Guest Submission from Solo Amerigo: When a Solve Fails but the Clues Survive
When a Solve Fails but the Clues
Survive: Yerkes Observatory and the Search for a Lion’s Share Mechanism
By Solo Amerigo
The problem facing many Lion’s Share
searchers may not be a lack of clues. It may be a lack of understanding about
how the clues are meant to work together. Like most searchers, I began by
looking for destinations. A name pointed to a place. A place pointed to another
place. A historical reference suggested a region. A line in the poem seemed to
confirm a direction. The work felt cumulative, and in one sense it was. The
book produced connections, and those connections produced more connections. The
trouble was that many of them seemed to stop just short of becoming useful.
They formed chains, but the chains did not always lead to a final place. They
created density, but not necessarily direction.
The Lion’s Share material in There’s
Treasure Inside contains an enormous amount of seemingly unrelated
information. Searchers have found historical references, geographic references,
astronomical references, institutional references, literary references,
mythological references, and personal-name clusters that appear meaningful
without being obviously decisive. It is easy to treat this as excess,
misdirection, or simple puzzle noise. Yet the book also contains repeated
chains of connection that look too deliberate to dismiss. They are not all in
one place. They do not all belong to one subject. They often do not resolve
where one expects them to resolve. Still, they appear constructed. Many of us
suspect the missing piece may not be another clue. It may be a mechanism.
After my time searching Yerkes Observatory, this idea merits further consideration. Yerkes Observatory entertained an unusually strong body of clues. Every chapter had a direct tie to either Wisconsin, Lake Geneva, Willian’s Bay, or Yerkes Observatory. Granted, I might have done some creative research to come up with a few of the clues, but every chapter had something. Even Picasso. Did you know the year he made the Jacqueline pendant, 1956, that big things were happening in the astronomy world at Yerkes Observatory? Milky Way mapping. Moon mapping. In fact, the Apollo 11 mission to the moon used Yerkes Observatory to map and recommend the moon landing sites. Astronomy, telescopes, Apollo, the moon, exploration, observatories, scientific achievement, names in the book, even Star Trek pointed directly to Yerkes Observatory. With “blueprint” dropped all throughout the book, it did not surprise me that the observatory blueprint and the starship Enterprise blueprint looked so much alike.
And then there’s the missing page 90 with the weird face carved into the wall in the Chavin chapter. Yerkes Observatory is covered with
carved faces. See any resemblance here?
Yerkes Observatory looked exactly right from a clue standpoint, but ended up being exactly wrong. At the same time, it was uncannily Joy Serenade-ish. Who of us has not pondered stanza three:
“Use will’s straight edge, as the turning square or any arc may align at a proper point.”
Will? William’s Bay? Could the observatory be a tool? Yerkes Observatory certainly acts like a tool. The building has an east-west axis. The main entrance faces north. The telescope dome has an elevator floor to allow the astronomers to go with the dome as it rotates through the night. The whole contraption enabled astronomers to keep a pinpoint star in alignment with the telescope all night long as they photographed it. That Ockham guy knew his stuff—if William is the straight edge Joy’s Serenade is thinking about. Yerkes Observatory, or some observatory, might just be the turning square we have all been looking for. I had to check it out.
The Geography Framework, the Yerkes Instrument, and the Telescope Model of Reduction
I went from Yerkes Observatory is the place to Yerkes
Observatory might be a waypoint to the place, which led to navigation as
a means to a solve.
If a hand from space reached down and turned the observatory like a turning
square on the globe, lines would be arcs. Plotting the cardinal directions
using the observatory as the origin onto Google Earth at 1,000 miles out and
also at 100 miles out, it looked like something I could use…somehow. It looked more
like a transit, compass, telescope, or alignment device more than a treasure
location per se.
The marks and cardinal direction lines centered on Yerkes Observatory certainly
it looks like a tool that could be rotated on its axes.
