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Page 1: Carter matariki

Taatai Arorangi: Matariki and the New Year

• Traditionally Māori, and many other cultures, used the night sky and the stars to tell the time and seasons.

• They also used them as they navigated the oceans.

• The tohunga kōkōrangi would watch for the rise of Matariki just before dawn.

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Matariki and the New Year

• Stories and legends were ways of passing knowledge from generation to generation.

• Even if the cause was not understood the story explained observed events.

• There may be many versions of a similar story.

• Here is one story of Matariki

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• The rising of Matariki the Maori New Year and signalled a time for connecting, giving thanks to the land, sea and sky, a time for the community to come together to farewell those departed and acknowledge the year gone.

• It is universal to Maori and Pakeha, because we all live with the opposite seasons to the Northern hemisphere.

• Matariki was also a time to turn to the future, welcoming the new generation to the world and planning for the year ahead.

• Matariki could be added

to our celebrations calendar. It provides us with something that's unique.

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• The crops were planted according to the appearance of the Matariki star cluster.

• If the stars were clear and bright, it was a sign of a favourable and productive season ahead, and planting would begin in September.

• If the stars appeared hazy and closely bunched together, a cold winter was in store and planting was put off until October.

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• The Matariki were honoured by the Maori. The heliacal rising of that asterism was greeted by women with song and dance.

• In other areas the cosmic rising of Rigel marked the beginning of the new year with a similar festival marking the event.

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The Helical rising of the Stars

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• New star patterns become visible as we travel around the Sun.

• Matariki is in Taurus

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Heliacal risings occur after a star has been behind the Sun for a time and it is just returning to visibility.

One morning, just before dawn, the star rises after its absence behind the Sun and is seen for a moment, then lost in the rising Sun’s glare.

That one special morning is called the star's heliacal rising.

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Circumpolar stars will NOT work!

• Not all stars have heliacal risings because some stars are always above the horizon and are called circumpolar stars.

• Only certain stars rise, flash and twinkle in the pre-dawn glow.

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El Niño or La Niña- watch out!

• Clear, bright stars = a good season.

• Hazy and bunched together= cold winter, planting delayed.

• The upper atmosphere may indicate long term weather conditions.

• Astute, practiced observers can see the difference from year to year.

• Can you?

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The rising position of the Sun in a year

Looking west this shows the Sun setting - from mid-winter through the equinox to mid-summer (Northern Hemisphere view).

What dates are these?

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• A cluster of around 1000 stars that are about 440 light years away (our Sun is 8 light minutes away)

• The blue color is caused by blue light being scattered by dust.

• The stars in the Pleiades are young- 100 million years old - about 1/50th the age of our Sun

•Merope, one of the brightest stars in the Pleiades- where the nebulosity is caused by a chance encounter between an open star cluster and a molecular cloud.

The Pleiades/Matariki star cluster facts

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• 29.5 days makes a “Moonth”• Maori followed a lunar calendar: Te Maramataka• New Moon is when the Moon is between Sun and the Earth • First quarter is when it has moved one fourth of it’s way around the Earth -

but it looks like a semi-circle and many call it a “half Moon”!• Full Moon comes half way through the cycle (Sun, Earth & Moon Alignment.• 29.5 days is not a factor of 365- which is why our months are a mix

from 28 day to 31 day lengths

In the Southern Hemisphere the sunlit part moves from the left to the right. C O D (C first quarter, O full Moon, D last quarter)

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Calendars, clocks and Time

• How many trips around the Sun have you made?

• What season were you born in?

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How many days, weeks, and “moonths” have you lived through?How do you know?

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Is it easy to count how many Moon cycles you have lived through? Is it years x12 or years x13 ?

So how many Moonths old are you?

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Near, Far and IN-between.


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