Dowsing, historically referred to as Rhabdomancy, has been
practised for thousands of years throughout a number of countries. So where
does it originate from and how has it evolved to today's modern practice?
Our concept of dowsing today comprises of searching for hidden
objects (like water, iron, oil or precious artefacts) with the use of equipment,
be it a twig from a tree or specially designed pendulum that have been proposed
by people attempting to take a 'scientific' approach to the ancient art. Yet
no matter how many historical accounts or dowsing devices we can find from Ancient
Egypt or other cultures, dowsing is thought to originate from a much earlier
time; if you think about it, the idea of having 'intuition' as to the whereabouts
of an object or person, you are applying a dowsing-type ideology, which has
probably been used long before dowsing equipment was created.
Artefacts from the time of the Egyptian Pharoahs suggest that
dowsing in its modernly recognisable form originates from the use of split reeds,
and from China, where Emporer Kwang Sung was thought to have engaged in the
art.
In 1556 Georgius Agricola published De Re Metallica,
a book whose illustrations showed dowsers looking for veins of metal using a
forked stick that Agricola referred to as a Virgula Furcate. In Seventeenth
Century France, dowsing became popular, with Baron and Baroness de Beausoleil
establishing a mineral mining company using dowsing to search for new potential
mines. However, the art remained mystical, and was condemned by the Catholic
Church as it was believed that the Devil controlled the movement of pendulums,
leading them to hidden objects. The de Beausoleils ended their lives in the
Bastille after revealing their use of alchemy.
Dowsing enjoyed a revival under the Victorians, perhaps owing
to their interest in the occult and unknown. It is thought to have been popularised
by German miners who arrived in Cornwall and located veins of tin which resulted
in the creation of mines. The most famous of Victorian dowsers, John Mullins,
was an English mason, who took up dowsing on a near full-time basis more than
two decades after the estate on which he worked was visited by a dowser in 1859.
He supported the use of a forked hazel twig, taking payment from customers only
if he was successful and on many occassions he was, finding wells to improve
water supplies. Mullins insisted on making pendulums from the local environment
in which he was working, and the success of the business resulted in it later
being taken over by his sons.
Dowsing Today
Accounts show that dowsing was used in the World Wars, but
of all people, it was the scientific community's Albert Einstein who praised
the potential of dowsing. He acknowledged that the art was regarded on the same
mystical level as astrology, but explained it as a way of using the human nervous
system to detect factors that were "unknown to us at this time".
Precisely a century after John Mullin's 1859 experience with
dowsing in Wiltshire, England, Californian dowser Verne Cameron offered to locate
the US Navy's fleet of submarines, which he achieved along with finding many
Russian submarines as well. But Cameron's success embedded itself throughout
his career: the South Californian city of Elsinore in which the dowser lived
was waterless, buying nearly all its water supply from Los Angeles. Cameron
helped locate one of the region's largest wells under the dried-up bed of a
lake.
Staying in the US, the government's Department Office of Environmental
Management has spent significant amounts of taxpayers' money on researching,
and trying to justify the use of, dowsing in the search for underground anomolies
such as leaks. While one US Geological Survey report published in 1917 dismissed
such research as a "misuse of public funds", the department has since
spent more than $400,000 researching one Ukrainian's offerings, the scientifically
named technique of Passive
Magnetic Resonance Anomaly Mappingor 'PMRAM'. The Ukrainian, the only
person in the world capable of using the method, claimed that it could be used
to detect underground leaks and other anomolies, a claim that has yet to be
conclusively proven.
Dowsing continues to be used today, though dowsers and the
majority of the scientific community remain divided on its success. Nevertheless,
historical accounts have shown many occassions on which dowsing has proven useful
to mankind.
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