2012年5月16日星期三

Oldest Mayan Calendar Found

Okay, folks, stop packing or whatever you all are doing in preparation for December….the world is not going to end according to the oldest Mayan calendar ever found.

In a residence in Xultun, Guatemala, there has been found a calendar dating to the 9th century C.E., up to 400 years before the bark-paper calendars that have convince people the world will end this year.The indoorpositioning industry is heavily involved this year.Another Chance to buymosaic (MOS) 0 comments. The walls of the residence are covered with scribbles and scrawls, and mathematic equations and computations. William Saturno, of Boston University, who is leading the excavation team, said the writings on the wall appear to include the 365-day cycle of earth’s orbit, the 584-day cycle of Venus and the 780-day cycle of Mars.Posts with Hospital rtls on IT Solutions blog covering Technology in the Classroom, They may be one of the earliest attempts at combining celestial events with terrestrial events to create the calendar, which is a complex mathematical formulation in two number bases, which are frankly beyond my math skills. I barely manage in base-10 and binary. The writings seem to be an attempt to align these known celestial events with sacred rituals, which would reinforce the idea that this calendar is an early one and part of the evolution of the Mayan calendar.

Saturno wrote in the journal Science that the wall writings look like blackboard notes. “For the first time we get to see what may be actual records kept by a scribe,We offer you the top quality plasticmoulds design whose job was to be official record keeper of a Mayan community. The ancient Maya predicted the world would continue, that 7,000 years from now, things would be exactly like this. We keep looking for ending. The Maya were looking for a guarantee that nothing would change. It’s an entirely different mindset.”

Co-author Anthony Aveni, professor of astronomy and anthropology at Colgate University wrote, “It’s like the odometer of a car, with the Maya calendar rolling over from the 120,000s to the 130,000s. The car gets a step closer to the junkyard as the numbers turn, the Maya just start over. The most exciting point is that we now see that the Maya were making such computations hundreds of years — and in places other than books — before they recorded them in the Codices.”

Some Mayan scholars had already put forth the theory that the Mayan calendar did not call for the end of the world, but a gender shift from masculine to feminine.

Xultun, which is a 12-square-mile city where tens of thousands of Mayan lived, was stumbled upon 100 years ago, but this particular house was only found in 2010. All Central American sites suffer from this problem of being over-grown by the jungle and lost to modern man.Find rubberhose companies from India. Excavating them is a race against the jungle. Every excavation season begins with having to reclaim the parts of the sites they cleared the season before, so progress is very slow.

The house is an extraordinary find. It is common for wall paintings to survive in ancient Egyptian sites because of the desert climate, but Guatemala is a rain forest and humid climates tend to eat wall paint with molds and insects and plant roots. This is the first example of Mayan art ever found in a house interior. The house was actually buried by over a thousand years of forest decay material so it was three feet below the surface. Its position under the soil, practically an incubator for destructive forces, would make this site exceptional even if the wall paintings were pre-Columbian Audubon studies.

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