Indigenous Sky Beings — Global Pattern of Star People Traditions
Across every inhabited continent, indigenous cultures maintain oral traditions describing beings who came from the sky, shared knowledge, and promised to return. The Hopi of Arizona describe the 'Ant People' who sheltered them underground during world-destroying catastrophes — beings with thin bodies, large heads, and antennae-like protrusions that match modern grey alien descriptions. Hopi prophecy stones depict two paths for humanity, with sky beings returning at a critical juncture. The Lakota Sioux speak of 'Star People' (Wicahpi Oyate) who came from the Pleiades star system and are their ancestors — maintaining star maps and ceremonies oriented toward the Pleiades. The Zuni describe 'Star Fathers' who arrived in 'shields' that flew through the air. Aboriginal Australians, whose continuous culture spans 65,000+ years, paint the Wandjina — large-eyed, mouthless beings with halos around their heads, depicted in rock art dating back 30,000+ years. The Wandjina came from the Milky Way and are considered the creators of the landscape. The Dogon of Mali (see separate case) knew about Sirius B millennia before telescopes. The Maori of New Zealand describe sky beings arriving in luminous craft. The Cherokee describe 'Star People' who visited and taught agriculture and astronomy. What makes this pattern devastating to the coincidence argument: these cultures were separated by oceans, had no contact with each other, spoke unrelated languages, and independently describe the same phenomenon — intelligent beings arriving from the sky in craft, sharing knowledge, and establishing ongoing relationships with humanity. The consistency across 65,000 years of independent traditions isn't mythology. It's testimony.