The Orion Zone: An Arizona Star Correlation
Gary A. David
Copyright © 2006-2014
In his book The Orion Zone: Ancient Star Cities of the American Southwest, independent researcher
Gary David shows how the constellation Orion provided the template by which the Anasazi
(ancestral Hopi) determined the precise locations of their villages during migrations across the
southwestern United States that lasted centuries. Spiritually mandated by the Hopi god Masau'u,
this terrestrial Orion closely mirrors its celestial counterpart, with a prehistoric city
corresponding to each major star in the constellation. By its specific orientation this sidereal
pattern projected upon the Arizona desert also encodes various sunrise and sunset points of both
summer and winter solstices. The astral-tellurian configuration surprisingly includes at least one
contiguous constellation as well, Canis Major. The flux of ley line energy along a series of ancient
pueblo sites ranging from southwestern Colorado to the mouth of the Colorado River additionally
indicates a functional chakra system of Orion brought down to earth. In this article Mr. David
gives us an overview of his main findings.
Orion of the High Desert
To watch Orion ascend from the eastern horizon and assume its dominant winter position at
the meridian is a wondrous spectacle. Even more so, it is a startling epiphany to see this
constellation rise out of the red dust of the high desert as a stellar configuration of Anasazi cities
built between the mid-eleventh century and the end of the thirteenth century A.D. The sky looks
downward to find its image made manifest in the earth, while the earth gazes upward, reflecting
on the unification of terrestrial and celestial.
Extending from the giant hand of Arizona s Black Mesa that juts down from the northeast,
three great fingers of rock beckon. They are the three Hopi Mesas, isolated upon this desolate but
starkly beautiful landscape to which the Ancient Ones so long ago were led. Directing our
attention to this Center of the World, we clearly see the close correlation to Orion s belt.
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Mintaka, a double star and the first of the trinity to peek over the eastern horizon as the
constellation rises, corresponds to Oraibi and Hotevilla on Third (or West) Mesa. The former
village is the oldest continuously inhabited community on the continent, founded in the early
twelfth century.
Approximately seven miles to the east, located at the base of Second (or Middle) Mesa, the
village of Shungopovi (initially known as Masipa, a cognate of the Hopi underworld deity
Masau u) was reputedly the first to be established after the Bear Clan migrated into the region
around the year 1100. Its celestial correlative is Alnilam, the middle star of the belt.
About seven miles farther east on First (or East) Mesa, the adjacent villages of Walpi,
Sichomovi, and Hano (or Tewa) the first of which was established prior to 1300 correspond to
the triple star Alnitak, rising last of the three stars of the belt.
Nearly due north of Third Mesa s Oraibi at a distance of just over fifty-six miles is Betatakin
Ruin in Tsegi Canyon, while about four miles beyond is Keet Seel Ruin. Located in Navaho
National Monument, both of these spectacular cliff dwellings were built during the midthirteenth century. Their sidereal counterpart is the double star Rigel, the left foot or knee of
Orion. (We are conceptualizing Orion as viewed from the front.)
Due south of Oraibi at an equal distance of fifty-six miles is Homolovi Ruins State Park, a
group of four Anasazi pueblos constructed between the mid-thirteenth and early fourteenth
centuries. These represent the irregularly variable star Betelgeuse, the right shoulder of Orion.
Forty-seven miles southwest of Oraibi is the primary Sinagua ruin at Wupatki National
Monument, surrounded by a few smaller ruins. ( Sinagua is the archaeological term for a group
culturally similar and contemporaneous to the Anasazi.) Built in the early twelfth century, their
celestial counterpart is Bellatrix, a slightly variable star forming the left shoulder of Orion.
About fifty miles northeast of First Mesa s village of Walpi is the mouth of Canyon de
Chelly and its eponymous national monument. In this and its side canyon, Canyon del Muerto, a
number of Anasazi ruins dating from the mid-eleventh century are found. Saiph, the triple star
forming the right foot or knee of Orion, corresponds to these ruins primarily White House,
Antelope House, and Mummy Cave.
Extending northwest from Wupatki/Bellatrix, Orion s left arm holds a shield over numerous
smaller ruins in Grand Canyon National Park, including Tusayan near Desert View on the south
rim. Reaching southward from Homol ovi/Betelgeuse, Orion s right arm holds a nodule club
above his head. This club stretches across Mogollon Rim (an escarpment that cuts east to west
across northern Arizona) and down to the Hohokam ruins near modern-day Phoenix. (The
Hohokam is an earlier group than the two previously mentioned. They used irrigated rather
than dry farming methods.)
The head of Orion is a small stellar triangle formed by Meissa at its apex and by Phi-1 and
Phi-2 Orionis at its base. It correlates to the Sinagua ruins at Walnut Canyon National Monument
together with a few smaller ruins in the immediate region.
If we conceptualize Orion not as the rectangle but as a polygon of seven sides appended to
another triangle whose base rests on the constellation s shoulders, we see the relative proportions
of the terrestrial Orion coincide with amazing accuracy. The apparent distances between the stars
as we see them in the constellation (as opposed to actual light-year distances) and the distances
between these major Hopi villages or Anasazi/Sinagua ruin sites are close enough to suggest that
something more than mere coincidence is at work here.
