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#1
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End of World "Possible"
Not that I'm taking it seriously, but...
Given that a Piktun consists of 20 Baktuns, not 13 Baktuns, it is not correct to say that because the world probably didn't end on September 5, 3114 B.C., that it isn't going to end on December 21, 2012. Instead, we need to go back 20 Baktuns to the start of Baktun 13 in the previous cycle of 20, not the beginning of the current cycle of 20, to find the previous end of the world. That would have been December 4, 5874 B.C. - and that is closer to being before the dawn of civilization, so that the world could have experienced some sort of global cataclysm without anything being written about it. John Savard |
#2
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End of World "Possible"
On Wednesday, December 19, 2012 at 23:42 UTC, Quadibloc wrote:
Not that I'm taking it seriously, but... Given that a Piktun consists of 20 Baktuns, not 13 Baktuns, it is not correct to say that because the world probably didn't end on September 5, 3114 B.C., that it isn't going to end on December 21, 2012. I collected my new hybrid car on Monday; together hybrid owners can battle the forces of diesel. Not that I'm taking it seriously, but... Instead, we need to go back 20 Baktuns to the start of Baktun 13 in the previous cycle of 20, not the beginning of the current cycle of 20, to find the previous end of the world. That would have been December 4, 5874 B.C. - and that is closer to being before the dawn of civilization, so that the world could have experienced some sort of global cataclysm without anything being written about it. The MIBs erased their memory, of course. |
#3
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End of World "Possible"
"Quadibloc" wrote in message
... Not that I'm taking it seriously, but... Given that a Piktun consists of 20 Baktuns, not 13 Baktuns, it is not correct to say that because the world probably didn't end on September 5, 3114 B.C., that it isn't going to end on December 21, 2012. Instead, we need to go back 20 Baktuns to the start of Baktun 13 in the previous cycle of 20, not the beginning of the current cycle of 20, to find the previous end of the world. That would have been December 4, 5874 B.C. - and that is closer to being before the dawn of civilization, so that the world could have experienced some sort of global cataclysm without anything being written about it. John Savard ================================================== ===== Not that I'm taking you seriously, but... Civilisation merely means city-dwelling, and that only happened when farming began. Without farming hunter-gatherers were nomads. Without cities there is no controlled fire, without controlled fire no pottery, the North American aboriginal had no earthenware pots, he had baskets. But pot shards date to 40,000 BCE in South and Central America. The world ended with the onset of the first ice sheet and started again 11,000 years ago. -- This message is brought to you from the keyboard of Lord Androcles, Zeroth Earl of Medway. When I get my O.B.E. I'll be an earlobe. |
#4
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End of World "Possible"
Quadibloc:
That would have been December 4, 5874 B.C. - and that is closer to being before the dawn of civilization, so that the world could have experienced some sort of global cataclysm without anything being written about it. If it was that recent, and it was global, we would know about it. We know about the global cataclysm of the Chicxulub event of 65MYBP and the smaller, more localized, Chesapeake Bay impact of 35MYBP (so-called, even though the Chesapeake Bay did not exist at that time). -- I agree with almost everything that you have said and almost everything that you will say in your entire life. usenet *at* davidillig dawt cawm |
#5
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End of World "Possible"
Incidentally, I found a post this morning about the Winter Solstice in
the year 7212 A. D., by Gerard Kelleher, noting that 5200 years in the future about equals 5200 years into the past, when the foundations of astronomy were laid - and the eternal verities of the Earth's orbital motions would stay the same. But the post appears to have disappeared. John Savard |
#6
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End of World "Possible"
Quadibloc:
Incidentally, I found a post this morning about the Winter Solstice in the year 7212 A. D., by Gerard Kelleher, noting that 5200 years in the future about equals 5200 years into the past, when the foundations of astronomy were laid - and the eternal verities of the Earth's orbital motions would stay the same. But the post appears to have disappeared. That's because it was on a server in NZ, which has already been destroyed. Ah, well, it's near 13:00 EST, so I've got 11 hours yet. Time for some pre-Apocalypse reading, maybe a nap, and some dinner. Also catch up with the TiVo before it's too late. -- I agree with almost everything that you have said and almost everything that you will say in your entire life. usenet *at* davidillig dawt cawm |
#7
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End of World "Possible"
On 12/19/12 5:42 PM, Quadibloc wrote:
Not that I'm taking it seriously, but... Given that a Piktun consists of 20 Baktuns, not 13 Baktuns, it is not correct to say that because the world probably didn't end on September 5, 3114 B.C., that it isn't going to end on December 21, 2012. Instead, we need to go back 20 Baktuns to the start of Baktun 13 in the previous cycle of 20, not the beginning of the current cycle of 20, to find the previous end of the world. That would have been December 4, 5874 B.C. - and that is closer to being before the dawn of civilization, so that the world could have experienced some sort of global cataclysm without anything being written about it. John Savard Most treat the Armageddon scenarios as somewhat silly, but with unchecked climate change we might experience the human version of the Permian-Triassic mass extinction event! That is realistic. -Sam http://edu-observatory.org/olli/Climate/index.html |
#8
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End of World "Possible"
"Davoud" wrote
Time for some pre-Apocalypse reading, maybe a nap, and some dinner. Also catch up with the TiVo before it's too late. I suggest we all get together for an apocalypso dance before the dump blows up. I'll call Harry Belafonte now.... |
#9
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End of World "Possible"
On Dec 20, 11:03*am, Sam Wormley wrote:
* *Most treat the Armageddon scenarios as somewhat silly, but with * *unchecked climate change we might experience the human version of * *the Permian-Triassic mass extinction event! That is realistic. Oh, it's certainly true enough that sometime in the next 52 years, we could indeed have a disaster if we don't mend our ways. But there will be a reason for what happens, a causal chain. The Mayan calendar will have nothing to do with it, so that's a distraction from what we should be trying to change. John Savard |
#10
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End of World "Possible"
Oh, wait a moment.
If the last time the world ended was on December 4, 5874 B.C., why is the Calendar Round starting on 4 Ahau 8 Cumhu, instead of 11 Ahau 3 Ceh? But there are 20 Baktuns in a Pictun. Oh, of course. If the world ends on December 21, 2012, then it's going to take until October 14, 4772 A.D. to rebuild civilization from the ashes, and start using the Mayan calendar again, now starting the Calendar Round on 10 Ahau 13 Yaxkin... *not* 4 Ahau 3 Yax. And it only took until the end of the world for me to figure this out... John Savard |
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