Explore a curious blend of legend, history, and firsthand observation about finding water with a divining rod—and what it may mean for skeptical minds.
This book gathers historical definitions, personal experiences, and documented experiments to examine the long-running claim that a forked rod can locate water or minerals underground. It surveys old authorities, modern inquiries, and dramatic anecdotes, asking readers to weigh evidence and explore the mysteries behind the practice.
- Learn how different authors and researchers described the divining rod over time.
- See accounts of experiments conducted in real places, from Woolwich to the Mendips, and what observers reported.
- Read about various claimed effects, from sensations in the body to the bending or turning of the rod, and how investigators evaluated them.
- Consider the questions scholars have raised about science, superstition, and the line between belief and demonstration.
Ideal for curiosity-driven readers, history buffs, and those who enjoy examining claims about early scientific inquiry and folk practices.