India on seas of Navigation 
anthropologist, has written  that: "Those who believe the ancient peoples of Asia were incapable of  crossing the ocean have completely lost sight of what the literary  sources tell us concerning their ships and their navigation. Many of the  peoples of Southeastern Asia had adopted Indian Hindu-Buddhist  civilizations. The influences of the Hindu-Buddhist culture of southeast  Asia in Mexico and particularly, among the Maya, are incredibly strong.
The  term Navigation originates from the Sanskrit word "Navgati" (meaning  science of sailing) (Nav - gati) Nav means sailor or ship and gati means  pace or speed in Sanskrit.
With great zeal Indian historians  pointed out that, in the past, Hindu civilization had extended far  beyond the present boundaries of India. It had included not only  Southeast Asia but extended as far as Indonesia (Bali and Java), the  Philippines and perhaps it has influence even to South America, is  something the world may have to think again, with the strong evidences  emerging with time.
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The question arises whether the  ancient Hindus of  Indonesia had contact with Mayan civilisation across  the pacific which is evident from the pyramid constructions in Indonesia  very similar to that of the Mayans. I shall share some information of  what I collected from my reading. ==
The strongest, and  indeed a hard piece of evidence established for trans-Pacific contact is  the use of a particular technique for the manufacture of bark paper,  common to China, Southeast Asia, Indonesia and Mesoamerica.
Michael  Coe (2001a:58) in his book says that knowledge of this paper-making  method "was diffused from eastern Indonesia to Mesoamerica at a very  early date." He further argues that since bark paper was used to make  books, information may have been exchanged between Pacific and  Mesoamerican peoples.
 The Indonesian Hindu temples Resembling Mayan Pyramids 
Image from : http://www.hinduwisdom.info/Pacific.htm  
Candi Sukuh Hindu Temple dedicated to Bhima of Mahabharata in Indonesia
Candi  Sukuh Hindu Temple dedicated to Bhima of Mahabharata in Indonesia  strikes a disquieting alien chord with its flat topped step pyramid and  its Mayan calendar carvings.
The religious structures in Java are commonly called Candis, a term which originally meant a commemorative building.
In  general layout, the temple conforms to the plan of most other Hindu  temples. There are three precincts, consisting of three concentric  terraces. However, where most temples would have a large square shrine,  Candi Sukuh has a pyramid reminiscent of Mayan structures from Central  America.
Another new discovery is a Candi-Sukuh like pyramid and  even a stone sphinx on a remote island off New Guinea. The site is known  to even a nearby logging company, but no-one to the outside world in  general. This giant pyramid has only been seen by helicopter pilots and a  few natives of the island. It is another example of Hindu/Maya  connection in the early pacific. So far no photographs of the site have  come forth. No one yet knows the age of this New Guinea pyramid and its  “sphinx” on a remote island near the Solomons.
Reference :   Discovering the Mysteries of Ancient America: Lost History And Legends,  Unearthed And Explored.  BOOK Authored by Frank Joseph and Zechariah  Sitchin.
The Hindus are also the only older people besides the  Mayans who are known to have employed the concept of zero in their  mathematics.
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 Ancient Architects Employed Analogous Design Doctrines and Masonry Methods 
Sri  V. Ganapati Sthapati, has just measured with tape, compass and a  lay-out story pole, the Mayan structures. He has confirmed that the  layout of these structures, locations for doors, windows, proportions of  width to length, roof styles, degree of slopes for roofs, column sizes,  wall thicknesses, etc., all conform completely to the principles and  guidelines as prescribed in the Vastu Shastras of India. Residential  layouts are identical to those found in Mohenjodaro ruins of India. The  temple layouts are identical to those that he is building today and that  can be found all over India."
Ganapati Sthapati is India's  foremost traditional temple architect and an expert in sculpture and  stone construction to personally examine these ancient buildings.  Sthapati is the architect of the San Marga Iraivan Temple being built at  Kauai Aadheenam, Hawaii.
Sthapati was accompanied by two  California builders and architects Deva Rajan and Thamby Kumaran. The  trio began 11,000 feet high in central Peru at the Incan site of Machu  Picchu. Sthapati believes, Indian architecture originated from the Mayan  people of Central America. In Indian history, Mayan appears several  times, most significantly as the author of Mayamatam, "Concept of Mayan"  which is a Vastu Shastra, a text on art, architecture and town  planning. The traditional date for this work is 8,000bce.
The  fundamental principle of Mayan's architecture and town planning is the  "module." Buildings and towns are to be laid out according to certain  multiples of a standard unit. Floor plans, door locations and sizes,  wall heights and roofs, all are determined by the modular plan. More  specifically, Mayan advocated the use of an eight-by-eight square, for a  total of 64 units, which is known as the Vastu Purusha Mandala. The  on-site inspection by Sthapati was to determine if the Incan and Mayan  structures followed a modular plan and also intended to examine the  stone working technology-his particular field of expertise.
