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Gerald Stanley Hawkins (20 April 1928 26 May 2003) was a British-born American astronomer and author noted for his work in the field of archaeoastronomy. A professor and chair of the astronomy department at Boston University in the United States, he published in 1963 an analysis of Stonehenge in which he was the first to propose that it was an ancient astronomical observatory used to predict movements of the sun and moon, and that it was used as a computer. Archaeologists and other scholars have since demonstrated such sophisticated, complex planning and construction at other prehistoric earthwork sites, such as Cahokia in the United States.

Gerald Hawkins
Born
Gerald Stanley Hawkins

(1928-04-20)20 April 1928
Died26 May 2003(2003-05-26) (aged 75)
Woodville, Virginia, United States
OccupationAstronomer
EmployerBoston University
Known forStonehenge Decoded
TitleProfessor

Early life and education


Gerald Hawkins was born in Great Yarmouth, England and studied physics and mathematics at the University of Nottingham. In 1952 he took a PhD in radio astronomy, studying under Sir Bernard Lovell at the University of Manchester.


Career


In 1957 Hawkins became professor of astronomy and chairman of the department at Boston University in the United States. He wrote widely on numerous subjects, including tektites, meteors and the steady-state universe theory. Born in England, he became an American citizen in 1965.

Hawkins applied the technological resources of the university to studying the astronomical alignments of ancient megalithic sites. He fed the positions of standing stones and other features at Stonehenge into an early IBM 7090 computer and used the mainframe to model sun and moon movements. In his 1965 book, Stonehenge Decoded, Hawkins argued that the various features at the monument were arranged in such a way as to predict a variety of astronomical events. This idea was briefly mentioned in his 1961 book, Splendor in the Sky (p. 23).

By interpreting Stonehenge as a giant prehistoric observatory and computer, Hawkins' work re-assessed what had previously been seen as a primitive temple. The archaeological community was skeptical and his theories were criticized by such noted historians as Richard Atkinson, who denounced the book as being "...tendentious, arrogant, slipshod, and unconvincing".[1]

Stonehenge Decoded sold widely. It was especially popular among the members of 1960s counter culture, who found that it followed a similar "wisdom of the ancients" line explored by Alexander Thom. Hawkins' theories still inform popular opinion of Stonehenge. Although some archaeologists are cautious to accept Hawkins' theories, many archaeoastronomers have built upon his work. Many scholars accept that the importance of astronomical alignment and large complexes being planned and constructed to fulfill cosmology has been demonstrated at other prehistoric sites, such as the Snake Mound and Cahokia[2] in the United States.

Hawkins later examined the Nazca lines in Peru, and concluded there was not enough evidence to support an astronomical explanation for them. He also studied the temple of Amun at Karnak. He continued to study Stonehenge up until his death.

American Astronomical Society obituaries: "Gerald Hawkins served as Dean of Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, from 1969 to 1971, when his career trajectory transported him to the United States Information Agency, where he was appointed Science Advisor to the Director and where he remained until his retirement in 1989."


See also



References


  1. Mike Pitts (24 July 2003), "Gerald Hawkins. Astronomer who claimed Stonehenge was a computer", The Guardian
  2. Friedlander, Michael W., "The Cahokia Sun Circles", The Wisconsin Archeologist, Vol. 88(1), pages 78–90, 2007.

3. Hawkins, Gerald S. "Splendor in the Sky" 1961.

4. American Astronomical Society Obituaries, aas.org


На других языках


[de] Gerald Hawkins

Gerald Stanley Hawkins (* 20. April 1928[1] in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk; † 26. Mai 2003 in Woodville (Virginia)[2]) war ein britischer Astronom und Astronomiehistoriker (Archäoastronomie), bekannt für sein Buch „Stonehenge decoded“ von 1965.
- [en] Gerald Hawkins

[fr] Gerald Hawkins

Gerald Stanley Hawkins (20 avril 1928 - 26 mai 2003) est un astronome britannique principalement connu pour son travail en archéoastronomie. Il est professeur et chair du département d'astronomie de l'université de Boston aux États-Unis. En 1965 il a publié une analyse sur Stonehenge dans laquelle il fut le premier à proposer l'idée que ce lieu servait d'observatoire astronomique utilisé pour prédire les mouvements du Soleil et des étoiles. Les archéologues et d'autres chercheurs ont depuis prouvé l'existence d'autres sites préhistoriques de terrassement relevant de projets aussi complexes et sophistiqués, tels que Cahokia aux États-Unis.

[ru] Хокинс, Джеральд

Джеральд Стэнли Хокинс (англ. Gerald Stanley Hawkins) (1928—2003) — британский астроном, широко известен своими исследованиями в области археоастрономии.



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