‘Earliest map of the sky’ carved 2,500 years ago contains mystery star that isn’t on any records

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NEWLY discovered stone disks found in Italy may have been the earliest maps of the sky.

The stones date back thousands of years before the constellations we know today.

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Newly discovered stone disks may have been the earliest maps of the skyCredit: NASA
The stones date back thousands of years

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The stones date back thousands of yearsCredit: Bernardini et al. 2022

They were unearthed near an ancient Rupinpiccolo protohistoric hill fort in northeastern Italy.

The two disks feature subtle markings that archaeologists believe correspond to the positions of 28 bright stars.

While the resemblance might not be immediately obvious, researchers found after a closer look that it reveals a potential celestial code, Mark Thompson reported in Universe Today.

Researchers Paolo Molaro and Federico Bernardini used statistical analysis to compare the markings on the stones to known constellations and found a very close match.

This suggests that the markings were deliberately made to represent the stars.

Specifically, they found nine marks matched the tail of Scorpius, five marks matched Orion, and nine marks matched the Pleiades cluster.

On the other sides of the disks, five marks that could represent Cassiopeia were found.

However, there was one mark that couldn’t be explained, Thompson reported.

“The marks did indeed seem to represent all the bright stars in each of the constellations (with the exception of Bellatrix and Saiph which may have been eroded) recorded giving credibility to the finding,” Thompson writes.

“A mark slightly north of Orion however has not yet been identified, perhaps it represented a nova or supernova that has not been recorded anywhere else,” he added.

“The mark is close to Mu Orionis which is a pair of physical binaries but also lies close to the location of Epsilon Sagittarii.”

The marks on the stones are thought to date back to between 1800 and 400 BCE.

More analysis needs to be conducted on the stones, but research seems to be pointing to the stones being the earliest-known maps of the night sky.

Another theory, according to Thompson, is that the map depicts supernova explosions in the sky from that period.



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