Korberger Stein Labyrinth (Stone of Korberger)

labyrinth Ley Line — Earth Grid TUNING CIRCUIT
47.3300°N, 11.3300°E Giza Bearing: 324.19° 2,569 km to Giza Power: 4/10

A labyrinth rock carving in the Alpine borderland between southern Germany and Austria, the Korberger Stein belongs to the sparse but significant Alpine labyrinth tradition. Mountain labyrinths are rare worldwide — most are found at sea level or in lowlands — making Alpine examples like this particularly valuable for understanding how labyrinth knowledge traveled across geographical barriers. At 324.19° Giza bearing, the carving sits in the Inn Valley corridor that has served as a trans-Alpine trade route since the Neolithic. The Alps' crystalline geology — predominantly gneiss and schist with quartz intrusions — creates the same piezoelectric conditions found at labyrinth sites in Scandinavia and Cornwall, suggesting a geological preference in labyrinth placement that transcends cultural boundaries.

Ley Line — Earth Grid

Labyrinth Earth energy marker (bearing 324.19°)

Labyrinth Details
Pattern Classical 7-Circuit
Circuits 7 paths, 8 walls
Material rock_carving
Age Bronze Age to Iron Age
Condition intact
Country Austria
Region Tyrol Alps
Related Sites — Ley Line — Earth Grid