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8/6/2019 Official CyArk Post
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Official CyArk PostBy: John MinkOctober 1st, 2009
Introduction
Publicity poster for the upcoming Roland Emmerich Film 2012
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1190080/http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1190080/http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1190080/8/6/2019 Official CyArk Post
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The Vase of Seven Gods (rollout image), found in the vicinity of the ancient Maya site of Naranjo, Guatemala and currentlyhoused at the Art Institute of Chicago. The glyphs inscribed on this vase describe a council of seven gods in planning thecreation of our present world, and begins with the long-count date 4 Ajaw 8 Kumku, or August 11th (or 13th) 3114 BCE in
the Gregorian calendar (Carrasco). Photograph copyrightJustin Kerr , File K2796.
Photo of man in home-made 2012 tee-shirt by RD Mauzy, licensed under Creative Commons NC-SA 2.0
This is the first post of a multi-part blog series from CyArk on the 2012 phenomenon that has
exploded across popular literature, the internet, television, and now film. As the date itself has itsbase in an ancient calendar of the Maya people of Central America, we hope to provide an
archaeological/anthropological critique of the phenomenon and perhaps clear up some
misconceptions. We recommend reading the blog entries in sequence, but if you wish to skip ahead to
any of the individual entries just click on the appropriate subject: Millenarianism (apocalyptic
thought) , New Age Predictions ,The Maya People ,The Maya Calendars ,Maya
http://www.mayavase.com/http://www.mayavase.com/http://www.mayavase.com/http://archive.cyark.org/2012-end-of-the-world-perceptions-and-myths-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-end-of-the-world-perceptions-and-myths-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-new-age-predictions-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-new-age-predictions-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-maya-perspectives-and-cultural-remains-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-maya-perspectives-and-cultural-remains-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-understanding-the-maya-calendars-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-understanding-the-maya-calendars-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-maya-conceptions-of-time-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-maya-conceptions-of-time-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-understanding-the-maya-calendars-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-maya-perspectives-and-cultural-remains-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-new-age-predictions-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-end-of-the-world-perceptions-and-myths-bloghttp://www.mayavase.com/http://www.mayavase.com/http://archive.cyark.org/2012-end-of-the-world-perceptions-and-myths-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-end-of-the-world-perceptions-and-myths-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-new-age-predictions-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-maya-perspectives-and-cultural-remains-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-understanding-the-maya-calendars-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-maya-conceptions-of-time-blog8/6/2019 Official CyArk Post
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Predictions , andArchaeology in Hollywood .
I bet you've seen the posters - Aerial views of major cities crushed by a variety of natural disasters,giant waves rushing over the highest peaks of the Himalayas, and the headline "We Were Warned"
above an enormous number 2012 written in a silver font that is both metallic and stone-like at the
same time. It all looks pretty exciting (who doesn't get a vicarious thrill out of having a Godzilla's eye-
view of our civilization's demise?), but what exactly is going on here? Well, 2012 is a flashy, big-
budget disaster movie due to be released on November 13, 2009; according to a wave of advance
publicity materials the film's premise focuses on a small band of humans struggling to survive in the
aftermath of an enormous global apocalypse. A website designed around a fictional organization, The
Institute for Human Continuity , details the efforts of a convincing-looking group of concerned
scientists, businesspeople, and world leaders to inform the public about the upcoming cataclysm
("confirmed with 94% certainty") and to "...develop plans to guarantee the survival of the human
race" (both quotes from the IHC website). While films dealing with the looming threat of global
apocalypse have been quite common and popular since the 1950s, the twist with 2012 is that it plays
to questions surrounding a previously-obscure phenomenon that is beginning to loom large in the
public imagination: What is the significance of the upcoming year that bears its namesake?
Sources of Confusion
In the much-studied (but not easily-understood) Long Count calendar from the ancient Maya culture
of Central America, the Gregorian calendar date of December 21st (or possibly 23rd) in 2012 CE
correlates to 4 Ahau 3 Kank'in, the ending of a 5125-year period of 13 B'ak'tuns (measuring
approximately 395 years each) since the "zero date" of4 Ajaw 8 Kumku, which equals the Gregorian
date of August 11th (or possibly 13th), 3114 BCE. This earlier date is frequently referenced in
inscriptions on Maya monuments such as the Temple of the Cross at Palenque (Rice, pp. 467-
48); scholars have determined from references to earlier cycles that after 13B'ak'tuns the
"zero date" is reset, like an odometer or clock striking midnight, and the count begins again
from a new "zero date" as it has in the past (Montgomery pp. 85-86; Van Stone, Appendix/Part IV).
The publicity materials and websites for the film 2012 concoct a heady stew of correlations between
their own fanciful ideas about this date of significance in the Maya calendar and other purported
predictions of immanent apocalypse from European, African, and Asian belief systems.
