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The pyramid at Chichen Itza - During the equinox near
sun set a shadow down the side of the pyramid steps
ends in the snake head of Kukulkan at the bottom. |
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Mayan Astronomy
Uniquely, there is some evidence to suggest the Maya
appear to be the only pre-telescopic civilization to
demonstrate knowledge of the Orion Nebula as being fuzzy,
i.e. not a stellar pin-point. The information which
supports this theory comes from a folk tale that deals
with the Orion constellation's area of the sky. Their
traditional hearths include in their middle a smudge of
glowing fire that corresponds with the Orion Nebula. This
is a significant clue to support the idea that the Maya
detected a diffuse area of the sky contrary to the pin
points of stars before the telescope was invented.
The Maya were very interested in zenial passages, the time
when the sun passes directly overhead. The latitude of
most of their cities being below the Tropic of Cancer,
these zenial passages would occur twice a year equidistant
from the solstice. To represent this position of the sun
overhead, the Maya had a god named Diving God.
The Dresden Codex contains the highest concentration of
astronomical phenomena observations and calculations of
any of the surviving texts (it appears that the data in
this codex is primarily or exclusively of an astronomical
nature). Examination and analysis of this codex reveals
that Venus was the most important astronomical object to
the Maya, even more important to them than the sun. |
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Mayan Astronomy
Links
Maya Astronomy
The Dresden Codex — the Book of Mayan Astronomy
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The
article above is licensed
under the
GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material
from the Wikipedia article "Maya
civilization" |
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