Sunday, December 30, 2012
Closing down...
I'll be closing it down in a couple of days.
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Mayan 'Apocalypse' 2012: Top 5 Facts About the Maya
"Many people from around the world have traveled to Belize to mark the end of the Mayan calendar and see the magnificent sites and cities they constructed during their reign in the region. They have also come to witness the next phase, the new beginning the ancient Mayans believed in," Katie Valk, founder and director of Belize Trips, explained in an email to The Christian Post.
Although the ancient civilization no longer stands, descendents of the Maya are spread over a number of regions in Latin America, including Belize, a small country located along the east coast of Central America, where Maya people represent 10 percent of its 312,000 population.
Valk says that popular interest in the Long Count calendar has been positive for Maya people, because it has encouraged many to delve and study deeper into the ancient civilization.
"I am also hoping this will serve the current Maya communities and assist them in ways to access better education, services, infrastructure and more control over their villages in the countries in which they reside," the travel agent added.
Valk does not believe that the world will lose interest in the fascinating Maya, even though there is no longer a countdown date to look forward to. But just what attracted people to the Maya civilization in the first place? What was so special about their culture and way of life, which came and went along with countless of others in the timeline of human history?
Below are some of the most interesting aspects of the Maya that archaeologists and scholars have gathered from excavating their ancient temples and palaces and studying the many artifacts they left behind:
The Maya Consisted of Many Groups of People
Although often called simply "the Maya," the central American peoples that archeologists commonly refer to by that name include a number of regional cities and cultures of the time period who shared many similarities, but also differences in terms of dress, customs, and beliefs. Occupying parts of present day Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, the earliest Maya settlements date back to around 1800 B.C. in what is known as the Pre-classic or Formative Period.
It was not until the Classic period, 250-900 A.D., that the Maya reached the heights of their civilization, however.
During this golden age, the Maya built elaborate plazas, palaces, temples and pyramids, and spread over 40 cities, some of which held up to 5,000 people. Supported by a population of over 2 million, a significant number for that time, the Maya flourished in the tropical rainforest climate of their region, a unique feat on its own, given that most other ancient cavitations developed in more stable, drier climates.
The Collapse of the Maya Remains a Mystery
While Maya communities scattered across Central America still exist today and preserve their culture in different ways, the sudden decline of this great civilization during the late 9th century remains a mystery to historians and archeologists. During that time period, their magnificent cities were one by one abandoned, and by 900 A.D. their entire civilization had pretty much collapsed, which still has archeologists scratching their heads.
Two competing theories exist as to why this happened – some historians believe that the Maya exhausted their natural resources, and combined with large droughts in the area, they were unable to sustain their population and had to abandon the cities. Others believe that since the Maya had no centralized authority, inter-city warfare might have led to trade alliances breaking down, making life much more difficult for people and sending traditional systems into chaos.
Whatever the reason, by the time the Spanish invaders arrived to colonize Central America in the 16th century, the Maya civilization was long gone – although aspects of it were incorporated into the larger Aztec empire.
Hundreds of Gods, Spirits and Supernatural Forces Dominated Maya Beliefs
The Maya devoted a lot of their time to religion and worshipped a plethora of different gods who had various characteristics. Itzamná was the most important god, who controlled the fire and ruled the heavens. Kukulcán, the Feathered Serpent, is one of their most recognizable deities, because his image appeared on many temples, and was later adopted by the Aztecs.
Other gods included Chac, a hooked-nose god of rain and lightning, Bolon Tzacab, the god of the royal descendents, and various other smaller deities inspired by nature.
While the Maya never had a singular king, their various rulers were thought to be intermediaries between the gods and the people, and thus considered to be semi-divine.
The Maya were also strong believers in the afterlife, and important figures were often buried in elaborate tombs with valuable offerings. The souls of the dead were believed to set on a journey though the underworld, which was filled with sinister gods and challenges. The Maya viewed heaven and hell as having multiple layers, where a different god ruled each realm.
Maya Religion Spurred Their Impressive Scientific Feats
The many religious rituals the Maya participated in depended on the rotation of time and the marking of calendar dates, which spurred the ancient civilization to develop impressive systems of mathematics and astronomy which were way ahead of their time.
The Maya developed the use of the number zero as a place-holder within their positional numerical system, while in science they accurately measured the solar year in use today (365 days), compiled remarkably precise tables of the position of the moon and nearby planets without the use of a telescope, and accurately predicted major cosmic events like solar eclipses.
The Maya had a great fascination with time, which they based many of their religious rituals on, and devised different calendars that helped them in agriculture and hunting. The most famous of their calendars, the Long Count calendar, also perhaps the most referenced Maya artifact in popular culture, has led to the biggest misconception people have of the Maya people.
The Maya Never Predicted an "Apocalypse"
Many people hold the notion that the Maya predicted Dec. 21, 2012 would be the "end of the world." But in actuality, the Maya never wrote anything about earth-shattering cataclysmic events or the death knell for the human population, or any of the fears that NASA has said are leading people to consider suicide in preparation of a possible "Doomsday."
The misconception stems from the Maya Long Count calendar, which was widely used on Maya monuments and has been a great object of interest for scholars and archeologists. The Maya divided this calendar into 13 ages, or Baktuns, each consisting of 144,000 days. Smaller cycles included the k'atun (7,200 days), tun (360 days), uinal (20 days) and kin (one day). The coming of each new Baktun was not feared, but celebrated by the people.
The calendar stretches back to Aug. 11, 3114 B.C, believed to be the mythical Mayan creation date, and ends on Dec. 21st, 2012.
Archeologists have insisted that there is nothing in this date that suggests an apocalypse, although the exact reason why the Maya did not add any other ages after the 13th remains a mystery. Since that number was considered divine, some people believe that a significant change is expected to befall Earth, while others suggest that the Maya simply did not get around to adding any further ages to the calendar before their civilization collapsed.
Whatever the real reason behind the calendar ending where it did, it is possible no one will never know.
A final interesting note is that the Dec. 21 date is only the closest representation on the modern Gregorian calendar that correlates to the end of the 13th Baktun – and some researchers have said that Dec. 23 or 24 might actually be a more accurate fit for the final date on the Maya Long Count Calendar.
Friday, December 21, 2012
We're still here!
And here we are.
There were a few folks worried in the US of course...just as there has been any time some Christian religious leader - or rather I should say cult leader - predicts the Rapture.
Moral of the story? Just live your life. If it happens it happens!
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
New posting schedule
So the next post for this blog will be on Monday.
Thanks for your patience.
Monday, December 17, 2012
Posts resume this Wednesday
Thanks for your patience!
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Mystical 'Doomsday' Mountain Braces for Mayan Apocalypse
In fact, everyone from NASA scientists to Maya scholars say that these beliefs are off-base. The Mayans never predicted that the end of their Long Count Calendar meant the end of the world, and there are no astronomical phenomenon headed our way that could possibly destroy the planet in less than two weeks. [Full Coverage: The Mayan Non-Apocalypse]
"In one day we had 500 people trying to book rooms. People want to bring their whole families," Obrad Blecic, a hotel manager near Mount Rtanj, told the Telegraph.
Monday, December 10, 2012
She was joking, people, she was joking!
ustralia's Prime Minister Julia Gillard has warned that predictions of the end of the world by ancient Mayans were correct and that the final days are coming -- in a deadpan ad for a lighthearted breakfast radio show.
"Whether the final blow comes from flesh-eating zombies, demonic hell-beasts or the total triumph of K-Pop, if you know one thing about me, it is this: I will always fight for you to the very end," Gillard said in a message to the "dear remaining fellow Australians."
