| 
		   ---------- Neolithic (10800 BCE 
		-3300 BCE)   | 
				Authors:
					Asko ParpolaB.G. Sidharth
						"The Key to the Celestial Vedas" 1999 
						isbn 0-89281-753-4Bal Gangadhar Tilak
						"Artic Home in the Vedas" pub 1893 
						isbn 81-89297-18-x"Orion" pub 1903 isbn 81-89297-16-3
					Jane 
					McIntosh
			
			Archeological Sites:Vedic Calendar:
				Vedic Year begins with Winter Solsticemid-March to
				mid-May:
				vasanta (spring)mid-May to
				mid-July: 
				grishma (summer)mid-July to
				mid-September:
				varsha (rains)mid-September to 
				mid-November: 
				autumnmid-November to 
				mid-January: 
				wintermid-January to 
				mid-March: sisira (dew)
 
Time Units:
				Deva Ahorata = 1 solar yearDeva Vatsara = 360 Deva Ahoorata(see 
				"Yugas," below)
 
					Satya/Krita = 4800 Deva VatsaraTreta =  3600 Deva  
						VatsaraDwapar = 2400 Deva VatsaraKali = 1200 Deva Vatsara
Chatur Yuga = 12,000 Deva vatsaraManwantatr = 71 Chatur YugaKalpa = 1000 Chatur YugaBrahma Ratra = 2 KalpaBrhma Varsha = 360 Brahma Rata
 
Numbers
				86,400,000 = 11 * 22 * 33
				* 44 * 55
Earth Cycles
				Note: 1 AU = 150,000,000 km or 93,000,000 
				miles100,000 year orbital stretch (ellipse to 
				circle) varies asmuch as 18,000,000 km
41,000 year tilt of Earth Axis (now 23.5 
				varies 21.5-24.5)23,000 year precession of the equinoMilankovitch Cycle
Moon
				Tithi: 
					1 lunar day or longitudinal angle increases by 12-degKarana: half of tithi or 6-degAmavasya: lunar phase of new Moon. Often means new Moon
Asvins (i.e. twin)Planets: Mercury and Venus  
			or   Castor and Pollux or day and night or morning and 
			evening stars or male female
 
EquinoxThe instant of time when
				the plane of
				Earth's
				equator passes through the center of the
				Sun 
				.. twice each year: around
				20 March and
				23 September .. when the Sun is
				directly above the Equator (northern hemisphere in March is 
				called the Vernal or Spring Equinox and the September equinox is 
				called the Autumnal or Fall Equinox.
 And when the
				solar terminator (the "edge" between night and day) is 
				perpendicular to the equator.
 
IndraGreatest of the Gods
Nakshatra (think "constellations")One of 28 Vedic Asterisms along the 
					ecliptic. Each Nakshatras covers 13° 20’ of the
			ecliptic each. Each Nakshatra is also divided into 
					quarters or padas of 3° 20’
 
Ribus: Earliest Astronomers
Rigveda: 
				(cultural) Oldest of the Vedas (see)
				Arya: Dasyus: 
				(servant/laborers) dark-skinned peopleDasas: (farmers)Panis: (merchants)
				Dravidians: Dravidian-speaking people found in India, 
				Pakistan, Afghanistan, Maldives and Sri Lanka  (Ceylon)Asuras:
Synodic MonthThe period between two successive new Moons or full Moons,
 29.5 days (making 354.0 days per year)
 
Sideral MonthTime it takes Moon to complete 1 orbit, 27.3 days
 
SolsticeThe longest day of the year, June 21
 The Longesr night of the year December 21
 
SuryaThe name of the Sun
 
Syzygy: 
			Straight line configuration (opposition or conjunction)
 that might result in an occultation, transit or eclipse
 
Tropical YearThe time it takes the Sun to return to an equinox (365.2422 days 
				used to keep seasons correct)
Vendanga JyotishaOne of six 
			Vendanga disciplines:
			keeping track of time
 
			Yuga
			2 
				(controversial)4-age epoch or era of time
         
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