Places where universes touch then are likely neither uncommon nor much of an issue. Other than the points where that touch creates a crack or leakage into a black hole.

And of course there will be cracks. Why wouldn’t there be? It’s simply not possible that every individual universe is smooth and perfectly formed with a nice solid crust. Not if there are an unlimited amount of them. The law of large numbers ensures some of these universes will be misshapen as hell. That part’s certain.

But of much more importance to us is, WHERE are these cracks? Because it seems reasonable to suppose that where these confluences occur is the point at which a window of some description might get created to the universe next door?

Let’s take that supposition a step further. Such cracks that exist are likely to have existed for millennia. While some will fluctuate, open and closed, many would be fairly constant. Much about our universe is ancient. For example the one we inhabit is calculated to be 13 billion plus years old. The same fundamental characteristics have existed within it for Eons.

Therefore, even though humans have been roaming our own planet for only 200,000 odd years, it’s likely at some point we would have come across some of these anomalies. Almost certainly not really understanding what they were, but just knowing that something out of the ordinary was going on.

Have the people before us already unknowingly discovered these glitches? Is that why they built giant impossible monuments in specific places? Why the hell was Stonehenge, with all the massive effort entailed to construct it, placed on Salisbury plain? A location hundreds of miles from the source of the materials needed to construct it. For such a positioning decision to have been made, there must have been some driving collective belief that this was the right place. Of course, it could equally be that some drunken druid went out on the booze one night, took a look at a hill just outside of Salisbury and said “hey fellas this is the spot”. Maybe he owned the land and it was all just a big real estate scam.

Once again though, let’s not simply dismiss the wisdom of the masses garnered across thousands of years. At some point this precise location was fantastically significant, even if the people of the time didn’t recognise correctly what that reason of that significance was. I’m not suggesting that the layout of the stones in themselves has any particular significance. The site might just as easily have been marked by a wooden hut. But the locals at the time thought the location of sufficient importance as to distinguish it with a mark of permanence. Something drew them there. And not just to Stonehenge, but to a hundred other similarly marked settings around the country and thousands of such similarly marked locations around the world.

It would seem that these noticeable cracks in the universe are not uncommon.

So what is the point of all this? What is the relevance to our hunt for (CT)? Well, as previously stated, we are seeking out the ways to give us the best possible chance of picking up any kind of signal from anywhere. We have already agreed the likely importance in achieving this of finding both the right time and right frequency.

Might it not also be a good plan to seek out the most likely place?

It could of course be that the superstitious people of the past were actually just sticking up memorials at random. But how likely is that? With the above I’m just hoping to build on the work of others across the millennia. To utilise those others who could well have already possessed a good chunk of the solution.

I’m just using the best tool at my disposal my brain, to seek out the most probable solutions.

I’m hoping you’ll have some thoughts of your own.