"Calendar find changes Mayan timetable" by Carolyn Y. Johnson | Globe Staff, May 10, 2012
In the rain-forest-covered ruins of a Mayan city dating back more than 1,100 years, an excavation led by Boston University has turned up the oldest evidence of that civilization’s mastery of astronomy - a precise lunar calendar written on what appears to be an ancient blackboard.
The calendar, consisting of delicately painted symbols and columns of
numbers, was one of a number of texts found on the wall of a room in a
residential area of the massive complex of ruins called Xultun in
northeast Guatemala, the scientists reported Thursday in the journal
Science. It is four to five centuries older than previous Mayan
calendars, and the earliest found on a wall rather than in books.
Scholars who study the Maya said the well-preserved room provides insights into the people’s lives beyond those drawn from the more lasting stone monuments and artifacts that archeologists often depend on to reconstruct ancient civilizations. It is almost as if the researchers can peer over the shoulders of the scribes who were writing and thinking there. The BU-led team reported that sections of the wall had been plastered over to make space for new text.
“For me what’s really amazing is people are erasing and changing it and adapting it,’’ said Charles Golden, associate professor of anthropology at Brandeis University, who was not involved in the research. “You get these works in progress that really humanizes this. It kind of demystifies it.’’
Another set of numbers painted on a section of wall undermines an idea that has been embraced in popular culture - including the movie “2012’’ - that the Maya predicted the world would end in “13 baktuns’’ or about 5,000 years, which works out to the end of this year.
I never bought in, although I will change my mind if building 4 at Fukushima falls over.
That idea has long been dismissed by scholars, who explain that the Maya calendar is like a vehicle odometer that turns over when it reaches that date, not a doomsday prediction. The new find reinforces that the Maya’s conception of time was not finite, because it contains a calendar that extends 17 baktuns, about 7,000 years.
Yes, it actually means TIME of REVEALING!
The Maya lived in Mexico and Central America and were a dominant force in that area, with a written language and an understanding of astronomy and calendars. Their civilization spanned from about 2000 BC to the arrival of the Spanish about 3,500 years later.
The room was uncovered through a combination of chance and persistence. A determined BU undergraduate, Maxwell Chamberlain, spotted a faded painting on a patch of wall during his lunch break, while exploring trenches dug by looters. William Saturno, an assistant professor of archeology at BU who led the team, began an excavation and discovered a magnificent, nearly life-size portrait of a Mayan king adorned with a brilliant-blue feather headdress. Further excavation, supported by the National Geographic Society, revealed a row of mysterious figures and one badly damaged wall, which was covered with writing.
Eventually, a Sudoku-like analysis, using information about what numbers were visible in the table to calculate what numbers the rest of the table must have contained, revealed that the incomplete table was a 13-year lunar calendar. Another set of numbers, the scientists report, seems to record other astronomical and planetary events.
“We find inside this city that’s been known about for a century, in this little house on the outskirts of town . . . all these numbers and writings and calculations that involve both the calendar and astronomy and observations and history and the preparations of texts,’’ Saturno said.
The modest room has only begun to yield its secrets, with more texts yet to be deciphered. Marc Zender, a visiting assistant professor of anthropology at Tulane University not involved in the research, compared the calculations inscribed on the walls to seeing the notes and scribblings that led to famous mathematical theorems.
It is likely that scribes were at work in the room, and “they were probably consulting books, but maybe it was getting onerous to flip through the book,’’ he speculated. “They may have simply copied them onto the wall so they didn’t have to keep opening their bark-paper books.’’
Zender said he hoped to use the tables to look at monuments left behind by the Maya at other sites, to understand whether mathematical and astronomical understanding and calendars were centralized.
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I'm still on schedule.