looks like its on Archaeoastronomy. Archaeoastronomy is the study of how ancient people related the Sun, Moon, and stars to events on Earth. For many millennia, ancient civilizations have been tracking cyclical arrangements in the sky, noticing that certain events corresponded to the repeating patterns they observed above them made by celestial bodies, which they considered gods. Astrotheology is the study of the astronomical influence on religion. While the influence of the stars on ancient Egypt has been known for over a century, this understanding in places like Hattusa,, the ancient Anatolian capital city of the Hittite empire, is just coming to light this decade.Eberhard Zangger is president of the Luwian Studies foundation in Zurich and an expert in the reconstruction of archaeological landscapes, and is currently focused on a site in modern day Turkey, which in antiquity was part of the Hittite empire. The Luwians were a group of Anatolian people who's language was part of the Indo-European family, and who's writing was cuneiform, imported from Mesopotamia, leaving behind mysterious ancient carvings in rock reliefs now being deciphered.The Getty Villa is s a recreation of an ancient Roman country house, with an extensive collection of art and antiquities, at the easterly end of the Malibu coast in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. The museum's collection includes art that spans the 7,000 years from the end of the Stone Age to the fall of the Roman empire.