Researchers found the oldest solar calendar, which indicates the collision of an unknown planet with Earth.

Turkey: Researchers found the world’s oldest solar calendar, which was carved on a wall in Turkey.
In southern Turkey, at the ancient site of Göbekli Tepe, there are traces of a complex, and in this complex, the world’s oldest solar calendar was carved on a wall, and researchers say those traces are approximately 12,000 years old.
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According to research, the V-shaped markings on the pillars represent the days of the year, and the 365 markings are divided into 12 months.
In these unique drawings, we can see the movement of the sun and moon. In these drawings, we can also see the changes in the star cluster in the sky.
A very special discovery in this research was on a separate pillar, which indicates the collision of an unknown planet with Earth almost 13,000 years ago, which triggered the ice age.
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But according to the researchers in the past, we have no evidence of any such collision of any planet with the earth that triggered the ice age. According to the researchers, Göbekli Tepe might be built as a memorial to the same asteroid collision.
Researchers thought that people who lived in Göbekli Tepe were fond of space studies, and that was the reason they carved this incident on a wall.