David Morrison, senior scientist at
the NASA Astrobiology Institute, said
he had been receiving about ten emails
a day from worried members of the public
who are ‘seriously, seriously
upset’.
A young woman from Denmark wrote to
him saying: ‘Mother of one daughter
and another coming.
Yesterday I was considering killing
myself, the baby in my stomach and
my beloved two-year-old daughter before
December 2012 for fear of having to
experience the Earth’s destruction.’
Another, a 13-year-old American, wrote: ‘I
am considering suicide. I am scared
to tears?.?.?. I don’t want to
live any more, I deserve an explanation.’
A third wrote: ‘I am so scared.
My only friend is my little dog. When
should I put her to sleep so she won’t
suffer when the Earth is destroyed?’
Worried Americans are rushing to buy
everything from £17 survival
guides to £32,000-per-person
places in bunkers that are marketed
as being both nuclear bomb and asteroid-proof.
Robert Vicino is a Californian businessman
who is building the luxury bunkers
in secret locations. His website asks: ‘What
if the prophecies are true? Which side
of the door do you want to be on?’
He says that he has more than 5,000
Americans booking places, and is now
building bunkers in Europe.
Steve Cramer, one man who has reserved
his place, insists: ‘We’re
not crazy people: these are fearful
times. My family wants to survive.
You have to be prepared.’
Jason Hodge, a father-of-four who
also counts himself a ‘future
survivor’, to use the jargon
of the apocalypse industry, adds: ‘It’s
an investment in life.

Archaeologists who have studied the
Mayans have been downplaying the apocalypse
theories over the years. Picture: Mayan
ruins at Hochob, Campeche, Mexico
'I want to make sure I have a place
I can take me and my family if that
worst-case scenario were to happen.’
But it’s not just America. Mayan
apocalypse converts have started flocking
to Bugarach, a tiny hilltop town in
the foothills of the Pyrenees.
The 200-strong local community has
had to contend with 20,000 visitors
since the start of last year, and the
French government is worried about
the threat of mass suicides.
Believers say a magnetic force surrounds
the town’s ‘mystical’ mountain
where the top layers of rock are older
than the lower ones.
(Geologists say that soon after the
mountain was formed, it exploded and
the top flew into the air, before landing
upside-down).
People claim the magnetic force will
protect them from the apocalypse to
come.
Others who have flocked to Bugarach
insist the mountain is a gateway to
another dimension and may contain a
secret alien base.
Unhelpfully, the Mayans did not specify
exactly what would happen when the
world ends. But that hasn’t stopped
believers from letting their imaginations
run riot.
Many of their 2012 doomsday scenarios
involve astronomical phenomena — a
rogue planet hitting Earth, fierce
solar storms, a galactic alignment
in which the Sun’s gravitational
effect combines with that of a huge
black hole to create havoc. The gloomiest
think we may get all three.
A particularly popular theory is that
a rogue planet called Nibiru is lurking
behind the Sun and will collide with
the Earth next December, destroying
it. Some believe this rogue body is
Eris, a dwarf planet orbiting beyond
Neptune.
The idea of a planet creeping out
from behind the Sun and smashing into
Earth provided the depressing backdrop
to last year’s Lars von Trier
film Melancholia, starring Kirsten
Dunst and Kiefer Sutherland.
Another theory, also involving the
Sun, predicts that a huge solar flare — called
a ‘solar max’ — will
destroy the Earth.
This notion has already inspired Hollywood
in the 2009 disaster blockbuster 2012,
in which the flare caused catastrophic
earthquakes. The film also made reference
to the Mayan calendar.

Sacred: Mayan priests prepare for a
cleansing ceremony at the ruins of
Iximche in the town of Tecpan, Guatemala
Finally, no apocalypse would be complete
without at least one alien invasion.
This time last year, reports emerged
suggesting the U.S. Search For Extraterrestrial
Intelligence Institute (SETI) had detected
three large spacecraft due to arrive
at Earth in 2012. SETI rejected the
claims, to which those who wanted to
believe the reports replied: ‘Well
they would, wouldn’t they?’
Another alien theory doing the rounds
among conspiracy theorists is that
the authorities will stage a fake extra-terrestrial
invasion at next year’s closing
ceremony for the London Olympic Games
so they can declare martial law and
introduce a new world order.
Academics and scientists dismiss all
of these theories as wild hysteria,
of course.
But the fact is that Mayan scholars
have been bickering for years over
what the end of the Long Count Calendar
actually signifies.
The Mayan calendar began in 3,114??BC — believed
by Mayans to be when the current ‘world
order’ was created — and
progresses in 144,000-day cycles (a
little more than 394 years) known as
baktuns.
The 13th (a sacred number for Mayans)
baktun runs out on the 2012 winter
solstice, December 21. After that date,
the ‘Great Cycle’ is completed
and the calendar sequence simply ends.
In 1957, respected Mayan scholar and
astronomer Maud Worcester Makemson
wrote that the completion of a ‘Great
Period’ of 13 baktuns would have
been ‘of the utmost significance
to the Maya’.
Nine years later, in 1966, Michael
Coe, another prominent Mayan anthropologist
and a former CIA agent, went much further
and concluded there was a ‘suggestion’ among
the Mayans that the final day of the
Great Cycle would see ‘Armageddon
overtake the degenerate peoples of
the world and all creation’ and ‘thus?.?.?.?our
present universe would be annihilated’.

Artwork: A Mayan sculpture installed
near a beach in Tulum, Mexico
Experts had tended to agree with Coe’s
interpretation until about a decade
ago when the academic world started
to insist the Mayans had meant nothing
of the sort.
The Mayans believed the end of the
13th baktun would indeed be significant,
say academics now, but in a good way.
There will simply be another cycle
and it will be a cause for celebration
not desperation.
This optimistic message has been championed
by many in the New Age movement, which
is obsessed by the idea that cultures
such as the Mayans had a secret spiritual
knowledge that we might tap into if
only we knew where to look.
Whatever the truth, hundreds of books
have already been published on the
subject, not to mention dozens of television
programmes and films.
For the most reliable indication of
the future, we should perhaps head
for the heart of Mayan territory in
south-eastern Mexico.
There, locals aren’t running
for the hills at all, and don’t
seem worried.
In fact, quite the reverse. After
suffering years of a tourist industry
badly hit by the violence of warring
drug cartels, they are looking forward
to an economic boom.
Mexico’s tourism agency hopes
the 2012 phenomenon will draw 52?million
visitors to the region — more
than twice the number the whole country
normally receives.
And the town of Tapachula, on the
Guatemalan border, has already started
a countdown to December 21 on a giant
digital clock in its main park.
Quite what will happen on the day
it runs out remains the subject of
feverish debate around the world.