Astronomy:Kumeyaay astronomy
Geographical range | El Vallecito |
---|---|
Period | 7000 BCE - c. 1875 |
Kumeyaay astronomy or cosmology (Kumeyaay: My Uuyow, "sky knowledge") comprises the astronomical knowledge of the Kumeyaay people, a Native American group whose traditional homeland occupies what is now Southern California in the United States and adjacent parts of northern Baja California in Mexico.[1] A deeply rooted cosmological belief system was developed and followed by the Kumeyaay civilization based on this knowledge including the computing of time (Kumeyaay Mat’taam).[2]
The first evidence of astronomical observations and visual registration was discovered in the El Vallecito archeological zone. The "Men in a square" rupestric painting located at El Diablito area of El Vallecito depicted a square that aligns with sunlight on the Fall equinox. These paintings were made by the Kumeyaay people, possibly during nomadic travels.[3][4] Kumeyaay sand paintings and rock art modeled the passage of the sun, moon, and constellations.[5]
Observation areas were made by the Kumeyaay to watch and register astronomical events. However many were destroyed by vandals before protection measures were instituted.[6]
Astronomical objects
- Hatotkeur (Spine of the Sky) - Milky Way
Constellations:[7]
Name | Meaning | Western equivalent |
---|---|---|
Kwechnyay | Hunter | part of Orion |
Hachaa | Six laughing girls | Pleiades |
Hawitai | Garter snake | Lyra |
Akewli | Chaser | part of Orion |
Hechkullk | Wolf | Auriga, Taurus |
Shallymat | Arm | Big Dipper |
Shally | Hand | Leo |
Pehkay | Seven | Cygnus |
Llykuushirra | Racer snake | Cassiopaeia |
Menniih | Tarantula | Canis Major/Minor |
Namuuly | Bear | Gemini |
'Ehwii | Rattlesnake | Draco |
Shuluk | Lightning | Scorpius |
Hetepaa | Coyote | Bootes |
Shaaii | Buzzard | Virgo |
'Ahaak | Raven | Aquila |
Emuu | Mountain sheep | Orion's Belt |
Awi yuk | Gopher snake | Corvus/Hydra |
Nyemii | Bobcat | Piscis Austrinus |
See also
References
- ↑ Hedges, K. (1981-01-01). "Winter solstice observatory sites in Kumeyaay Territory, San Diego County, California.". Archaeoastronomy in the Americas: 151–156. Bibcode: 1981aram.conf..151H.
- ↑ "Kumeyaay: Native Californians - San Diego Museum of Man" (in en-US). San Diego Museum of Man. http://www.museumofman.org/exhibits/kumeyaay-native-californians/.
- ↑ "El INAH identifica evento arqueoastronómico en pintura rupestre de El Vallecito (INAH identified archeoastronomic event in cave paintings at El Vallecito)". Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. http://www.inah.gob.mx/es/boletines/4995-el-inah-identifica-evento-arqueoastronomico-en-pintura-rupestre-de-el-vallecito.
- ↑ Ray A. Williamson (1987). Living the Sky: The Cosmos of the American Indian. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 272–3. ISBN 978-0-8061-2034-8. https://archive.org/details/livingskycosmoso00will/page/272.
- ↑ Richard L. Carrico, (ed) Strangers in a Stolen Land: Indians of San Diego County from Prehistory to the New Deal, Sunbelt Publications, 2008, ISBN:9780932653826
- ↑ As it can be read in the information card about Kumeyaay astronomy at the San Diego Museum of Man. 2016.
- ↑ Connolly, Michael (2016). Maay Uuyow: Kumeyaay Cosmology. Alpine, California: Shuluk. pp. 43. ISBN 9780692707661.
External links
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumeyaay astronomy.
Read more |