Definition of "geomancy"
geomancy
noun
usually uncountable, plural geomancies
A method of divination using earth or the ground, such as interpreting markings on the ground or how handfuls of dirt land when tossed.
Quotations
The Arabian Geomancy, said to have been first practised by Almadul, was more recondite, being founded on the effects of motion under the crust of the earth, the chinks thus produced, and the noises or thunderings heard; its foundation was the dogma of Aristotle, that "the moving of the heaven is everlasting, and is the beginning and cause of all inferior movings."
1855, Edward Smedley et al., The Occult Sciences, London: Richard Griffin, page 314
The fountain or the well represents a point where invisible energies flow into a society; in geomancy these would be known as "power points." Where these energies are, elementals or genii loci or nature spirits congregate.
1981, William Irwin Thompson, The Time Falling Bodies Take to Light: Mythology, Sexuality and the Origins of Culture, London: Rider/Hutchinson & Co., page 230
Quotations
geomancy [...] The pretended art of divining future events, or of ascertaining the luckiness or unluckiness of any event or locality, by means of signs connected with the earth [...] or, as in China, from the configuration and aspect of a particular region in its relation to some other.
1899, William Dwight Whitney, The Century Dictionary, volume III, page 61