MÉRIDA, MEXICO—According to a report in Fox News Latino and the Mexico City newspaper Excelsior,
Beatriz Quintal Suaste of the Yucatán National Institute of
Anthropology and History says that an observatory at the Early Classic
Maya site of Acanceh may have helped priest-astronomers track the
movement of the planet Venus. The third-brightest object in the sky
after the sun and the moon, Venus is thought to have been represented in
Maya mythology by a god named Noh Ek. The new study suggests that the
southern edge of the observatory aligns with the northernmost position
of Venus in the night sky. Three codexes found at the site support the
idea that the ancient astronomers would have been able to track Venus’s
584-day cycle through the sky from the observatory.
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