Something else popped into view as I looked at the graphic. Was I seeing an
overview effect? Are we supposed to be thinking high level and then graduating
stepwise down to a closer and closer viewpoint until the target finally comes
into view? Does the book support this idea? I combed the book for every geography word and
location and discovered something. The geography repeatedly moved from large
locations to smaller locations, like this:
Southeast Asia → Khmer → Angkor → Angkor Wat
California → San Francisco Bay Area → Menlo Park → Bowers Museum
Arizona → Hopi Reservation → Oraibi → Hotevilla
California → Sacramento → American River → Sutter’s Mill
Peru → Andes Mountains → Chavín de Huántar
Broad areas reduced to regions and then to localities. The reduction structure
repeated itself, space travel, then Mars, then Moon, then Apollo, then Neil
Armstrong shouted to start big and end small. Geography too. We read in the
book about continents, countries, regions, states, cities, museums. Could the
geography in the book be teaching a principle of reduction. Even the foreign
locations. South America, Colombia, two grey peaks and a plain, Chivor mine? My
the number of occurrences in the book the named geography can hardly be accidental.
Nor do the instructions in the book’s Introduction suggest it is accidental. Start
big, move smaller is a key.
The Introduction to the book has an interesting sentence. “As our
blue and green planet revolves around the sun, life on earth sketches out over
8 billion lifelines, all drawing out one huge map across its surface.”
Are we drawing a map from the information presented in the book? If
so, could the “compass rose” on the map
make a grid whose origin sits at Yerkes Observatory and divides the country
into search quadrants? Most certainly yes. Taking it one step further, viewed
through the lens of population distribution, the contiguous states naturally
separate into several major population regions:
• Northeast Megalopolis
• Great Lakes and Midwest
• Southeast
• Texas and South Central
• West Coast
Let’s lay down the grid using the observatory as the origin, and 42.5 N latitude as the east/west baseline, with 90W as the vertical axis. Then, lets think about how the book says the five boxes were distributed according to population density so that people throughout the contiguous United States would have a reasonable opportunity to search for one near their home.
The natural population regions of the country roughly correspond to areas in the following circles:
• Great Lakes and Midwest
• Northeast Megalopolis
• Southeast
• Texas and South Central
• West Coast
Next, superimpose the observatory instrument and the Surveyor Transit Model and
the Telescope Model of Geographic Reduction really starts to take shape. The
100 mile radius is almost entirely inside the Great Lakes and Midwest population
center. The Northeast Megalopolis and the Southeast population density circles split
the southeast quadrant in half on each side of the Southeast radian at the
1,000 mile mark. The Texas and West Coast circles stand alone, each on a radian
at the 1,000 mile mark. This suggests that the model operates from large to
small.
→ United States
→ Population Sector
→ Region
→ State
→ Area
→ Locality
→ Target
The next step is to test it.
The 100-Mile and 1000-Mile Radius Tests: Yerkes Observatory as a Surveyor
Transit
To test this, two separate radius studies were performed, the 100 mile and the
1,000 mile radius tests. Using the observatory as a fixed reference station,
eight great-circle bearings were projected outward (as pictured in the graphic
above) along the cardinal and intercardinal directions: North, Northeast, East,
Southeast, South, Southwest, West, and Northwest. Two separate scales were then
examined. The first projected the bearings approximately 100 miles from the
observatory to identify the immediate geographic environment surrounding the
instrument. The second projected the same bearings approximately 1,000 miles
from the observatory to examine national-scale geography. Locations,
institutions, landmarks, and clue-associated places from the Lions Share
geography dataset were then compared against these corridors. The objective was
not to find a destination directly, but to determine which directions
accumulated the greatest concentration of clue-related geography and how those
concentrations aligned with the major population-density sectors of the
contiguous United States. The 100-mile test was interpreted as a calibration
exercise that revealed the local observational and institutional systems
surrounding Yerkes Observatory, while the 1,000-mile test was interpreted as a
search-sector exercise that highlighted broader candidate regions and
geographic reduction pathways. Together, the two tests were used to evaluate
whether Yerkes Observatory functions as a navigational instrument capable of
reducing a national search space into progressively smaller geographic targets.
