2012 Doomsday/Mayanism: Difference between revisions

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<ref>{{11/11/11 Debuking
 
  |url= https://phys.org/news/2011-11-anthropologist-debunks-doomsday-myths.html
Cite web
  |title= 11/11/11 Debuking
<ref>{{cite web
  |author= University of Kansas
  |url=  
  |date= 3 November 2011
  |title=  
  |website= Phys.org
  |author=  
  |publisher= Science X Network
  |date=  
  |access-date= 7 December 2021
  |website=  
  |publisher=  
  |access-date=  
}}</ref>
}}</ref>

Revision as of 04:05, 13 December 2021

From pexels.

Doomsday

The 2012 Doomsday phenomenon was a widespread belief that the world was going to end, the method of destruction was debated thoroughly among theorists with no distinct end just simply that it would. Multiple articles flooded the internet, including from NASA. In 2009, NASA re-printed an article, The Great 2012 Doomsday Scare, which was authored by the Director of Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, E.C. Krupp. The article frames the year 2012 as “acting like a badly behaved celebrity. Frightful rumors and gossip are spreading. Already more than a half dozen books are marketing”[1]

The Maya People

Modern Day Maya Civilization

Today, the Maya inhabit Mexico and Central America, specifically: Yucatan, Quintana Roo, Campeche, Tabasco, and Chiapas in Mexico as well as in Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador, and Honduras.[2]

Tortuguero Monument 6

Mayan long count calendar

Pseudoscience and Mayan Culture

[3]

  1. Krupp, E.C. (2009, November 09). The Great 2012 Doomsday Scare. NASA. https://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/2012-guest.html
  2. Mark, J. J. (2012, July 06). Maya Civilization. World History Encyclopedia.
  3. Template:11/11/11 Debuking