While this unwieldy amalgamation of ideas is unambiguously a product of fiction writers in Hollywood,
these writers have drawn inspiration from a growing school of thought that has coalesced in recent
decades outside the entertainment industry; adherents to this school of thought, however, do not
consider their conclusions to be restricted to the arena of fantasy. Thanks to their own tireless efforts
at self-publicity and the prominence of popular media such as the film 2012, many of the highly-
speculative conclusions of these theorists have begun to loom very large in the minds of the general
public, and consequently the lines between fact and fiction have begun to blur. These compelling but
http://archive.cyark.org/2012-maya-conceptions-of-time-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-archaeology-and-hollywood-bloghttp://www.instituteforhumancontinuity.org/http://www.instituteforhumancontinuity.org/http://www.instituteforhumancontinuity.org/http://archive.cyark.org/2012-archaeology-and-hollywood-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-maya-conceptions-of-time-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-maya-conceptions-of-time-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-archaeology-and-hollywood-bloghttp://www.instituteforhumancontinuity.org/http://www.instituteforhumancontinuity.org/8/6/2019 Official CyArk Post
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artificial amalgamations of ideas from disparate cultures, packaged as legitimate research, have made
the job of educating the public an often needlessly complicated task for
anthropological+archaeological experts in the field who have spent their lives conducting peer-
reviewed, careful research on ancient and modern Maya people.
Discovering the Truth
This is the first article in a series of posts that will hopefully clear up some misconceptions about the
upcoming "zero date" in 2012 by unraveling some of the tangle of often-contradictory information we
do have. A disparate collection of answers as to what the significance of this controversial date
represents have been proposed from a wide range of sources, from New Age theorists to astrological
enthusiasts to academic scholars to modern-day Maya timekeepers themselves. One thing they all
have in common is the recognizance that this upcoming date is making a strong impression on a
growing number of people, and that much of this impression is based on a belief that the world as we
know it is about to undergo some sort of profound change. But what (if anything) is really predicted
about this change, and why do so many people think that these predictions have validity?
To gain some understanding of why the idea of 2012 as a phenomenon is gaining such traction and
widespread, viral popularity in our modern culture (particularly in Western countries such as the
United States), we have to look at several factors:
First: We must examine our beliefs pertaining to The End Of The Worldin its various guises, as well
as other beliefs regarding the desire for a supernaturally rapid social/spiritual transformation on a
mass scale, and find out more about those who encourage these beliefs.
Second: We must discover what is actuallyknown of the Maya themselves and theirbeliefs
(particularly pertaining to their calendar), and consider the most credible interpretations of the
information we do possess on their works.Finally: We must look at the role of Hollywood and the rest of the entertainment industry in using
creative interpretations of science, history, culture, and archaeology to deliver a sensational product
to thrill mass numbers of people; all while making the end product appear as plausible as necessary to
suspend the audience's disbelief.
To understand these three factors, we must suspend any of our own preconceptions about the 2012
phenomenon for a moment (assuming that we have any) and attempt to look at this unwieldy picture
of impending doom and/or spiritual transformation from outside of its frame, replete with all of its
clashing colors and questionable juxtapositions.
Over the next month, I will be discussing some possible interpretations of this much-debated
upcoming date over several upcoming blog entries. The first entry, coming next Friday, takes a look at
the views of modern people who are, for various reasons, heavily invested in the idea that something
major is going to happen on December 21st (or 23rd!), 2012 C.E. So stay tuned here at CyArk for
more to come; and don't get out your crystals or start climbing into your fortified subterranean
bunkers just yet!
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Unless, of course, that makes you more comfortable...
Read on to the next blog entry...
Another publicity poster for the upcoming Roland Emmerich Film 2012
References:
Rice, Prudence M. (2007). Maya Calendar Origins: Monuments, Mythistory, and the Materialization of
Time. Austin:University of Texas Press.
Montgomery, John (2003). Cycles in Time: The Maya Calendar. Antigua (Guatemala):Editorial Laura
Lee.
http://archive.cyark.org/2012-end-of-the-world-perceptions-and-myths-bloghttp://www.imdb.com/title/tt1190080/http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1190080/http://archive.cyark.org/2012-end-of-the-world-perceptions-and-myths-bloghttp://archive.cyark.org/2012-end-of-the-world-perceptions-and-myths-bloghttp://www.imdb.com/title/tt1190080/8/6/2019 Official CyArk Post
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Van Stone, Mark (2008). It's Not the End of the World: What the Ancient Maya Tell Us About 2012.
Located online at the Foundation For The Advancement Of Mesoamerican Studies website .
Carrasco, Michael (2008). Unaahil B'aak: The Temples of Palenque. Located online on the Wesleyan
University website .
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