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         Archaeoastronomy:     more books (103)
  1. Exploring Ancient Skies: An Encyclopedic Survey of Archaeoastronomy by David H. Kelley, Eugene F. Milone, 2004-11-19
  2. Mysteries and Discoveries of Archaeoastronomy: From Giza to Easter Island by Giulio Magli, 2009-04-28
  3. Archaeoastronomy in the Americas (Ballena Press Anthropological Papers)
  4. Archaeoastronomy in the Old World by D. C. Heggie, 2009-12-17
  5. Ethnoastronomy & Archaeoastronomy in the American Tropics (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, V. 385)
  6. Archaeoastronomy in the New World: American Primitive Astronomy
  7. Archaeoastronomy of southeast Colorado and the Oklahoma Panhandle by William R McGlone, 1999
  8. African Cultural Astronomy: Current Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy research in Africa (Astrophysics and Space Science Proceedings)
  9. East-Asian Archaeoastronomy: Historical Records of Astronomical Observations of China, Japan and Korea (Earth Space Institute Book Series) by Zhenoao Xu, W. Pankenier, et all 2000-11-17
  10. Archaeoastronomy: Skywatching in the Native American Southwest (Plateau (Flagstaff, Ariz. : 1939), Vol. 63, No. 2,) by Ronald McCoy, 1994-03
  11. The Petroglyph Calendar: An Archaeoastronomy Adventure by Hubert A. Jr. Allen, 2001-03-01
  12. Archaeoastronomy in Pre-Columbian American
  13. Archaeoastronomy and the Roots of Science (Aaas Selected Symposium, 71)
  14. World Archaeoastronomy: Selected Papers from the 2nd Oxford International Conference on Archaeoastronomy Held at Merida, Yucatan, Mexico, 13-17 January 1986

1. Archaeoastronomy Pinpoints Equinox, Solstice And Cross Quarter Moments Throughou
Overview of archaeoastronomy. Includes maps, almanacs and video archive.
http://www.archaeoastronomy.com/
Archaeoastronomy Spotlights the Dawn of Human History documentary
US Naval Obs.

Big Bear Solar O.

Old News DVD

2008 Northern Hemisphere seasonal cusps in UT/GMT, Universal or Greenwich Mean Time
Earth's annual orbit is The Master Clock because the common yardstick of our lives is the year . Years are divided by the seasons just as calendars are segmented by months. Mechanical and digital timepieces measure intervals that split into hours, minutes and seconds each spin of our planet on its axis. Yet, it is the earth's regular, rhythmic loop around the sun that standardizes our timeframe of reference, regardless of geographic distances separating us from our acquaintances or generational distances separating us from our ancestors.
Our planet moves around the sun in an elliptical circuit deviating less than a second from one year to the next. Together we proceed through 8 significant, yet invisible, thresholds within each orbit. These spatial milestones mark the beginning, midpoint and end of each of our seasons. Equinoxes Solstices and Cross Quarters are moments shared planet-wide, defined by the earth's tilt and the sun's position on

2. Archaeoastronomy - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Early archaeoastronomy began by surveying alignments of Megalithic stones in the British Isles and sites like Auglish in County Londonderry in an attempt to
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeoastronomy
Archaeoastronomy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The sun rising over Stonehenge at the 2005 Summer Solstice The rising sun illuminates the inner chamber of Newgrange , Ireland, on winter solstice and a week either side, sky conditions permitting. west side of El Castillo at Chich©n Itz¡ , Mexico The Great Pyramid of Giza (a.k.a. Kheops or Khufu) near Cairo, Egypt, constructed ~2570 BCE, world's tallest building until 1300 CE Charles Piazzi Smyth professor of astronomy, University of Edinburgh and Astronomer Royal of Scotland from 1845 to 1888 illustration from Piazzi Smyth's book Our Inheritance in the Great Pyramid with claims of prophetic measurements therein Richard Anthony Proctor British astronomer, prolific author, international lecturer Joseph Lockyer British astronomer, founded science journal Nature in 1869 Early archaeoastronomy began by surveying alignments of Megalithic stones in the British Isles and sites like Auglish in County Londonderry in an attempt to find statistical patterns Archaeoastronomy (also spelled archeoastronomy ) is a scientific field seeking to better understand the lives of people in the past through their megalithic petroglyphic and other ancient memorials constructed, in whole or in part, to honor

