By Vigdis Hocken
The Mayan calendar ended one of its great cycles in December 2012, which fueled predictions about an apocalypse on December 21, 2012 at 11:11(UTC).
One theory suggests a galactic alignment which would create chaos on Earth because of the gravitational effect between the Sun and the Black hole called Sagittarius A, which is located at the center of our galaxy.
The Mayan calendar developed a system of astrology from their calendar that is called the Tzolkāin which has 20 different day signs and 13 different galactic numbers that adds up to a 260 day cycle for the calendar. This is opposed to the 364 day calendar that most people are familiar with today. . Gregorian calendar. Julian calendar. The calendar eras. The Muslim calendar. The Gregorian calendar conversion. Hebrew calendar. Coptic calendar. Mayan calendar, 2012, the end of the world. Calendar section ( 12 calculators ).
Another theory involves a 'polar shift', which means a reversal of the north and south magnetic poles.
- The Mayan Long Count calendar was divided into different units of time that used the Haab, or solar year (365 days), as a base. The Calendar Round consisted of two separate calendars; the first was the 365-day solar year, the second was the 260-day Tzolkin cycle.
- The most commonly known Mayan cyclic calendars are Haab and Tzolkin. In addition to these, the Maya also developed the Long Count calendar to chronologically date mythical and historical events. The 13 baktun cycle of the Mayan long-account calendar is 1,872,000 days or 5,125.366 years long.
Scientists believe that the Earth is overdue for a geomagnetic reversal. However, this can take up to 5,000 years to complete and does not start on any particular date.
Our Mayan Calendar Countdown was very popular at the time.
Just a New Beginning
NASA scientists have thoroughly studied and analyzed the possibility of the Earth ending in 2012, and have concluded that 21st December 2012 will be nothing more than a normal December solstice.
Mayan Baby Calendar 2019
There is simply no scientific evidence to support any claims of an apocalypse on Earth on December 21, 2012.
No Planetary Alignment
In response to theories about planetary alignments leading to an apocalypse on Earth on December 21, 2012, scientists say no planetary alignments are likely to occur in the next few decades. And even if they did, the effects on our planet would be negligible.
NASA scientists also claim that the 'polar shift' theory is totally impossible. Although continents move slowly throughout time, a magnetic reversal is very unlikely to happen in the next few millennia and would not cause any harm to life on Earth.
The scientists' conclusion is that the end of the Mayan calendar does not imply the end of the world, only the end of the Mayan long-count period. The 'long count' is a part of the Maya calendar, which is shaped like a wheel.

When we reach the end of the wheel, it will turn to the beginning again, just like our modern Gregorian calendar starts again every January 1.
In the tonalpohualli, the sacred Aztec calendar, Thursday December 10, 2020 is:
Trecena:
13-day period
(1 -) Atl (water)
Mayan Calendar July 2019
Yoaltecuhtli:
Lord of the Night
Xiuhpohualli:
365-day calendar
8 - Tozoztontli (III)
(Correlation: Alfonso Caso - Nicholson's veintena alignment [adjust])
The significance of this day
Day Ozomahtli (Monkey) is governed by Xochipili, the Flower Prince, as its provider of tonalli (Shadow Soul) life energy. Ozomahtli is a day for creating, for play, for celebrating. A good day for lightheartedness, a bad day for seriousness. Ozomahtli is a warning about how easily the noble person can be trapped by the lures of public life.
The thirteen day period (trecena) that starts with day 1-Atl (Water) is ruled by Chalchihuihtotolin. These are 13 days of instability and unexpected events, of accidents and coincidences: these are good days to gamble a little on a long-shot; bad days to gamble a lot on a sure thing. Every day rollercoasters between all-good and all-bad, between rapture and terror. This trecena advises the priest-warrior to perfect the art of shapeshifting: only by mimicking the nature of water do we become an agent of change rather than a target of it. The purified heart casts no reflection in the smoking mirror.
Aztec facts
Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs, often combines two terms to create a metaphoric expression (difrasismo). Examples are 'atl-tepetl' ('water, hill') for the concept of a settlement, or 'atl-tlachinolli' (water, fire) for the concept of war.
