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Saturday, January 9, 2016

Digging Maya Astronomy (and Astronomers) - lecture at Griffith Observatory

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From: "Friends Of The Observatory" <fotofriend@friendsoftheobservatory.org>
Date: Jan 8, 2016 8:32 PM
Subject: Digging Maya Astronomy (and Astronomers) - lecture at Griffith Observatory
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Cosmic Musings Lecture: January 29, 2016, 7:30 p.m. at Griffith Observatory
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COSMIC MUSINGS LECTURE PRESENTED BY
SPONSORED BY:
United logo
Digging Maya Astronomy (and Astronomers)
Friday, January 29, 2016, 7:30 p.m.
Griffith Observatory

Register Now!
FOTO MEMBERS: $10 / NON-MEMBERS: $25
NO LATE SEATING / NO REFUNDS
Join us for a very special opportunity to hear DR. ANTHONY AVENI, Russell Colgate Professor of Astronomy, Anthropology, and Native American Studies at Colgate University, tell us about the continuing story of recent team excavations at Xultun, a Classic Maya ruin located in the Guatemalan rainforest. In 2010, archaeologists discovered an astronomers' workshop containing a wall filled with micro-hieroglyphic texts and tables that prove astronomers were predicting eclipses seven centuries before they show up in the folded screen books known as codices. In 2013, the remains of the early bookmaking astronomers were dug up under the floor where they did their work. Professor Aveni shares his stories with Indiana Jones romance and academic authenticity in a lecture entitled "Digging Maya Astronomy (and Astronomers)."
The Maya end-of-the-world prediction for 2 December 2012 focused attention on one of the world's most fascinating cultures. Maya pre-Columbian art, architecture, hieroglyphic script, and mathematical and astronomical systems are found from Mexico into Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, and El Salvador. Today, pyramid temples at Chichén Itzá and Yaxchilán intrigue us with structures aligned on celestial events. Maya hieroglyphic texts document astronomical accuracy. 
Maya Mural

Classic Maya murals of two Maya figures found at Xultun, in the Guatemalan rainforest. Illustration by Heather Hurst.
Numerical Array

The number array above was found on the wall of a small room in a Maya ruin with the oldest known Maya astronomical tables. Composite image by William Saturno; drawing by David Stuart.

Author or editor of 35 books, Anthony Aveni is a distinguished and popular speaker. He was featured in Rolling Stone magazine's list of the ten best university professors in the country and voted National Professor of the Year by the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education, the highest national award for teaching, just two of his many awards and accomplishments.


Space is limited. RESERVATIONS ARE REQUIRED. RSVP deadline is THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 2016. Thank you for using our automated electronic registration system. 

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