Note 220:

Kālcakra The Wheel of Time. In conversation, both Karṇa Vīr and Kamāro also used this to refer to a sacrifice to Juma Kāl and Juma Dūt, another parallel with Kānphaṭa yogins. While cakra ordinarily means "wheel," it also means a "print," as in "fingerprint," and can also refer to a maṇḍala drawn with rice flour on the ground, or, more generally still, any magical diagram or print. A very dangerous witch technique is known as cakra gaḍne, "to bury a print," popularly considered to be the same as pulta chekne, note š516.