The science
A primer on geobiology and Earth's energy
Geobiology is the study of how the Earth's energy networks affect living systems. Here's what the research shows — and what we still don't know.
Energy lines and nodes
Across cultures and millennia, traditions describe lines of subtle energy criss-crossing the Earth. The Chinese called them dragon lines. The British called them ley lines. Aboriginal Australians describe them as songlines.
Modern dowsing research, particularly the decades-long work of Rory Duff in Britain, has classified these into a typology of nine types — from the wide, slow Type 1 lines to the rare, powerful Type 5 "Emperor Dragon" currents.
Why temples and circles?
The places where multiple energy lines intersect form nodes. The most powerful nodes (3rd order, 4th order, 5th order) are the locations our ancestors marked with stone circles, temples, churches, mounds, and burial sites — long before they had instruments capable of measuring electromagnetism.
Stonehenge sits on a 5th order node. Avebury contains multiple Type 4 and Type 5 nodes. Glastonbury Tor is on the Michael and Mary lines. The pattern is consistent.
Harmony windows
Several times a year, the Earth's energetic field shifts in measurable ways — most strongly at the solstices and equinoxes, but also during specific lunar and astronomical alignments. We call these harmony windows.
During a harmony window, sacred sites become more energetically active. This is when ancient cultures held their major ceremonies. It's also when the network's community organises gatherings.
What the network offers
- An interactive map of every documented site
- Detailed energetic profiles for each site (where research exists)
- Country-level histories of spiritual heritage
- Dates of upcoming harmony windows
- A space for practitioners to teach, sell, and gather
What we don't claim
On scientific certainty
The energetic phenomena described here are not fully explained by mainstream physics. They may be — there's promising research in fields like geomagnetism, piezoelectric effects in granite, and human electrophysiology. But we don't ask you to take any of it on faith.
What we offer is a structured, mapped, citable body of work — the cultural and energetic data of 336 sites — and a community of people who explore these places in person and share what they find.