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Where the Salagramas are they found
and what are they
The Saligramas are found
only in the Gandaki
River at Mukti Kshetra - also called Muktinath and Damodar Kunda,
one of the most sacred pilgrimage places in north-west Nepal. Here
the natural elements are displayed in a miraculous form. Flickering
blue flames of natural methane gas burn on water, earth and stone -
in an offering said to have been first lighted by Brahma, the Hindu
Creator. Muktinath’s sanctity goes far back into antiquity. The
Indian epic Mahabharat mentions it, calling the place Shaligram. The
river Gandaki is a very ancient river; and the geologists say that
it existed even before the formation of the Himalayan ranges. It
rises beyond the Himalayan ranges, probably in Tibet, and flows (in
the north-south direction) into Nepal, which is the southern valley
of the Himalayas, and India. The situation of the birth of the river
is given as North 27 27 and East 83 56’; it courses in the
south-western direction, and joins Ganga in a place called
Bhavatyapur in Bihar. It is an important tributary of the river
Ganga. It is called Salagrami or Narayani in Uttar-pradesh. It was
known to the Greek geographers as Kondochetts.
The
glossy black fossils called shaligram are found in here. On the
outside they look like small rounded rocks, but split open they
reveal the imprint of ammonites formed 140 million years ago.
Because of its wheel-like shape or chakra, the shaligram is
associated with the Hindu god Vishnu. The chakras on the stones are
formed by the river worms called Vajra-keeta. Its teeth/nails are
said to be harder than granite stone. The Vajra keeta worms drill
the stones, get inside and live there. During their stay inside the
stones, they cause these chakras. Similarly outside chakras also are
caused by the worms only. Saligrama are used as living place by the
worms not used as shells. The chakra formation is found both on the
outer and inner surface of the saligrama. Sometimes this can be seen
through the holes on the Saligrama with the aid of torch light. The
holes are termed as vadana or mouth.
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