Mayan 'Year of Doom' begins. Maya astronomers knew long ago that there would be intense solar activity in the year the world now calls 2012. Mayan 'Year of Doom' begins , suggests that December 21, 2011 would begin a year of horrors that would culminate in the Earth’s destruction on December 21, 2012.
There is more to the story, Perhaps in their revulsion toward the high-jacking of Maya culture by profit making ventures and psuedo-religious sects, archaeologists are not telling the public the full story. Maya astronomers DID know that the early 21st century would be time of violent weather, which would peak in 2012. Such dangerous periods have happened like clockwork through the ages.
In either case, there is proof of the sun’s impact on weather, and human history. The last period of maximum solar activity was in the late 1500s and early 1600s, with the peak at 1595. Most of the towns visited by Hernando de Soto in 1540-42 disappeared during a period of extreme drought in the Southeast during the last 20 years of the 16th century. The Roanoke Island Colony probably disappeared because of this drought, while the Jamestown Colony almost failed because of this drought.
During the previous period of maximum solar intensity (mid-12th century) the Toltec Empire collapsed, the enormous town on the Ocmulgee River in Georgia was abandoned, all the Native towns around Lake Okeechobee, FL were abandoned and horrific droughts devastated the Anasazi culture in the Southwest. However, the warmth was beneficial to northern European farmers. English farmers were able to grow grapes and make commercial quality wines in the 12th century.
The late 20th century and early 21st century saw several record-breaking storms and earthquakes, while the American Southwest is experiencing an ever worsening drought. This is exactly what Maya astronomers and priests expected each 416 years. On the peak year of solar activity, 2012, the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has predicted very dangerous solar flares.
A solar flare blast can knock out satellites, land-based communication systems, regional power grids, mainframe computers, cable TV networks and even the computers that operate modern automobiles. In truth, there is potential for major damage being done to the world’s economy in 2012 because of natural catastrophes, but it is not likely to be hurricanes the size of nations or asteroids simultaneously striking several locations on earth as portrayed in the movies.
Of course, as soon as such statements as above are published, one can expect 20 inches of snow at Miami Beach on Christmas morning. Mother Nature is ultimately, a very unpredictable lady.
There is more to the story, Perhaps in their revulsion toward the high-jacking of Maya culture by profit making ventures and psuedo-religious sects, archaeologists are not telling the public the full story. Maya astronomers DID know that the early 21st century would be time of violent weather, which would peak in 2012. Such dangerous periods have happened like clockwork through the ages.
The indigenous peoples of the Western Hemisphere were clever folks. Although the ubiquitous 52 year century they used was based on the period required for the solar and lunar calendars to complete their mutual cycles, it also marks 1/8th of the 416 year cycle of the sun. The sun’s peak production of heat energy occurs every 416 years. Alternatively, one could say that the periods when the earth receives the least warmth from the sun occur every 416 years.
In either case, there is proof of the sun’s impact on weather, and human history. The last period of maximum solar activity was in the late 1500s and early 1600s, with the peak at 1595. Most of the towns visited by Hernando de Soto in 1540-42 disappeared during a period of extreme drought in the Southeast during the last 20 years of the 16th century. The Roanoke Island Colony probably disappeared because of this drought, while the Jamestown Colony almost failed because of this drought.
During the previous period of maximum solar intensity (mid-12th century) the Toltec Empire collapsed, the enormous town on the Ocmulgee River in Georgia was abandoned, all the Native towns around Lake Okeechobee, FL were abandoned and horrific droughts devastated the Anasazi culture in the Southwest. However, the warmth was beneficial to northern European farmers. English farmers were able to grow grapes and make commercial quality wines in the 12th century.
The late 20th century and early 21st century saw several record-breaking storms and earthquakes, while the American Southwest is experiencing an ever worsening drought. This is exactly what Maya astronomers and priests expected each 416 years. On the peak year of solar activity, 2012, the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has predicted very dangerous solar flares.
A solar flare blast can knock out satellites, land-based communication systems, regional power grids, mainframe computers, cable TV networks and even the computers that operate modern automobiles. In truth, there is potential for major damage being done to the world’s economy in 2012 because of natural catastrophes, but it is not likely to be hurricanes the size of nations or asteroids simultaneously striking several locations on earth as portrayed in the movies.
Of course, as soon as such statements as above are published, one can expect 20 inches of snow at Miami Beach on Christmas morning. Mother Nature is ultimately, a very unpredictable lady.
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