
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~tlaloc/archastro/
An enormous resource for all things archaeoastronomic. Well laid out and colourful.
http://www.archaeolink.com/archaeoastronomy.htm
Archaeolink shows users considerable links to all Archaeoastronomy matters
http://www.niler.com/s1.html
I picked this because it shows an eight year research study into Petroglyphs at Signal Hill, Arizona by Nile Root. The research is well laid out and easily explained. Photos are excellent with relevant interpretations inserted.
http://www.le.ac.uk/archaeology/rug/rug.html
Prof. Clive Ruggles of the University of Leicester in Britain has produced an enormous resource in these extensive listings. Obviously invaluable to any researcher.
http://www.astroarchaeology.org
Michael O'Callaghan set up this site to channel ideas into preserving the ancient Irish heritage of Megalithic complexes by organising an appeal, which has so far netted over 1,100 signatures. The site delves deeply into Irish Mythology, the politics of excavation and restoration and is a conduit for amateur Irish (and foreign) researchers to pull ideas together in agreement with professional archaeologists (one hopes). Personally I don't subscribe to some of the so called fringe explanations of Irish Megalithic origins however the site is needed as an interface to promote better understanding for all researchers involved in these World class heritage sites.
http://www.jqjacobs.net/astro/
James Jacobs has all manner of formulae for the researcher to use including sections on Geodesy and Archaegeodesy. Well worth looking into.
http://www.astronomywebguide.com/index.htm
A serious amateur astronomer called Kathy has set up a new site that is very detailed and well organised.It deals with all manner of links to astronomy topics from all levels, equipment, software, telescopes etc. There are various sections dealing with the history of astronomy, radiotelescopes, observatories you name it Kathy has a link to it on this site. The colour scheme is beautiful.
http://www.loukashapsis/astro.html
An extensive collection of photos of the Northern lights.
http://www.ptialaska.net/~hutch/aurora.html
Dick Hutchinson lives within the aurora borealis zone in Alaska, near Circle. Since I deal with The Northern Lights phenomenon in my Loughcrew article I thought I'd give you, what I consider, a very good web site so you can see top class photos of these mysterious lights that visit the polar regions of the earth. On this site Dick has excellent full scale amazing photos and animation clips that show you how fast these lights change shape and colour. The photos are clickable in a running text commentary and look out for the 'green spiral' one that has some resemblance to K1 kerbstone at Newgrange.
http://www.megalithic.co.uk
Andy Burnham's 'Megalithic Mysteries' site is a photo catalogue of stone circles, standing stones, dolmens, menhirs etc found distributed across the British Isles. You'll like his home page with a well organised index and superb graphics. Each entry is detailed and there are numerous interesting articles on the sites in question. So make sure you check him out.
http://www.carrowkeel.com
Martin Byrne lives at the base of the Carrowkeel megalithic site in County Sligo, Ireland and is an Archaeoastronomer, Artist, Woodcarver and Bord Failte approved tour guide for the area. His site is excellent for the richness of its description of the cairns and the superb photos of the Sun entering certain mounds open there.Check out his on line shop for interesting goodies to buy and read his exposes on mythology connected with the Lough Arrow region.
http://depts.washington.edu/qil/calib/
Here we have the university of washington's Calib calibration program that you can download to convert radiocarbon ages to possibr calibrated ranges. The current version is at 4.4
http://www.rlaha.ox.ac.uk/orau.htm
Here you can download the Oxford calibration program to convert Radiocarbon dates to a range of calendar ones to compare astronomic workings. the current version is at 3.8.
http://www.overbeyond.com
Tom Dunne has a nicely arranged web site with a collection of humourous short stories, some essays and comments on Irish Archaeology and the added attraction of neatly designed character animation across the top of his pages. You'll enjoy browsing through his guestbook and make sure you leave a comment or two for Tom before you leave.
http://comments.imdb.com/CommentsAuthor?368360
368360 is my code (scrol) on the Internet Movie Database(IMDB). I'm a bit of a movie buff so you'll find 11 movies(last count) reviewed ranging from Hitchcock's THE BIRDS, through Gilliam's 12 MONKEYS, to Rose's IMMORTAL BELOVED. I hope to add a few more before the end of 2000. If you can't find me in there under that link, try just keying in WWW.IMDB.COM and in the search window, key in 'The Birds' and you will be taken to another page. Once there key 'The Birds 1963' and the film page will open. Scroll down the page and look for 'comments by other users'. Click that and go to 12, aug, 1999 for my comments under 'scrol'. Finally click 'scrol' to go to my list of movies I've reviewed.
http://science.nasa.gov/ssl/pad/solar/cmes.htm<