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Observatory that put Mount Everest in record books now lies in ruins

Observatory that put Mount Everest in record books now lies in ruins

SIRONJ: “Bhuri” for fair-skinned foreigners. “Tori” for restless bustle. British surveyors mapped a continent from this ridge. From here came numbers that measured the world’s tallest mountain. Mount Everest entered history but Bhuri Tori slipped out of it. Name lingered and science faded. Today, thieves measure stones here.Perched on a wind-lashed hill at Kalyanpur village near Sironj in central Madhya Pradesh – about 100km northeast of Bhopal in Vidisha district – Bhuri Tori once pulsed like the geodetic heart of undivided India. From this rocky outpost, British surveyors fixed coordinates, tracked stars and stitched together one of history’s most audacious scientific enterprises: Great Trigonometrical Survey (GTS).Today, stones have been pried loose. Walls stand scarred. Pendulums have vanished. Black stone observatories lie gutted under open skies where astronomers once mapped a continent and made calculations linked to measuring Mount Everest’s height took shape. History survives here in fragments.Survey of India records show the then surveyor general Colonel George Everest adopted Kalyanpur’s trigonometrical station in 1840 as an “origin of calculation” for GTS – a colossal 19th-century project that mapped territories stretching across current-day India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Myanmar and Sri Lanka with mathematical precision unprecedented for its age. Long before satellites and GPS, surveyors built chains of triangles across jungles, deserts and mountains. One measured baseline, paired with angles and trigonometry, unlocked distances across thousands of kilometres. Begun by William Lambton in early 1800s and later expanded by Everest, Andrew Scott Waugh and James Walker, GTS transformed cartography and geodesy. Mathematician Radhanath Sikdar later computed the height of Mount Everest in the 1850s using survey data generated through this sprawling scientific grid.Bhuri Tori sat near its intellectual centre of gravity.Historical accounts describe nearly 700 workers camped on the hill for close to two years alongside four elephants, 42 camels and 30 horses while observatory structures rose from black stones. British officers’ pale complexions and feverish activity inspired the name Bhuri Tori.”This is our hidden hero, reduced to complete neglect,” said local history enthusiast Shaoib Gazi who promotes the site through social media. He said Everest selected Kalyanpur because it occupied a strategic midpoint between Great Arc measurements and Prime Meridian calculations. “It was perfectly placed to split longitudinal gap between Great Arc and Prime Meridian,” he added.

Observatory that put Mt Everest in record books now lies in ruins

The structure still hints at scientific choreography once performed here. The roofless black stone enclosure contains recesses in north-south walls, designed for astronomical observations. Open sky functioned as laboratory ceiling. Gas lanterns flashed signals toward telescopes mounted on pillars in nearby Surantal village for triangulation checks.Two pendulum-driven structures were later added nearby. Now, only hollow shells remain.Pages of 1917 volume Triangulation in India and Adjacent Countries place Bhuri Tori within wider geodetic framework underpinning surveys across South Asia. Coordinates fixed from this ridge rippled outwards through maps, military charts and administrative boundaries for decades.Now, entropy has taken over. Chunks of masonry have disappeared. Weather gnaws at exposed stone. Heritage watchers said vandalism and theft have hollowed out the site faster than authorities acknowledge it.Sironj sits roughly two hours by road from Bhopal. Yet Bhuri Tori remains largely absent from tourism circuits and conservation plans. Sironj chief municipal officer Ramprakash said the matter falls outside urban body jurisdiction because the site lies under village panchayat limits.Silence hangs heavier on a hilltop than bureaucracy below. “As it is an archaeological matter, only the agencies related to that can answer,” said Vidisha collector Anshul Gupta when asked about preservation efforts. As India hurtles deeper into the age of satellites and remote sensing, Bhuri Tori poses a stubborn question: can a nation preserve landmarks that first taught it how to measure itself?

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