Sthapati  was born in 1927 into a family whose ancestors, members of the  aboriginal tribe of Viswakarmas, built the great temple at Tanjore in  the 10th century ce at the request of Raja Raja Chola. He learned the  craft from his father, Sri M. Vaiydyanatha Sthapati and his uncle, Sri  M. Sellakkannu Sthapati. He spent 27 years as head of the Government  College of Architecture and Sculpture in Mahabalipuram, Tamil Nadu, and  is responsible for India's significant resurgence in the ancient art of  stone carving. After his retirement in 1988, he continued building  temples and founded the Vastu Vedic Research Foundation to explore the  ancient origins of the temple craftsmen. He is responsible for the  construction of dozens of temples in India, and others in Chicago,  Washington D.C., Kentucky, Boston, Baltimore, San Francisco, and Hawaii  in the USA as well as in the UK, Singapore, Fiji, Malaysia, Mauritius  and the Seychelles.
Machu Pichu  He proceeded to measure the  buildings in detail and discovered each to be built on a module-based  plan, following the system of eight-by-eight squares. The module method  was followed within small fractions of an inch. The buildings were  oriented toward certain points of the compass. Also the lengths of  buildings were never more than twice the width.
Saqsayhuman, an  Incan site dated from 400 bce to 1400 ce Here are the famous stone walls  made of rocks weighing up to 160 tons and fitted together so expertly  that a knife blade cannot be put in any joint. Sthapati pointed out  small knobs left on their faces, used for the use of levers, the exact  same method used in India to move large stones. Thirty to forty men  moved these large rocks with this method, he explained to the guide's  astonishment.
He observed details of the stone working being  identical to what is practiced in India, such as the method of quarrying  stones by splitting off slabs, the jointing and fitting of stones, the  use of lime mortar, leveling with a plumb bob line and triangle, and the  corbeling for the roofs. Corbeling is the method by which stones are  drawn in layer by layer until they meet or nearly meet to allow a roof  slab to be placed on top.
Sthapati considers the similarity of  this technology to that used in India to be very significant. The use of  the horizontal lintel and the absence of the arch are additional  noteworthy points of correspondence between the two traditions.
The  Mayan Yucatan Peninsula Having arrived at Chichén Itzá in time for the  summer equinox on March 21st. The trio got to witness the moment of  sunset at equinox, a shadow is cast by the steps of the Pyramid which  creates the image of a serpent's body which joins a stone carving of a  serpent's head at the bottom of the stair case. It is a stunning  demonstration of Mayan astronomical and architectural precision.
The  trio got back to work and tape measured and closely examined the  Pyramid of the Castle. It too conformed to the Vastu Vedic principles of  Mayan. The temple structure at the top was exactly 1/4th of the base.  And the stepped pyramid design derived from a three-dimensional  extension of the basic eight-by-eight grid system. The temple room at  the top was also modular in design, with the wall thickness determining  the size of doorways, location of columns, thickness of columns and the  width and length of the structure.
From Chichén Itzá, they  traveled on to Uxmal where they observed the snake and "bindu" designs  on the wall faces.  They were astounded by the thousands of pyramids at  Tikal and Uxacturn in Guatemala, all laid out to conform to a grid  pattern and oriented in astronomically significant directions.
Use  of lime mortar for all of the stone and brick buildings, can been seen  in the monumental creations in Mahabalipuram and the stone temples of  Tanjor and Gangai Konda Choleswram in Tamil Nadu. The outer surfaces  were plastered, embellishments worked out in lime mortar, then painted.  This method was strongest among the Mayas at Tikal and Uaxactún, where  all of the structures once had a plaster coating painted with many  colors.
Sri Ganapati Sthapati is vigorously continuing his  research and is open to suggestions one may contact him with queries or  information at :
Vastu Vedic Research Foundation, Plot A-1,  H.I.G. Colony, 1st Main Road (New Beach Road), Thiruvalluvar Nagar,  Thiruvanmiyur, Madras 600 041, India.
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 Also view : 
http://en. .org/wiki/Mamuni_Mayan
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 References : 
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http://www.hinduwisdom.info/Pacific.htm
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/physics/pdf/0101/0101076v1.pdf
http://en. .org/wiki/Maya_peoples
http://www.pluralism.org/news/article.php?id=9700
http://www.archaeologyonline.net/artifacts/who-discovered-america.html
http://www.occultforums.com/archive/index.php?t-11552.html
http://www.redicecreations.com/radio/2007/07jul/RICR-070715-SUB.htm
Hindu Mayan Connection
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Very useful tips..................Sthapati Architects, Specialises in Traditional architecture in Chennai. We have also designed Temple architecture in Chennai.
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