Why no Evidence of MAYAN dissappearance
by Henryk Szubinski
DUST DEVILS and DUST storms on Mezzo America.
blindness and MAYA civilization as the non observable reality of the
external non visual world butt which as auditory and other sense
perceptions still functioning such as touch ,taste,smell.
So that previous to blindness the worship of the Earth, water, wind and fire,
the fire would have been the period in which the Mayans went blind. So this must have
been the last on the list of the age of fire as that which related to some sense perception as
FIRE = SIGHT so that blindness = non fire.
Meaning that WATER = non fire, indicating that water could have extinguished the fire that caused the
BLINDNESS ?. Perhaps not.
OTher causes of the "non fire" as the Wind? . Perhaps not because that would
mean that dust or small fragements of wind particles would have entered the
eyes of the MAYA at some very high speed similar to the winds on MArs.
Perhaps not.
But one function remains, the Earth. So how could the Earth =non fire.
Well the Earth would have to be dark as there would be no fire, but it
would open up as a comparison of not seeing the openings into the depth as
could be referenced to large areas of MAYAN earth falling into large caverns
beneath the Earth where the Maya build their temples and palaces.Perhaps not?.
That would mean no buildings or temples remaining.
So the cause must be the Wind . How could such a strong wind start in the MAYAN age?.
Lets see what happens on Mars.
more:
data from NASA
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/the-fact-and-fiction-of-martian-dust-storms
date 07,05,2017
time, 18:29
Mars is infamous for intense dust storms, which sometimes kick up enough dust to be seen by telescopes on Earth.
“Every year there are some moderately big dust storms that pop up on Mars and they cover continent-sized areas and last for weeks at a time,” said Michael Smith, a planetary scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
Beyond Mars’ large annual storms are massive storms that occur more rarely but are much larger and more intense.
“Once every three Mars years (about 5 ½ Earth years), on average, normal storms grow into planet-encircling dust storms, and we usually call those ‘global dust storms’ to distinguish them,” Smith said.
It is unlikely that even these dust storms could strand an astronaut on Mars, however. Even the wind in the largest dust storms likely could not tip or rip apart major mechanical equipment. The winds in the strongest Martian storms top out at about 60 miles per hour, less than half the speed of some hurricane-force winds on Earth.
Focusing on wind speed may be a little misleading, as well. The atmosphere on Mars is about 1 percent as dense as Earth’s atmosphere. That means to fly a kite on Mars, the wind would need to blow much faster than on Earth to get the kite in the air.
“The key difference between Earth and Mars is that Mars’ atmospheric pressure is a lot less,” said William Farrell, a plasma physicist who studies atmospheric breakdown in Mars dust storms at Goddard. “So things get blown, but it’s not with the same intensity.”
Stirring Up Dust
Large global dust storms put enough dust in the air to completely cover the planet and block out the sun, but doing so ultimately dooms the storm itself. The radiative heat of sunlight reaching the surface of the planet is what drives these dust storms.
As sunlight hits the ground, it warms the air closest to the surface, leaving the upper air cooler. As in thunderstorms on Earth, the warm and cool air together become unstable, with warm air rising up and taking dust with it.
Learn more:
Rising plumes of warm air create everything from small dust devils, similar to those that form in deserts on Earth, to larger continent-sized storms. These larger storms sometimes combine into the global storms, which cover the entire planet in atmospheric dust.
Larger storms typically only happen during summer in Mars’ southern hemisphere. Seasons on Mars are caused by the tilt of the planet, like on Earth. But Mars’ orbit is less circular than Earth’s; for part of a Martian year, the planet is closer to the sun and therefore significantly hotter. This warmer time is during the southern hemisphere’s summer, so radiative heat forces are strongest then. Once started, bigger storms can last weeks to months.
Scientists aren’t really sure why the years’ long gaps between storms exist.
