>>Put down the google earth and READ some relevant history. Any randon angle on the Earth is likely to strike someplace important. You need to document it's non-randomness.<<
I was not referring to important places in general since what someone considers important may vary, thus there could be thousands of important spots. I was referring to what pyramids encode, they encode astronomic info via mountains. Visoko is in Bosnia. Bosnia is a Balkan country. Rila is the tallest mountain in the Balkan peninsula – 26 feet taller than mount Olympus. It is not a random point – actually it is a unique point.
>>Your line also connects London to Paris (as far as I can tell). There are solid reasons why both locations were chosen ;it was where navigable rivers became impassable, allowing for trade and security.<<
No it doesn’t go anywhere near London or Paris. The line is about 100 miles away from Paris and the Paris – London angle is around 60 degrees – nowhere near the 26.25 degrees Rila – Visoko angle. Another interesting thing to note is that due to the curvature of the Earth the starting angle is different from the ending angle. The 26.25 degrees angle is the starting angle at mount Rila – Bulgaria. If we go to the Visoko pyramids we note that the angle has dropped to 22.56 degrees. What do these two values tell us? Well we find them on the same pyramid. According to Legon the Kafre upper passage angle is 26.467 degrees while according to Maragioglio & Rinaldi the Kafre lower passage angle is 22.667 degrees. This angle which Temple calls golden angle of resurrection is found in the other pyramids also:
Menkaure descending passageway angle(Lehner) = 26.033 degrees
Khufu Grand Gallery angle = 26.2857 degrees
Khufu descending passageway angle = 26.071 degrees
But the Rila – Visoko curve actually relates to an ascending 26.25 degrees angle and a descending 22.56 degrees angle. One thus descends down Kafre’s pyramid through the lower passageway and ascends up Khufu’s pyramid through the Grand Gallery to the King’s Chamber.