed snout, with the surrounding islands as fragments of skull and skeleton arranged in a roughly anatomical layout. The same obscured high-elevation feature is reported on this body as on the first.
The session takes the arrangement — two parallel bodies in similar orientation, with the destroyed body’s pieces laid out in recognizable anatomical configuration — as evidence of post-event placement rather than of in-place death. The working hypothesis is that someone with the capacity to move continental-scale objects positioned both bodies after a battle, and that the high-elevation features on both have been deliberately obscured in modern mapping precisely because the structures still hold weapon-relevant information.
Documented vs. Speculative
Documented: the geography of Greenland’s west coast and the Canadian Arctic Archipelago; the resolution differences in publicly available satellite imagery of high-latitude interiors; the Vedic and Puranic accounts of sound-based weapons. Speculative: the reading of either landform as a creature, the proposal that the obscured high points are technological structures, and the connection between the geographic reading and the textual sonic-weapon record. The session ends without resolving any of these — it leaves them open as threads.
Working draft. Sources include Wikipedia entries on the Greenland Ice Sheet, Disko Island, the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, and bat dentition; references to the Sammohana, Mohini, Váyavíya, and Shabdavedi astras drawn from standard summaries of the Mahabharata and Ramayana weapons. Geographic claims about coastline geometry and parallel ridge structure can be checked directly against Google Earth.