3. HTML REDIRECT
A comprehensive introduction to archaeoastronomy including a look at various people groups and case studies of sites.
http://library.thinkquest.org/C0118421/

4. A Brief Introduction To Archaeoastronomy
The study of the astronomical practices, celestial lore, mythologies, religions and worldviews of all ancient cultures we call archaeoastronomy.
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~tlaloc/archastro/cfaar_as.html
Center for Archaeoastronomy Main Page NEWS Find Out More What is Archaeoastronomy? More About the Center for Archaeoastronomy More About ISAAC Publications of the Center ... Lost Codex Used Book Sale Outside Links Archaeoastronomy Archaeology Astronomy History of Science ... Museums
A Brief Introduction to Archaeoastronomy
The study of the astronomical practices, celestial lore, mythologies, religions and world-views of all ancient cultures we call archaeoastronomy . We like to describe archaeoastronomy, in essence, as the "anthropology of astronomy", to distinguish it from the "history of astronomy". You may already know that many of the great monuments and ceremonial constructions of early civilizations were astronomically aligned. The accurate cardinal orientation of the Great Pyramid at Giza in Egypt or the Venus alignment of the magnificent Maya Palace of the Governor at Uxmal in Yucatan are outstanding examples. We learn much about the development of science and cosmological thought from the study of both the ancient astronomies and surviving indigenous traditions around the world. With its roots in the Stonehenge discoveries of the 1960s, archaeoastronomy and ethnoastronomy (the study of contemporary native astronomies) have blossomed into active interdisciplinary fields that are providing new perspectives for the history of our species' interaction with the cosmos.

5. Archaeoastronomy, University Of Texas Press
The journal produced by the Center for archaeoastronomy on an annual basis. Published by University of Texas Press.
http://www.utexas.edu/utpress/journals/jarch.html
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Archaeoastronomy
The Journal of Astronomy in Culture
The Journal of the Center for Archaeoastronomy
Editor: John B. Carlson, Director
Co-Editors: David S. P. Dearborn, Clive L. N. Ruggles, Stephen McCluskey, Stanislaw Iwaniszewski
Book Review Editor: Stephen McCluskey, Department of History, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506 The Journal of The Center for Archaeoastronomy and ISAAC, the International Society for Archaeoastronomy and Astronomy in Culture . The Center is an independent foundation created to advance research, education, and public awareness of archaeoastronomy, including ethnoastronomy; and to promote archaeoastronomy as a discipline within the sciences, the arts, and the humanities. Also available is the online companion publication, on the website of The Center for Archaeoastronomy. provides the latest news in archaeoastronomy, including conference notices, new books and web sites, as well as forthcoming events from the Center and ISAAC. Submission Guidelines Volume XX, 2006

6. Archaeoastronomy
archaeoastronomy. Clioaudio on a bad day. About Me CV The Research archaeoastronomy? Dates / Sunrise / Sunset / Solar Declination Figures
http://archaeoastronomy.wordpress.com/
Archaeoastronomy
Clioaudio on a bad day

