Workingman wrote:Astronomy and Calendars fit well, don't you think?
I have not found an ancient calendar that is more accurate than what we use today, but I have found some oddities with 19 months, 10 months, equal day months. Unfortunately none of them fit the observable year on Earth - they all had to be tweaked.
Well you only have to look in one direction to invalidate that.
The Mayan Long Count calendar just exceeded 5,000 years. There is clear evidence that the Long Count was inherited by the Mayans from the Olmecs and that the Mayans did not invent it themselves.
So what do we know about the Long Count? Well actually the most significant thing we know about the Long Count is that it is slightly _more_ accurate than the Gregorian calendar we use today.
Even more interesting is that the Long Count has stayed accurate throughout that 5,000 years.
Why is this incredibly unusual? Because in order for us to keep our calendar accurate, we have to add leap seconds. We only know about leap seconds since the advent of the Atomic Clock in the 60's. Since the first atomic clock we have adjusted by 36 seconds but, more importantly, we have adjusted by exactly 26 seconds since 1972.
So if you adjust that back to 5,000 years ago, that makes 137.8 leap minutes that our Gregorian calendar would have to have been adjusted in order for it to remain correct over that time.
This is circa 1.6 seconds in a YEAR. It's not possible to measure that 1.6 seconds in a year with normal physical measuring tools. Simply put, the expansion and contraction of physical measuring tools made of metal or other materials, simply by temperature and humidity from the different times of the year, would make it virtually impossible. Those aincients would have had to measure for multiple lifetimes, on exactly the same day of the year, with the same temperature and atmospheric pressure, with their "supposed" mechanical instruments.
In fact there are records which show that the Spanish destroyed a pair of Gold and Silver calendar measurers which they melted down for the metal. Totally destroying something which would probably have amazed scientists today. Because it's almost certain that those calendars came with instructions as to how to tell the temperature and atmospheric fluctuations by the differing expansion rates of the two metals. Apparently these Calendar "wheels" were of sufficient size to show the difference.
This is maths which would have taken a team of advanced scientists a few weeks to do before the advent of computers.
We are asked to believe that the Olmec's and Mayan's had this knowledge and technology of heat, atmospheric pressure, metallurgic expansion properties down to the atomic measurement level and also knew how to apply it to the Long Count calendar in order to adjust it for the slowing of the rotation of the earth which could not be measured by any means at their technology level????
I'm pretty willing to bet that if we were to subject to the Long Count calendar to analysis of when the Spanish stopped raping and destroying the knowledge of South America, that the Long Count calendar would be absolutely correct to the exact microsecond at that time (some 500 odd years ago).
Yet we are expected to blithely accept that knowledge which has only become ours with the advent of powerful computers, micro circuitry and micro engineering and atomic time keeping; was common place to a low level of society which was still "learning" and "progressing" to our current pinnacle of ability.
Sorry but I absolutely refuse to accept that. There is and must be, another explanation and just because senior fellows and academics don't want to open that can of worms, does not mean that it is not so.