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Wednesday, October 16, 2024 at 4:27 PM
TriCity Insurance Agency

Astronaut proposes new names for a star and planet in the Chickasaw language

The Chickasaw language may soon be written in the stars thanks to the efforts of a space traveler and a group dedicated to safeguarding the sacred language.

The Chickasaw language may soon be written in the stars thanks to the efforts of a space traveler and a group dedicated to safeguarding the sacred language.

Astronaut John Herrington and the Chickasaw Nation Language Preservation D i v i s i o n h a v e collaborated with the Cosmosphere International SciEd Center and Space Museum in Hutchinson, Kansas, to propose new names for a star and planet in the Chickasaw language.

The star called WD0806-661 and its planet called WD-0806-661B were two of 20 stars and planets to be a part of the “NameExoWorlds” competition, in which contestants propose names for the stars and planets. Cmdr. John Herrington, a Chickasaw citizen, was particularly drawn to this star and its planet because the star is a part of a fish-shaped constellation called Volans, which happens to be a very important constellation to him and his career.

Herrington was the first enrolled member of a First American tribe to travel into space. On Nov. 23, 2002, he flew on the Space Shuttle Endeavour, STS-113, t o the International Space Station where he performed 20-hours of spacewalks over three days. His group of designated astronauts was the largest ever selected at the time, four people in one space craft.

They w e r e given the nickname “the Sardines” by veteran astronauts.

Herrington used the constellation of Volans as inspiration for the patch he designed for their group. Volans is shaped like a flying fish made up of seven stars, which was used to represent their class nickname. The design also served as a tribute to the Mercury and Challenger astronauts.

When star WD-0806661 and its planet WD0806-661B showed up on the International Astronomical Union’s (IAU) “NameExoWorlds” competition, Herrington worked with the Chickasaw Nation Language Preservation Division to c r e a t e a name that would honor Chickasaw heritage and people by writing their language among the stars.

On Dec. 6, 2022, Herrington delivered a presentation about the p r o c e s s t o more than 3,000 students through Cosmophere’s LaunchLearning program. Here, he revealed that the names proposed are “Nani’ Wakaa’ Ifochik” for the star, meaning “flying fish star” and “Nani’ Wakaa’,' for the planet, which means “flying fish.” Both names reference his group’s nickname, “the sardines” as the constellation looks like a fish flying through space.

The Chickasaw language was the primary language of Chickasaw people for hundreds of years and is still spoken throughout the Chickasaw Nation. Chickasaw is a Muskogean language, and C h i c k a s a w and Choctaw together form the Western branch of the Muskogean language family. To learn more about the Chickasaw language and its resources, please visit www.Chickasaw.net/ language.

IAU will announce the results of the competition in March 2023.

For more information about IAU, visit IAU.org.

To view Herrington’s proposal video, go to YouTube and s e a r c h “Cosmosphere and Chickasaw Nation NameExoWorlds 2 0 2 2 Proposal.”


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