An atypical image of BaU is represented on the seal of Ninkala with a presentation scene in the upper register and swimming geese or swans and two scorpions in the lower register (fig. 48). Ninkala’s profession ‘midwife of BaU’ identifies the enthroned goddess as BaU, whose role as ‘great physician’ is invoked by the upright snake. 923 Although the seal of Ninkala is unprovenanced, the name of the goddess BaU indicates it comes from Girsu (Tello), where BaU had her major temple.
https://archive.org/stream/AsherGreveWestenholz2013GoddessesInContext/Asher-Greve_Westenholz_2013_Goddesses_in_Context_djvu.txt
Fifty-Ninth General Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America. (1957)
American Journal of Archaeology
Vol. 62, No. 2 (Apr., 1958), pp. 221-228
"Bau or Baba, or Gula, goddess of childbirth, life and healing. Scholars related her sym-bol to her functions and the omega was explained as a pair of swaddling bands or the umbilical cord."
https://www.jstor.org/stable/502358
utoronto.ca
wjudaism.library.utoronto.ca
"In the Akkadian mythology, 'Rechem Raba,' according to Jakov Klein, means the womb of a female god" Shifra Shin and Jakov Klein, In Those Distant Days: Anthology of Mesopotamian Literature in Hebrew (Tel Aviv: Am Oved, 2010), p. 101
Dvora Lederman Daniely, David Yellin College, Jerusalem, Israel (2017)
“Kings of People Shall Be of Her: Sarah, the Hebrew Female God"
https://wjudaism.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/wjudaism/article/view/29732/22239
כיוון=שמאל