South Point Vortex South Point Vortex

South Point Vortex

South Point, or Ka Lae, on the Big Island of Hawaii, is at the southernmost point of the United States. The vortex is centered on the 19.5 degree north latitude line, a coordinate of immense significance in sacred geometry. This specific latitude is believed to be a point where a tetrahedral energy grid intersects with the Earth’s surface, creating a stargate or a merkaba intersection.

Registered on 01.12.15 by: Zach Royer – It is believed that the first Polynesians to arrive in the Hawaiian Islands disembarked here at Ka Lae somewhere between 400 and 800 A.D. With the ruins of heiau (temples), fishing shrines and other cultural vestiges found here it’s no wonder why this entire southern tip has been registered as a National Historical Landmark.

To get to this rocky shoreline you need to take the narrow South Point Road 12-miles through open ranch lands lined with white windmills. There is a small heiau (sacred place of worship) near Ka Lae so visitors should treat the area with great respect. Because of the dangerous currents here, swimming is not advised.

Besides being the landing place of the first Hawaiians, and home to a remarkable green sand beach, South Point, known locally as Ka lae, is said by the local residents to be like a rift in time. UFO sightings and intense energies are things you may hear about taking place there. The ley line coming into the South Point vortex of the Big Island, not far from Kalani, is considered to be one of the most powerful to be on land. Author William “Pila” Chiles talks about the South Point as a “doorway” where “the density of three dimensional reality seems to be very thin” and the energy is “very unusual”.

The South Point vortex is believed to be an aperture or ‘doorway’ between dimensions, one of many to exist in the world. It’s our belief after researching and writing this book that Hawai’i is connected in some ways to India as well as Egypt, two other sacred locations, by what is referred to as the World Grid.Hawai’i Vortex Field Guide

Resources

Image By Arjunkrsen via Wikimedia Commons

Google Maps

Note: There is currently no scientific method to prove that vortexes exist. Just because a location is on the vortex map, does not prove there is a vortex there. What it means, is that someone suggested the location and provided evidence or a personal account, and/or we found corroborating evidence from other sources. We do this so other visitors to the site can send us their opinion on the validity of the vortex claim, to build a consensus.

Have you visited this location? If so, let us know if you think this place is a vortex or not. We will post your comments here.

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