Can't help you with the retirement fund.

Moderators: MichelleH, Minimalist, JPeters
My bolding, btw.The sculptured Dendera zodiac (or Denderah zodiac) is a widely known Egyptian artefact, containing images of Taurus (the bull) and the Libra (the balance). The relief, which was on the ceiling of the pronaos (or portico) of Hathor temple, has been conjectured to be the basis on which later astronomy systems were based.[4] During the Napoleonic campaign in Egypt, Vivant Denon drew the circular zodiac, the more widely known one, and the rectangular zodiacs. In 1802, Denon distributed, after the Napoleonic expedition, pictures of the temple ceiling. There existed a controversy as to how old the zodiac was, ranging from tens of thousands to a thousand years to a few hundred, and if the zodiac was a planisphere or an astrological chart.
The controversy around the zodiac, called the "Dendera Affair", involved people of the likes of Joseph Fourier (who estimated that the age was 2500 BC), Thomas Young, Jean-François Champollion, and M. Biot.
Johann Karl Burckhardt and Jean-Baptiste Coraboeuf held that, after analysis of the zodiac, the ancient Egyptians understood the precession of the equinoxes.
Champollion, among others, believed that it was a religious zodiac. Champollion deciphered the names of Tiberius, Claudius, Nero, and Domitian on the ceiling of Dendera's temple and placed the zodiac in the era of Rome's rule over Egypt.
http://www.sacred-texts.com/eso/sta/sta12.htmDigit wrote: And how did the constellation's names come about? The patterns in the sky are hardly obvious, and some downright misleading.
I have lots of free time!I've got visions of you alternately standing on piles of rocks or up to your knees in sand waving plum bobs around and sprinkling them with hematite, trying to work this all out!