Humans – latest in science and technology | New Ӱԭ /subject/humans/ Science news and science articles from New Ӱԭ Tue, 14 Jul 2026 09:26:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0.1 242057827 Maya mathematician’s name decoded alongside astronomical formula /article/2578746-maya-mathematicians-name-decoded-alongside-astronomical-formula/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=humans&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Mon, 13 Jul 2026 23:01:00 +0000 /?p=2578746
The mathematical formula inscribed on a wall at the Maya site of Xultun, Guatemala
F.D. Rossi; H. Hurst

An ancient Maya astronomer-mathematician has been identified for the first time along with his complex calculations made around 1200 years ago, predicting the orbital cycles of Mars and Venus.

“This is the first direct mention of an ancestral Maya astronomer-mathematician by personal name,” says at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

It is also the oldest recorded name of an astronomer-mathematician ever known from anywhere in the Americas, he says.

The Maya civilisation flourished in Central America between roughly 2000 BC and AD 1697. They had advanced knowledge of mathematics and astronomy, but much of it was lost after the mass burning of their books by Spanish missionaries.

Since 2010, excavations at the site of Xultun, Guatemala, have revealed astronomical and mathematical inscriptions inside a small masonry building.

On the east and north-east wall of the building are around 50 texts that scientists believe are “rough drafts” made by Maya mathematicians as they charted and predicted the cycles of celestial objects relative to Earth and to one another.

Rossi and his colleagues have painstakingly deciphered one of these murals, named Text 19. At the bottom of the mural is the name of Sak Tahn Waax, which translates to White-chested Fox, who is believed the be the author of the formula.

Mounds at the the archaeological site of Xultun, Guatemala, where the inscription was found
Proyecto Regional Arqueológico San Bartolo-Xultun; PRASBX

Text 19 consists of 11 hieroglyphs, which had to be scanned, photographed and magnified under different illumination angles, and compared to other, later, astronomical-mathematical writings, before their meaning could be deduced.

While similar mathematical and astronomical expertise is found across Maya cities, the mention of Sak Tahn Waax, who the researchers believe was probably male, is unique.

“Whether this is an instance of the scribe himself signing his own calculation or attributing the intellectual work to another, we have a formula and the name of its creator, which serves to demonstrate the importance of this kind of intellectual contribution for Classic Maya people,” says Rossi.

The calendar system on display in Text 19 uses maths in relation to time periods, he says. These time periods were drawn from a 260-day calendar, a 365-day solar calendar, a 584-day approximation of Venus’s synodic cycle (when the planet returns to the same position relative to both Earth and the sun) and a 780-day approximation of Mars’s synodic cycle. The total length of the formula is five Venus synodic cycles or 2920 days, and the date that Text 19 most likely refers to is 7 November of AD 781 in the Julian calendar.

Exactly how this formula would have been applied is unknown, says Rossi, as it “isn’t incorporated into any larger body of work”.

“We think it is meant to concisely and meaningfully show the relationship between these two planets and human counts of time in ways that could then be applied to political ceremony, predictive astronomy and understandings of seasonality,” he says.

Such meticulous mathematical legwork would have been critical to structuring life in a world before computers, smartphones and weather apps, says Rossi.

Journal Reference:

Antiquity

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How humans evolved to be twice as big as our ancestors /article/2533221-how-humans-evolved-to-be-twice-as-big-as-our-ancestors/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=humans&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Mon, 13 Jul 2026 17:00:03 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2533221 2533221 This book is essential reading before watching the new Odyssey film /article/2531908-this-book-is-essential-reading-before-watching-the-new-odyssey-film/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=humans&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Wed, 08 Jul 2026 17:00:33 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2531908
Jimmy Gonzales as Cepheus, Matt Damon as Odysseus and Himesh Patel as Eurylochus in Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey
Jimmy Gonzales as Cepheus, Matt Damon as Odysseus and Himesh Patel as Eurylochus in Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey
Melinda Sue Gordon / © Universal Studios

“You don’t acquire Homer; Homer acquires you.” So writes Adam Nicolson in , his paean to that indispensable pair of ancient epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey. Christopher Nolan’s of the latter makes Nicolson’s book essential reading now for anyone interested in the story’s greater significance.

