Back to Stellarium

Boorong

skycultures/boorong/description.md

26.13.6 KB
Original Source

Boorong

Introduction

One hundred and forty years ago, a Boorong family at Lake Tyrrell (North-Western Victoria, Australia) told William Stanbridge something of their stories relating to the night sky. Some forty stars, constellations and other celestial phenomena were named and located. He wrote them down and related this information to the Philosophical Institute in Melbourne in 1857. In his paper he wrote down the Aboriginal term and gave its European equivalent. What John Morieson has done is look closely at these celestial phenomena, attempt to satisfactorily identity them and to imitate the way the Boorong people may have seen them. John's interpretation was used to create the constellation figures in Stellarium.

The Boorong were very much acquainted with the night sky, and William Stanbridge wrote in 1857 that they "Pride themselves upon knowing more of Astronomy than any other tribe".

Description

Constellations and other celestial objects

NameExplanationCelestial Clue
<notr>Berm-berm-gle</notr>Red-kneed dotterelAlpha and Beta Centauri
<notr>Boorong</notr>Night; small mallee; starry firmamentStarry firmament at night
<notr>Bunya</notr>Ring-tail possumTop star in Southern Cross
<notr>Chargee Gnowee</notr>Elder sister, sister of the sunVenus
<notr>Bittur</notr>Larvae of the woodant
<notr>Collenbitchick</notr>Species of antDouble star in head of Capricornus
<notr>Collowgulloric War</notr>Female crow, wife of WarEta Carinae
<notr>Colowgulloric Warepil</notr>Female eagle, wife of WarepilRigel In Orion
<notr>Djuit</notr>Red-rumped parrotAntares
<notr>Gellarlec</notr>Pink cockatooAldebaran
<notr>Ginabongbearp</notr>Sulphur-crested white cockatoo; pulling up daylightJupiter
<notr>Gnowee</notr>Day; SunSun
<notr>Karik Karik</notr>Spear thrower; Australian KestrelTwo stars at end of Scorpius
<notr>Kourt-chin</notr>Male and female brolgaClouds of Magellan
<notr>Kulkanbulla</notr>Two teenage boysBelt and Scabbard of Orion
<notr>Lamankurrk</notr>Girls, young womenPleiades
<notr>Marpeankurrk</notr>Meat ant; treecreeperArcturus
<notr>Millee</notr>Murray RiverPart of the Milky Way
<notr>Mindi</notr>The maned snakePart of the Milky Way
<notr>Mityan</notr>QuollMoon
<notr>Neilloan</notr>Mallee fowlLyra
<notr>Nurrumbunguttias</notr>Old man, black faced mallee kangarooWhite aura of the Milky Way
<notr>Otchocut</notr>Great fishDelphinus
<notr>Porkelong toute</notr>Loss of toothShooting star
<notr>Pupperimbul</notr>Diamond firetail finch or shy hylacolaCarried the emu egg to become the Sun
<notr>Purra</notr>Red kangarooCapella
<notr>Tchingal</notr>The tall one; emuDark space near Cross
<notr>Totyarguil</notr>Purple crowned lorikeetAltair
<notr>Tourchingboiongerra</notr>Needlewood hakea and willie wagtailsComa Berenices
<notr>Tourte</notr>StarAny star
<notr>Tyrille</notr>Space; night skySpace; night sky
<notr>Unurgunite</notr>Jacky lizardSigma Canis Majoris
<notr>Wanjel</notr>Long-necked tortoisePollux
<notr>War</notr>CrowCanopus
<notr>Warepil</notr>Wedge tailed eagleSirius
<notr>Warring</notr>GalaxyMilky Way
<notr>Weetkurrk</notr>Singing bushlarkStar in Bootes west of Arcturus
<notr>Won</notr>BoomerangCorona Australis
<notr>Yerredetkurrk</notr>Owlet nightjarAchernar
<notr>Yurree</notr>Fan-tailed cockatooCastor

Authors

This sky culture was contributed by John Morieson and Alex Cherney.

License

CC BY-SA 4.0