She concluded her message by saying "Good luck to you all."
Australia's Herald Sun newspaper contacted Gillard's office seeking further information.
"What Australian doesn't mind a laugh from time to time? Anyway, the world's going to end tomorrow so shouldn't you be writing about that?" a spokesperson for the prime minister said.
NASA: It's not true
Such has been the hype about the supposed Mayan prediction for the end of the world on Dec. 21, 2012, that NASA was moved to issue a denial in a statement on its website.
"The world will not end in 2012. Our planet has been getting along just fine for more than 4 billion years, and credible scientists worldwide know of no threat associated with 2012," NASA said.
Sunday, December 9, 2012
NASA warns Mayan apocalypse stories pose threat to frightened children and suicidal teenagers
While some are throwing fantastical Doomsday countdown parties, The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is issuing grave warnings that 2012 Mayan apocalypse rumors pose a real-life threat to frightened children and depressive teenagers.
David Morrison, an astrobiologist at NASA Ames Research Center, said on Wednesday that he receives a large number of emails and letters from worried citizens, most often from young people.
Some say they can't eat, or are too worried to sleep, while others say they are suicidal, Morrison said.
‘While this is a joke to some people and a mystery to others, there is a core of people who are truly concerned,’ Morrison said.
NASA, a United States government agency, recently set up an information page on its website explaining why the world is not going to end on December 21, 2012.
The apocalypse rumors and fears are based on misinterpretations of the Mayan calendar, as SPACE.com reported.
The rumors began with claims that Nibiru, a rogue planet discovered by the Sumerians, will crash into Earth on December 21, killing everyone, according to NASA’s website.
There is no such planet, scientists say.
‘If Nibiru or Planet X were real and headed for an encounter with the Earth in 2012, astronomers would have been tracking it for at least the past decade, and it would be visible by now to the naked eye,’ NASA states on its apocalypse fear debunking page.
Concerns about the planet’s demise would be better directed on more substantiated problems such as climate change, Andrew Fraknoi, an astronomer at Foothill College in Los Altos Hills, California, said.
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Professor explains 2012 Mayan doomsday prophecy
The beginning of December brings the world one step closer to Dec. 21, 2012, and increasing global anxiety over an approaching “Mayan Doomsday.”
However, Christian Wells, an associate professor of anthropology, held a lecture on Nov. 30 to separate the fact from fiction of the legend. To his laughing audience in the Continuing Education building, Wells described what people believe will happen on Dec. 21, when the ancient Mayan calendar ends and when assorted “doomsday” scenarios are expected to take place. However, Wells denounced the apocalyptic claims.
“You still have to do your holiday shopping — the world is not going to end,” he said.
The ancient Mayans, Wells said, were skilled astronomers who were able to accurately predict the movements of the galaxy for centuries in advance of their time. According to their calendar, which Wells said is a detailed list of astronomical events that occurs over 13 cycles of 144,000 days, Dec. 21, 2012, marks the end of the 13th and final “B’ak’tun,” or cycle.
Wells said many of the ideas on blogs and forums from the Internet describe various ways this date will bring an end of civilization. These ideas include a polar planetary shift, a shift of the Earth’s magnetic poles where “north becomes south” — an increase of Earth’s gravity in the Kuiper Belt, which would attract more comets and asteroids to hit the planet; or a series of solar flares and other astronomical phenomenon.
Using quotes from a panel of NASA researchers and physicists, Wells said these apocalyptic possibilities are highly unlikely from a scientific and historic perspective. Rather than focus on what could happen on what many call the “Mayan Doomsday,” Wells based his lecture on where all these ideas came from.
He said the ideas are rooted in claims of new age groups that have been recording discoveries of the ancient Maya since the 1950s. Wells said the Mayan “doomsday prophecy” comes from two directly translated statements which are that “the 13th calendrical cycle will end on Dec. 21, 2012,” and “This is the destruction of the world. This then is its end.”
“What’s happened … is New Age religions have pulled these sentences out of the literary context, strung them together, and created a whole new meaning about apocalypse,” Wells said.
This reinterpretation of the Mayan calendar, Wells said, also fascinated Spanish explorers in the 1550s when they collected a detailed history from the Maya and a book they titled the “Popol Vuh.” This states that at the end of the calendar “there will occur a blackness (or spectacle), and the god of the nine will come down to the (Earth).”
Wells, who studies Mayan culture in his anthropology work, said this message came out of its original context.
“The Mayan Doomsday prophecy, I think, is actually a narrative about sustainability,” Wells said. “The Maya were great astronomers and knew exactly where they were in relation to larger cycles and trends in the environment and the universe. That’s what sustainability is all about — knowing your place in the world.”
Wells said the whole “doomsday prophecy,” was misconstrued by New Age religions that tried to apply the sustainability message to a global scale, turning it into a message of collapse and apocalypse.
According to a poll done of 16,262 people in 26 countries by Ipsos Global Public Affairs earlier this year, Wells said, one out of 10 people believe in the legend. In the U.S., 12 percent believe in it.
“If the poll is representative, then 37 million people in the U.S. agree or believe that the Mayan calendar marks the end of the world,” Wells said. “Even if it’s not representative, and even a fraction of this is true — say a million — that’s still a lot of people.”
The lecture, titled “The Maya Doomsday Prophecy and the End of the World,” was sponsored by the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at USF and the USF Humanities Institute.
“We have reason to be worried about climate change and the fiscal cliff that’s coming up,” Wells said.
But, he said, the biggest threat to the earth in 2012 was “the human race itself.”
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Some Beijing Citizens Fear Mayan 2012 Prophecy
From The Epoch Times: Some Beijing Citizens Fear Mayan 2012 Prophecy
One of four historic Mayan manuscripts that still exist in the world and that together suggest modern water, and life preservers.
People are talking about ancient Mayan predictions, which have been interpreted by some as meaning the end of the world is near. Chinese media reported how the predictions are affecting some Chinese people in the capital.
Beijing resident Ms. Xu told The Epoch Times that people have been discussing doomsday via text messages, urging others to stock up on food and other provisions. She said fears about the end of the world increased when local lay Buddhists discussed the topic.
According to an Associated Press report, experts say the Mayans did not predict that Dec. 21, 2012, would be the end of the world. “There are many ancient Maya monuments that discuss events far into the future from now,” wrote Geoffrey Braswell, an anthropologist at the University of California, San Diego, quoted by AP.
However, Mr. Lu, a member of the 13th regiment of the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, raised 1.5 million yuan (US$240,898.50) and took two years to build a “Noah’s Ark.”
Lu told Chinese media that he has been studying the Mayan prophecies since college. “Mayan prophecies have always been quite accurate,” he said. “So the prediction that the dawn of Dec. 22, 2012 will never come will come true as well.”
Lu designed and purchased the materials for the ark himself and worked until nightfall every day, finally hiring four workers to help him finish it. He said if the end of the world does not come, the ark could be used for tourist transport, for flood relief, or as a ferry to make up for the lack of bridges in Xinjiang.
Japanese princess and New Age luminary Kaoru Nakamura said in a YouTube video that the Earth is going to go dark for three days starting Dec. 22. “We are in dark completely, no electricity, no sun,” she said, adding that some government officials know of the coming disaster and are building secret hiding places. Meanwhile, we should “open our hearts,” and become better people, “filling our hearts with golden light.” Princess Nakamura said her third eye is open and she is able to “communicate with UFOs.”
