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Flood, Josephine. Rock Art of the Dreamtime. Sydney: HarperCollins, 1997. [An interpretative survey by an archaeologist of Aboriginal rock art in Australia.]

Foncerrada de Molina, Marta. Cacaxtla: La Iconografнa de los Olmeca-Xicalanca. Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autуnoma de Mйxico, 1993. [A beautifully illustrated account of the Cacaxtla murals. In Spanish.]

Fountain, John W., and Rolf M. Sinclair, eds. Current Studies in Archaeoastronomy: Conversations across Time and Space. Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, 2005. [A collection of papers from the fifth “Oxford” international symposium on archaeoastronomy held in Santa Fe in 1996.]

Fraser, David. Land and Society in Neolithic Orkney (in two volumes). Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (BAR British Series 117), 1983. [An early example of an investigation of a set of monuments (the chambered cairns of the Scottish Orkney Islands) in relation to their landscape, including orientation in relation to the visible topography.]

Friedel, David, Linda Schele, and Joy Parker. Maya Cosmos: Three Thousand Years on the Shaman’s Path. New York: William Morrow, 1995. [Controversial but challenging interpretation of Maya religious thought and sky knowledge, arguing a long-term continuity lasting into the modern era.]

Galindo Trejo, Jesъs. Arqueoastronomнa en la Amйrica Antigua. Madrid: Equipo Sirius, 1994. [A broad introduction from the viewpoint of an astronomer. In Spanish.]

Galindo Trejo, Jesъs, et al. “Arqueoastronomнa Mesoamericana.” Arqueologнa Mexicana 7 (41) 2000. [A set of articles providing a broad introduction to Mesoamerican archaeoastronomy. In Spanish.]

Garnham, Trevor. Lines on the Landscape: Circles from the Sky: Monuments of Neolithic Orkney. Stroud, England: Tempus, 2004. [A range of ideas concerning the Neolithic monuments and landscape of the Scottish Orkney Islands.]

Gaspani, Adriano. La Cultura di Golasecca: Cielo Luna e Stelle dei Primi Celti d’Italia. Aosta, Italy: Keltia Editrice, 1999. [Speculative interpretation of monuments in the Golasecca region of northern Italy based on the identification of various putative solar, lunar, and stellar alignments. In Italian.]

Gibson, Alex. Stonehenge and Timber Circles. Mount Pleasant, SC: Tempus, 1998. [A good general introduction to European prehistoric timber circles. Includes Stonehenge interpreted in the light of this tradition.]

Gibson, Alex, and Derek Simpson, eds. Prehistoric Ritual and Religion: Essays in Honour of Aubrey Burl. Stroud, UK: Sutton, 1998. [A collection of essays on prehistoric northwest Europe dealing with topics from Neolithic monuments and landscapes to Iron Age calendars.]

Gifford, Edward W. Tongan Society. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press, 1929.

Gillings, Mark, and Joshua Pollard. Avebury. London: Duckworth, 2004. [New descriptions and interpretations drawing upon recent excavations.]

Gingerich, Owen, ed. “Review Symposium: The Star of Bethlehem.” Journal for the History of Astronomy 33 (2002): 386–394.

Giot, Pierre-Roland. La Bretagne des Mйgalithes. Rennes, France: Йditions Ouest-France, 1997. [Comprehensive and definitive guide to Breton megaliths, more selective only in the Carnac area where the concentration of monuments is particularly great. In French.]

Gladwin, Thomas. East Is a Big Bird: Navigation and Logic on Puluwat Atoll. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 1970.

Glodariu, Ioan, Eugen Iaroslavschi, and Adriana Rusu. Cet≤Ωi ∫i Asez≤ri Dбcice оn MunΩii Or≤∫tiei [Dacian Citadels and Settlements in the Or≤∫tie Mountains]. Bucharest: Editura Sport Turism, 1988. [An archaeological overview, including an account of the use of the sundial and gnomon. In Romanian with a summary in English.]

Glodariu, Ioan, Adriana Rusu-Pescaru, Eugen Iaroslavschi, and Florin St≤nescu. Sarmizegetusa Regia: Capitala Daciei Preromane [Sarmizegetusa Regia: Pre-Roman Capital of the Dacians]. Deva, Romania: Acta Musei Devensis, 1996. [An archaeological overview of the site, including an account of its possible astronomical significance. In Romanian with a summary in English.]

Gomes, Carlos J. Pinto, et al. Paisagens Arqueolуgicas Aoeste de Йvora. Йvora: Cвmara Municipal de Йvora, 1997. [Provides useful archaeological background on the megalithic monuments of the western Йvora region in central Portugal. Contains articles in Portuguese and English.]

Gonzбlez Reimann, Luis. Tiempo Cнclico y Eras del Mundo en la India. Mexico City: El Colegio de Mйxico, 1988. [In Spanish.]

Goodenough, Ward H. Native Astronomy in the Central Carolines. Philadelphia: University Museum, University of Pennsylvania, 1953.

Goodman, Ronald. Lakota Star Knowledge: Studies in Lakota Stellar Theology. Rosebud SD: Sinte Gleska College, 1990.

Green, Miranda. The Sun-Gods of Ancient Europe. London: Batsford, 1991. [An archaeologist traces the origins of sun cults in Iron Age Europe back into the Neolithic and Bronze Age.]

Griffin-Pierce, Trudy. Earth Is My Mother, Sky Is My Father: Space, Time and Astronomy in Navajo Sandpainting. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1992. [A valuable study of Navajo cosmology and sky knowledge and its expression through the medium of sandpainting.]

Grimble, Arthur. “Gilbertese Astronomy and Astronomical Observances.” Journal of the Polynesian Society 40 (1931): 197–224.

Gwilt, Adam, and Colin Haselgrove, eds. Reconstructing Iron Age Societies. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 1997.

Hadingham, Evan. Circles and Standing Stones. London: Heinemann, 1975. [One of many books produced in the 1970s and early 1980s to introduce archaeoastronomy to a general audience. Badly dated in places.]

———. Early Man and the Cosmos. London: Heinemann, 1983. [A broad introduction to archaeoastronomy for a general audience. Much has now been superseded.]

———. Lines to the Mountain Gods: Nazca and the Mysteries of Peru. London: Harrap, 1987. [A popular account of investigations at the Nasca lines up to the mid-1980s including the work of Gerald Hawkins, Maria Reiche, and Anthony Aveni and his team.]

Hale‘ole, S. N. Ka Mo‘olelo o L§‘ieikawai: The Hawaiian Romance of L§‘ieikawai, translated by Martha W. Beckwith. Honolulu: First People’s Productions, 1997. [First published in translation in 1919 by the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.]

Hamilton, Roland, ed. and trans. History of the Inca Empire [a translation of books 11 and 12 of Cobo’s Historia del Nuevo Mundo, 1653]. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1979.

Hancock, Graham, and Santha Faiia. Heaven’s Mirror: Quest for the Lost Civilization. London: Penguin, 1998. [Highly controversial theory that has been met with extensive criticism from academics.]

Harding, Jan. Henge Monuments of the British Isles. Mount Pleasant, SC: Tempus, 2003. [An excellent general introduction to this type of monument, providing a useful background to discussions of their possible astronomical significance.]

Hawkes, Jacquetta. Man and the Sun. London: Cresset Press, 1962.

Hawkins, Gerald (with John B. White). Stonehenge Decoded. New York: Double-day, 1965. [Interpretation of Stonehenge as an astronomical computer. Heavily criticized by academics at the time and now seen as an example of the dangers of misinterpretation.]