
Following The Milky Way Path of Souls
Author(s) -
William F. Romain
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of skyscape archaeology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2055-3498
pISSN - 2055-348X
DOI - 10.1558/jsa.18926
Subject(s) - milky way , archaeology , dead tree , geography , forestry , physics , astrophysics , galaxy
Cahokia was a major Native American city on the east side of the Mississippi River, across from the modern-day city of St. Louis, Missouri. Cahokia flourished from c.1050 AD to c.1250. In this paper archaeoastronomic and ethnohistoric data along with computer simulations are used to explore the idea that the Cahokia site axis and the Rattlesnake Causeway were intentionally aligned to the Milky Way. It is proposed that this alignment accounts for the peculiar 5° offset of the site from the cardinal directions. Following Sarah Baires, it is suggested that Rattlesnake Causeway was a terrestrial metaphor for the Milky Way Path of Souls used by the deceased to cross to the Land of the Dead. Rattlesnake Mound at the end of the Causeway is suggested as a portal to the Path of Souls. According to ethnohistoric accounts, the Land of the Dead was guarded by a Great Serpent – suggested here as visible in the night sky as either the constellation Serpens or that of Scorpius.