For instance, four of the sides of the polygon A. Betatakin to Oraibi, B. Oraibi to Wupatki,
C. Wupatki to Walnut Canyon, and F. Walpi to Canyon de Chelly are exactly proportional,
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while the remaining three sides D. Walnut Canyon to Homol ovi, E. Homol ovi to Walpi, and
G. Canyon de Chelly back to Betatakin are slightly stretched in relation to the constellation
from between ten miles in the case of D. and E. and twelve miles in the case of G. (See Diagram
1.)
This variation could be due in part either to possible cartographic distortions of the
contemporary sky chart in relation to the geographic map or to ancient misperceptions of the
proportions of the constellation vis-à-vis the landscape. Given the physical exigencies for
building a village, such as springs or rivers (which are not prevalent in the desert anyway), this is
a striking correlation, despite these small anomalies in the overall pattern.
As John Grigsby says in his discussion of the relationship between the temples of Angkor in
Cambodia and the constellation Draco: If this is a fluke then it s an amazing one... There is
allowance for human error in the transference of the constellation on to a map, and then the
transference of the fallible map on to a difficult terrain over hundreds of square kilometers with
no method of checking the progress of the site from the air. 1
In this case we are not dealing with Hindu/Buddhist temples but with multiple star cities,
sometimes separated from each other by more than fifty miles. Furthermore, the map is
actually represented on a number of stone tablets given to the Hopi at the beginning of their
migrations. This geodetic configuration was influenced or even specifically determined by a
divine presence namely, Masau u, god of death, the underworld, and the earth plane.
Referring once more to Diagram 1, we also notice the angular correspondences of Orion-onthe-earth to Orion-in-the-sky. Here again the visual reciprocity is startling enough to make us
doubt that mere coincidence is responsible. Using the Bersoft Image Measurement software,
however, we can correlate in degrees the precise angles of this pair of digital images seen in the
diagram.
Angle
AG Terra Orion
AG Astra Orion
BC Terra Orion
BC Astra Orion
CD Terra Orion
CD Astra Orion
DE Terra Orion
DE Astra Orion
FG Terra Orion
FG Astra Orion
Degrees
65.37
71.19
132.60
130.77
84.31
100.07
97.79
95.65
56.17
64.23
Difference
5.82
1.83
15.76
2.14
8.06
The closest correlation is between the left and right shoulders (BC and DE respectively) of
the terrestrial and celestial Orions, with only about two degrees difference between the two pairs
of angles. In addition, the left and right legs (AG and FG respectively) are within the limits of
recognizable correspondence, with approximately six to eight degrees of difference. The only
angles that vary considerably are those that represent Orion s head (CD), with over fifteen
degrees of difference between terra firma and the firmament. Given the whole polygonal
configuration, however, this discrepancy is not enough to rule out a generally close
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correspondence between Orion Above and Orion Below.
Solstice Interrelationship of Villages
Another factor that precludes mere chance in this mirroring of sky and earth is the angular
positioning of the terrestrial Orion in relation to longitude. According to their cosmology, the
Hopi place importance on inter-cardinal directions that is, northwest, southwest, southeast, and
northeast rather than cardinal directions. The Anasazi could not, of course, make use of the
compass but relied instead upon solstice sunrise and sunset points on the horizon for orientation.
The Sun Chiefs (in Hopi, tawa-mongwi) still perform their observations of the eastern
horizon at sunrise from the winter solstice on December 22 (azimuth 120 degrees) through the
summer solstice on June 21 (azimuth 60 degrees), when the sun god Tawa is making his
northward journey. On the other hand, they study the western horizon at sunset from June 21
(azimuth 300 degrees) through December 22 (azimuth 240 degrees), when he travels south from
the vicinity of what the Hopi call the Sipapuni to the San Francisco Peaks southwest of the Hopi
Mesas.2
A few days before and after each solstice, Tawa seems to stop the term solstice literally
meaning the sun to stand still and rest in his winter or summer Tawaki, or house. In fact,
the winter Soyal ceremony is performed in part to encourage the sun to reverse his direction and
return to Hopiland instead of continuing southward and eventually disappearing altogether.
The key solstice points on the horizon that we designate by the azimuthal degrees of 60, 120,
240, and 300 (only at this specific latitude, however) recur in the relative positioning of the
Anasazi sky cities. For instance, if we stand on the edge of Third Mesa in the village of Oraibi on
the winter solstice, we watch the sun set at exactly 240 degrees on the horizon, directly in line
with the ruins of Wupatki almost fifty miles away. The sun disappears over Humphreys Peak, the
highest mountain in Arizona where is located the major shrine of the katsinam (also spelled
kachinas, beneficent supernatural beings who act as spiritual messengers). (See Diagram 2.)
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Incidentally, if this line between Oraibi and the San Francisco Peaks is extended southwest, it
intersects the small pueblo called King s Ruin in Big Chino Valley, once a stop-off point on the
major trade route from the Colorado River.3 If the line is extended still farther southwest, it
intersects the mouth of Bill Williams River on the Colorado.
Conversely, if we stand at Wupatki during the summer solstice, we see the sun rise directly
over Oraibi on Third Mesa at 60 degrees azimuth on the horizon. On that same day the sun sets
at 300 degrees azimuth, to which the left arm of the terrestrial Orion points. In addition, from
Oraibi the summer solstice sun sets twelve degrees north of the Sipapuni near the Colorado
River, the Place of Emergence of the Hopi from the previous Third World (or era) to the
current Fourth World.
