- ABORIGINES had a zodiac thousands of years before the first European equivalent,
according to a Melbourne academic.
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- John Morieson, of Swinburne University
in Melbourne, says that they had a highly sophisticated understanding of
the seasons and the world around them 23,000 years ago.
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- He also says that the Aborigines had
no need of a written language because everything could be read in the night
sky.
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- Further, because they have been recorded
as having eyesight five times better than whites, there would have been
no problem with reading the celestial data. The Aborigines' zodiac featured
40 different native birds and animals, including crows, eagles, parrots,
lorikeets and dancing men.
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- "A study of these sky creatures
reveals encyclopaedic oral knowledge, a thorough understanding of the seasons
and no need for a written culture," Mr Morieson says.
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- He adds that there is evidence for the
zodiac from Aboriginal folklore passed on in the 1840s by the now-lost
Boorong people. The most conspicuous elements in the zodiac are a giant
emu reposing between the Southern Cross and Scorpio; Gemini is formed by
a tortoise and a fantail cuckoo and a pair of Australian cranes make up
the elements of Magellan.
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- Carbon dating of the Boorong settlement
at Lake Tyrell, in Victoria, puts the information at 23,000 years old.
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- Mr Morieson worked for four years with
local Aborigines on data first gathered by a Victoria grazier, William
Stanbridge, and presented to the Philosophical Institute in Melbourne in
1857.
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- His material was based on first-hand
accounts from Boorong elders who identified 30 stars and constellations
used by tribal Aborigines. He recorded each Aboriginal term and its equivalent
in the European zodiac.
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- The work, which is expected to make a
significant impact on Aboriginal studies, has been accepted for publication
by Melbourne University Press.
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