7. Archaeoastronomy - Crystalinks
archaeoastronomy is the study and interpretation of solar, lunar and stellar alignments found at ancient monuments such as pyramids, towers, ground lines
http://www.crystalinks.com/archaeoastronomy.html
Archaeoastronomy
Archaeoastronomy is the study and interpretation of solar, lunar and stellar alignments found at ancient monuments such as pyramids, towers, ground lines such as the Nazca Lines in Peru, and megalithic sites Stonehenge, Carnac, Newgrange, etc. These monuments are on major planetary grid points. Archaeoastronomy uses celestial objects
to mark time, much like calendars do. Archaeoastronomy investigates how the ancients applied astronomy in their lives, as well as in their art and architecture. The study of Archaeoastronomy is a cross disciplinary approach which examines the mythology, religion and world views of prehistoric and ancient civilizations through the means of their astronomical practices. It is the study of the study of contemporary native astronomies. In examining the observations of such peoples, it is possible to gain a certain insight into the ways in which they constructed their own universes and therefore provide a more holistic understanding of the means and motivations of the culture as a whole. The astronomical inquiry of the ancients must be looked upon as a mechanism of observation and prediction which closely tied them to their environments, depending upon various cultural, religious and mythological bases for validation in the process.

8. ISAAC The International Society For Archaeoastronomy And
An introduction to ISAAC The International Society for archaeoastronomy and Astronomy in Culture.
http://www.archaeoastronomy.org/
Redirection to here

9. Cloudbait Observatory Archaeoastronomy
Well developed site featuring articles and photographs on a number of significant sites and their archaeoastronomy.
http://www.cloudbait.com/archaeoastronomy.html
Archaeoastronomy We can assume that people have been observing the stars for as long as we have had minds enough to wonder. Throughout most of history there have been two reasons that people looked to the heavens: as a tool for predicting seasonal events such as planting and harvest times, and as a source of spiritual guidance and mythological explanation. Rare elements of true science have occasionally shown up, for example in ancient Greece, but it is only in the last few hundred years that we can really say that astronomy has become a science in the modern sense. Sadly, we still live in a world of irrational people who are prepared to believe in astrology and other nonsense. For these people, I have only sympathy that they have given up the very essence of what makes us human: our ability to reason. For our ancestors, who didn't know better, I give credit for the observations and discoveries that were made and which contributed to our knowledge today. When I travel, I always enjoy visiting sites with some historic astronomical significance, and I share here some of those places.
British
Aztec
Egyptian
American Indian
Indian
Mayan Chris L Peterson

10. Journal For The History Of Astronomy
Academic journal for history of astronomy and archaeoastronomy.
http://www.shpltd.co.uk/aa.html
HOME HISTORY OF SCIENCE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY ARCHAEOASTRONOMY ... E-MAIL
ARCHAEOASTRONOMY
From 2003 Archaeoastronomy was no longer published as a separate journal but was incorporated into enlarged issues of Journal for the History of Astronomy Contents Sample Issue Download

11. ArchaeoAstronomy - An Interview With David Dearborn
An interview with David Dearborn, on his research at the interface between astronomy and archaeology.
http://archaeology.about.com/cs/archaeoastronomy/a/dearborn.htm
zGCID=" test0" zGCID=" test0 test4" zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') You are here: About Education Archaeology Archaeologists ... Interviews ArchaeoAstronomy - An Interview with David Dearborn Archaeology Education Archaeology Essentials ... Help Caracol (The Observatory), Chichen Itza, Mexico Jim Gateley (c) 2006 Email to a friend Print this Page Submit to Digg Archaeoastronomy Resources Archaeoastronomy Inca Archaeology Agriculture and Pastoralism Observatories and Boks Megalithic Sites Chaco 1054 SkyWatchers by Anthony Aveni More on David Dearborn David Dearborn (Lawrence Livermore) Archaeoastronomy: The Journal of Astronomy in Culture Most Popular The Sphinx, Old Kingdom, Egypt Letter of Intent Research Paper Topics Terracotta Army ... Megalithic Sites
ArchaeoAstronomy
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An Interview with David Dearborn
David S. P. Dearborn is an astrophysicist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory , and co-editor of Archaeoastronomy: A Journal for Astronomy in Culture as well as . In addition, he is a founding member of ISAAC (the