Nicolson’s work follows three trains of thought. In the first, he waxes philosophical about what Homer – always referred to in the singular, but acknowledged to have been multiple people, spanning generations – has to say about the meaning of life and the clash between civilisation and depravity. He delves into the fascination literary giants have had with Homer, including John Keats, whose poem Endymion gives the book its title, and Alexander Pope, whose translations leave much to be desired.

The other two strands are more rooted in the tangible world. Nicolson digs into the text of the Iliad and the Odyssey and parses out variations in the Greek, tracing the language’s structure back to the Linear B of the Mycenaean era and beyond, and uses this linguistic examination to attempt to pin down exactly when the poems were first composed – much earlier than we’d previously thought, he argues. The standardised, written Homer that we know came down from a much older oral tradition, says Nicolson, as far back as even 2000-1800 BC.

The Mighty Dead: Why Homer matters by Adam Nicolson

Finally, he finds traces of Homer’s writing in archaeological treasures from around the ancient Mediterranean, from a papyrus found at the Hawara site in Egypt to a pottery shard discovered in a tomb on the island of Ischia, one of the oldest surviving examples of written Greek. The papyrus dates to about AD 150; the pottery, to the 8th century BC. Much attention is also paid to the shaft graves of Mycenae, and what they can tell us about the world before the Bronze Age collapse.

Nicolson isn’t interested in the historicity of the poems themselves – they are myths, after all – as much as he is in the world that produced them. He draws a compelling portrait of a complex ancient realm, and of people for whom these stories provided a link to their nomadic, warrior-centred past.

Rereading The Mighty Dead, with its focus on relics and remnants, reminded me of my honeymoon to Crete. My husband and I visited the archaeological museum in Heraklion and saw a boar-tusk helmet on display; in book 10 of the Iliad, you will find Odysseus described wearing one, too. It is a reminder, as Nicolson’s book impressively contends, that the world of Homer is still very much all around us, if we know where to look.

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Artefacts hint at cultural exchange between Neanderthals and humans /article/2533108-artefacts-hint-at-cultural-exchange-between-neanderthals-and-humans/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=humans&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Mon, 06 Jul 2026 19:00:04 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2533108 2533108 Human brains may have got bigger for no particular reason /article/2532890-human-brains-may-have-got-bigger-for-no-particular-reason/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=humans&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Mon, 06 Jul 2026 09:00:37 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2532890 2532890 ‘Hobbit’ hominins scavenged meat left over by Komodo dragons /article/2532777-hobbit-hominins-scavenged-meat-left-over-by-komodo-dragons/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=humans&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Fri, 03 Jul 2026 18:00:38 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2532777 2532777 We’re not the most successful human species /video/2532585-were-not-the-most-successful-human-species/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=humans&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Wed, 01 Jul 2026 17:00:29 +0000 /?post_type=video&p=2532585

Homo sapiens have been around for about 300,000 years. Often, our big brains and intelligence are credited with making us the most successful species to have ever walked on Earth, but that isn’t entirely true. There was another species of human that survived on this very same planet for nearly 2 million years, which was the grandparent of so many other human species, including us. They explored new continents. They mastered tools. They may have controlled fire. And they did it all with a brain barely half the size of ours. Enter Homo erectus, a species that may force us to confront an uncomfortable possibility… that intelligence alone isn’t what makes a species successful.

Read more: How Homo naledi is changing what we know about death

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Humans sleep the least of all apes – is it the secret to our success? /article/2530704-humans-sleep-the-least-of-all-apes-is-it-the-secret-to-our-success/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=humans&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Mon, 29 Jun 2026 15:00:45 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2530704 2530704 Ancient human DNA found on cave art for the first time /article/2532130-ancient-human-dna-found-on-cave-art-for-the-first-time/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=humans&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Fri, 26 Jun 2026 11:45:44 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2532130 2532130 Lost books by ancient philosophers recovered from ‘unreadable’ scrolls /article/2531697-lost-books-by-ancient-philosophers-recovered-from-unreadable-scrolls/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=humans&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Thu, 25 Jun 2026 08:30:43 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2531697 2531697