Tag: Mayan

NASA: Apocalypse Just Isn’t Going To Happen (020134)

This one make 20,000 plus stories I have read that explain why 2012 is not the end times. Why wont these authors stop writing books explaining why it will? Oh yeah money. Remember the guy last year that said he had recalculated the Mayan math and it was off a few years? Now he gets to make money selling that book for 3 more years. Maybe this video will help those of you that believe we are headed for apocalypse.


 


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Mayan Civilization Collapse Due to Modest Reduction in Precipitation

One of the biggest debates in archaeology is what destroyed the extensive, highly-advanced Mayan Empire 1,000 years ago. It’s known that the empire went through a long collapse from roughly 800 to 1,000, leaving behind a network of pyramids and monumental architecture in the Yucatán jungles. But why? We have only educated guesses, and one of the most widely-believed theories is that some kind of climate catastrophe drove the Maya to abandon their cities in droves.


Now, two Earth scientists have carefully analyzed rock samples from the Yucatán, which revealed water levels in local lakes, as well as chemical traces that show likely rainfall over the decades of the collapse. What the scientists found was more evidence that the region suffered from drought during the typically rainy summers — but the drought was fairly mild. There were probably fewer hurricanes in the ocean driving rainstorms to land. In a paper published today inScience, researchers Martín Medina-Elizalde and Eelco J. Rohling call it “a succession of extended drought periods interrupted by brief recoveries.”

Is it really possible that a mild drought, no matter how many centuries it lasted, could really topple an empire? After all, civilizations in Europe have endured everything from plagues to the Little Ice Age, and people did not abandon the cities.

Medina-Elizalde and Rohling suggest:

If these repeated episodes of drier climate had a significant role in the fate of the Classic Maya civilization, as suggested by archaeological evidence, then this would imply that the ecological carrying capacity of the Yucatán Peninsula is highly sensitive to precipitation reductions.

In other words, it’s possible that it didn’t take much of a drought to usher in a catastrophic series of crop losses or other environmental problems. And these problems, in turn, could foment dramatic social upheavals.

The scientists note that this does not bode well for the future of the region, since in coming decades the Yucatán Peninsula is likely to experience “modest reductions in precipitation” like those during the collapse of the Mayan Empire.

 

Full Article | Source: www.io9.com


 

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