If we perch on the edge of Canyon de Chelly, looking not downward into the canyon but
instead southwest at the winter solstice sunset, the sun on the horizon appears about five degrees
south of the First Mesa village of Walpi. This line extended farther southwest beyond the horizon
intersects both Sunset Crater, a volcano that erupted in 1064 A.D., and Humphreys Peak,
elevation 12,633 ft.
Again, the reciprocal angular relationship between the two pueblo sites remains, so from
Walpi during the summer solstice the sun appears to rise from Canyon de Chelly fifty miles
away. A northeastward extension of this 65-degree line eventually reaches a point in New
Mexico near Salmon Ruin and Aztec Ruin. 4 In addition, a winter solstice sunrise line (120
degrees azimuth) drawn from Walpi past Wide Ruin traverses the Zuni Pueblo (a tribe closely
related to the Hopi) and ends just south of El Morro National Monument. 5
5
If during the winter solstice we stand at the rim of Tsegi Canyon (wherein the ruins of
Betatakin and Keet Seel are located) and sight southeast along the edge of Black Mesa, we see
the sun come up over Canyon de Chelly and Canyon del Muerto. The sun is in fact at 120
degrees azimuth on the horizon directly over Antelope House Ruin in the latter canyon. An
extension of the same line into New Mexico intersects Casamero Ruin. 6
From the same spot at Tsegi Canyon also on the first day of winter, we see the sun set at 240
degrees azimuth over Grand Canyon more than eighty miles to the southwest. From Tsegi a
summer solstice sunrise line of 60 degrees azimuth additionally intersects Hovenweep National
Monument in southeastern Utah, well known for the archaeo-astronomical precision of its
solstice and equinox markers. Again from Tsegi a sunset line of 300 degrees azimuth crosses
Bryce Canyon National Park and Paunsaugunt Plateau in southern Utah, where nearly one
hundred and fifty small Anasazi and Fremont ruins have been identified. 7
If we travel one hundred and twelve miles almost due south of Tsegi Canyon to the ruins at
Homol ovi and look fifty miles to the northwest, the summer solstice sunset appears eight
degrees south of Wupatki. This line (designated as H in Diagram 1) running between Homol ovi
and Wupatki passes between Grand Falls (an impressive cataract along the Little Colorado
River) and Roden Crater (a volcanic cinder cone that artist James Turrell has turned into an
immense earth sculpture) to finally end at Tusayan Ruin on the south rim of Grand Canyon.
Again, from the reciprocal village of Wupatki the winter solstice sun rises eight degrees
north of Homol ovi. This Wupatki-Homol ovi line (128 degrees azimuth) extending southeast
passes just south of Casa Malpais Ruin and ends less than ten miles south of Gila Cliff Dwellings
in New Mexico.8
From Homol ovi a winter solstice sunrise line (120 degrees azimuth) falls seven degrees
north of Casa Malpais9 and three degrees north of Raven Site Ruin 10, both north of the modern
town of Springerville, Arizona. From Homol ovi during the winter solstice sundown (240
degrees azimuth), the sun passes directly through East and West Sunset Mountains, the gateway
to the Mogollon Rim. This line from Homol ovi proceeds past the early fourteenth century,
thousand-room Chavez Pass Ruin on Anderson Mesa (known in Hopi as Nuvakwewtaqa, mesa
wearing a snow belt )11 and continues along the Palatkwapi Trail down to Verde Valley, ending
near Clear Creek Ruin.
If the summer solstice sunrise line (60 degrees azimuth) is extended from Homol ovi into
New Mexico, it intersects the vicinity of Chaco Canyon, the largest and perhaps most impressive
of all the Anasazi sites in the Southwest. In the overall astral-terrestrial pattern Chaco
corresponds to Sirius, the brightest star in the heavens located in the constellation Canis Major.
In this schema each village is connected to at least one other by a solstice sunrise or sunset
point on the horizon. The interrelationship provided a psychological link between one s own
village and the people in one s sister village miles away. Moreover, it reinforced the divinely
ordered coordinates of the various sky cities come down to earth. Not only had Masau u/Orion
spoken in a geodetic language that connected the Above with the Below, but also Tawa/Sun had
verified this configuration by his solar measurements along the curving rim of the tutskwa, or
sacred earth.
Non-solstice Lines, the Grand Chakra System, and the Hopi Winter Solstice Ceremony
In addition to the solstice alignments, a number of intriguing non-solstice lines exists to
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corroborate the pattern as a whole. As heretofore stated, an extension of the solstice line between
Oraibi and Wupatki (the belt and left shoulder of the terrestrial Orion respectively) would
ultimately end on the Colorado River at the point where a major trail east toward Anasazi
territory began. Similarly, if the non-solstice line between Walpi and Homol ovi (the belt and the
right shoulder respectively) is extended, it intersects the wrist of the constellation and terminates
within five miles of the important Hohokam ruin site and astronomical observatory of Casa
Grande Ruins National Monument, near the Gila River one hundred and fifty miles to the south.
We also have already discussed the extension of the Walpi-Canyon de Chelly solstice line
(Orion s right leg) ending up at the Salmon-Aztec ruins area. An extension of the OraibiBetatakin non-solstice line (Orion s left leg) would bring us to Glen Canyon National Recreation
Area nearly fifty miles to the north. Ruefully, hundreds or perhaps even thousands of small
Anasazi ruins were submerged by the construction of the Glen Canyon Dam in 1963, and the few
that remain can only be reached by boat.
