Astrophysicist, aeronautical engineer, and historical researcher applying rigorous analytical methods to the study of ancient cosmology, lost knowledge, and the origins of the zodiac.
Hugh Evans presents evidence suggesting that some of humanity’s earliest astronomical knowledge was first encoded on the land itself, rather than projected onto the sky.
Rather than viewing ancient astronomy as abstract observation, this research suggests it began as a lived, geographic practice, embedded directly into sacred terrain.
Hugh Evans brings a rare combination of scientific discipline and historical inquiry to the study of ancient cosmology. He studied astrophysics at university, graduated in aeronautical engineering, and later qualified as a Chartered Accountant. Today, he applies this rigorous analytical background to a lifelong passion for history, astronomy, and the lost knowledge of ancient civilizations.
Over thousands of hours of meticulous research—including extensive site visits, landscape analysis, hieroglyphic interpretation, and ancient language translation—Hugh has developed a compelling thesis: that the Zodiac and circumpolar constellations were first mapped on Earth, long before they were formalized in the skies. His work focuses on the landforms and megalithic features of Gwynedd, North Wales, where he has identified terrestrial counterparts to all twelve zodiac constellations.
According to Evans, these ground-based star maps predate the Babylonian and Egyptian zodiacs and may be even older than Göbekli Tepe. Rather than humans projecting patterns onto the stars, his research suggests the inverse: the constellations in the heavens were chosen to mirror sacred patterns already encoded in the landscape.
Central to this work is the region surrounding Cadair Idris, which Hugh identifies as a key nodal point in an ancient, coherent astronomical system embedded in the terrain itself—preserved through Welsh place-names, myth, and linguistic structure.
September 25–27, 2026 · Hyatt Regency Newport Beach, California
An ongoing inquiry into precession, antiquity, and the cycles that shape civilization.