Science
Ujjain's location in a map of gravity anomalies in India.
A key characteristic of the Indian civilization is the concept of a sacred geography. By it, certain locations, and geographical features like mountains or rivers, are accorded a special sanctity. The reasons are usually obscure, and lost to time. Nonetheless, it is a fact that every corner of the subcontinent has its sacred spots, which, cumulatively, outline the boundaries of an ancient nation.
They range from countless village temple groves which used to dot the land, but have so sadly fallen of late to the hand of man, to mighty rivers and soaring mountains. They may be curves in a river, like Kashi, on the Ganges; or halting points on major trade routes, like Maheshwar on the Narmada; or historic cities like Dwaraka, an ancient gateway to India for traders from the west.
Many of these locations have remained as major pilgrimage centres for millennia now, with visits by devotees continuing in an unbroken cycle of devotion and salvation, even through the horrific, sustained depredations of the last millennium. Now, we can but speculate on why these places came to acquire a special status so long ago, and why they continue to attract such widespread reverence even today.
Perhaps this sacred geography reflects the true degree to which we are bound to our land, and represents the essence of our way of life – a need to maintain the natural order of things. Perhaps it also underscores a deeply spiritual rationale for a greater reality – that it is humans who have to maintain harmony with nature, and not the other way around.
Of course, there are many today who scoff at this concept. To them, such sentiments only mirror meaningless pagan practices with no scientific basis. There are no tree spirits to be found in sacred groves; in fact, there are no tree spirits at all. A yakshi is precisely the reason why Marx is right – that religion is the opium of the masses. And anyone lauding the divinity of the Indus is actually a fascist, majoritarian, Islamophobic, Hindutvavadi, hell bent on resurrecting an Akhand Bharat.
And yet, that same science, which our deracinated intellectuals employ to mock us and our zany ways, now offers intriguing insights into our sacred geography. Maybe, just maybe, there’s more to these places than meets the eye. Therefore, this piece will unveil hitherto unknown facts about two revered spots in Central India – the jyotirlingas of Mahakaleshwar at Ujjain, and Omkareshwar on the Narmada.
The Mahakaleshwar at Ujjain
History teaches us that Ujjain was already a bustling city at least 2600 years ago, and the capital of the Avanti mahajanapada – one of 16 principal kingdoms and republics which flourished around the time of The Buddha and Mahavira. Its presiding deity has been Shiva, called Mahakaal, or the lord of time, for most of recorded history.
The Surya Siddhanta, a remarkable astronomical treatise dated to around 1600 years ago, says that the location of Ujjain is unique because it marks the intersection point of the zero-longitude meridian with the Tropic of Cancer. That is why Mahakaleshwar’s home is also known as ‘the navel of the earth’.
However, this uniqueness was inferred a thousand years after the city was established – and also well after Ujjain had already become one of the seven sacred spots of the subcontinent.
This is where modern science intrudes, to offer us a fascinating reason why Ujjain has always been a unique spot: multiple gravity surveys reveal that Mahakaal’s jyotirlinga is located precisely at the centre of the strongest gravity anomaly in the subcontinent.
(A modern gravity anomaly is measured by satellites, and is a measure of the earth’s surface density at a particular point. Oceans and sedimentary basins have low values, while mountain ranges, or thick layers of dense rocks, like our basaltic Deccan Traps, have high values. Low values are traditionally colour-coded in blues, and highs in reds)
In simple English, the Mahakaleshwar is located at the densest spot in India.
Here is a regional gravity map extracted from NASA’s 2003 GRACE mission (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment). Note the location of the Mahakaleshwar jyotirlinga – at the centre of the red high, and the fact that the closest gravity anomaly of similar magnitude is thousands of kilometres away, in the Andaman and Nicobar archipelago.
Readers are encouraged to visit the GRACE data website. It offers a visualisation of global gravity anomalies. Type in the Mahakaleshwar’s coordinates (Latitude: 23.181; longitude: 75.766), click enter, and gasp in awe!
These findings were corroborated by a gravity survey conducted in 2006, jointly by the Geological Survey of India, National Geophysical research Institute, and the Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Ltd.
The Omkareshwar on the Narmada
The Shiva temple of Omkareshwar is located on a rocky island named Mandhata, in the Narmada River. As per legend, Adi Shankaracharya first met his guru, Govinda Bhagavatpada, in a small cave on this island. The cave exists, and can be accessed by steps from below the temple.
The Narmada is a relatively narrow river which runs from east to west, for the most part like an arrow, through a valley formed over a billion years ago. In geology, this is called the Narmada-Son alignment – a gigantic suture which separates the Malwa and Deccan plateaus.
Perhaps, but there is another curious reason why this is a unique spot.
A surface geology map below shows that once we leave the alluvial river mouth at Bharuch, in the Gulf of Cambay, and travel eastwards up-river, the Narmada valley is uniformly covered by Deccan Trap basalt up to Omkareshwar (colour code: light purple).
What’s fascinating is how these Precambrian formations, older than the Deccan Traps by half a billion years, or more, suddenly emerge from beneath vast lava flows, at exactly that point where a sacred geography positions a jyotirlinga.
Indeed, if going by boat upstream, Mandhata island at Omkareshwar marks the precise point on the Narmada, where a traveller first encounters these ancient rocks. Conversely, travelling downstream, Omkareshwar is the point on the river at which the Deccan Traps start.
Visitors to the temple can see this with their own eyes: the linga is a misshapen clump of rock which protrudes from the ground by about a foot. It is quite different from the lingas more commonly consecrated in temples elsewhere, which are hand-hewn, polished, and cylindrical, with a perfect, demi-spheroidic top.
And that surely gives a new meaning to the term swayambhu, doesn’t it?
****************
And if these are coincidences, then they are too many to ignore, since Mahakaleshwar and Omkareshwar are but two examples on a curious list. Here’s one: The Himalayas are dotted with hundreds of peaks, yet of them all, Mount Kailas has a special status. Is that because Shiva’s home is, in fact, the single largest piece of rock known to humans? And that begs an extraordinary question: how did people classify Mount Kailas as somehow unique, so many millennia ago, when science as we know it was still in its infancy? Or was it?
Obviously, then, the logical inference is that our ancients had a greater understanding of our land than we presently appreciate. And while we unfortunately don’t know the extent of that knowledge system, there’s certainly more to the sacred geography of this subcontinent than meets the eye.