Another alignment of ancient pueblo sites forms the grand chakra system of Orion and
indicates the direction that his spiritual energy flows. Drawing a line southwest from
Shungopovi/Alnilam on Second Mesa, we pass less than five miles southeast of Roden Crater
and Grand Falls, both mentioned above. Continuing southwest the line runs by Ridge Ruin 12,
through Winona Village13, and into the forehead of Orion namely, Walnut Canyon National
Monument, a significant mid-twelfth century Sinagua ruin located in the foothills of the San
Francisco Peaks.
If the line is extended farther still, it intersects the red rock country of Sedona with its
electromagnetic vortexes, passing the small but gorgeously located ruin and pictograph (rock
painting) site of Palatki (or Red House ) as well as the larger Honanki (or Bear House ). In
Verde Valley the newly energized vector directly transits Tuzigoot National Monument, a major
thirteenth century Sinagua ruin of over one hundred rooms perched on a hilltop for the probable
purpose of stellar observation.
This line traverses the Black Hills of Arizona, goes by the newly excavated Emilienne Ruin
in Lonesome Valley14, intersects the Fitzmaurice Ruin located upon a ridge on the south bank of
Lynx Creek in Prescott Valley15, continues through the small Lynx Creek Ruin at the northern
base of the Bradshaw Mountains, treks across the northern limits of the Sonoran desert, and
passes near the geoglyphs on the Arizona /California border 16 to ultimately reach a point just
north of the Colorado River s mouth. This is perhaps the place where the ancients migrating on
reed rafts from the Third to the Fourth World entered the territory.
The same line extended in the other direction from Shungopovi travels northeast across
Black Mesa, passing just southeast of Four Corners to finally end up at the major Anasazi sites at
Mesa Verde National Park in southwestern Colorado.
In this series of villages we see a total of eleven both major and minor Anasazi or Sinagua
ruins and one Hopi pueblo perfectly aligned over a distance of over 275 miles within the
framework of the tellurian Orion. The probability that these were randomly distributed is highly
unlikely and increases the possibility that Masau u (or some other divine agent) directed their
positioning.
This ley line forms a grand chakra system that provides an inseparable link and a conduit
of pranic earth energy flowing from the Hopi Mesas to the evergreens forests of the San
Francisco Peaks. More specifically, Walnut Canyon symbolizes the terrestrial Orion s Third Eye,
or pineal gland, which is etymologically derived from the Latin word pinus, or pine cone.
At this point we might ask: Why was the template of Orion placed on the earth at the specific
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angle that we find it relative to longitude? The chakra line mentioned above, which runs in part
from Shungopovi/Alnilam (the belt of Orion) to Walnut Canyon/Meissa (the head of Orion) is
231 degrees azimuth in relation to Shungopovi. The direction of southwest is 225 degrees
azimuth. The axis for the terrestrial Orion is thus within six degrees of northeast/southwest.
Imagine we are standing at Shungopovi shortly after midnight on the winter solstice nine
centuries ago about the time when the Hopi Mesas were first settled. Looking southwest, we
find the middle star of Orion s belt hovering directly above the southwestern horizon at an
altitude of approximately 38 degrees. Specifically, at 1:15 a.m. on December 22, 1100 A.D.,
Alnilam is at 231 degrees azimuth.17 In other words, as we gaze from the central star of the
earthbound belt of Orion toward his head located in the foothills of the San Francisco Peaks
where the sacred katsinam live, we see the celestial constellation precisely mirror the angle of the
terrestrial configuration.
But what is the significance of this precise time when the middle star in Orion s belt is at 231
degrees? At the very moment we are watching this sidereal spectacle, one of the most sacred
ceremonies 18 of the Hopi known as the Soyal is also taking place in the kiva, or subterranean
prayer chamber. Just past his meridian, Orion can be clearly seen through the hatchway
overhead. This is the time when Hotomkam [Orion s belt] begins to hang down in the sky.
Now a powerful, barefooted figure descends the kiva ladder. White dots that resemble stars
have been painted on his arms, legs, chest, and back. He carries a crook on which has been tied
an ear of black corn Masau u s maize that signifies the Above. One account identifies him as
Muy ingwa, the germination deity related to Masau u. 19 Another calls him Star man,
ostensibly because his headdress made of four white corn leaves represents a four-pointed star,
perhaps Aldebaran in the Hyades.20
This ritually transmuted person takes a hoop covered with buckskin and begins to dance. His
sun shield fringed with red horsehair is about a foot in diameter with a dozen or so eagle
feathers tied to its circumference. Its lower hemisphere is painted blue, its upper right quadrant is
red, and its upper left quadrant is yellow. Two horizontal black lines for the eyes and a small
downward pointing triangle for the mouth are painted on the lower half of this striking face
representing Tawa.
Alexander Stephen, who witnessed the rite at Walpi in 1891, remarked that the star priest
stamps upon the sipapu (or a hole in the floor of the kiva that links it to the underworld) as a
signal to start the most important portion of the ceremony.21 This occurs just after 1:00 a.m., the
time on this date in 1100 A.D. when Orion was at 231 degrees azimuth.
