Latin America
Related: About this forumMayans Made Major Discovery in Math, Astronomy
Mayans Made Major Discovery in Math, Astronomy
Wed Aug 17, 2016 1:0
TEHRAN (FNA)- Ancient hieroglyphic texts reveal Mayans made major discovery in math and astronomy, a researcher suggests.
This study blends the study of Mayan hieroglyphics (epigraphy), archaeology and astronomy to present a new interpretation of the Venus Table, which tracks the observable phases of the second planet from the Sun.
For more than 120 years the Venus Table of the Dresden Codex -- an ancient Mayan book containing astronomical data -- has been of great interest to scholars around the world. The accuracy of its observations, especially the calculation of a kind of 'leap year' in the Mayan Calendar, was deemed an impressive curiosity used primarily for astrology.
But UC Santa Barbara's Gerardo Aldana, a professor of anthropology and of Chicana and Chicano studies, believes the Venus Table has been misunderstood and vastly underappreciated. In a new journal article, Aldana makes the case that the Venus Table represents a remarkable innovation in mathematics and astronomy -- and a distinctly Mayan accomplishment. "That's why I'm calling it 'discovering discovery,' " he explained, "because it's not just their discovery, it's all the blinders that we have, that we've constructed and put in place that prevent us from seeing that this was their own actual scientific discovery made by Mayan people at a Mayan city."
Multitasking science
Aldana's paper, "Discovering Discovery: Chich'en Itza, the Dresden Codex Venus Table and 10th Century Mayan Astronomical Innovation," in the Journal of Astronomy in Culture, blends the study of Mayan hieroglyphics (epigraphy), archaeology and astronomy to present a new interpretation of the Venus Table, which tracks the observable phases of the second planet from the Sun. Using this multidisciplinary approach, he said, a new reading of the table demonstrates that the mathematical correction of their "Venus calendar" -- a sophisticated innovation -- was likely developed at the city of Chich'en Itza during the Terminal Classic period (AD 800-1000). What's more, the calculations may have been done under the patronage of K'ak' U Pakal K'awiil, one of the city's most prominent historical figures.
More:
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13950527000300
cheapdate
(3,811 posts)system several years ago. It was in a book by Daniel Pinchbeck. Fascinating. As someone who works a lot with numbers (I'm an engineer) I was very impressed with how elegantly their base-20 number system computed solar and celestial cycles.
Can't wait to read this new material. Thanks for posting!
allan01
(1,950 posts)watch their heads explode . old old old old old science .