Quetzalcōātl
De Wikipedia
In Quetzalcōātl Aztēcah teōtl. Tlāhuizcalpantēcuhtli, Tōnalmachiyōtlanextileh ihuan Āmoxtlanextileh. Quetzalcōātl tētlamaca in Tlaōlli tlacayōtl.
Quetzalcōātl quitoznequi quetzalli= in yectli cuacualtzin ianimantzin ihuan cōātl= in tlein in tlaticpac ca= tlācatl, imanon quetzalcōātl quitoznequi in tlācatl in āquin motlehcoz ianimantzin ica in tlahuitlacatzin in tlācatl ma moteochihua.
Quetzalcōātl, amo aztēcatl, tlamo mēxihcatl, mopōhuaz tōltēcatl ipan in huēhuē tlamanitiliztli, Aztēcah in tōcāitl omitoaya cah zan ocatcan in aquinhuan in oquin yehcoayan in inihuīcpa in mēxihcah.
In āmatl tepoltic. Xitlapalehuia Huiquipedia in tehualaquitica. |
[editar] Nō Xitta:
- Topiltzin Quetzalcōātl
[editar] Nohiucan tlachia
- 14 December 2004, Nature: Mystery of 'chirping' pyramid decoded Acoustic analysis shows how temple transforms echoes into sounds of nature. Quote: "...sound waves ricocheting around the tiered steps of the El Castillo pyramid, at the Mayan ruin of Chichén Itzá near Cancún in Mexico, create sounds that mimic the chirp of a bird and the patter of raindrops...The bird-call effect, which resembles the warble of the Mexican quetzal bird, a sacred animal in Mayan culture...He himself is now sceptical of the quetzal theory..."
- ocasa.org: An archaeological study of chirped echo from the Mayan pyramid of Kukulkan at Chichen Itza by David Lubman. Acoustical Consultant, Hear the Quetzal in the cloud forest. (AV), "You will hear two Quetzal bird chirps (recorded in a rain forest) followed by two chirped echoes stimulated by a handclaps at the pyramid" (AV)