The 100-Mile Radius Test
The first test examined the area immediately surrounding the
observatory. A one-hundred-mile radius roughly encompasses:
• Southern Wisconsin
• Northern Illinois
• Portions of Indiana
• Portions of Iowa
• Portions of Michigan
The objective was to determine what the instrument “sees” when
focused locally. The strongest results were not treasure regions. Instead, the
local field repeatedly highlighted institutional and observational systems. The
most significant cluster was:
→Yerkes Observatory
→ Chicago
→ University of Chicago
→ World’s Fair connections
Additional support appeared through:
• Illinois
• Scientific institutions
• Transportation networks
• Purdue University
• Aviation-related clues
• Astronomy-related clues
What emerged was a geography centered on observation, education,
innovation, and infrastructure. This is notable because these systems align
closely with the interpretation of Yerkes as an instrument. The local field
appears to emphasize mechanism rather than destination. In other words, the
one-hundred-mile test identifies the calibration zone. A surveyor first
establishes the instrument. Only afterward are distant targets measured.
The 1000-Mile Radius Test
The second test expanded the search field to approximately one
thousand miles from Yerkes. At this scale the instrument begins to observe much
larger portions of the United States.The resulting geography changed
dramatically. Instead of institutions and observatories, the dominant clusters
became major population regions and repeated clue geographies. Several
candidate regions emerged.
→North Carolina
→ Statesville
→ Hiddenite
→ Chapel Hill
→ Asheville
→ Bakersville
→ California
→ San Francisco Bay Area
→ Menlo Park
→ Sacramento
→ American River
→ Sutter’s Mill
Additional support appeared in:
• Tennessee
• Atlanta
• Tuskegee
• New York
• Washington
These regions align closely with the population-sector model
derived from the five-box architecture. Rather than identifying the instrument,
the one-thousand-mile field appears to identify candidate search regions. This
distinction proved significant.
The Telescope Model of Geographic Reduction Interpretation
The differing results of the two tests may initially appear
contradictory. However, they align remarkably well with the Telescope Model of
Geographic Reduction. A telescope operates differently at different
magnifications. A low-magnification view reveals broad regions. A
high-magnification view reveals local detail. The same pattern appears in the
Yerkes framework. At one hundred miles, the instrument focuses on itself and
the systems immediately surrounding it. At one thousand miles, the instrument
begins identifying broader search sectors. The result is not inconsistency but
scale-dependent behavior. This is exactly what would be expected from a
navigation instrument.
The Calibration Zone
The one-hundred-mile study suggests that the region surrounding
Yerkes Observatory serves a special purpose. It repeatedly highlights:
• Astronomy
• Universities
• World’s Fair connections
• Transportation
• Observation
• Scientific institutions
These systems explain how the puzzle works rather than where the
treasure is hidden. The calibration-zone hypothesis therefore proposes that the
local field around the observatory teaches the method. The observatory, the
University of Chicago, and related institutions form a cluster centered on
observation, alignment, and measurement.
The National Search Zone
The one-thousand-mile study appears to serve a different purpose.
Instead of teaching the method, it identifies the areas to which the method
should be applied. The strongest candidate regions emerging from this test
include:
• North Carolina
• California
• Tennessee and Georgia
• The Northeast institutional corridor
These locations survive multiple stages of reduction and repeatedly
appear throughout the geography dataset.
The Surveyor Transit Model
Taken together, the two tests suggest a layered interpretation. The
one-hundred-mile field identifies the instrument and its operating principles.
The one-thousand-mile field identifies the regions to which those principles
should be applied. The resulting framework becomes:
→ Yerkes Observatory
→ Calibration Zone
→ Compass Rose
→ Population Sector
→ Region
→ State
→ Area
→ Locality
→ Target
This structure mirrors both the Telescope Model of Geographic
Reduction and the graduated geography chains found throughout the clue book.