NASA has assured the public that no catastrophic threats to Earth are coming on Dec. 21, The space agency added that the date called “the end of the world” was only the end of one cycle on the Mayan long-count calendar “but then, just as your calendar begins again on Jan. 1, another long-count period begins for the Mayan calendar.”
Monday, December 3, 2012
Chinese Man, Fearing Mayan 2012 Apocalypse, Spends Life Savings Building Ark
Urumqi, Xinjiang, China is the farthest place in the world from any ocean or large body of water. However, a Chinese man, Lu Zhenghai, has spent his life savings building an ark in anticipation of the December 21, 2012 apocalypse predicted by the Mayan calendar. Here is a photo of the 80-ton craft.I agree with the author above!
Think about this for one moment: If there was a disaster big enough so that someone living in Urumqi could actually use such a craft, there would be no hope of survival for anyone on earth anyways, no? The nearest ocean is over 1,600 miles away, and the city has an elevation of 2,600 feet.
I wish for once, just once, that instead of wasting money on foolishness people like him would give their money to me, so I could put it to some good use.
Sunday, December 2, 2012
Is 2012 the end? Mayan calendar myth looms large in December
DOVER — Eleanor Harrison-Buck has spent years researching the people of Mesoamerica — studying the structure of their societies, and learning about their architecture and analyzing the role of religious ideology in their lives.
But lately, she's been spending a surprising amount of time talking about the Mayan calendar.
A mistaken idea that the Mayan calendar predicts an apocalyptic event will take place in December 2012 has taken root in popular culture, even though it's been debunked by new archaeological evidence, as well as academic experts.
Tales of a doomsday event occurring in 2012 are still running rampant in print, on television and online. The myth was also at the center of a major Hollywood film, adding more fuel to the fire.
About one in 10 Americans now reports feeling genuine anxiety about the prospect of a cataclysmic event occurring before the end of the year, according to a study conducted earlier this year.
“It is one of the first questions that comes up, not only among my students, but also among the general public and friends,” said Harrison-Buck, an assistant professor of archaeology at the University of New Hampshire. “You know, I can't tell you how many reporters have called me and asked me, 'Is the world going to end?”
As the clock winds down to Dec. 21, experts on the Mayan calendar have been racing to convince people that the Mayas didn't predict an apocalypse for the end of this year. Earlier this year, archaeologists, anthropologists and others met in Mexico to discuss the implications of the myth.
The Maya calendar is a product of the 365 day solar calendar, which was shared throughout Mesoamerica. The Maya didn't develop it, according to Harrison-Buck, but they did elaborate on it. They also had a shorter ritual calendar, and the combination of the two produced a repeated cycle of 52 years, known as a “calendar round.”
For calculating dates beyond this 52-year period, the Maya and other cultures across Mesoamerica used the so-called “long count” calendar. This calendar is divided into periods of 394 years, called “baktuns.” The calendar fixes a given date within a period of 13 baktuns, known as the “great cycle.”
Researchers believe the great cycle of 13 baktuns started in 3,114 BC, meaning the period would end on date generally accepted as Dec. 21, 2012. That date is said to be the end of the “great cycle” of 13 baktuns.
Experts say 13 was a significant number for the Mayas, and the end of that cycle would be a milestone — but not an end.
The Maya saw time and space as a cyclical process, Harrison-Buck said. Researchers have determined this from hieroglyphics, and also from the Popol Vuh, the Maya creation story. The end of one time cycle in the long count calendar is more akin to a New Year's celebration than a doomsday, she said.
“While they didn't talk a lot about what events might accompany the end of this date, we know from period-ending celebrations in other, smaller bundles of time ... that they were certainly seen as times of destruction, but also renewal,” she said.
The Mayas, whose “classic” culture of writing, astronomy and temple complexes flourished from A.D. 300 to 900, were extremely interested in future events, far beyond Dec. 21.
By contrast, apocalyptic visions have been common for more than 1,000 years in Western, Christian thinking, and are not native to Mayan thought.
People interpreting the calendar incorrectly have proposed that the Maya were privy to knowledge about impending astronomical disasters, ranging from explosive storms on the surface of the sun that could knock out power grids to a galactic alignment that could trigger a reversal in Earth's magnetic field.
“It's become a snowballing process,” NASA astrobiologist David Morrison, who has been trying to debunk the Mayan calendar myth, said during a recent NASA videoconference. “It's gone viral. There's nothing logical about why these different calamities should be associated with Dec. 21, but that's the situation that we're in.”
For about a decade, Morrison has been answering questions from the public at NASA's “Ask an Astrobiologist” webpage. In the last few years, the real science questions have been overwhelmed by questions about a 2012 doomsday.
Morrison believes there are literally millions of people who think the world will end next month, including many children. Some have even said they are contemplating suicide, Morrison said.
“While it's a joke to many people and a mystery to others, there is a core of people who are truly concerned, and I think it's appropriate that we should answer these questions that are being sent to us,” he said.
Some of the most convincing evidence disproving the Mayan calendar myth emerged during an archaeological dig in Guatemala earlier this year. A Boston University professor and his team found a mural painted inside a residence that includes a calendar with predictions of dates thousands of years after the end of the 13th baktun.
Fellow BU professor Curtis Runnels said the Mayan calendar myth appears to share some similarities with other great hoaxes of the past.
Runnels, an archaeology professor who teaches a course on historical myths and mysteries, recalled reading similar doomsday scenarios spelled out in newspaper stories when he was a child. He suggested that deep down, most people understand the stories are fiction, and value them only for entertainment.
“People like sensation,” he explained. “They like mystery.”
During NASA's videoconference last week, Andrew Fraknoi, a science educator from Foothill College in Los Altos Hills, Calif., suggested that the Mayan calendar myth has exposed one real concern facing our country in the near future: a low regard for science education.
“It's really sad that so many people are worried and writing to David Morrison,” he said. “It's really sad that our schools have not taught skeptical thinking.”
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Bugarach: the French village destined to survive the Mayan apocalypse
Bugarach, with its two narrow streets, 176 residents, little agriculture, scores of wild orchids and virtually no pollution, was barely heard of a few years ago. Now, it's arguably the most famous village in France, known variously as "the village at the end of the world", the "chosen village", or as CNN put it, "the doomsday destination".
According to a prophecy/internet rumour, which no one has ever quite got to the bottom of, an ancient Mayan calendar has predicted the end of the world will happen on the night of 21 December 2012, and only one place on earth will be saved: the sleepy village of Bugarach. The mayor, Jean-Pierre Delord, a farmer in his 60s, first spotted the apocalyptic forecast online two years ago after being alerted by a villager. He mentioned it at a council meeting, suggesting special security measures, perhaps army logistics, to handle an influx of visitors in December 2012. Someone at the meeting told the local press and before long world news agencies and Japanese TV crews were pacing the cobbles asking baffled villagers their views on armageddon.
The French government's dedicated sect-watchdog, known as Miviludes, was soon on the case, keen to prevent any apocalyptic sect activity, or ritualised suicide by doomsday cults such as the Order of the Solar Temple, which lost members in ritual killings in the Alps in 1995. French government officials had spotted 2.5m websites referencing the Bugarach end-of-the-world phenomenon by the end of 2010. These have now mushroomed. Meanwhile, rumours of the impact on Bugarach got more outlandish, helped by media that couldn't resist the saga of a rural doomsday. Planes from America were said to have been fully booked for December with passengers who had only bought one-way tickets, hippy cults were claimed to have built bunkers beneath the village, and half-naked ramblers were said to be seen wandering up the mountain in procession, ringing bells. This turned out to be far from true. But as D-day approaches, the rumour has created a heavy atmosphere among villagers, who are keen for all of this – though not the world itself – to end.
