Fuente: Science News
  Expuesto el: martes, 03 de julio de 2012 18:19
  Autor: Science News
  Asunto: Apocalypse, not so fast
| Ancient Maya reference to    2012 involved politics, not prophecy Web    edition : 3:18    pm 
 STEP    FORWARDHieroglyphs    carved on this 1,300-year-old Maya staircase step mention December 21, 2012,    apparently as part of a nearby king’s efforts to shore up his waning power.D. Stuart Although hieroglyphs    previously found at an ancient Maya site may or may not mention December 21,    2012, as the end of time, don’t cancel any New Year’s Eve plans. Scientists    working at another Maya city have uncovered a second reference to the same    2012 date, and the writing on the wall — make that the staircase — concerns    political turmoil back then, not apocalypse now. Anthropologists who    discovered and deciphered the 2012 reference among hieroglyphs carved on 22    staircase steps at Guatemala’s La Corona site announced their find June 28 in    Guatemala City. “This text talks about    ancient political history rather than prophecy,” says excavation codirector    Marcello Canuto of Tulane University in New Orleans. “In times of crisis, the    ancient Maya used their calendar to promote continuity and stability rather    than to predict apocalypse.” Two centuries of    political history plays out in the 1,300-year-old inscription, says    anthropologist David Stuart of the University of Texas at Austin, who is in    charge of deciphering the carved text. On one staircase block,    Stuart recognized a commemoration of a 696 visit to La Corona by the powerful    ruler of Calakmul, a Maya site in what’s now southern Mexico. Long thought to    have been killed or captured in a 695 battle lost to a rival kingdom, the    Calakmul king apparently weathered that defeat and visited his allies at La    Corona to convince them that he remained a strong ruler, Stuart suggests. In the commemoration, the    Calakmul king refers to himself with a title signifying that he presided over    and celebrated the end of a key Maya calendar cycle in 692. To attribute    special status to his weakened reign, Stuart says, the king also connects    himself to a future date when the next calendar cycle would conclude —    December 21, 2012. To a Maya king stung by a    major military setback, “the reference to 2012 might even have provided a    comforting sense of inevitability” in his continued rule, remarks    anthropologist Stephen Houston of Brown University in Providence, R.I. Researchers located La    Corona 15 years ago, after decades of looted sculptures from the Maya city    turning up on the antiquities black market. Canuto and anthropologist Tomás    Barrientos of Universidad del Valle de Guatemala have led work at La Corona    since 2007. In May and June, the    investigators decided to excavate at a building that looters had damaged    nearly 40 years ago. Thieves had discarded staircase stones bearing carved    writing in front of the structure. Digging produced additional discarded    hieroglyphic stones and an intact step consisting of 12 carved stones. At least 264 hieroglyphs    appeared on the La Corona staircase, making it one of the longest known    ancient Maya texts. Linking the 2012    reference at La Corona to a nearby king’s political maneuvering, “while imaginative,    is cogent and reasonable,” comments anthropologist David Freidel of    Washington University in St. Louis. And if    Canuto and Stuart’s proposal turns out to be wrong — well, it’s not the end    of the world.  
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