See for example: HenrikssonG.BlombergM., “Evidence for Minoan astronomical observations from the peak sanctuaries on Petsophas and Traostalos”, Opuscula Atheniensia, xxi/6 (1996), 99–113; HerbertS., “The orientation of Greek temples”, Palestine exploration quarterly, cxvi (1994), 31–34; PapathanassiouM., “Archaeoastronomy in Greece: Data, problems, and perspectives”, in Trends in the historiography of science, ed. by GavrogluK. (Dordrecht, 1994), 443–8; PapathanassiouM.HoskinM., “Orientations of Greek temples on Corfu”, Journal for the history of astronomy, xxv (1994), 111–14.
2.
DinsmoorW. B., “Archaeology and astronomy”, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, lxxx (1939), 95–173.
3.
Papathanassiou, op. cit. (ref. 1), 448.
4.
Agamemnon, 519–20, cited in DinsmoorW. B., The architecture of ancient Greece (New York, 1975), 49.
5.
Ibid..
6.
NissenH.. Das Templum (Berlin, 1869).
7.
Here we follow the accepted tradition of referring geographically to Magna Graecia only as the southern half of the Italian peninsula, not including Sicily.
8.
Herbert, op. cit. (ref. 1), 32–33.
9.
DoxiadesC., Architectural space in ancient Greece (Cambridge, 1972), cited in Herbert, op. cit. (ref. 1), 33.
10.
AveniA.RomanoG., “Orientation and Etruscan ritual”, Antiquity, lxviii (1994), 545–63.
11.
AveniA., “Archaeoastronomy”, Advances in archaeological method and theory, iv (1981), 1–77.
12.
HenrikssonBlomberg, op. cit. (ref. 1).
13.
PapathanassiouM.HoskinM.PapadopoulouH., “Orientations of tombs in the Late-Minoan cemetery at Armenoi, Crete”, Archaeoastronomy, no. 17 (1992), S43–55.
14.
GoodwinM., “The archaeoastronomy of early Minoan Crete”, unpublished Master's thesis, Bryn Mawr College, 1998.
15.
PapathanassiouM.HoskinM., “The Late-Minoan cemetery at Armenoi: A reappraisal”, Journal for the history of astronomy, xxvii (1996), 53–59 argue that it is the range of moonrise rather than the 19-year lunar extremes to which many of the alignments in this area refer.