At the tiny town hall, the leftwing, independent mayor of 36 years, Jean-Pierre Delord is dressed in jeans and wellies. "The Bugarach sign at the entrance to the village has been stolen for the third time – that costs a lot of money, you know," he sighs. Not to mention the pebbles taken from the mountain above the village and sold online as talismans, something he has filed a legal complaint about. Or the online sale of "prayers". There was even one idea by a budding entrepreneur to charge hopefuls five euros to send their last wills and testaments to Bugarach to be buried underground there for the end of the world, but it never happened
"The village has always attracted people with esoteric beliefs, they were here before and they will come afterwards, but this is something quite different," Delord says. This corner of southern France has long been a cauldron of mystic fables and occult conspiracy theories. Nearby Rennes-Le-Chateau, described in the Cadogan Guide as "the vortex of Da Vinci Code madness", is famous for its riddles of hidden treasure and a supposed cover-up of Jesus and Mary Magdalene's married life in France. All around is the countryside of the Cathars, the mysterious and persecuted medieval heretical sect, who have now inspired a local tourism drive. Nostradamus is said to have spent some of his childhood in nearby Alet-les-Bains.
But in Bugarach, says Delord, "it's all about the mountain". At 1,320m, the peak of Bugarach looms over the village. It sits alone, not part of a range, and some believe its spooky shape inspired the mountain in Steven Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Known as the "upside down mountain", it is a geological oddity whereby the lower layers of rock are mysteriously younger than those at the top. It is also host to a bewildering number of caves. Strange sounds from underground and odd light effects at the top have for decades seen the mountain likened not only to a UFO landing pad, but a "UFO underground car park", with regular spaceship vrooming and revving allegedly heard from within. UFO believers often travel here, looking for bits of spaceship amid the mountain rock. It has been claimed that the former French president François Mitterrand came here by helicopter to investigate.
Delord has no criticisms of anyone's beliefs about UFOs, or otherwise, "It's a magnificent mountain and people say they do see things – brilliance, lights, not necessarily extraterrestrials," though he hopes aliens do exist somewhere in the universe. The number of ramblers who have climbed the mountain has boomed since the apocalypse prediction, from 10,000 in 2010 to 20,000 in 2011. Delord rejects suggestions by some that he stoked the media frenzy himself. But does he believe the world will end on 21 December? His eyes widen. "Of course not. This is the 183rd end-of-the-world prophecy since antiquity. But I can't take the risk of a lot of people coming here, trying to climb the mountain and getting hurt." He wants the local authorities to shut off mountain paths and control any crowds.
In the organic shop on the edge of the village, a couple of civil servants from Nice were just down from the mountain top, enthusing about the weird sensations: how their compass went haywire, the strange cloud formations "in the shape of a wide-toothed comb". "There's an energy that's difficult to define but it does feel unique," says Corine Leblanc, who has lived here for several years. But suspicions and counter-theories abound about the apocalypse prophecy. Could it be designed to distract people from a real debate about whether wind turbines should be built in the village, some ask. Leblanc's partner, Patrice Etienne, worked in events management and communications in Paris for two decades and is sceptical. Could talk of the army closing off the mountain on 21 December in fact be cover for covert military operations and secret tests on paranormal activity? He's cynical about details such as fears that cult members might arrive here to end their lives. "Why come to the only place on earth that will be spared the apocalypse if you want to commit suicide? Wouldn't that be a bit like trying to drown yourself wearing a lifejacket?" he frowns.
"Is it that if you throw yourself off the mountain, then a spaceship would come by, scoop you up and save you?" wondered the owner of a guest-house in neighbouring Rennes-les-Bains, a spa-town known for its own esoterists, hippies and spiritualists, quick to add that she didn't believe for a second that Bugarach's mountain was an intergalactic Noah's ark. Normally, she would be shut for Christmas, but this year after a slow summer she had bookings for 21 December, so far mainly journalists.
The oddity is that tourist bookings this year seem to be down slightly, not up. The usual walkers, eco-tourists and people coming for spiritual retreats seemed put off by news crews doing lives-to-camera on armageddon. One Estonian rambler had taken refuge in Rennes-Le-Bain's thermal springs saying, "I went for one walk around Bugarach and was stopped by two TV crews asked if I'd prepared for the apocalypse."
In Bugarach, looking round the tiny church, Barbara Delahaye, a Spanish tourist in her 50s and a fervent Catholic, said there was no harm in all the fuss. "As Christians, one must always be prepared for the end of the world, it's not a bad thing to be kept aware of that."
Marco, an Italian warehouse worker from Genoa, had driven here to spend two days "looking for traces of UFOs" on the mountain. "I expected more people to be here," he says when he realises that he and a journalist are the only people at his guest-house that night.
In her restored terraced house, Valerie Austin, the local choir leader, summed up the odd atmosphere. "People come and look at us villagers as if we're all peculiar and in contact with some other world. I'm just waiting for one of them to give us a banana, I feel like a monkey at a zoo. We, the people that live here, have nothing to do with this," she says. Austin, a music teacher from Northumberland, moved here 24 years ago because "all the things I thought important in life seemed to be here: beautiful scenery, no pollution, clean water and kind of authentic, old-fashioned life-style."
She manages a holiday cottage that lost bookings over the summer because "people who wanted a quiet holiday were put off by the media buzz". The choir couldn't plan their usual pre-Christmas concerts in local villages because they weren't not sure whether there would be mayhem on the roads.
Does she believe any of it? "The Mayans couldn't even predict their own downfall, could they?" she sighs.
One of the most far-fetched claims has been of an apocalypse-inspired property boom in Bugarach as people allegedly rushed to set up home near safety. If prices have gone up in recent years, it has only been part of the long-running general move of city-dwellers looking for the rural dream. For-sale signs dot the village and neither sales nor prices have soared. "Why would you buy a house if the world was about to end?" asked one villager.
John Argles, a builder from London, was mid-construction on his dream house by the stream. An "atheist and a realist" he was surprised when he arrived that people asked him if he'd come for Doomsday. "That had nothing to do with it," he says. It was the nature, including its resident flock of vultures, that had tempted him. "It's the nearest thing to utopia I could find." He plans to meet friends for a celebratory drink in the local bar on 22 December.
Whatever its origins, the Bugarach prophecy has implanted itself in France's collective consciousness. Nicolas D'Estienne d'Orves, a novelist and opera critic for Le Figaro, released a book on it last week, The Village of the End of the World. A documentary on the life of villagers, The World Stops at Bugarach, will air on French TV, fittingly, on 20 December. D'Estienne d'Orves says it was "impossible" to get to the bottom of the genesis of the Mayan Bugarach rumour. "It was grabbed on to because this is a place where there's nothing, so you can easily project your fantasies on to it. It's like filling a balloon with air," he says. His book includes the letters received by Bugarach's mayor over the past two years of apocalypse frenzy, including one well-wisher proposing to organise "The Bugarach music festival: a new world beginning for humanity" to coincide with the end of the world, in which he promised to get together Peter Gabriel, Pink Floyd, Paul McCartney, Paul Simon, Led Zeppelin, Jean Michel Jarre and the Black Eyed Peas.
