A rather obscure and poorly preserved small tablet from the Seleucid period found at Warka (ancient Uruk) enumerates the parts of the liver (with which the gall bladder is, as customary, associated) or the marks on it, called "station" and the like, and gives for each a correspondence with a God, a month, and a constellation. To quote some of the better understood lines: "The "station" is Enlil; month I; [Aries]. The "path" is Šamaš; month II; Taurus. The "sweet mouth" is Nusku; month III; Orion. The "strength" is Uraš; month IV; Cancer, Plow-star. The "gate of the palace" is Ninegal; month V; Regulus. The "bubble" is the Storm God Adad; month VI; Raven star. The gall bladder is Anu; month VII; Libra. The "finger" (identifiable as the processus pyramidalis) is God (broken); month VIII; Goat star."
“Astral Magic in Babylonia” by Erica Reiner (p 78)