Working Conclusion
The
100-mile and 1000-mile radius tests suggest that Yerkes as an instrument
instead of a solve location behaves more like a surveyor’s transit than a
destination. At close range, the observatory identifies the systems that teach
observation, measurement, and alignment. At large range, the observatory
identifies candidate search sectors and geographic reduction pathways. The fact
that the two tests produce different results supports a Navigation Solve. A
genuine navigation instrument should reveal different information at different
scales, which the tests indicate is happening. The local field should explain
the method, which the tests again indicate is happening. The national field
should reveal the search space. Under this interpretation, the purpose of
Yerkes is not to point directly at the treasure. Its purpose is to establish a
coordinate framework through which the treasure can eventually be brought into
focus.
Raw Geographic Data Collected from the Book and Used in the Tests
Geography Master
Document (Chapters 1–23)
Chapter 1 — The 120-carat Sapphire
Subtitle: A Plan that Changed the World
Geography:
- Los Angeles
- San Francisco Bay Area
- Menlo Park, California
- Bowers Museum
Chapter 2 — The 100 Gold Rings of
Tuyet Nguyet
Subtitle: Don’t Wing It
Geography:
- University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
- Southeast Asia
- Vietnam
- Angkor
- Angkor Wat
- Vatican City
- Rome
- Ancient Greece
- Khmer
- Champa
Chapter 3 — A Puzzle Box, A Magnifying
Glass & A Mysterious Egg
Subtitle: Joy is in the Details
Geography:
- Japan
- Tokyo
- Hakone
- Los Angeles
- Asheville, North Carolina
- Bakersville, North Carolina
- Smithsonian American Art Museum
- North Carolina
- Midwest United States
- London, England
- America
Chapter 4 — The 96 Carat Chivor
Emerald
Subtitle: Blaze the Path
Geography:
- Hiddenite Emerald Mine
- Columbus, Ohio
- Columbus Rock and Mineral Society
- Cincinnati
- Illinois
- Chivor, Colombia
- Europe to New World
- Spain
- Ship Route to Asia
- South America
- El Dorado
- Andes Mountains
- Plain of Llanos
- Dense Forest
- Foot by Foot
- Road Less Traveled
- Road Not Taken
- Two Jagged Grey Peaks
- Rock Towers
- Green Rolling Plains
- Rough Red Dirt Embankment
Chapter 5 — Masterworks by Art Smith
Subtitle: An Exercise in Faith
Geography:
- Morgan’s Pass, Jamaica
- Kingston
- Cuba
- New York City
- New York World’s Fair
- Cooper Union
- Greenwich Village
- Ancient Egypt
- Tribal Africa
Chapter 6 — Rubies to Wear
Subtitle: Inspiration is Welcome
Geography:
- Ancient Burma
- Thailand
- Sukhothai, Thailand
- Brooklyn, New York
- Atlantic Ocean
Chapter 7 — Amelia’s Autograph
Subtitle: Explore More
Geography:
- Londonderry, Ireland
- Purdue University
- Harvard University
- Mexico City
- Washington, DC
- New Jersey
- Canada
- Great White North
- Newfoundland, Canada
- New Horizons
- Beyond Boundaries
- Past the Next Tree Line
- Over the Next Rise
- Around the Next Corner
Chapter 8 — Beauty’s Bespoken
Treasures
Subtitle: Know the Past, See the Future
Geography:
- Oraibi
- Native American Settlement
- Badger Clan
- Hopi Reservation
- Arizona
- Museum of Modern Art, New York
City
- Scottsdale
- Princeton
- Netherlands
- Hotevilla
- Alcatraz
- Treasure Island
- Grand Canyon
Chapter 9 — The Golden Chalice
Subtitle: Confirmation Bias
Geography:
- Andes Mountains, Peru
- Over 10,000 Feet Elevation