The French government, however, is obliged to take it seriously. More than 700km away in his Paris office near the prime minister's residence, Serge Blisko, head of Miviludes, says he would be advising local authorities on how to prepare policing and keep an eye for gurus and sects exploiting people. "After these moments, there can be a danger of psychological collapse. If fragile, vulnerable people expect an event like the end of the world and it doesn't happen, they can feel let down and in anguish," he says.
Meanwhile, on sale in the village is wine called "Cuvée Bugarach" labelled: "If there's only one left, I shall be that one." It helps "communicate with extra-terrestrials", the blurb says.
Over the next weeks, the state will decide what level of security is needed in the village on 21 December, whether to close mountain paths and how to handle any visitors. Although if it's snowing and icy, it would be almost impossible to access it by car via the death-defying canyon bends of the nearby Gorges of Galamus.
At the town hall, the mayor, while hoping the fuss would soon be over, was still proud of his village's fame. "If I'd have have had to pay a communications agency for this kind of publicity, it would have been a fortune," he says.
Monday, November 26, 2012
Mayan prophecy 2012: Spend the Maya apocalypse in Albuquerque, New Mexico
I hear the end of the world is coming, when is the date for the Mayan prediction or prophecy for the apocalypse?
As the Thanksgiving weekend is winding down today, some are already thinking ahead to the Mayan 2012 prophecies for an apocalypse.
As you may know, the end of the Mayan Long-Count calendar arrives with the winter solstice of 2012. That's December 21, 2012. In central New Mexico the solstice arrives at 4:12 AM, so an inventive company is going to celebrate the event a few hours later with a Sunset Float. They company, Quiet Waters Paddling Adventures, has a Web site complete with a countdown clock to the Mayan end of the world.
Quiet Waters Paddling, by the way is less than a half-hour drive from gay-friendly Albuquerque. The city's official Web site, itsatrip.org, had an official GLBT section. Click here to go directly to that microsite.The company is hoping the apocalypse will be more closely aligned with the original Greek meaning of the term (a revelation of something hidden), rather than the actual end of the world. The tour will gather together at 1:30 in the afternoon, then head to the Rio, where we'll take in the famous Sandia Sunset, following with a campfire, snacks, hot chocolate, and the ubiquitous S'mores.
The company offers this disclaimer, "Obviously, if the world really does end at 4:12 AM, this event will be canceled."
Rates:
Rates are per-person. Limit of one adult per kayak, or two adults per canoe. Children under twelve who float along with a parent or guardian in the same boat do so at half price (Applies to children floating along with one adult in a kayak or two adults in a canoe).
Mayan Apocalypse Sunset Float: $59.00
But once again, the date for the Maya prediction for the end of the world, or apocalypse is December 21, 2012. While the Mayan prophecy is causing anxiety for some, most think of it as a day of fun before the holidays, not a day of gloom.
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Mindpix Corporation Announces Co-Production with ZZYX Entertainment LLC PR Web
Monday, November 19, 2012
Doomsday 2012 Hoax: NASA Scientist David Morrison Debunks End Of World Theories
Is the world going to end right in the middle of the upcoming holiday season? While that wouldn't be good for retail sales, many people feel that Dec. 21, 2012 is a date that will linger in our minds forever -- assuming we all survive the calamities that are supposedly headed our way.
The ancient Mayan civilization calendar is believed to end this year on Dec. 21. And somehow, through word-of-mouth, movies, books, the Internet, etc., a cult-like belief system has sprung up in our culture suggesting any number of awful things will take place on that date.
Some of these include:
- An unknown planet on a collision path with Earth.
- A close encounter between Earth and a black hole in deep space.
- More natural disasters around our planet.
- A shifting of Earth's magnetic poles.
Many believe it goes back thousands of years to the ancient Sumerian culture who reportedly discovered a twelfth planet they called Nibiru -- aka Planet X -- which was predicted to have a close encounter with Earth in 2003.
When that didn't happen, a new Doomsday was moved to December 2012.
On the other hand, there are some who believe the December date heralds not doom and gloom, but a more positive transformative experience for Earth and its inhabitants.
It all sounds rather sketchy, especially to a scientist.
"It's all a hoax, and it's based on absolutely no factual information. None of the things that are supposed to happen are real, and so it's kind of hard to even have a scientific discussion about what they're worried about because there's no science there," said David Morrison, a leading space scientist and director of the Carl Sagan Center for Study of Life in the Universe at the SETI Institute in California.
While SETI scientists are involved with the ongoing search for extraterrestrial intelligence, they also want to quiet any fears the public has about the alleged Doomsday.
To that end, Morrison created a special Doomsday 2012 Fact Sheet in September that's posted on both SETI and NASA websites.
According to this fact sheet, "opinion polls suggest that one in 10 Americans worry about whether they will survive past December 21 of this year."
"Think about that. It means when you walk down the street and look around, there are 25 million people who presumably have no stake in anything because their world's going to end in [December]. That is scary," Morrison told The Huffington Post.
When Morrison was researching information for his Doomsday fact sheet, he didn't find anything that confirmed that the Mayans left us any dire predictions.
"The Maya scholars I've talked to say flat out they did not make any such predictions. The question then is does their calendar end? Well, that's not true, either, because there are written references to dates that are hundreds of years in the future, which indicates the calendar must keep going," he said.
"So, this is not a Maya thing -- they don't think anything bad's going to happen, and it's only meaningful if you believe the Maya could predict the future."
Morrison assured HuffPost that he's not building a bunker in his backyard to protect himself and his loved ones.
"I am not. And that's a whole other thing that's part of this mythology about how the government has been frantically building bunkers to house millions of people underground -- the elite, of course, not the rest of us. And that's just crazy."
There is, however, one part of this whole Doomsday scenario that the NASA/SETI scientist is very concerned about.
"I think it is wrong to put out a website or make a YouTube video in order to frighten children," he said. "That is something we should be truly offended by. And my main concern is that children have said they are contemplating suicide. A science teacher in Stockton, Calif., said the parents of two of her students told her they were planning to kill the children and themselves in a family suicide before the 21st of December.
"For children who are asking, 'Will Christmas come this year, Daddy?' I think that's evil," Morrison said.
That's also a concern of Jonathan Alpert, a New York City-based psychotherapist and author of "Be Fearless: Change Your Life in 28 Days."
"I have adults who see me and have beliefs that the world is ending, and they have kids, so it permeates into the kids' thinking," Alpert told HuffPost. "They're instilling fear in their young ones. Kids learn from adults, so if you're a kid and you witness your parents getting frenetic and anxious around the end of the world, and they're hoarding water and this and that, then naturally you'll develop a similar response."
Alpert says that, even though scientists reject the Doomsday scenario, it still affects people.
"In a way, it's like a folklore," Alpert explained. "People want to feel like they're part of something. They want to believe in things, even if those things are somewhat outrageous. There's a feeling of belonging-ness."
To help parents and children cope with any Doomsday issues, Alpert offers some advice.
"I would say stick with the facts. Kids are impressionable and easily influenced and ideas can be perpetuated in an unhealthy way, so parents should certainly take an active role in knowing what their kids are being exposed to and subsequently re-educating their kids."
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Ancient Mayans subject of locally produced film
The key to understanding Mayan creation mythology resides in Athens.
Well, sort of.
Standoff Studios, an Athens-based film production company, just finished work on a film called “Mayan Blue” that literally dives into the ancient history of the Mayan civilization in present day Guatemala.
Deep beneath the waters of Lake Atitlan in the Central American country, a lost city of Maya has hid submerged for about 2,000 years. A local diver discovered the ruins in the 1990s, but the Guatemalan government kept his discovery quiet for many years.
