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Ayahos

Coordinates: 47°31′22″N 122°23′40″W / 47.52270°N 122.39431°W / 47.52270; -122.39431 (Psai-Yah-hus)
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Representation of the a'yahos spirit.

Psi-ya-hus (also spelled Psai-Yah-hus) is a spirit rock near the Fauntleroy ferry terminal in Seattle, Washington.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]: 118  Coast Salish peoples associate the rock with A'yahos, a "malevolent and dangerous" spirit,[6]: 72  capable of shapeshifting, who sometimes appears in a two-headed serpent form, who is associated with other earthquake-related areas like landslides near the Seattle Fault.[4][8][9]

LIDAR imagery of the Seattle area revealed a previously unknown landslide in the Fauntleroy area. Another area associated with the a'yahos near Mercer Island could be related to the Lake Washington sunken forests, caused by landslides triggered by a Seattle Fault event around 900 CE.[4]

References

  1. ^ Buerge, D. M. (March 6, 1985), "Lost Seattle, our shameful neglect of a rich archeological past", Seattle Weekly
  2. ^ Fauntleroy, Southwest Seattle Historical Society, retrieved 2015-07-05
  3. ^ Ron Richardson (March 22, 2002), "Fauntleroy thumbnail history", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink
  4. ^ a b c R. S. Ludwin; C. P. Thrush; K. James; D. Buerge; C. Jonientz-Trisler; J. Rasmussen; K. Troost; A. de los Angeles (July 2005), "Serpent Spirit-power Stories along the Seattle Fault", Seismological Research Letters, 76 (4): 426–431, doi:10.1785/gssrl.76.4.426
  5. ^ True, Kathryn; Dolan, Maria (2003), Nature in the City Seattle, The Mountaineers Books, p. 185, ISBN 9780898868791
  6. ^ a b Piccardi, Luigi; Masse, W. Bruce (2007), "Folklore and earthquakes: Native American oral traditions from Cascadia compared with written traditions from Japan", Myth and Geology, vol. 273, London: Geological Society, pp. 67–94, doi:10.1144/GSL.SP.2007.273.01.07, ISBN 9781862392168, S2CID 130713882
  7. ^ Yeates, Robert S. (2004), "Ghost Forests, Raised Shorelines, and the Seattle Fault" (PDF), Living with Earthquakes in the Pacific Northwest (Second ed.), Oregon State University Press, pp. 109–118, ISBN 0-87071-024-9
  8. ^ Vince Stricherz (July 11, 2005), "Native lore tells the tale: There's been a whole lotta shakin' goin' on", UW Today, University of Washington
  9. ^ David Bressan (October 28, 2012), "An Essential Field Guide to North American Earthquake Beasts", History of Geology, Scientific American blogs

47°31′22″N 122°23′40″W / 47.52270°N 122.39431°W / 47.52270; -122.39431 (Psai-Yah-hus)