Twin Suns in Australian Aboriginal Traditions
Duane W. Hamacher, Rubina R. Visuvanathan

TL;DR
This paper explores Australian Aboriginal oral traditions mentioning multiple Suns, revealing they likely describe natural phenomena like Sun dogs and seasonal Sun path changes, highlighting Indigenous observational knowledge.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis linking oral traditions to natural atmospheric phenomena, challenging the view that such stories are purely mythological.
Findings
Descriptions of multiple Suns correspond to Sun dogs and seasonal Sun path changes.
Aboriginal traditions reflect careful observation of natural phenomena.
Oral stories encode environmental and atmospheric knowledge.
Abstract
The oral traditions of Aboriginal cultures across Australia contain references to the presence of multiple Suns in the sky at the same time. Explanations of this have been largely regarded as symbolic or mythological, rather than observations of natural phenomena. In this paper, we examine oral traditions describing multiple Suns and analyse interpretations that could explain them. Our analysis of the oral traditions concludes that descriptions of multiple Suns fall into two main categories: one describing the changes in the path of the Sun throughout the year, and the other describing observations of parhelia, an atmospheric phenomenon known as 'Sun dogs' that creates an optical illusion of multiple Suns in the sky at once. This analysis shows how Aboriginal people pay close attention to natural phenomena, assign them social meaning, and incorporate them into oral tradition.
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Taxonomy
TopicsAustralian Indigenous Culture and History · Pacific and Southeast Asian Studies
