We have the Algonquin Indians and giant prehistoric fish to thank for August’s Full Moon name. The Algonquin have made their home around the North American Great Lakes since after the last ice age. The ice age was a time of fantastical beasts - ferocious short-faced bears (about twice the size of today’s grizzly) stalked elephant-sized woolly mammoths on the steppe. While the mammoths and bears have vanished, one prehistoric relic still remains hidden in the dark waters of the lakes. Sturgeon are fresh-water fish that resemble sharks. They can grow as long as a surfboard, weigh more than a full grown man and live a century and a half. Massive sturgeon were prized by the Algonquin, and often the only thing that stood between their families and certain winter starvation. The fish was so important to the culture, in fact, that they bestowed this month’s moon with the honorific title of Full Sturgeon Moon.
The Algonquin also called August’s Moon the “Full Green Corn Moon.”
Different tribes used different Moon names. Other examples for August are: “Wheat Cut Moon” (San Ildefonso, and San Juan), “Moon When All Things Ripen” (Dakotah Sioux), and ”Blueberry Moon” (Ojibwe).
📸 : Old Famers Almanac
🗞️: Moon Giant and Old Farmers Almanac
The Full Sturgeon Moon 2018: Find Moon phase dates, best days by the Moon, full Moon names, and more.














