Skywatchers of Ancient Mexico helped establish the field of archaeoastronomy, and it remains the standard introduction to this subject. Combining basic astronomy with archaeological and ethnological data, it presented a readable and entertaining synthesis of all that was known of ancient astronomy in the western hemisphere as of 1980.
In this revised edition, Anthony Aveni draws on his own and others' discoveries of the past twenty years to bring the Skywatchers story up to the present. He offers new data and interpretations in many areas, including:
With this updated information, Skywatchers will serve a new generation of general and scholarly readers and will be useful in courses on archaeoastronomy, astronomy, history of astronomy, history of science, anthropology, archaeology, and world religions.
Archaeologist specializing in Mesoamerica & #Pseudoarchaeology, by lines for Forbes Science, WaPo, & AiPT. Tweets my own, unless I’m a brain in a jar! He/him
@ericwojo Susan Milbrath’s book Star Gods of the Maya has some of the most details on constellations. And Anthony Aveni’s book Skywatchers of Ancient Mexico is still an amazing resource for astronomical knowledge in general.
-- Archaeoastronomy