Mayan_Long_CountSince Calendar Round dates can only distinguish within 18980 days, equivalent to around 52 solar years, the cycle repeats roughly once each lifetime, and thus, a much more refined method of dating was needed if their history was to be recorded accurately.The Long Count employs the use of number series, roughly base 20 and is constructed by counting whole number of days alone. The Mayan name for a day was k'in; twenty of these k'ins are known as a winal (or uinal); eighteen winals make one tun; twenty tuns are known as a k'atun, twenty k'atuns make a b'ak'tun. (Four higher-order cycles but rarely used are known as Piktun, Kalabtun, K'inchiltun, and Alautun.) Only one day in one calendar system has to be firmly established in the other to be able to translate all dates in one system to the other. The commonly-established way of expressing the correlation between the Maya calendar and the Gregorian or Julian calendars is to give the offset in days from the start of the Julian Period to the Maya creation on 13.0.0.0.0 4 Ajaw 8 Kumk'u. |