(11, Source 1)
Demonstrates how that there was many people who relied on different ways on to tell how to should be seen. It describes the different methods all these people created and how they used their calendar to tell how time should be seen.
In “How 1582 Lost Ten Days” it describes how the Gregorian calendar made major fixes to the Julian Caesar calendar. Luigi Lilius was the person who recognized that the Julian Caesar Calendar was wrong. It talks about how they also handled the situation and who helped with creating the new and reformed way of time.
“The Julian Caesar calendar was 365 ¼ day long and the actual solar year was 365.2422 days. This meant that the Julian calendar exceeded the solar year by eleven minutes and fourteen seconds each year. This difference grew with each successive century, and by the late sixteenth century, the Julian Calendar was ten full days longer than the solar calendar.” (4, Source …show more content…
But the Council of Trent took immediate action to fix this problem. And by fixing this problem they added another day after Thursday, and they named it Friday. By doing that they would drop the 10 days and be aligned with the solar year. That’s how the ten added days were fixed and demonstrates how this article is very different to the other sources.
In the article, “Oldest Known Mayan Calendar Debunks December 2012 Myth,” describes about how the Mayan calendar was created and the time as well. This article offers a lot more information about the Mayans and how they came up with this calendar. Also talks about a myth that happens in December of 2012 and also the painting that the Mayans used to tell time.
“Its walls are adorned with remarkably preserved paintings and writing, including calculations related to the Mayan calendar.” (3, Source 3)
It also describes how wide the room is and at what time it was created. Also how each wall looks like from each side of the room. It also describes how the Mayans determined how time should be seen.
“Scrawled in red and black are charts of numbers represented by bars and dots in the typical Mayan