As the dance rhythm crescendos, the Star man begins to twirl the sun hoop very fast in
clockwise rotation around the inter-cardinal points between two lines of singers one at the
north and the other at the south. By his mad oscillations (to use Stephens phrase), the star
priest is attempting to turn back the sun from its southward journey. All these dances, songs,
and spinning of the sun are timed by the changing positions of the three stars, Hotomkam,
overhead. Now is the time this must be done, before the sun rises and takes up his journey. 22
If this were merely a solar ritual, we assume that it would take place at sunrise. On the
contrary, the sidereal position of Orion must reflect the terrestrial positioning of the
constellation, which occurs only after the former has passed its meridian, that is, ...when
Hotomkam begins to hang down in the sky. Prior to dawn runners are sent out to the shrines of
both Masau u (Orion) and Tawa (the sun) in order to deposit pahos (or prayer feathers), offerings
to the two gods whose complex interaction helps to assure the seasons cyclic return, keeping the
world in balance for yet another year.
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Egyptian Parallels to the Arizona Orion
In their bestseller The Orion Mystery, Robert Bauval and Adrian Gilbert have propounded
what is known as the Star Correlation Theory. 23 (Their book, incidentally, provided the initial
impetus for writing this article and my book The Orion Zone.) The co-authors have discovered
an ancient unified ground plan in which the pyramids at Giza form the pattern of Orion s belt.
According to their entire configuration described just briefly here, the Great Pyramid (Khufu)
represents Alnitak, the middle pyramid (Khafre) represents Alnilam, and the slightly offset
smaller pyramid (Menkaure) represents Mintaka.
In addition, two ruined pyramids one at Abu Ruwash to the north and another at Zawyat Al
Aryan to the south correlate to Saiph and Bellatrix respectively. Farther south three pyramids at
Abusir correspond to the triangular head of Orion. Bauval and Gilbert also believe that the
pyramids at Dashour namely, the Red Pyramid and the Bent Pyramid represent the Hyades
stars of Aldebaran and Epsilon Taurus respectively.
This schema furthermore correlates Letopolis, located due west across the Nile from
Heliopolis, with Sirius, the most brilliant star in the sky. As co-author Gilbert states in his later
book:
It was Bauval s contention that the part of the Milky Way which interested the
Egyptians most was the region that runs from the star Sirius along the
constellation of Orion on up towards Taurus. This region of the sky seemed to
correspond, in the Egyptian mind at least, to the area of the Memphite necropolis,
that is to say the span of Old Kingdom burial grounds stretching along the west
bank of the Nile from Dashur to Giza and down to Abu Ruwash. At the centre of
this area was Giza; this, he determined, was the earthly equivalent of Rostau
(Mead s Rusta), the gateway to the Duat or underworld. 24
The region in Hopi cosmology corresponding to the Duat is called Tuuwanasavi (literally,
Center of the World ), located at the three Hopi Mesas. Similar to the ground-sky dualism of
the three primary structures at the Giza necropolis, these natural pyramids closely reflect the
belt stars of Orion. In addition, the entry to the nether realms is known in Hopi as the Sipapuni,
located in Grand Canyon. This culturally sacrosanct area mirrors the left arm of Orion. Whereas
the Egyptian Rostau is coextensive with the axis mundi of the belt stars formed by the triad of
pyramids, the Hopi gateway to the underworld in Grand Canyon is adjacent to the center-place
but still close enough to be archetypally resonant.
In a later book entitled The Message of the Sphinx, Robert Bauval and co-author Graham
Hancock describe the cosmic journey of the Horus-King, or son of the Sun, to the underworld:
He is now at the Gateway to Rostau and about to enter the Fifth Division [Hour] of the Duat
the holy of holies of the Osirian afterworld Kingdom. Moreover, he is presented with a choice of
two ways or roads to reach Rostau: one which is on land and the other in water . 25
We have been blessed with a wealth of Egyptian hieroglyphic texts, both on stone and on
papyrus, from which we can reconstruct the Egyptian cosmology. Unless we consider
petroglyphs more as a form of linguistic communication than as rock art, then the Hopi and
their ancestors, on the other hand, had no written language; hence we must rely on their recently
transcribed oral tradition. In this regard the tawa-mongwi (or sun watcher ) Don Talayesva
from Oraibi village describes an interesting parallel to Rostau.
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As a young man attending the Sherman School for Indians in Riverside, California during the
early years of the twentieth century, Talayesva became deathly ill and, in true shamanistic
fashion, made a journey to the spirit world. After a long ordeal with many bizarre, hallucinatory
visions26, he reached the top of a high mesa and paused to look.
Before me were two trails passing westward through the gap of the mountains.
On the right was the rough narrow path, with the cactus and the coiled snakes, and
filled with miserable Two-Hearts making very slow and painful progress. On the
left was the fine, smooth highway with no person in sight, since everyone had
sped along so swiftly. I took it, passed many ruins and deserted houses, reached
the mountain, entered a narrow valley, and crossed through the gap to the other
side. Soon I came to a great canyon where my journey seemed to end; and I stood
there on the rim wondering what to do. Peering deep into the canyon, I saw
something shiny winding its way like a silver thread on the bottom; and I thought
that it must be the Little Colorado River. On the walls across the canyon were the
houses of our ancestors with smoke rising from the chimneys and people sitting
out on the roofs. 27
In this narrative the dry, narrow road filled with cacti and rattlesnakes, where progress is
measured at just one step per year, is contrasted with the easy, broad road quickly leading to the
canyon of the Little Colorado River. A few miles east of the confluence of this river and the
Colorado River is the previously mentioned Sipapuni, the actual location of the Hopi Place of
Emergence from the Third World to the Fourth World. Physically, it is a large travertine dome
in Grand Canyon to which annual pilgrimages are made in order to gather ritualistic salt.
