Search Header Logo
Hōkūle'a reading

Hōkūle'a reading

Assessment

Presentation

Science

8th Grade

Easy

NGSS
MS-ESS1-1

Standards-aligned

Created by

Mindy Swanson

Used 3+ times

FREE Resource

3 Slides • 3 Questions

2

The star compass - by Nainoa Thompson

The star compass is the basic mental construct for navigation. We have Hawaiian names for the houses of the stars – the place where they come out of the ocean and go back into the ocean. If you can identify the stars as they rise and set, and if you have memorized where they rise and set, you can find your direction.​ The star compass also reads the flight path of birds and the direction of waves. It does everything. It is a mental construct to help you memorize what you need to know to navigate.

You cannot look up at the stars and tell where you are. You only know where you are in this kind of navigation by memorizing where you sailed from. That means constant observation. You have to constantly remember your speed, your direction and time. You don’t have a speedometer. You don’t have a compass. You don’t have a watch. It all has to be done in your head. It is easy-in principle-but it’s hard to do.

The memorization process is very difficult. Consider that you have to remember those three things for a month-every time you change course, every time you slow down. This mental construct of the star compass with its Hawaiian names is from Mau Piailug. The genius of this construct is that it compacts a lot information and enables you to make decisions based on that information.

media

3

Labelling

Drag the star names to the place they appear on the star compass

Drag labels to their correct position on the image
Hānaiakamalama
Nā Hiku
Lā sets today
Lā rises today
Hōkūpa‛a
Kamailehope

4

How do we tell direction? We use the best clues that we have. We use the sun when it is low down on the horizon. Mau has names for the different widths and the different colors of the sun’s path on the water. When the sun is low, the path is narrow, and as the sun rises the path gets wider and wider. When the sun gets too high you cannot tell where it has risen. You have to use other clues.

Sunrise is the most important part of the day. At sunrise you start to look at the shape of the ocean-the character of the sea. You memorize where the wind is coming from. The wind generates the waves. You analyze the character of the waves. When the sun gets too high, you steer by the waves. And then at sunset you repeat the process. The sun goes down-you look at the shape of the waves. Did the wind direction change? Did the swell pattern change? At night we use the stars. We use about 220, memorizing where they come up, where they go down.​

When it gets cloudy and you can’t use the sun or the stars all you can do is rely on the ocean waves. That’s why Mau told me once, “If you can read the ocean you will never be lost.” One of the problems is that when the sky gets black at night under heavy clouds you cannot see the waves. You cannot even see the bow of the canoe. This is where traditional navigators like Mau are so skilled. Lying inside the hull of the canoe, he can feel the different wave patterns as they come to the canoe, and from them tell the canoe’s direction. I can’t do that. I think that’s what he started learning when he was a child with his grandfather, when he was placed in tide pools to feel the ocean.​

The star compass - by Nainoa Thompson

media
media
media

5

Open Ended

Why is sunrise the most important part of the day?

6

Open Ended

What do you think would be the hardest part of learning this traditional form of navigation?

Show answer

Auto Play

Slide 1 / 6

SLIDE