Ian Hills

Profile picture for user Ian Hills
Ian
Hills

Ian Hills is a scientific author and independent researcher whose work explores the electrodynamic architecture of the natural and ancient world. Trained as an aviator, Ian first noticed unusual, scale‑invariant patterns in thunderstorms - anomalies in atmospheric behaviour that didn’t fit the standard models. Those early observations led him into a broader investigation of toroidal stability, harmonic fields, and the repeating geometries that appear across vastly different scales.

Archaeology began as a side interest, but the deeper he looked, the more the same electrodynamic signatures emerged in ancient structures. Sites such as Puma Punku, Göbekli Tepe, Stonehenge, and the Great Pyramid all displayed architectural patterns that mirrored the very field behaviours he had seen in the atmosphere. This convergence of physics and archaeology became the foundation of his continuum work.

Ian is the author of The Pyramid Lock and "The Harmonic Geometry" Amazon series, which examine how ancient builders may have interacted with natural telluric and atmospheric fields through geometry, materials, and harmonic design. His writing focuses on clarity, testability, and accessible scientific communication - offering readers a grounded framework for understanding ancient structures through the lens of classical physics and scale‑invariant behaviour.

When he’s not writing, Ian can usually be found in the garden with a notebook, a cigar, and a glass of something interesting - thinking about the next piece of the continuum.

Member for

3 weeks