12. Archaeoastronomy » The Study Of Astronomy In Culture
Alun Salt s weblog, musing on archaeoastronomy.
http://archaeoastronomy.co.uk/
Archaeoastronomy
The study of astronomy in culture Skip navigation
About this site
This used to be the site of my weblog. I've moved that to archaeoastronomy.wordpress.com and now I'm using this as an index of various archaeoastronomy articles I've written for it with some I've seen elsewhere. If you're looking for a directory of archaeoastronomy links, then the Open Directory project is good. If you're looking for Archaeoastronomy organisations, then there's ISAAC and SEAC and if you're interested in alternative archaeology there's the Hall of Ma'at
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Reviews of relevant books. Not comprehensive.
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13. Archaeoastronomy
An overview of the theoretical foundations of archaeoastronomy with a case study of the Anazazi Culture.
http://www.geocities.com/Wellesley/6265/papers/theory/archaeoastronomy.html
A Critical Look at Archaeoastronomy and the Anasazi Culture of the American Southwest The following research paper was written after attending Dr. Paul Browns, Archaeological fieldschool to the American Southwest, and will be presented at the Spring 2,000 Undergraduate Research Conference at Minnesota State University, Mankato. The science of archaeoastronomy While the Oxford conferences and the adjunct papers produced for it continue to have their place within the relative canon of archaeoastronomical thought, such papers have also brought out some of the major flaws in such a blooming science as archaeoastronomy. Such flaws, though similarly faced by the disciplines of archaeology and anthropology within their theoretical coming of age, have contributed to the almost complete dismissal of archaeoastronomical finings by archaeology itself. Ultimately, the reasons for such a dismissal law within the question of whether archaeoastronomy is truly relevant to archaeology or not and for that matter if it is relevant does such information truly at the continuum of archaeological information. , in the constellation canis major, may appear to astronomers to have some archaeology or anthropological relevance, such studies are far removed from actual archaeological research. In particular, what is anything can be defined or taken from a study of the color of Canis Major? What can be learned from studying the differing ways in which cultures understood culture of their own cosmological or mythological place? Does such information add to the advancement or knowledge of a human cultural universal? In the case of Sirius A, while the color of the star may be particularly intriguing for astronomers, it is obvious on a cultural level, that different cultures will look at colors in differing ways, and thus the only thing added to the study of archaeology by such research is a look at the world view or mythology of a given culture, something which archaeology and anthropology could have done even without any astronomical help.

14. Archaeoastronomy - MSN Encarta
archaeoastronomy, study of the varied astronomical achievements of ancient peoples, extending from prehistoric times to the advanced cultures of the
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761575971/Archaeoastronomy.html
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Archaeoastronomy
Encyclopedia Article Find Print E-mail Blog It Archaeoastronomy , study of the varied astronomical achievements of ancient peoples, extending from prehistoric times to the advanced cultures of the Middle East and Latin America. Such study involves the combined efforts of astronomers, archaeologists, ethnographers, and other scientists to interpret the meaning of architectural remains and written records of astronomical significance. Such remains range from rock paintings, the medicine wheels of native North Americans, and much larger megalithic structures, such as Britain's Stonehenge, to the sophisticated calendars developed by the Egyptians and Maya. The remnants of cultures throughout the world give evidence of their concern with the complex regularity of the motions of the sun, moon, and stars and with unusual occurrences such as the appearance of a nova or comet in the sky. Besides the simple fact that the sky was a dominating feature of the human world in ancient times—a fact obscured for people in advanced modern civilizations by the prevalence of artificial lighting—the regularity of celestial events provided ancient peoples with the best means for bringing order to their understanding of the world. It enabled them to measure the passage of time, to predict the recurrence of seasonal events (an essential for agriculture), to undertake extensive navigations, and to develop the calendars needed for their complex societies.

