Sacred architecture in the Afar astronomical tradition is organised around two independent but complementary orientation systems. System 1 encodes the local zodiacal ruling star: the star that governs the current precessional age, which at the age’s centre rises due east from the observer’s latitude. System 2 encodes the Sirius origin bearing: the heliacal rising azimuth of Sirius at the site’s latitude and construction epoch, pointing back toward the Afar identity latitude (11.87°N) where the tradition’s astronomical calibration was established. The two systems operate independently and simultaneously: a site may encode one, both, or neither with varying precision. The critical property of System 2 is its directional stability: Sirius rises within the ESE quadrant (approximately 100°–135°) from all tradition latitudes across all tradition epochs, making it a reliable directional signature that is both distinctively non-solar (summer solstice sunrise spans 56°–143° across the same latitude range) and uniquely origin-pointing for any observer who knows the Afar identity relationship. The paper defines both systems formally, demonstrates their independence, tabulates Sirius rising azimuths across the tradition’s full latitude-epoch matrix, and demonstrates the two-system model at five well-established sites: Göbekli Tepe (System 1 only, pre-Sirius phase), Gigal Rephaim (System 1 solar + System 2 Sirius), Delos (System 2 primary + System 1 processional), the Great Pyramid (System 2 shaft + System 2 causeway), and Baalbek (System 2 ancestral bearing).
Diogo Azevedo Oliveira Sennfelt (Fri,) studied this question.