In correlative terms the Milky Way is conceptualized as the watery road of the Colorado
River at the bottom of Grand Canyon that sacred source to which spirits of the dead return in
order to exist in a universe parallel to the pueblo world they once knew. (In an alternate
conception, this stellar highway traverses the evergreen forests of the San Francisco Peaks, upon
whose summit a mythical kiva leading to the underworld is located.)
Talayesva s account also includes such traditional otherworldly motifs as the Judgment
Seat on Mount Beautiful, which supports a great red stairway, at least in his vision. (This peak
is actually located about eight miles west of Oraibi.) We furthermore hear of a confrontation with
the Lord of Death, in this case a threatening version of Masau u (the Hopi equivalent of Osiris),
who chases after him.
Like the Egyptian journey to the Duat, the Hopi journey to Maski (literally, House of
Death ) has two roads one on land and the other on water. In this context we must decide if the
latter is really a code word for the sky. In the double-speak of the astral-terrestrial correlation
theory, are these spirits in actuality ascending to the celestial river of the Milky Way? Is this,
then, the purpose of the grand Orion schema? To draw a map on the Earth that points the way to
the stars?
Returning to the subject of Orion projected upon the deserts of both Egypt and Arizona, we
find both discrepancies and parallels. In terms of distinction the Egyptian plan is on a much
smaller scale than the one incorporating the Arizona stellar cities, using tens of kilometers rather
than hundreds of miles. Furthermore, in the Egyptian schema the bright stars of Betelgeuse and
Rigel are perplexingly unaccounted for.28
In addition, the Giza terrestrial Orion from head to foot is oriented southeast to northwest,
10
while the Arizona Orion is oriented southwest to northeast. Of course, the pyramids are located
west of the Nile River, while the Hopi Mesas are located east of the Nile of Arizona, namely,
the Colorado River.29
We should also point out that Abusir is not in the correct location to match Orion s head on
the constellatory template. Bauval and Gilbert state that Abusir is ...a kilometre or so south-east
of Zawyat al Aryan 30, which is Bellatrix (Orion s left shoulder). It is in fact about six
kilometers southeast. In other words, Abusir is nearly four miles south-southeast of where it
should be according to the Star Correlation Theory. Unlike Bauval, Gilbert, and Hancock, I have
not been to Egypt, but the consultation of any scale map will verify this statement. 31
Despite these few differences, the basic orientation of the Egyptian Orion is similar to that of
the Arizona Orion that is, south, the reverse of the celestial Orion. According to Dr. E. C.
Krupp of the Griffith Observatory, this is one factor that invalidates the Orion Correlation
Theory.32 His critique, however, is the result of a specific cultural bias in which an observer is
looking down upon a map with north at the top and south at the bottom.
Imagine instead that we are standing on top of the Great Pyramid or for that matter, at the
southern tip of First Mesa in Arizona and gazing southward just after midnight on the winter
solstice. The other two pyramids or Mesas would be stretching off to the southwest in a
pattern that reflects the belt of Orion now achieving culmination in the southern sky. We can
further imagine that if the upper portion of the terrestrial Orion were simply lifted perpendicular
to the apparent plane of the earth while his feet were still planted in the same position Abu
Ruwash and an undetermined site in the case of Egypt, Canyon de Chelly and Betatakin in the
case of Arizona , then this positioning would perfectly mirror Orion as we see it in the sky.
When the Anasazi gazed into the heavens, they were not looking at an extension of the
physical world the way we perceive it today. They were instead witnessing a manifestation of the
spirit world. Much like the Egyptian Duat, the Hopi underworld encompasses both the vast
reaches of the sky and the region beneath the surface of the earth. This fact is validated by the
dichotomous existence of ancestor spirits who live in the subterranean realm but periodically
return to their earthly villages as clouds bringing the blessing of rain.
Even though the eastern and western domains ruled by Tawa (the sun) remain constant, the
polar directions of north and south, controlled by the Elder and Younger Warrior Twins (sons of
the sun) respectively, are reversed. Therefore, the right hand holding the nodule club is in the
east and the left hand holding the shield is in the west, similar to the star chart. The head is,
however, pointing roughly southward instead of northward. This inversion is completely
consistent with Hopi cosmology because the terrestrial configuration is conceptualized as a
reversal of the spirit world, of which the sky is merely another dimension. (An alternate
explanation for the change in directions is the possibility that the pole shift, which destroyed the
Hopis Second World, reversed the position of the constellation s mundane aspect.)
Gazing up at Orion on a midwinter night, we can imagine that our perspectives have
switched. Suspended high above the land, we stare southwest toward the sacred katsina peaks
and the head of the celestial Masau u suffused in the evergreen forests of the Milky Way.
Ironically, it is here on the high desert of Arizona that we also intuit the truth of the hermetic
maxim attributed to the Egyptian god Thoth (Hermes Trismegistus): As above, so below.
Let s briefly look at one more so-called coincidence: The word zona, as in the name
Arizona, is particularly significant. From classical times onward, it has literally been defined as
The girdle [or belt] of Orion. 33
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Village of Walpi, First Mesa, Arizona.
ENDNOTES
1. Grigsby cited in Graham Hancock, Santha Faiia, Heaven s Mirror: Quest For the Lost Civilization (New York:
Crown Publishers, Inc. 1998), 127.
