Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mayan astronomy room found

Calculatio­ns, charts on walls go back 1,200 years, researcher­s say

- MALCOLM RITTER

NEW YORK — Archaeolog­ists have found a small room in Mayan ruins where royal scribes apparently used walls like a blackboard to keep track of astronomic­al records and the society’s intricate calendar some 1,200 years ago.

The walls reveal the oldest known astronomic­al tables from the Maya. Scientists already knew they must have been keeping such records at that time, but until now the oldest known examples dated from about 600 years later.

Astronomic­al records were key to the Mayan calendar, which has gotten some attention recently because of doomsday warnings that it predicts the end of the world this December. Experts say it makes no such prediction. The new finding provides a bit of backup: The calculatio­ns include a time span longer than 6,000 years that could extend well beyond 2012.

“Why would they go into those numbers if the world is going to come to an end this year?” observed Anthony Aveni of Colgate University in Hamilton, N.Y., an expert on Mayan astronomy. “You could say a number that big at least suggests that time marches on.”

Aveni, along with William Saturno of Boston University and others, report the discovery in Friday’s issue of the journal Science.

The room, a bit bigger than 6 feet square, is part of a large complex of Mayan ruins in the rain forest at Xultun in northeaste­rn Guatemala. The walls also contain portraits of a seated king and some other figures, but it’s clear those have no connection to the astronomic­al writings, the scientists said.

One wall contains a calendar based on phases of the moon, covering about 13 years. The researcher­s said they think it might have been used to keep track of which deity was overseeing the moon at particular times.

Aveni said it would allow scribes to predict the appearance of a full moon years in advance, for example. Such record keeping was key to Mayan astrology and rituals and maybe would be used to advise the king on when to go to war or how good this year’s crops would be, he said.

“‘What you have here is astronomy driven by religion,” he said.

On an adjacent wall are numbers indicating four time spans from roughly 935 to 6,700 years. It’s not clear what they represent, but maybe the scribes were doing calculatio­ns that combined observatio­ns from important astronomic­al events like the movements of Mars, Venus and the moon, the researcher­s said.

Why bother to do that? Maybe the scribes were “geeks ... who just got carried away with doing these kinds of computatio­ns and calculatio­ns, and probably did them far beyond the needs of ordinary society,” Aveni suggested.

Experts unconnecte­d with the discovery said it was a significan­t advance.

“It’s really a wonderful surprise,” said Simon Martin, co-curator of an exhibit about the Mayan calendar at the University of Pennsylvan­ia Museum of Archaeolog­y and Anthropolo­gy.

While the results of the scribes’ work were known from carvings on monuments, “we’ve never really been able to identify a working space, or how they actually went about things,” Martin said.

The new work gives insight into that, he said, and the fact the room had a stone roof rather than thatching supports previous indication­s that the scribes enjoyed a high social standing.

“It’s a very important discovery. We’re only getting a glimpse of it” in the published paper, said John Carlson, director of the Center for Archaeoast­ronomy in College Park, Md.

“This is an intriguing start for this discovery.”

 ?? Ap/national Geographic/tyrone TURNER ?? Conservato­r Angelyn Bass cleans and stabilizes the surface of a wall at a Maya house in the ancient city of Zultun in northeaste­rn Guatelmala.
Ap/national Geographic/tyrone TURNER Conservato­r Angelyn Bass cleans and stabilizes the surface of a wall at a Maya house in the ancient city of Zultun in northeaste­rn Guatelmala.
 ?? Ap/national Geographic/tyrone TURNER ?? This image from the wall of a Maya house shows four long numbers related to the Maya calendar and computatio­ns on the moon, the sun and possibly Venus and Mars with dates that stretch 7,000 years into the future.
Ap/national Geographic/tyrone TURNER This image from the wall of a Maya house shows four long numbers related to the Maya calendar and computatio­ns on the moon, the sun and possibly Venus and Mars with dates that stretch 7,000 years into the future.

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