| 2012:
End of the 5th Sun
Published on 02/20/06 at 18:18:53 EST
by Will Hart
Certain aspects of the interlocking Maya calendar
system have filtered into public consciousness
in the last decade and a half. One of them is
the prediction that we will come to the end of
a solar-planetary cycle in 2012. But what is this
cycle exactly and why is it going to end on the
winter solstice of that auspicious year? Is the
world going to end as some people are forecasting?
The Maya conceived of time and human history
as moving in cycles, small and large. While we
use a single calendar to keep track of our annual
solar circuit and to mark all of the important
days within a year, the Maya used a variety of
calendars. The array included a 365-day solar
calendar; a 260-day sacred calendar and a Long
Count calendar that operated something like an
odometer with a zero start date. Unlike the other
calendars the Long Count clocked linear time and
was programmed to stop after 5,125 years elapsed.
The Long Count was begun at the onset of this
current cycle, known as the 5th Sun, in 3114 BC.
It will clock the required number of years to
complete a full cycle of five suns on December
21, 2012. John Major Jenkins has made the case
that this date corresponds to two major alignments,
(one between the winter solstice sun and the galactic
equator; the other an approximate one between
solstice sun and galactic core) and it also completes
the Great Zodiac precession cycle of 26,000 years.
I am not questioning this thesis however I do
wonder if that is all there is to the end of this
solar cycle- the 5th Sun?
The Maya began their Long Count on what they
referred to as the ‘Birth of Venus.’
Scholars have never been able to determine what
the Maya were referring to and neither have alternative
researchers. Nevertheless their sacred calendar,
the Tzolkin, placed the synodic cycles of Venus
in a central role. The 104-year ‘Venus Round’
cycle (2 Calendar Rounds of 52 years each), was
a very important ceremonial event as this was
the point in time when the solar and sacred calendars
realigned with the cycle of Venus.
I need to insert an important numerical progression
at this point to provide a basis for the rest
of the article. The number thirteen was a root
number for the Maya. It is both a prime number
and the eighth number in the crucial Fibonacci
series that is one source of the Golden Ratio,
1.618.
If we use 13 as the root of the Mayan calendar
system we find the following sequence: 13, 26,
39, 52, 65, 78, 91 and 104, which are achieved
by simply adding 13 to each succeeding sum. These
are the key numbers in the Mayan calendrics and
they have a solid scientific footing. Venus was
the central component of the Mayan cosmology.
It is for good reason that our nearest planetary
neighbor is called earth’s sister planet.
They have a phase-locked orbital cycle that is
based on a 13:8 ratio. That is derived from the
fact that Venus revolves around the sun 1.6 times
faster than Earth so that 13 Venus revolutions
is equal to 8 years.
Why is this important? By establishing Venus
as the key component of the sacred calendar they
automatically built the Golden Ratio (1.6) into
the system since that ratio defines the difference
between the two planets orbital cycles. By using
13 as the root number they also included the crucial
multiples, or powers, of thirteen - 13,000 and
26,000 - or half as well as the full number of
years in the precession. We see that the 5 Suns,
each lasting 5,125 years, also add up to the Great
Zodiacal Year.
We can break these numbers down in different
ways and each will show that there was nothing
arbitrary about the Mayan system. We somewhat
arrogantly disdain other cultures for being superstitious
until we come to the number 13 and our own irrationality
surfaces. But let’s examine how deeply embedded
this number - as well as 26, 52 and 91 - are in
our own calendar. Our year is divided into four
seasons that are demarcated by the equinoxes and
solstices.
Each of the four seasons is 91 days or 13 weeks
long, which gives us a year of 52 weeks. We see
the key Maya 13-base numerical progression reflected
in our own calendar. Half of a year is 26 weeks.
It is beyond the scope of this article to delve
into all of the intricacies of the Mayan calendrical
and mathematical systems; they were extremely
adept in these fields.
What I have uncovered during my decades of research
into this topic are two crucial keys to understanding
the system: the ‘Transit of Venus’
and solar output cycles. It just so happens that
the 2012 end date corresponds to a Venus Transit
cycle that occurs twice in the next 10 years in
2004 and then in 2012. As mentioned above Venus
was central to the Mayan cosmology. The Long Count
began on what the Maya call the “Birth of
Venus” so it is perhaps not too surprising
that it ends on a Transit of Venus.