2. J. McKim Malville, Claudia Putnam, Prehistoric Astronomy in the Southwest (Boulder Colorado: Johnson Books,
1993, 1989), 23. Note: Azimuth is defined as the arc of the horizon measured in degrees clockwise from the true
north point. The Sipapuni is the name for the Hopi entrance to the underworld in Grand Canyon, located near the
confluence of the Little Colorado River and the Colorado River. The San Francisco Peaks near the town of Flagstaff
are the highest mountains in Arizona and are considered sacred to both the Hopi and the Navajo.
3. Inhabited from 1026 A.D. (or possibly earlier in light of the underlying pit house) to about 1300, King s Ruin has
a thirteen-room foundation, twelve of which could have been two stories high. The five hundred pieces of unworked
shells found at the site indicate substantial trade with the Pacific. Necklaces of turquoise, black shale and red
argillite were also found. One argillite necklace consisting of 2,031 beads stretched sixty-six inches long. Fifty-five
graves were also discovered, containing sixty-six individuals, most of which were buried in the extended posture
with heads oriented toward the east, awaiting Pahana s (or the White Brother s) return. Ginger Johnson, A View of
Prehistory in the Prescott Region (Prescott, Arizona: privately published, 1995), 8-9.
4. Salmon Ruin near the San Juan River was occupied for a few generations after 1088 A.D., then abandoned and
reoccupied between 1225 and the late 1200s. The pueblo contained between six hundred and seven hundred and
fifty rooms. It also had a tower kiva built on a platform twenty feet high that was made of rock imported from thirty
miles away. Ten miles north of Salmon is Aztec Ruin (an obvious misnomer) located on the Animas River. During
its peak development it contained about five hundred rooms. Like the former, this latter site was originally inhabited
in the early twelfth century by people of Chaco Canyon and then re-inhabited from 1225 to 1300 by people of Mesa
Verde. In addition, it has a restored Great Kiva.
5. Inhabited from 1226 to 1276 A.D., Wide Ruin (or Kin Tiel) is located about fifty miles due south of Canyon de
Chelly. It is an oval-shaped pueblo of one hundred and fifty to two hundred rooms with a number of kivas. Atsinna
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pueblo, located atop a high mesa at El Morro National Monument, was a mid-thirteenth century rectangular
structure, part of which was three stories in height. It had five hundred to a thousand rooms and two kivas, one
circular and the other square.
a. David Grant Noble, Ancient Ruins of the Southwest: An Archaeological Guide (Flagstaff, Arizona: Northland
Publishing, 1989, reprint 1981).
b. Norman T. Oppelt, Guide to Prehistoric Ruins of the Southwest (Boulder, Colorado: Pruett Publishing
Company, 1989, reprint 1981).
6. Constructed in the mid-eleventh century, Casamero Ruin was a small thirty-room pueblo. However, its Great
Kiva, one of the largest in the Southwest, was seventy feet in diameter even slightly more spacious than the better
known Casa Rinconada at Chaco Canyon about forty-five miles to the north. Noble, Ancient Ruins, 89-90; and
Oppelt, Guide To Prehistoric Ruins, 177.
7. Robert H. Lister and Florence C. Lister, Those Who Came Before: Southwestern Archeology in the National Park
System (Tucson, Arizona: Southwestern Parks & Monuments Association, 1994, reprint 1993), 224.
8. Located in the Mogollon Mountains of west-central New Mexico, Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument is a
ruin comprised of forty rooms in five separate caves located one hundred and fifty feet above the canyon floor. The
timbers of these structures have been tree-ring dated to the 1280s. The late Mogollon (or Mimbres) people are
known for their exquisite black-on-white pottery, using realistic though stylized designs. The site was abandoned by
1400. Noble, Ancient Ruins, 7-8.
9. Casa Malpais is a thirteenth century Mogollon site of a hundred rooms with a square Great Kiva (one of the
largest in the Southwest). It also has catacombs, ceremonial rooms, three winding stone stairways, and an
astronomical observatory. Because of the nature of the artifacts found, such as crystals, ceremonial pipes, and
soapstone fetish stands, it is thought to have been primarily a religious center. Stan Smith, House of the Badlands,
Arizona Highways, August 1993, 39-44.
10. Located nearly ninety miles southeast of Homol ovi and about twelve miles north of the Casa Malpais, the
Raven Site (privately owned by the White Mountain Archaeological Center) was occupied as early as 800 through
1450 A.D. and had more than eight hundred rooms and two kivas. James R. Cunkle, Raven Site Ruin: Interpretive
Guide (St. Johns, Arizona: White Mountain Archaeological Center, no publication date).
11. Jefferson Reid and Stephanie Whittlesey, The Archaeology of Ancient Arizona (Tucson, Arizona: The University
of Arizona Press, 1997), 220.
12. Occupied from 1085 to 1207 A.D., Ridge Ruin was a thirty-room pueblo with three kivas and a Maya-style ball
court. It was also the site of the so-called Magician s Burial. Thought by Hopi elders to be of the Motswimi, or
Warrior Society, this apparently important man was interred with twenty-five whole pottery vessels and over six
hundred other artifacts, including shell and stone jewelry, turquoise mosaics, woven baskets, wooden wands, arrow
points, and a bead cap.
a. Rose Houk, Sinagua: Prehistoric Cultures of the Southwest (Tucson, Arizona: Southwest Parks &
Monuments Association, 1992), 7.
b. Oppelt, Guide to Prehistoric Ruins, 99-100.
c. Reid and Whittlesey, Archaeology of Ancient Arizona, 219-20.
