One of these objects names an annual feast at Fort Ouiatenon (“wee-ah-teh-non”) that reenacts Wea trade with Wabash River voyageurs (“voy-ah-ZHUR”). One of these objects caused blindness among the pale race said to have built a wall at Fort Mountain State Park, causing people with eyes like these objects to be killed by the Cherokee. A late summer raiding time nicknamed for one of these objects titles S. C. Gwynne’s history of Quanah Parker and the Comanche Empire. Farmer’s almanacs often listed ersatz “Indian” names for one of these objects, like the “sprouting grass,” “strawberry,” and “hunter’s.” One of these abiotic objects titles a David Grann book about William Hale’s schemes to acquire headrights to oil royalties in Oklahoma. For 10 points, a 2023 Martin Scorsese film about the Osage murders is titled for “killers” of what sort of object named for flowers? ■END■
ANSWER: moons [accept months; accept Killers of the Flower Moon; accept Empire of the Summer Moon; accept moon-eyed people; accept Feast of the Hunter’s Moon; prompt on natural satellites, astronomical bodies, celestial bodies, stellar bodies, heavenly bodies, or equivalents of any]
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= Average correct buzz position