The discovery, the film’s writer/producer Hamilton Craig said, was “pretty hush-hush down there.” Most people hadn’t heard of it, he said, as Guatemalan authorities wanted to prevent looting of the historical site.
“We lucked into finding out about it,” Craig said.
About five years ago, the Standoff Studios team were busy producing a TV show about diving. Filming took them regularly down to Guatemala, where they met the site’s discoverer, Roberto Samayoa.
Work on “Mayan Blue” began in earnest in 2010 and continued through 2011.
“Mayan Blue,” directed by Rafael Garcia, features the academic work of American and Guatemalan archaeologists. The resulting film, featuring underwater cinematography as well as explorations into many dry Mayan historical sites, unveils this found city’s place in the ancient Mayan’s creation myth.
Spoiler alert: It’s rather important.
“It’s without a doubt a unique site,” Craig said.
He feels they’ve made an important contribution to the archaeological canon concerning the Mayan civilization.
“It’s archaeological. So the archaeologists can hypothesize,” he said. “Can they prove anything definitive? No. But we can create some strong possibilities through ancient texts and murals.”
As the end of the world, per the Mayan calendar, approaches, Craig said they aren’t rushing the film out to audiences to capitalize on the apocalyptic hubbub. The film’s findings, Craig said, are tied to the calendar, which stops on Dec. 21, but represents the opposite end of the cycle.
Standoff Studios is currently entering “Mayan Blue” in film festivals across the world, and is also in negotiations with TV companies for the rights.
“Mayan Blue” will screen in Athens “as soon as the opportunity arises,” Craig said.
Friday, November 16, 2012
Ancient Visions of a 2012 Eclipse
[Note: Tropical dates given in this article are Gregorian unless otherwise noted.]
Get ready for a full solar eclipse coming to your planet on November 13, 2012. This will be the final full eclipse of the current 13-baktun cycle of the Mayan Long Count, and that is just the beginning. The significance of this event transcends even Mayan cosmology, in which, as we will see, it is deeply integrated, speaking to a unified planetary vision of natural cycles, harmonic mathemagics, and the opportunity for a radical cultural renewal.
Evidence for human interest in recording natural cycles goes back 35,000 years or more. The earliest known artifact to express a substantial mathematical awareness, with the potential to be used in a properly "calendrical" fashion, is The Ishango Bone. This baboon fibula was incised with 168 tally marks, and inset with a crystal, around 25,000 years ago in equatorial Africa, near the headwaters of the Nile river. The exact purpose of the Ishango Bone is debated among scholars, but the inscribed intervals suggest its usefulness in integrating a number of factors. The level of sophistication may be very advanced; its set of four consecutive prime numbers (11, 13, 17, 19) in particular, has generated a great deal of speculation. The notches are arranged into three columns, two of 60 marks, and one of 48. It has been suggested that the intervals of 60 each record a cycle of two lunar months, and the notch-lengths and spacing of all three columns may indicate the changing phases. Also, the number 168 is a perfect multiple of 28, a number sacred to the moon in many traditions around the world, including the indigenous Igbo of Africa.
It may also be significant that in addition to the 168 incisions, the bone's inset crystal is believed to have been used to make incisions itself. The creative potential of the crystal is then, in a sense, the bone's 169th element, introducing the sacred moon number thirteen (13 x 13 = 169). The numbers 168 and 169 are the only consecutive multiples of 28 and 13 smaller than their common product 364 (= 28 x 13). This "plus one" relationship of 168 to 169 also relates the product of 13 and 28 with the solar year:
28 x 6 + 1 = 13 x 13
13 x 28 + 1 = 365
These same mathematical phenomena are evident in advanced calendrical computations, many thousands of years later, and on the other side of the planet, in the few surviving hieroglyphic books of the Maya. The book known as the Paris Codex contains an almanac of years composed of thirteen 28-day intervals. Conspicuous in this almanac is the repeated presence of the number 168. These supposed "distance numbers" have been discussed at length by scholars, but remain an enigma, with no clear consensus emerging as to their purpose. Less remarked upon, but also significant, is the almanac's base day, which is 12 Lamat, the 168th day of the Mayan ritual calendar.
Out of the several hundred almanacs in the 3 principal Mayan codices, only one other utilizes 12 Lamat as its base [1]. This is the Eclipse Table of the Dresden Codex. This Eclipse Table demonstrates such accuracy and sophistication in its ability to predict eclipses that it is one of the most widely appreciated examples of intellectual achievement by the Maya, or any of the world's ancient cultures. According to the evidence of Michael Grofe's insightful, detailed analysis, as incredible as it may seem, the Maya who constructed this document were capable of predicting eclipses with an accuracy that stretches modern computer programs to their limits [2].
In addition to beginning with day 168 of the ritual calendar, the Eclipse Table also incorporates the "plus one" day 169. This is conceptualized in a simple fashion, by equating the base of the table, 12 Lamat, with zero, and thereby equating 13 Muluc -- kin 169 -- with day one. The significance of this kin is then emphasized on the page following the table, which associates 13 Muluc with a series of large astro-numerically significant intervals. The number 169 also plays a role in the introductory section of the Eclipse Table, in the form of a column of 13 consecutive 13s. This column relates to the 364-day almanac of the Paris Codex, probably as a method for integrating eclipses with a number of other celestial cycles over a period of 130 years [3].
Although the Maya offer us the most definitive, precise examples, these same patterns are found throughout the ancient world. One of history's most mathematically sophisticated calendrical traditions existed among the Essene Jewish community at Qumran during the final centuries of the BC era. The principal calendar of this community was of 364 days, which incorporated, to at least some degree, cycles of 13 and 28. Of paramount importance to this calendrical tradition was the cycle of priestly courses, which determined the rotation of responsibility for the administration of temple activities among the 24 priestly divisions of Israel. Each division succeeded in turn for a period of one week, defining a full 24-week cycle of precisely 168 days (= 24 x 7).
The ritual importance of the number 168 is also evident in 14th century England's chivalric Order of the Garter. Like King Arthur's legendary Knights of the Round Table, this order was organized by the number 13. Furthermore, the order's founder, King Edward III, is said to have worn a mantle embroidered with 168 garters, with one additional garter -- the 169th -- worn around his leg.
Thousands of years earlier, the neolithic culture of England had constructed megalithic monuments demonstrating an impressive astronomical awareness. The earliest stage of construction at Stonehenge included a circle of 56 stations (= 28 x 2), known today as the Aubrey holes. This circle is believed to have functioned as an eclipse calculator through integrating cycles of 13 and 28 days [4]. During this same period, another megalithic site known as Woodhenge was built just two miles to the west, composed of 168 distinct post holes.
More intriguing connections to these matters are found in the Egyptian legend of the death of Osiris. According to Plutarch's account of this legend, after an important interval of 28 years (being either his age or reign) Osiris met his destiny at the hands of his adversary Set (Typhon) on the 17th day of the month Athyr. As Plutarch further relates, Set is associated with eclipses and a polygon of 56 sides [5], suggestive of the Aubrey holes just mentioned. According to the calendars of Plutarch's time, the date of Set's "eclipse" of Osiris -- 17 Athyr -- corresponds to November 13. (This concerns the Alexandrian/Coptic calendar of Egypt and the Julian calendar of Rome. The correlation is within one day of November 13 by tropical Gregorian reckoning for 100 AD, approximate date of Plutarch's Moralia.)
Incredibly, November 13 also corresponds to both the first day of the Mayan Eclipse Table (in 755 AD), and to the full solar eclipse of 2012, the last such event of the Mayan calendar's famous 13th baktun. Just let that sink in for a moment.