15. Megalithic Sites In Ireland; Astronomy;Future Observations
Comprehensive Astronomical analysis of Irish Megalithic sites.
http://www.bluhorizonlines.org/
This is an ongoing research project into the Astronomical significance of Megalithic sites in Ireland
http://www.bluhorizonlines.org
Educational, informative, comprehensive,
and now with diagram animation!!
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Eclipse Icon 3340BC (see Loughcrew) Zenith Post Plan 5519BC (see Knowth)
21 st. Century Archaeoastronomy
Technolithic Observations For The Record Petroglyph Decipherment ... Radiometric Measurements
Cairn E Ground Plan (see Carrowkeel) K52 Iconography (see Newgrange)
Celtic Cross (see Photo Gallery)
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16. History Of Astronomy: Topics: Archaeoastronomy, Ancient Astronomy And Ethnoastro
With documents about archaeoastronomy in general and in South America, as well as links. Search for more archaeoastronomy sources with Alta Vista.
http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_items_archaeo.html
History of Astronomy Topics
History of Astronomy: Topics: Archaeoastronomy, Ancient Astronomy and Ethnoastronomy
Deutsche Fassung

17. ArchNet: Archaeoastronomy
Listing of archaeoastronomy Links by Continent Listing of archaeoastronomy Links by Country Listing of archaeoastronomy Links by Region
http://archnet.asu.edu/topical/Selected_Topics/Archaeoastronomy.php
Archaeoastronomy
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Listing of All Links for Archaeoastronomy
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18. Archaeoastronomy Pages By James Q. Jacobs
A hub page with links to all ancient astronomy related articles by James Q. Jacobs. Bibliography.
http://www.jqjacobs.net/astro/archaeoastronomy.html

19. Earth Mysteries
Chris Witcombe of Sweet Briar College provides an illustrated history of the astronomical interpretation of Stonehenge. Part of Earth Mysteries.
http://witcombe.sbc.edu/earthmysteries/EMStonehengeD.html
written and produced by
Chris Witcombe
Sweet Briar College witcombe@sbc.edu
Archaeoastronomy at Stonehenge
Already in the 18th century the British antiquarian William Stukeley had noticed that the horseshoe of great trilithons and the horseshoe of 19 bluestones at Stonehenge opened up in the direction of the midsummer sunrise. It was quickly surmised that the monument must have been deliberately oriented and planned so that on midsummer's morning the sun rose directly over the Heel Stone and the first rays shone into the centre of the monument between the open arms of the horseshoe arrangement. View from the center of Stonehenge towards the Heel Stone , and a photograph of the sun rising over the Heel Stone This discovery has had tremendous impact on how Stonehenge has been interpreted. For Stukeley in the 18th century and Sir Norman Lockyer in the first years of the 20th century, this alignment implied a ritualistic connection with sun worship and it was generally concluded that Stonehenge was constructed as a temple to the sun. More recently, though, the astronomer Gerald Hawkins has argued that Stonehenge is not merely aligned with solar and lunar astronomical events, but can be used to predict other events such as eclipses. In other words, Stonehenge was more than a temple, it was an astronomical calculator.

20. Ligustic Archaeoastronomy
Ligurian archaeoastronomy, mainly in Italian but with some English and German translations.
http://www.archaeoastronomy.it/index2.htm
Ligustic Archaeoastronomy
Professional site were are showed several studies of archaeoastronomy and megalitism, rupestral engraving, palaeoethnology and archaeology in Liguria and out of Liguria (Italy). If you want e-mail us, click here. - CONSTRUCTION DATE 01/04/2001 - - LAST UPDATE 08/01/2008 -
Our archaeoastronomy articles published

Meetings and Conferences

IISL international congress of archaeoastronomy
Sanremo - Italy - 2002 ... Links No parts of this site may be reproduced in any manner without permission from the autors.
some of ours studies of archaeoastronomy: Site location Latitud Longitud Altitude mt.230 a.s.l.; Site location Latitud Longitud Altitude Isola di Bergeggi (sv); mt.53 a.s.l.; Site location Latitud Longitud Altitude Bene Vagienna frazione Roncaglia (Cn); mt.354 a.s.l.;

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