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Australian Stonehenge (Wurdi Youang; Victoria)

EnolaGaia

I knew the job was dangerous when I took it ...
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This 2009 MIT Technology Review article describes (what is AFAIK) the first Neolithic Australian site to which astronomical alignments have been attributed.
The Mystery of Australia's Stonehenge

Aboriginal Australians have lived in Oz for the best part of 50,000 years, making them the world’s oldest culture by quite some margin. It also makes them the world’s first astronomers. However, years of prejudice have prevented the astronomical achievements of Aboriginal Australians from being fully appreciated–something that Ray Norris and Duane Hamacher at Macquarie University, in Sydney, want to change.

They’ve put together an impressive account of the astronomical achievements of Aboriginal Australians. It is fairly well known, at least in Australia, that these people had their own mythology associated with the night skies, centered on the idea that the world was created in “the Dreaming” by ancestral spirits whose presence can still be seen, both on the land and in the sky ...

But it turns out that Aboriginal Australians also had a sophisticated understanding of astronomical events, such as solar and lunar eclipses. That’s all the more amazing given that total solar eclipses are rare, occurring over any one piece of land only every three or four generations, and that any information about them must have been passed from generation to generation in the form of songs, stories, and cave paintings that can still be seen today.

But the most eye-opening revelation, for me at least, is the existence of an “Australian Stonehenge” called Wurdi Youang, in Victoria, whose age is unknown but obviously predates European settlement.

Wurdi Youang is an egg-shaped ring of stones about 50 meters across. Some of the stones have significant astronomical alignments. For example, some stones seem to indicate the position of the setting sun at the equinoxes and solstices, although there is some disagreement over this idea. Like Stonehenge in the U.K., no records of its use survive, and consequently, nobody knows what it was used for. ...

FULL STORY: https://www.technologyreview.com/s/413695/the-mystery-of-australias-stonehenge/
 
Here are the bibliographic details and abstract from the published research report about Wurdi Youang. The complete paper is accessible at the link below.


The Astronomy of Aboriginal Australia
Ray P. Norris and Duane W. Hamacher
The Role of Astronomy in Society and Culture: Proceedings IAU Symposium No. 260, 2009
D. Valls-Gabaud & A. Boksenberg, eds.
Cambridge University Press, 2009, pp. 39-47.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1743921311002122

Abstract. The traditional cultures of Aboriginal Australians include a significant astronomical component, which is usually reported in terms of songs or stories associated with stars and constellations. Here we argue that the astronomical components extend further, and include a search for meaning in the sky, beyond simply mirroring the earth-bound understanding. In particular, we have found that traditional Aboriginal cultures include a deep understanding of the motion of objects in the sky, and that this knowledge was used for practical purposes such as constructing calendars. We also present evidence that traditional Aboriginal Australians made careful records and measurements of cyclical phenomena, and paid careful attention to unexpected phenomena such as eclipses and meteorite impacts.

PDF File: https://arxiv.org/pdf/0906.0155.pdf
 
I'm wondering if that's projecting Eurocentric ideas?

The Aborigines had complex language and sophisticated ideas...maybe they didn't need to build?

Sub Saharan Africa possesses few large buildings but that didn't mean they lacked in civilisation and technology, did they?
 
Aborigines probably didn't build much because they were always having to move around within their territory.
That's the hunter-gatherer lifestyle.
Similar situation with many tribes all over Africa.
 
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