What is it with mountains and the end of the world?
Last month, officials announced that a supposedly mystical mountain in France would be closed on Dec. 21 to prevent a flood of doomsday believers
from coming to wait out the Mayan apocalypse. Now, a pyramid-shaped
peak in Serbia is the site of similar frenzy, according to the Telegraph newspaper.
Bookings are pouring in for Dec. 21 at hotels around the mountain, the
newspaper reported. That date is the day the ancient Maya Long Count
Calendar completes a full cycle of creation, a fact that some believers have taken to herald an 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]
Nevertheless, believers are reportedly set to head for the hills — for Mount Rtanj,
that is. The mountain is in eastern Serbia, part of the Carpathian
range, and has long been the subject of myth. One old legend holds that
the peak was once home to a wizard guarding a great treasure. More
recently, the pyramid shape of the mountain has been attributed to alien
influence.
These rumors have made the rounds online: On one site, abovetopsecret.com, posters write of mysterious glowing lights and UFOs
seen in the sky around the mountain and draw parallels between the
peak's shape and that of the Great Pyramids of Egypt. The theory is that
the mountain holds an alien-built pyramid inside. According to the
Telegraph, science-fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke called the mountain a place of special energy.
These rumors have apparently driven doomsday-fearers to seek out the mountain in hopes of protection."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.
Meanwhile, in the French Pyrenees, another supposed Mayan apocalypse "safe zone"
has been closed for the alleged doomsday, with officials fearing an
influx of doomsday cultists and journalists on Dec. 21. Like Mount
Rtanj, France's Pic de Bugarach is the center of rumors about UFOs and
mystical powers. Believers think the mountain will open up on doomsday,
revealing an alien spacecraft that will carry people to safety.
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