Map makers take great pride in their work and offer their viewers multiple ways of looking at their masterpieces. There is the satellite view that all maps are derived from, along with topography maps that use satellite sourced radar to “see” the 3rd dimension of elevation. Also, there is the most common map available, known as the State map, that shows towns, major roads, and highways. A little known version of the 50 American States is a hydrological map that shows all the rivers, creeks, streams, and large lakes caused by watersheds within that State. These maps, with the proper amount of detail, look remarkably like a medical diagram of a human’s vascular or nervous systems. The similarity is uncanny and gives great evidence that the Earth is a living entity. Yearly rainfall and the elevation differences are the determining factors on how concentrated the branches are and where endorheic (dead-end terrain with no water exits) exists. They resemble an X-ray abscess of human tissue. In the US, forests are indicators of high precipitation areas. The Southeast, Northeast, and the Mississippi River States have many rivers, while the Great Plains, Rocky Mountains, and Eastern parts of the Pacific States lack sufficient rain to form only a few rivers. The hydrological maps of these states have few “blood vessels” and resemble a cyst. Water is essentially life, and life abounds where many vessels and pathways exist