Before going further, it is important to acknowledge some of the complex subtlety inherent in Mayan astronomy, as exemplified by the Eclipse Table. The Mayan Long Count date at the base of the Eclipse Table is 9.16.4.10.8. In the traditional correlation (which I fully accept), this actually corresponds to November 10, 755 AD, meaning day one of the table -- 13 Muluc -- would correspond to November 11. According to astronomical models, however, November 12-13 would more accurately synchronize to the new moon at this time. The main body of the table appears to address this discrepancy with the inclusion of "warning stations". The recorded intervals of the table identify individual days, but each interval is accompanied by three consecutive day-signs, which define a three-day range in which an eclipse might be expected. This three-day leeway, and the associated astronomy, has played a significant role in debates over the calendar correlation, with many scholars proposing a shift of two days (familiar through various references to either December 21 or 23 as the end of the 13th baktun), such that November 13, rather than November 11 would be day one of the Eclipse Table.
In my studies of Mayan timekeeping, I have come to realize that such discrepancies are typically deliberate (note that "warning stations" are exceedingly rare in Mayan almanacs), and, far from indicating any sort of imprecision, often act as windows into insights even more profound than the literal reading would suggest. Therefore, one might view the November 11 correlation as particularly relevant to the traditional count, and the November 13 discrepancy as a sort of initiatory mystery.
With this in mind, it is worth taking a look back at the year 2010. At this time the traditional Mayan day-count demonstrated the exact same relation to the tropical year as it did in 755 AD, the year of the Eclipse Table's base date. That is, November 11, 755 AD (Gregorian) and November 11, 2010, were both 13 Muluc in the traditional count. This type of synchronization with the tropical year has a probability of occurring once in 260 years. (A similar synchronization with the strictly 365-day haab occurs every 52 years.) Although an eclipse did not occur on either of these two dates, the year 2010 was notable for a full lunar eclipse that took place on the day of its southern solstice, exactly two years before the end of the 13th baktun.
This two-year interval highlights another famous discrepancy known as the Dreamspell. The Dreamspell is a modern interpretation of the Mesoamerican ritual calendar, which, while popular, has not been taken seriously by many scholars. Interestingly, however, during the final years of the 13th batkun, the discrepancy between the two counts is such that a day in the traditional count will be followed 2 years and 2 days later by its Dreamspell equivalent. Therefore, November 11, 2010 -- the traditional day 13 Muluc -- is followed 2 years and 2 days later by November 13, 2012, when the Dreamspell day 13 Muluc and the final full eclipse of the 13th baktun coincide.
The formulation of the Dreamspell did not arise out of a conscious effort to manifest this particularly remarkable synchronicity; it is based on a reading of patterns and discrepancies in the monuments of ancient Palenque and the colonial era books of Chilam Balam. To simplify, the main criteria places the baktun shift of 2012 in a year named 7 Cauac, signifying 'the time between incarnations', in conjunction with a discrepancy of 47 days. The canonical Solar New Year of the ancient Maya (as distinct from their 365-day haab) corresponds to July 26, which was observed throughout the Yucatan and the Chilam Balam tradition. The final such Solar New Year of the 13th baktun occurred on the traditional day 12 Eb, 47 days before 7 Cauac.
This New Year was determined by observing solar zenith (no shadow) at the latitude of Edzna, a pioneering Mayan astronomical center, where the courtyard of the main acropolis contains a gnomon for the purpose. Edzna shares this latitude, and a number of other characteristics, with the great city of Teotihuacan in central Mexico. Both cities are laid-out in a virtually identical manner with respect to horizonal astronomy, and both experienced early stages of construction at virtually the same time. This early stage corresponds roughly to the Long Count's transition from the 8th to 9th baktun, a date memorialized in the books of Chilam Balam as the beginning of the pyramid-building phase of Mayan civilization. This baktun shift of 41 AD occurred in a year in which the July 26 zenith at Edzna also coincided with the beginning of the 365-day haab of the Classic Maya, on the traditional day 7 Cauac -- an astoundingly uncommon convergence of factors. [6]
The coincidence of 7 Cauac with July 26 in the first year of this important era of Mayan history also entails the occurrence of 13 Muluc on November 13. Furthermore, the phases of the moon during this year also correspond to the Eclipse Table and 2012, placing the new moon within one day of Nov 12. In 41 AD, however, the eclipse did not occur with 12 Lamat / 13 Muluc, but one month earlier. This indicates a whole other level of synchronization, having to do with the 26,000-year cycle of stellar precession. In the 1971 years between 41 AD and 2012 the the fixed stars have shifted with respect to the tropical year by approximately 28 days, describing the arc of Earth's orbit over one lunar month. The stellar configuration of Earth's November skies today, corresponds to the configuration of October 2000 years ago. Therefore, according to a galactic frame of reference, the solar eclipses of the 41 AD and 2012 baktun shifts are nearly identical.
This phenomenon is intrinsically related to the human understanding of precession. The measurement of eclipses in relation to the fixed stars is one of the chief means by which Hipparchus was able to introduce the concept to Old World astronomy, and it has been suggested that a similar approach was taken by the Maya, with the Pleiades star cluster -- important throughout Mesoamerican cosmology -- as their point of reference [7]. The luni-stellar alignments of 41 AD and 2012 are such that both years witnessed eclipses with the sun, moon, and Pleiades all in alignment. (The eclipse of May 20, 2012 had its own set of remarkable circumstances, which I have explored elsewhere.) To appreciate this, on the evening of November 13, whether you are in a position to view the eclipse or not, notice that the Pleiades (that unmistakable glittering jewel) will be rising in the east just after the sun sets in the west. Reflect that you are witness to the same celestial patterns as the great moon sages, 5 baktuns past.
(Note that all 4 of these solar eclipses -- April 19, 41 AD, October 14, 41 AD, May 20, 2012, and November 13, 2012 -- are either total, annular, or hybrid, meaning, as opposed to partial eclipses, they all exhibit a perfect alignment between sun, moon, and Earth.)
This 5-baktun cycle is approximately equivalent to one thirteenth of a full precessional cycle of 26,000 years, which takes us back to the Ishango Bone origins. Recalling that this artifact was discovered at the headwaters of the Nile, it is interesting to consider that according to Egyptian cosmology "an intricate logic links the moon with the Nile through the number 28." [8]
We have seen one aspect of this "intricate logic" in the eclipse of Osiris by Set, and, through profound synchronicity, its connection to 2012 and the reckoning of the Maya. There is yet more. The Egyptian calendar of Plutarch's time -- the Alexandrian, or Coptic calendar -- is still maintained by traditional groups in Egypt to this day, as is a structurally identical calendar in Ethiopia. These calendars usually observe New Year's Day on September 11, as they did in 2012. Recalling that the Dreamspell discrepancies highlight an interval of 47 days related to July 26 and 7 Cauac, notice that the Coptic New Year of September 11 occurs exactly 47 days after July 26, and September 11, 2012 was 7 Cauac in the traditional Mayan calendar.
What is the agency behind these incredible synchronizations? Is it all just a case of apophenia, or does there exist some common thread of intention or attunement? I will leave it to the reader to decide, but can't suppress my amazement at the outlandish degree of correspondence. The numbers, the cycles, the timing; I hope I have done them some justice. There is currently a popular strain of scholarly backlash against myths of "peaceful stargazers" and the "noble savage", such that promoting the wisdom of indigenous traditions, or suggesting that ancient people attained levels of achievement that we cannot appreciate today, is liable to elicit accusations of naivety, prejudice, or even racism. It is not my intention to romanticize ancient or indigenous people, but there exists a potential for harm in this backlash; it can be invoked by those who really are prejudiced, who do have ulterior motives, who, for whatever reason, are threatened by the idea of ancient wisdom.