13. Winona Village, which was occupied at the end of the eleventh century, contained about twenty pit houses and
five surface storage rooms. Oppelt, Guide To Prehistoric Ruins, 99.
14. The Emilienne Ruin had a foundation of twelve rooms, most of which could have been two stories high, plus
eleven outlying one-room units.
15. The Fitzmaurice Ruin, occupied from 1140 to 1300 A.D., had twenty-seven rooms in which were found beads,
pendants, bracelets, and eighty-one amulets, including crystals, animal fetishes, obsidian nodules (so-called Apache
Tears), and a curious six-faceted, truncated pyramid carved from jadeite and measuring one-and-a-half centimeters
wide.
a. Franklin Barnett, Excavation of Main Pueblo At Fitzmaurice Ruin: Prescott Culture in Yavapai County,
Arizona (Flagstaff, Arizona: Museum of Northern Arizona, 1974), 95.
b. Johnson, Prehistory in the Prescott Region, 16.
16. Similar to the Nazca lines of Peru, these geoglyphs (also called intaglios) of human, animal, and star figures,
some over a hundred feet long, were made by removing the darker, desert-varnished pebbles to expose the lighter
soil beneath. Reid and Whittlesey, Archaeology of Ancient Arizona, 127-9. According to the Mohave and Quechan
tribes of the lower Colorado River region, the human figures represent the deity Mastamho, the Creator of the Earth
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and all life. Notice the similarity between the name of this god and that of the Hopi earth god Masau u. These
figures are thought to be between four hundred-fifty and two thousand years old.
17. Also at 1:15 a.m. on this date, Bellatrix is at 240 degrees azimuth and Meissa is at 242 degrees azimuth. Forty
minutes later Alnilam is at 240 degrees, the azimuthal degree at which the sun will set at 5:15 p.m. on this same day.
Incidentally, at the winter solstice sunset time Orion is just rising on the opposite horizon, thus emphasizing the
pivotal relationship of Orion/Masau u and the Sun/Tawa. All astronomical computations were performed with
Skyglobe (KlassM Software). Mark A. Haney, Skyglobe 2.04 for Windows [floppy disk] (Ann Arbor, Michigan:
KlassM Software, 1997.
18. Edmund Nequatewea cited by John D. Loftin, Religion and Hopi Life In the Twentieth Century (Bloomington,
Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1994, reprint 1991), 33.
19. Frank Waters and Oswald White Bear Fredericks, Book of the Hopi (New York: Penguins Books, 1987, reprint,
1963), 158-61.
20. Richard Maitland Bradfield, An Interpretation of Hopi Culture (Derby, England: published by author, 1995),
134-5.
21. Stephen cited by Ray A. Williamson, Living the Sky: The Cosmos of the American Indian (Norman, Oklahoma:
University of Oklahoma Press, 1989, reprint 1984), 79-82.
22. Waters and Fredericks, Book of the Hopi, 161-2.
23. Robert Bauval and Adrian Gilbert, The Orion Mystery: Unlocking the Secrets of the Pyramids (New York:
Crown Publishers, Inc., 1994), 125 ff.
24. Adrian Gilbert, Signs in the Sky (London: Bantam Press, 2000), 65.
25. Graham Hancock and Robert Bauval, The Message of the Sphinx: A Quest For the Hidden Legacy of Mankind
(New York: Three Rivers Press, 1996), 175. Note: The discussion by Bauval, Gilbert, and Hancock of the Egyptian
master plan is a great deal more complex than what is merely sketched out in this article. Their opus involves
various facets such as precession of the equinoxes, star-targeted shafts in the Great Pyramid, and other topics that
are not directly relevant to our discussion. However, this compelling work overall has challenged many orthodox
ideas in Egyptology and has spawned heated debates both on the amateur and the professional levels.
26. Is it simply just another coincidence that the Hopi word tu at, also spelled tuu awta, meaning hallucination or
mystical vision, sounds so close to the Egyptian Duat indeed spelled by E. A. Wallis Budge, former director of
antiquities at British Museum, as Tuat, that seemingly illusory realm of the afterlife?
27. Don Talayesva, Leo W. Simmons, editor, Sun Chief: An Autobiography of a Hopi Indian (New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1974, reprint 1942), 121-8.
28. Recently two independent Egyptologists, Larry Dean Hunter and Michael Arbuthnot, claimed to have found all
the stars of Orion represented by constructions on the Egyptian landscape. However, their terrestrial correlations are
somewhat different than those originally put forth by Bauval and Gilbert. See The Orion Pyramid Theory in the
Research/Articles section of the Team Atlantis website. www.teamatlantis.com
29. Reid and Whittlesey, The Archaeology of Ancient Arizona, 112.
30. Bauval and Gilbert, The Orion Mystery, 139.
31. T. G. H. James, Ancient Egypt: The Land and Its Legacy (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1989, 1988), 41.
32. E. C. Krupp, Skywatchers, Shamans, & Kings: Astronomy and the Archaeology of Power (New York: John
Wiley & Sons, Inc.), 290-1.
33. See Zone, definition 3.c., The Oxford English Dictionary; and Richard Hinckley Allen, Star Names: Their
Lore and Meaning (New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1963, reprint 1899), 315.
Copyright © 2006-2014 Gary A. David. All rights reserved.
Email: garydavid52@hotmail.com
Website: www.theorionzone.com
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