“It could be that it just takes a while for the sources to replenish themselves,” Smith said. “Maybe there’s some kind of cycle that the dust has to go through to get back into the right places to trigger a new one, or maybe it’s just kind of luck.”
Scientists have been tracking these global dust storms on Mars for more than a century, using both telescopes on Earth and spacecraft orbiting Mars. The storms have been observed a number of times since 1909, most recently in 2007. Now, more than eight years later, Smith is hopeful he’ll get the chance to study a major storm soon.
“We’re overdue for a global dust storm and it could be saving up a really big one this year, so that would kind of fun,” he said. “I like the dust storms.”
A towering dust devil casts a serpentine shadow over the Martian surface in this image acquired by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.The scene is a late-spring afternoon in the Amazonis Planitia region of northern Mars. The view covers an area about four-tenths of a mile (644 meters) across. North is toward the top. The length of the dusty whirlwind's shadow indicates that the dust plume reaches more than half a mile (800 meters) in height. The plume is about 30 yards or meters in diameter.
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
more :
That dust devils exist on Dry land and that they are SPIRAL in nature may be the clue to the meaning of the MAYAN use of the Astronomical calendar as having
the mention of the "galactic beam alignment" as the same spirals being at the cause of the galaxy and it's spirals.
Imagine such a large dust devil. With the small particles of metal, sand , rocks, crystals as the base elements of their make up and how the furnace of the galaxy and it's 4 details at the core disc moves so fast as to FUSE the metals with the sand with the crystals and that entered their eyes and made them blind like some kind of biblical end?.
Mayan sorcerers usually speak of the INORGANIC BEINGS that are the SPIRAL SERPENTINES.
When the Dust devils reach above the 800 meters they may have been part of the cloud layers and their connection to water as the change to tornadoes that displaced water into the basin deltas , change from dryness to moisture and water being pulled downwards.
That the EARTH CAVERN theory would indicate that the Maya had gravity related DUST DEVILS, meaning that the other forces of the Earth such as water that extinguished the fire of the visual observation, could only effect the mind of a MAYAN by going blind. This would be some magnetic change of the water that effected the brains of the MAYANS.
This magnetic influence would pull the dust devils to one position because the whole of MEZZO AMERICA is shaped like a SPIRAL. So the center of the problem would
spiral dust devils into the central ,south American positions by magnetic interactions with the MOON.
The relationship with the Earth crumbling beneath the MAYANS feet ? Perhaps as the other direction where the dust devils pull huge amounts of Earth upwards and deposits it somewhere from the center of mezzo America . BY following the spiral of South America with a spiral in the opposite direction may be mapped as the place where all the MAYAN gold could be found by the DUST DEVILS having moved them and deposited them in the ocean or other land.
dust devil and its shadow on Mars
A towering dust devil casts a serpentine shadow over the Martian surface in this image acquired by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.The scene is a late-spring afternoon in the Amazonis Planitia region of northern Mars. The view covers an area about four-tenths of a mile (644 meters) across. North is toward the top. The length of the dusty whirlwind's shadow indicates that the dust plume reaches more than half a mile (800 meters) in height. The plume is about 30 yards or meters in diameter.
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
Here then the SEARCH for the SPIRALS and their Cause and effect as to where they would have displaced all the MAYAN treasures.
A towering dust devil casts a serpentine shadow over the Martian surface in this image acquired by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.The scene is a late-spring afternoon in the Amazonis Planitia region of northern Mars. The view covers an area about four-tenths of a mile (644 meters) across. North is toward the top. The length of the dusty whirlwind's shadow indicates that the dust plume reaches more than half a mile (800 meters) in height. The plume is about 30 yards or meters in diameter.
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
Here then the SEARCH for the SPIRALS and their Cause and effect as to where they would have displaced all the MAYAN treasures.
The 2 Mounds may have been the focus of the Dust devils as they change to Tornadoes that heap Earth into a pyramidal appearance with the focus of the mounds being where they had their tornado center.