- Chavín de Huántar
- 45 Foot Walls
- Spain
- Highland Civilization
- Statesville, North Carolina
- Formed a Circle
- Meteoric Highs
- Cratering Lows
Chapter 10 — Jackie Onassis’ Diamond
Sapphire Brooch
Subtitle: Welcome the Good and the Bad
Geography:
- Statesville, North Carolina
- Washington Times
- White House
- New York City
- Grand Central Station
Chapter 11 — Treasures from a Famous
Shipwreck
Subtitle: The Temptress Greed
Geography:
- Montevideo, Uruguay
- Main Dirt Road
- Ragtag Port
- Anchored in Bay
- Spain
- Buenos Aires
- Lima
- Santiago
- Río de la Plata
- Montevideo, Brazil (as written)
Chapter 12 — Massive Gold Rush Nugget
Subtitle: Make Good Choices
Geography:
- California
- Parts of California
- Mexico
- Sacramento
- Sutter’s Mill
- American River
- Fifth Largest Economy
- San Francisco
- Ghost Town
- South America
- Australia
- Brazil
- River in Californian Desert
- The California Star
- China
- Northeast
- Transcontinental Railroad
Chapter 13 — The Best of its Class
Jordan Rookie Card
Subtitle: Be Like Mike
Geography:
- Chicago Bulls
- University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
- Not Too High or Too Low
Chapter 14 — Tiffany’s Furnace and
Thoreau’s Fire
Subtitle: Fail Forward
Geography:
- United States of America
- Pioneered in America
- Travel Across the Globe
- Tiffany & Co.
- Paris
- Egyptian
- Flowers Along the Way to Treasure
- Walden
- Concord
- Largest Forest Fire Ever
- Fairhaven Bay
- Harpers Ferry
Chapter 15 — 1960 Rome Olympic Gold
Medal
Subtitle: Don’t Give Up
Geography:
- Rome
- Athens
- Clarksville, Tennessee
- Nashville
- Meharry Medical School
- Tuskegee, Alabama
- Tennessee State College
- Seattle, Washington
- Melbourne
- Texas
- Atlanta
Chapter 16 — 1996 Olympic Gold
Subtitle: Defy Expectations
Geography:
- Atlanta
- Nigeria
- England
- Cairo
- Egypt
- Hungary
- Japan
- Brazil
- Tallahassee, Florida
- Mexico
- Argentina
- Origin of the United States
Chapter 17 — George Washington’s Jelly
Glass
Subtitle: Share Your Story
Geography:
- French and Indian War
- New York
- Delaware River
- British
- Germany
- No Bridges to Cross
- Sheet of Ice
- Monmouth
- Atlantic Ocean
- Philadelphia
- Mount Vernon
- Broadway
Chapter 18 — Andrew Carnegie’s Emerald
Subtitle: The Science of Giving
Geography:
- Colombia
- Statesville, North Carolina
- Dunfermline, Scotland
- Western Union
- Pennsylvania Railroad
- Carnegie Mellon University
- Sesame Street
- Mount Wilson Observatory
- Milky Way (Space)
Chapter 19 — Moon Rocks & Meteors
Subtitle: The Next Frontier
Geography:
- Mars
- Statesville, North Carolina
- Western Sahara Desert
- Moon
- NASA
- Central America
- Desert Flat Expanses
- Costa Rica
- Australia
- Colonize the Moon
- Peer at Earth
- Milky Way
Chapter 20 — The Six-Figure Birthstone
Subtitle: Choosing a New Perspective
Geography:
- Tanzania
- Chivor
- Tiffany & Co.
- Several Acres of Park Terrain
- Sight Extends Above
- Shift Vantage Point
- New Standpoint to Form a Complete
Picture
Chapter 21 — Antiquities of Alexander
Subtitle: Make it Make Sense
Geography:
- Ancient Greece
- Macedonia
- India
- Getty Museum, Los Angeles
Chapter 22 — Picasso’s Pendant
Subtitle: A Love Story
Geography:
- Spain
- Madoura, France
Chapter 23 — Sing Your Own Special
Song
Subtitle: Finding Treasures Along the Way
Geography:
- Egypt
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