
Indigenous People and Relating to the Cosmos with Dr. Ed Krupp of the Griffith Observatory - Rock Art 17
Dr. Ed Krupp is Director of the Griffith Astronomical Observatory in Los Angeles, California. He is a world class scholar and is a pioneer in the study of how indigenous people, the world over, relate to the cosmos, saw the celestial realm and provided prehistoric astronomical observatories as sun, moon, and star watchers. These activities are of course memorialized in rock art and in rock features constructed on the land to view the heavens and predict important seasonal changes in the sky world. Links * California Rock Art Foundation [https://www.carockart.org/] * Griffith Observatory [http://www.griffithobservatory.org/] Contact * Chris Webster * [email protected] * Twitter: @archeowebby [https://www.twitter.com/archeowebby] * Dr. Alan Garfinkel * [email protected] Affiliates * Wildnote [http://www.wildnoteapp.com/] * TeePublic [https://www.teepublic.com/?ref_id=5724&ref_type=aff] * Timeular [https://timeular.com/ref/chriswebster/] Find this show on the educational podcast app, Lyceum.fm! [http://lyceum.fm/]
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Show Notes
Dr. Ed Krupp is Director of the Griffith Astronomical Observatory in Los Angeles, California. He is a world class scholar and is a pioneer in the study of how indigenous people, the world over, relate to the cosmos, saw the celestial realm and provided prehistoric astronomical observatories as sun, moon, and star watchers. These activities are of course memorialized in rock art and in rock features constructed on the land to view the heavens and predict important seasonal changes in the sky world.
Links
Contact
- Chris Webster
- [email protected]
- Twitter: @archeowebby
- Dr. Alan Garfinkel
- [email protected]
Affiliates
Find this show on the educational podcast app, Lyceum.fm!
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