For 5 baktuns indigenous cultures have been under threat. For 5 centuries they have faced extinction. The shift of the 13-baktun cycle is not just another date on just another calendar. It marks a singular opportunity for people of good faith to recognize, and reflect on our collective connection to the ancient world and the cycles of nature. Far more than a simple tally of days, the Long Count represents a truly remarkable intellectual and spiritual legacy. And it's not over yet.
One cycle gives way to the next. The thirteenth baktun ends, Baktun Thirteen begins; and we ride the wave of a new 13-moon cycle. The November 13 eclipse occurs on the Dreamspell equivalent of 13 Muluc, interpreted "13 Moon". As anyone remotely familiar with the Dreamspell knows, the "13 Moon" calendar is its principal touchstone. This 13 Moon calendar is essentially the same as the 13 x 28 almanac of the Paris Codex, the chief difference being the day of the New Year.
The base of the Paris almanac is believed to correspond to that of the Eclipse Table, and marks the beginning of five 364-day years (364 x 5 = 260 x 7). Over these 5 years the 364-day cycle shifts with respect to the tropical year by 6 or 7 days, a discrepancy addressed by the almanac's green correction numbers. Within this 6 or 7-day interval is November 8, which is 260 days -- one cycle of the ritual calendar -- before July 26.
From the "13 Moon" full solar eclipse of November 13, 2012, if we add the 260-day discrepancy, and then apply the 5-year Paris almanac to the Dreamspell, we arrive at the first day of a 13 Moon year, beginning on the day "13 Moon". A full lunar eclipse occurs on the following day. Welcome to the New Time!
Endnotes
[1] Bricker, Harvey M. and Bricker, Victoria R., Zodiacal References in the Maya Codices, from The Sky in Mayan Literature, ed. Anthony F. Aveni, 148-183, Oxford University Press, 1992: 153-154
[2] Grofe, Michael John. 2007. The Serpent Series: Precession in the Maya Dresden Codex. PhD dissertation, Davis: University of California, 2007: 142-143
[3] Grofe pp.154-157
[4] Sir Fred Hoyle suggested a method of calculation involving 4 markers around the circle. Two of these markers, corresponding to the lunar nodes, would be moved on a yearly basis. Of the other two, one would be moved two holes every day, completing a full circuit in 28 days, while the other would be moved every 13 days. (Gregg, DP, The Stonehenge Codes: A New Light on Ancient Knowledge?, 2010: 212-213.)
[5] For his discussion these matters, see Plutarch, "Isis and Osiris", translated from The Moralia by Frank Cole Babbitt, vol. 5 Loeb Classical Library 1936: 103-109, 75
Penelope.uchicago.edu <Retrieved 9/24/2012>
[6] Although July 26, 41 AD was 7 Cauac, the first day of the Classic haab occurred 2 days earlier on July 24. This reflects different traditions of "year bearer" observation, which shifted over time. Edzna played a crucial role in recording these shifts, and according to the Chilam Balam tradition, the first day of the haab in 41 AD would indeed have fallen with 7 Cauac on July 26. Note the relation of the 2-day year-bearer shift to the 2-day "warning station" discrepancy of the Eclipse Table. My discussion of Edzna is based on the work of Vincent Malmstrom, and it should be noted that while invaluable, Malmstrom's chronological analysis is based exclusively on the non-traditional (GMT+2) correlation, and is not 100% consistent.
[7] Grofe p.108
[8] Quote from Krupp, E. C., Echoes of the Ancient Skies: The Astronomy of Lost Civilizations, Courier Dover Publications 2003: 18. See Plutarch p.105. I discuss this more in-depth in my article "Planetary Culture of 13 Moons Part I: The Ancient Artifacts".
Thursday, November 15, 2012
December 21, 2012: The Operetta
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
When Is The Apocalypse? December 21 Mayan Prediction Explained
When is the Mayan apocalypse? We've heard for years that the world will end in 2012, according to ancient calendars and predictions, but now that doomsday is just over a month away the question is: what will the apocalypse entail and when exactly will it happen?
The ancient Mayan calendar was unlike any modern calendar. The Mayans considered the concepts of 'time' and 'date' as intermingling spiritual cycles. Their calendar itself was a sacred object, with each day getting its own spirit.
So why are talking about the Mayan calendar? Because it ends on December 21, 2012 CE. It is believed by many, including a number of living tribes in America and around the world, that Dec. 21 will bring the end of our world and the "regeneration" of a new earth. Apocalypse.
If you're asking, "What did the Mayans know?" the answer is "a lot." Their civilization perfected a form of astrology based on the cycle referred to as the Precession of the Equinoxes. This 26,000 year cycle detailed the Earth's passing through all 12 zodiac signs, each one lasting 2,000 to 2,150 years and representing a single cosmic year.
In addition, the Mayan developed methods of architecture, art, math and science based along the same principles, and built stone pyramids and monuments based on specific computations. The reason for this heroic effort, many believe, was to leave behind a warning that the Apocalypse would come in 2012.
The Mayan's predicted that the end of the current cosmic year will bring with it new age and creation in the form of a worldwide apocalypse. The prophecy was also allegedly confirmed by Mayan King Pacal Voltan, who believed that the end of the world would occur on our December 21, 2012, the Winter Solstice.
If you're having trouble believing the predictions of long-extinct Mayans and their King, then get ready for a bombshell: modern science confirms the Apocalyptic prophecy, and even tells us exactly what time it will happen.
On December 21, 2012 at exactly 11.11 PM Universal Time (AKA Greenwich Mean Time) the sun will be positioned exactly in between earth and the center of the Milky Way. According to American Academic Lawrence Joseph, when this happens "whatever energy typically streams to Earth from the center of the Milky Way will indeed be disrupted."
What exactly will occur when this happens on Decmeber 21 is unclear, but some believe that gravitional, magnetic and solar energies could be dramatically altered, causing worldwide national disasters while weakening the earth's magnetic field to allow solar radiation to penetrate the atmosphere.
In "The Mayan Prophecies," authors Adrian Gilbert and Maurice Cotterell argue that "long-term sunspot cycles" could actually flip the planet's magnetic field.
The end of 2012 also marks the transition from the current zodiac age of Pisces to the age of Aquarius. While Pisces (fish) has come to represent Christianity, religion and order, Aquarius could bring the end of the civilization of the beginning of something new, possibly through violent change.
However, others believe that the age of Aquarius will bring a "Golden Age," through a radical change in civilization and a departure from Pisces society. The word apocalypse can also signify a transition between ages (possibly a violent one), rather than simple the end of everything.
Of course, not everyone believes the world will end on December 21. Mayanist scholar Mark Van Stone has even argued that "there is nothing in the Maya or Aztec or ancient Mesoamerican prophecy to suggest that they prophesied a sudden or major change of any sort in 2012," adding that the concept of a Mayan apocalypse is a completely modern invention.
Susan Milbrath, curator of Latin American Art and Archaeology at the Florida Museum of Natural History told USA Today,"We have no record or knowledge that [the Maya] would think the world would come to an end."
Executive director of the Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies Sandra Noble takes the perspective even further, telling USA Today, "For the ancient Maya, it was a huge celebration to make it to the end of a whole cycle."