By
JOHN NOBLE WILFORD
Published:
May 10, 2012
Hacking
through jungle growth and clearing away rubble, archaeologists made their way
to excavate a house buried at the edge of ruins of a large Maya city in the
remote Petén lowlands of northeastern Guatemala. It turned out to have been the
studio for royal scribes with a taste for art and a devotion to the heavens as
the source of calculations for the ancient culture’s elaborate calendars.
Inside,
two of the three standing masonry walls were decorated with a faded but still
impressive mural, including a painting of a seated king with a scepter and
wearing blue feathers. It seemed that, like the Alec Guinness character in the
1958 movie “The Horse’s Mouth,” no Maya artist could abide a wall without a
touch of inspired paint. The third wall, on the east side, appeared to have
served as the scribes’ blackboard.
On its badly eroded surface, along with
black-painted human figures, were scrawled Mayan glyphs and columns of numbers
in the form of bars and dots (bars for the number 5 and dots for 1), based on
observations of motions of the Sun, the Moon and planets. The glyphs were
delicately painted in red or black. From time to time, thin coats of plaster
had been applied over texts to provide a clean slate for new calculations.
Still other texts were incised into the plaster surface.
The early-ninth-century workshop of scribes
and calendar priests was the first important discovery in the ruins of a Maya
city known today as Xultún, found a century ago but largely unexplored until
the past few years. Archaeologists said the calendar writing on the wall
appeared to be already well advanced several centuries earlier than the
examples previously known, mainly from the Dresden Codex, a bark-paper book
from the period shortly before the Spanish arrived in the early 16th century.
Rest assured, however, that nothing written on
those walls foretells the world coming to an end on Dec. 21, 2012, as some have
feared through a misinterpretation of the Maya Long Count calendar. That date
is simply when one cycle of the Maya calendar ends and a new one begins.
The discovery at Xultún, made by a team led by
William A. Saturno of Boston University, was reported in the journal Science,
published online on Thursday, and at a teleconference with reporters. The
National Geographic Society, which supported the excavations, will describe the
research in the June issue of its magazine.
“For the first time,” Dr. Saturno said, “we
get a real look at this kind of work space in a Maya city and the scribes’
tight connections to the royal court.”
David Stuart, professor of Mesoamerican art
and writing at the University of Texas at Austin, who deciphered the glyphs,
said, “This is tremendously exciting,” noting that the columns of numbers
interspersed with glyphs inside circles was “the kind of thing that only
appears in one place — the Dresden Codex.”
Some of the columns of numbers, for example,
are topped by the profile of a lunar deity and represent multiples of 177 or
178, numbers that the archaeologists said were important in ancient Maya
astronomy. Eclipse tables in the Dresden Codex are based on sequences of
multiples of such numbers. Some texts “defy translation right now,” he said,
and some writing is barely legible even with infrared imagery and other
enhancements.
Dr. Stuart was an author of the report, along
with Dr. Saturno; Anthony F. Aveni, professor of astronomy and anthropology at
Colgate University; and Franco Rossi, an archaeologist at Boston University.
One goal of the Maya calendar keepers, the
researchers wrote in the journal article, “was to seek harmony between sky
events and sacred rituals.” They observed that the calculations appeared to
represent various calendrical cycles the Maya were noted for: the 260-day
ceremonial calendar, the 365-day solar calendar, the 584-day cycle of Venus and
the 780-day cycle of Mars.
They said the sets of the Xultún calculations
were “undoubtedly carefully contrived” and “may have been devised to create
schemes for synchronizing predictable events connected with the movement of
Mars, Venus, the Moon and possibly Mercury.” Why these particular calculations,
ranging in duration from 935 to 6,703 years, were used is uncertain, the
researchers said.
The principal scribe, who may have been
related to the royal family, also left his mark on the north wall, near the
presumed king’s picture. Four long numbers there represent dates that stretch
over 7,000 years. The scientists said this was the first place that seems to
tabulate all these cycles in this way. Another number scratched in the plaster
records a date that translates to A.D. 813. This was in the last century of the
Classic Period, before the Maya civilization collapsed into Post-Classic
decline.
Xultún is a 12-square-mile site where
archaeologists estimate that tens of thousands of people once lived. Its first
temples and monuments were constructed in the first centuries B.C., only five
miles from other Maya ruins at San Bartolo, where in 2001 Dr. Saturno uncovered
some of the oldest extant wall paintings at a large ceremonial center. The last
known carved monument at Xultún dates to A.D. 890, in the twilight of the
Classic Period.
One of Dr. Saturno’s students, Maxwell
Chamberlain, came upon the scribes’ buried studio two years ago while following
looters’ trenches through the rain forest. The first surprise was that any of
the paintings and writings had survived the humidity of the Guatemalan
lowlands. The building, part of a larger elite residential complex, was
designated No. 54 of 56 structures when mapped by Harvard scientists in the
1970s. Archaeologists suspect that thousands of other houses remain uncounted.
Although there may be reasons to worry about
the future, the researchers emphasized that nothing in Maya beliefs or
calendars warranted hoisting “The End Is Nigh” placards. A change in the Long
Count cycle, said Dr. Aveni, an astroarchaeologist, is like the odometer of a
car rolling over from 120,000 to 130,000. “The car gets a step closer to the
junkyard as the numbers turn over,” he said. “The Maya just start over.”



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