My research has revealed that a Transit of Venus
occurred in 1518 and 1526. This was the period
when Cortez landed on the shores of the Yucatan
and wound up conquering the Aztec empire. The
next transit was in 1631-’39. It was followed
by a complete stoppage of the sunspot cycle, which
lasted for 70 years (science has no explanation
for this event). The ‘little ice age’
occurred between 1645 and 1720. What do we find
associated with the next transit in 1761-‘69?
We discover the birth of the American Revolution.
There is no doubt that the Transit of Venus was
an important divinatory alignment factored into
the Maya calendar. We will not have to wait for
long to test this theory and also get a glimpse
of 2012 during the ‘passage’ years.
But in reality as Jose Arguelles and others have
pointed out the precursor years began in 1987
and the final stages of this cycle really kicked
into gear in 1991-’1993. How do we know?
There has been a tremendous surge in the number
and magnitude of natural disasters and this was
also forecast as a harbinger of the 5th Sun’s
demise.
13,000 years is a very important time period
since we know that the last ice age ended then.
This indicates that there is a periodicity to
the solar output cycle. There are short and long
term fluctuations in solar output and as a result
great ice ages, little ice ages and warm interglacials,
which we are in nearing the end of now.
The cyclical nature of the long range weather
patterns are well established is are the variable
nature of solar activity. We know that that is
true since we have been in a ‘global warming’
period for the past 300 years. The “little
ice age” started to thaw in the early 1700s
when the sunspot cycle returned. The level of
solar activity has been increasing steadily from
that ‘zero sunspot point’ right up
to our recent sunspot cycles in 1989-‘90
and the double peak in 2000- ’02.
Is it a coincidence that 2012 also coincides
with the next solar sunspot maximum? The actual
peak of this 300-year cycle of increasing solar
output occurred in 1960 when the number of sunspots
exceeded 200, the usual peak is around 100-150.
Now, what is interesting is that during the first
half of the 20th century the Earth’s seismic
and volcanic activity were comparatively quiet.
Then after 1960 the level of seismic and volcanic
activity increases steadily to the point that
the 1990s can accurately be called the ‘decade
of disasters’. The surge in major earthquakes
and volcanic eruptions radically departed from
earlier decades. According to the chief scientist
for the world’s largest reinsurance company
Zurich Re, “since 1960 natural disasters
are a growth industry.”
I hardly need to mention “global warming”
since it is constantly in the headlines. However,
the truth is obvious for those that care to see
it. The Earth has been warming for 13,000 years
with periodic short-term cold spells. However,
solar output is the forcing mechanism behind global
warming and the 5th Sun is intimately tied to
that phenomenon. What does the end of the 5th
Sun really mean?
I take it very literally to mean that the sun’s
output is going to change. We are going to enter
the flip side of a new 13,000 year cycle. The
earth is overheated and so is the sun, the result
being planetary instability manifested in rising
earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and erratic weather
patterns.
These will increase further starting in 2004.
The volcanic ash will create more and more cloud
cover and that will begin to cool the planet down.
If my theory is correct the Maya knew that the
Venus Transit acted like a circuit breaker switching
off the sunspot cycle and impacting the Sun-Moon-Earth-Venus
system. This appears to have happened just prior
to the previous two ‘little ice ages’
that were preceded by what solar physicists call
the Spoorer (1400-1510) and Maunder Minimum(s)
1640-1710), periods of radically diminished solar
activity.
The Venus Transit will trigger the demise of
the 5th Sun and set the stage for the next cycle,
the 6th Sun. That is the physical side of the
Maya 5th Sun forecast. Unlike many predictions
this one is built into the Maya calendar and it
can be verified with some historical research.
Is the world going to end in a violent crescendo
of natural disasters and impacts from cosmic objects?
I do not think that is likely nor is it what the
Maya predicted.
However, a prolonged period of change is on the
horizon that will be ushered in by the 2004 –
2012 ‘passage’. It will culminate
in the galactic alignment and complete the precessional
cycle at that point.
Source http://www.diagnosis2012.co.uk/5thsun.htm
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