1 Enoch 18:2
1 I saw the treasuries of all the winds: I saw how He had equipped them for the whole creation and the firm foundations of the earth. 2 And I saw the cornerstone of the earth: I saw the four winds that support the earth and the firmament of heaven. 3 And I saw how the winds stretch out the vaults of heaven and have their station between heaven and earth; these are the pillars of heaven. 4 I saw the winds of heaven which turn and guide the course of the sun and all the stars to their setting. 5 I saw the winds on the earth carrying the clouds; I saw the paths of the angels. I saw at the end of the earth the firmament of heaven above. And I proceeded and saw a place that burns day and night, where there are seven mountains of magnificent stones, three towards the east, and three towards the south.
2 Enoch 4:1
Secrets of Enoch1 They presented to me the elders and leaders of the celestial orders, showing me two hundred angels who govern the stars and their services to the heavens. They fly with their wings and surround all those who navigate.
Notes and References
"... That 2 Enoch presumes the Book of the Watchers in its redacted form—rather than simply oral or exegetical motifs about Enoch or the fallen angels—is suggested by the echoes of cosmological and eschatological traditions from the second half of the Book of the Watchers, which recounts Enoch’s tours to the ends of the earth (1 Enoch 17–36) ... A focus on cosmology leads us to notice other points of continuity as well. The first sights on Enoch’s tour in the Book of the Watchers, for example, are the “storehouses of all the winds” with which God “arranged all that is created.” These are the winds that blow upon the inhabited earth and are the forces that bear the earth, support the firmament, stretch out the skies, and move the sun, stars, and clouds across the heavens (1 Enoch 18:1–5). In the first heaven of 2 Enoch, the winds have become angels. These are “the elders, the rulers of the stellar orders ... the angels who govern the stars, the heavenly combinations” (2 Enoch 4:1) — those who dwell in the lowest heaven alongside the treasuries of snow, cold, clouds, and dew, and those angels who guard them ..."
Reed, Annette Y. 2 Enoch and the Trajectories of Jewish Cosmology: From Mesopotamian Astronomy to Greco-Egyptian Philosophy in Roman Egypt (pp. 1-24) Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy, No. 22, 2014