Calendar in the Sky
Our ancestors built devices to measure the passing of the seasons. In Chaco Canyon, in New Mexico, there is a great roofless ceremonial kiva or temple, dating from the eleventh century. On June 21, the longest day of the year in the northern hemisphere, a shaft of sunlight enters a window at dawn and slowly moves so that it covers a special niche. But this happens only around June 21. We can imagine the proud Anasazi people, who described themselves as The Ancient Ones, gathered in their pews every June 21, dressed in feathers and rattles an turquoise to celebrate the power of the Sun. They also monitored the apparent motion of the MoonL the 28 hugher niches in the kiva may represent the number of days for the moon to return to the same position among the constellations. These people paid close attention to the Sun and the Moon and the stars.
Other devices based on similar ideas are found at Angkor Wat in Cambodia; Stonehenge in England; Abu Simbel in Egypt; Chicen Itza in Mexico; and the Great Plains in North America. Some alleged calendrical devices may just possibly be due to chance – an accidental alignment of window and niche on June 21, say. But there are other devices wonderfully different. At one locale in the American Southwest is a set of three upright slabs which were moved from their original position about 1,000 years ago.
The spiral up there in the skies is a metaphor of immortality. Image : Animated Colorful Spinning Eleptical Cercle © Elena |
A spiral, a little like a galaxy has been carved in the rocks. On June 21, the first day of summer, a dagger of sunlight pouring through an opening between the slabs bisects the spiral; and on December 21, the first day of winter, there are two daggers of sunlight that flank the spiral, a unique application of the midday sun to read the calendar in the sky.
But why did people all over the world make such en effort to learn astronomy? We hunted gazelles and antelope and buffalo whose migrations ebbed and flowed with the seasons. Fruits an nuts were ready to be picked in some times but not in others. When we invented agriculture, we had to take care to plant and harvest our crops in the right season. Annual meetings of far-flung nomadic tribes were set for prescribed times.
The ability to read the calendar in the skies was literally a matter of life and death. The reappearance of the crescent moon after the new moon; the return of the Sun after a total eclipse; the rising of the Sun in the morning after its troublesome absence at night were noted by people around the world: these phenomena spoke to our ancestors of the possibility of surviving death. Up there in the skies was also a metaphor of immortality.
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