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      Astronomical Orientations of Bora Ceremonial Grounds in Southeast Australia

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          Abstract

          Ethnographic evidence indicates that bora (initiation) ceremonial sites in southeast Australia, which typically comprise a pair of circles connected by a pathway, are symbolically reflected in the Milky Way as the 'Sky Bora'. This evidence also indicates that the position of the Sky Bora signifies the time of the year when initiation ceremonies are held. We use archaeological data to test the hypothesis that southeast Australian bora grounds have a preferred orientation to the position of the Milky Way in the night sky in August, when the plane of the galaxy from Crux to Sagittarius is roughly vertical in the evening sky to the south-southwest. We accomplish this by measuring the orientations of 68 bora grounds using a combination of data from the archaeological literature and site cards in the New South Wales Aboriginal Heritage Information Management System database. We find that bora grounds have a preferred orientation to the south and southwest, consistent with the Sky Bora hypothesis. Monte Carlo statistics show that these preferences were not the result of chance alignments, but were deliberate.

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          Orientations Of Linear Stone Arrangements in New South Wales

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            Author and article information

            Journal
            04 May 2013
            Article
            1305.0881
            4538317d-75d5-4a5c-ba0c-9207c6a77f17

            http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

            History
            Custom metadata
            Australian Archaeology, No. 77 (December 2013), in press
            physics.hist-ph physics.soc-ph

            General physics,History of physics
            General physics, History of physics

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