Cold and Blustery

Good morning Augusta.  

This morning it is partly cloudy with a High of 36F with a windchill as low as 14F. Winds from the West at 10 to 15 mph.

Tonight it will remain partly cloudy. Low of 21F with a windchill as low as 14F. Winds from the West at 5 to 10 mph.

The readings taken from my own weather instrumentation are:

A relative humidity of 56% with a Dew Point of 15.9ºF and a wind chill of 18.5º F.    

The temperature is 30.2ºF.

Presently we have   West Southwest winds between 14.5 MPH and 17.9 MPH.

Our Barometric pressure is 29.52/HPA 999.2 and rising with a weather graphic indicating clouds.

The UV rating is 0 out of 16, sunset will be at 4:03 PM with Moon Rise at 2:22 a.m. Eastern Standard Time, and the moon phase is waxing gibbous.

For the pilots out there: Raw METAR is –

METAR KAUG 251253Z AUTO 28008G17KT 10SM FEW045 M03/M11 A2958 RMK AO2 PK WND 28028/1155 SLP022 T10281111

Visibility is 10.0 miles/16.1 Kilometers with a few clouds down to 4,500 ft / 1371 m

We had rain in this area in the past 24 hours of 0.18.

Remember, this year is the year when the world is supposed to end. Well, to be clear, it will end according to many who point to the Mayan calendar, and that will happen on December 21.

According to the GOP, the world ended when our current president (aDemocrat) was elected twice, and Democrats state plainly that the world 'may' come to an end if republicans don't stop saying "no" to anything a Democrat suggests. Independents claim that the world ended some time ago, but, as noted above, congress refuses to deal with the problem, and that is why we're all still here.

Take your pick.

Getting back to the Mayans, I found this 2007 article written by G. Jeffrey MacDonald, Special to USA TODAY, and thought I'd put it in here for your consumption.

With humanity coming up fast on 2012, publishers are helping readers gear up and count down to this mysterious — some even call it apocalyptic — date that ancient Mayan societies were anticipating thousands of years ago.

Since November, at least three new books on 2012 have arrived in mainstream bookstores. A fourth is due this fall. Each arrives in the wake of the 2006 success of 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl, which has been selling thousands of copies a month since its release in May and counts more than 40,000 in print. The books also build on popular interest in the Maya, fueled in part by Mel Gibson's December 2006 film about Mayan civilization, Apocalpyto.

Authors disagree about what humankind should expect on Dec. 21, 2012, when the Maya's "Long Count" calendar marks the end of a 5,126-year era.

Journalist Lawrence Joseph forecasts widespread catastrophe in Apocalypse 2012: A Scientific Investigation Into Civilization's End. Spiritual healer Andrew Smith predicts a restoration of a "true balance between Divine Feminine and Masculine" in The Revolution of 2012: Vol. 1, The Preparation. In 2012, Daniel Pinchbeck anticipates a "change in the nature of consciousness," assisted by indigenous insights and psychedelic drug use.

The buildup to 2012 echoes excitement and fear expressed on the eve of the new millennium, popularly known as Y2K, though on a smaller scale, says Lynn Garrett, senior religion editor at Publishers Weekly. She says publishers seem to be courting readers who believe humanity is creating its own ecological disasters and desperately needs ancient indigenous wisdom.

"The convergence I see here is the apocalyptic expectations, if you will, along with the fact that the environment is in the front of many people's minds these days," Garrett says. "Part of the appeal of these earth religions is that notion that we need to reconnect with the Earth in order to save ourselves."

But scholars are bristling at attempts to link the ancient Maya with trends in contemporary spirituality. Maya civilization, known for advanced writing, mathematics and astronomy, flourished for centuries in Mesoamerica, especially between A.D. 300 and 900. Its Long Count calendar, which was discontinued under Spanish colonization, tracks more than 5,000 years, then resets at year zero.

"For the ancient Maya, it was a huge celebration to make it to the end of a whole cycle," says Sandra Noble, executive director of the Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies in Crystal River, Fla. To render Dec. 21, 2012, as a doomsday or moment of cosmic shifting, she says, is "a complete fabrication and a chance for a lot of people to cash in."

Part of the 2012 mystique stems from the stars. On the winter solstice in 2012, the sun will be aligned with the center of the Milky Way for the first time in about 26,000 years. This means that "whatever energy typically streams to Earth from the center of the Milky Way will indeed be disrupted on 12/21/12 at 11:11 p.m. Universal Time," Joseph writes.

But scholars doubt the ancient Maya extrapolated great meaning from anticipating the alignment — if they were even aware of what the configuration would be.

Astronomers generally agree that "it would be impossible the Maya themselves would have known that," says Susan Milbrath, a Maya archaeoastronomer and a curator at the Florida Museum of Natural History. What's more, she says, "we have no record or knowledge that they would think the world would come to an end at that point."

University of Florida anthropologist Susan Gillespie says the 2012 phenomenon comes "from media and from other people making use of the Maya past to fulfill agendas that are really their own."

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