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552 results for "cultural astronomy" — page 1 of 28
ZH_2_12 — Agricultural Astronomy: Star-Based Planting and Harvest Calendars
Before modern calendars, weather services, and agricultural extension offices, farming communities worldwide used stellar observations to time their agricultural activities — planting, irrigation, harvesting, and animal
ZH_1_01 — Archaeoastronomy: Discipline, Debates, and Cultural Astronomy
Archaeoastronomy is the interdisciplinary study of how past cultures understood, used, and integrated celestial phenomena — the motions of the sun, moon, planets, and stars — into their architecture, ritual practices, ag
ZH_5_05 — Cross-Cultural Constellation Patterns: Connecting Star Groupings Worldwide
Every documented human culture groups stars into constellations or asterisms — named patterns that organize the sky into a readable, memorizable, and culturally meaningful map. Yet surprisingly few star groupings are uni
INTERDOC_64 — Cross-Cultural Constellations: Independent Invention vs. Diffusion as a Knowledge-Transmission Probe
The 88 modern IAU constellations are a cultural product — 48 from Ptolemy (~150 CE, derived from Mesopotamian/Babylonian sources), 12 from Keyser and de Houtman (~1596, Dutch East Indies), and 28 filled in by 17th–18th c
G_4_11 — Archaeoastronomy Methods and Systematic Evidence
Archaeoastronomy — the study of how past civilizations understood, observed, and used astronomical phenomena — has matured from a field plagued by speculative alignment claims into a rigorous interdisciplinary discipline
ZH_4_03 — Star Myths and Constellation Stories Across Cultures
Every human culture that has observed the night sky has organized the visible stars into patterns — constellations, asterisms, and star groups — and woven them into narrative frameworks that encode cosmological beliefs,
ZH_4_11 — Astronomical Mythology: Why Stars Were Named and Storied
Every known human culture has projected stories, characters, and meaning onto the stars — transforming patterns of light into mythological landscapes inhabited by gods, heroes, animals, and cosmic forces. Astronomical my
ZH_4_15 — Milky Way Mythology: Cultural Interpretations of the Galaxy Worldwide
The Milky Way — the luminous band of light stretching across the night sky, now understood as the disk of our home galaxy seen edge-on from within — has been one of humanity's most universally observed and mythologized c
ZH_3_12 — South American Archaeoastronomy Beyond the Inca
While the Inca astronomical tradition (the ceque system, the Intihuatana, and the dark-cloud constellations of the Milky Way) is the most thoroughly studied in South America, numerous pre-Inca and non-Inca civilizations
ZH_5_06 — Horizon Astronomy: Skyline Observations, Foresights, and Horizonal Calendars
Horizon astronomy — the practice of observing where celestial bodies rise and set along the natural skyline — is the most ancient, most widespread, and most practical form of astronomical observation. Unlike meridian tra
ZH_2_11 — Southeast Asian Astronomy: Thai, Burmese, Khmer, and Indonesian Traditions
The astronomical traditions of Southeast Asia — Thailand (Siam), Myanmar (Burma), Cambodia (Khmer), Java, Bali, and the wider Malay-Indonesian archipelago — represent a distinctive synthesis of Indian, indigenous, and (i
C_5_20 — Seasonal Ritual Cycles: Solstice, Equinox, and Agricultural Festivals
Seasonal ritual cycles — religious festivals, agricultural ceremonies, and sacred observances tied to the solstices, equinoxes, and the transitional points between them — represent humanity's oldest continuous relationsh
D_5_30 — Chichén Itzá: Maya Architecture, Astronomy, and Cultural Synthesis
Chichén Itzá, located in the northern Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico, is one of the largest, most diverse, and most intensively studied Maya archaeological sites, occupied from approximately 600 CE through the Spanish Conqu
W_1_30 — Alexander the Great: Conquest, Hellenization, and Cultural Fusion
Alexander III of Macedon (356–323 BCE), known as Alexander the Great, created the largest empire the ancient world had seen in just 13 years of campaigning — conquering from Greece to Egypt to the Indus Valley, covering
ZH_4_04 — Dogon Astronomy: Sirius B Debate and Modern Assessment
The Dogon are a West African people living on the Bandiagara Escarpment in Mali, known for a complex cosmological system documented by the French anthropologist Marcel Griaule in a series of publications beginning in 194
ZH_3_06 — Andean Dark Constellations and Milky Way Astronomy
Andean astronomical traditions, particularly as documented in Quechua-speaking communities of Peru and Bolivia and inferred from colonial-era Spanish accounts of Inca cosmology, are distinguished by a feature unique in w
ZH_3_19 — Inca Astronomy and Ceque System
Inca astronomy represents one of the most sophisticated indigenous astronomical traditions of the Americas, deeply embedded in the spatial, ritual, and agricultural organization of the Tawantinsuyu (Inca Empire, ~1438–15
ZH_3_04 — Chaco Canyon: Solar Markers and Pueblo Astronomy
Chaco Canyon (northwestern New Mexico) was the center of Ancestral Puebloan (formerly called Anasazi) civilization from approximately 850–1150 CE, featuring monumental Great Houses containing hundreds of rooms, extensive
ZH_3_11 — Arctic and Subarctic Astronomy: Inuit, Sámi, Siberian
The astronomy of Arctic and subarctic peoples — including the Inuit (across Canada, Alaska, and Greenland), Sámi (Fennoscandia), and Siberian cultures (Chukchi, Evenki, Yakut, and others) — represents adaptation to one o
ZH_3_08 — Archaeoastronomy of Mesoamerica: Teotihuacan, Monte Albán
Mesoamerican archaeoastronomy encompasses the astronomical knowledge and celestial alignments embedded in the architecture, urban planning, calendrical systems, and ritual practices of civilizations from central Mexico t
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