Sunrise Solstice at Stonehenge
Credit & Copyright:
Pete Strasser (Tucson, Arizona, USA)
Today the Sun reaches its northernmost point in the planet Earth's sky.
Called a solstice,
the date traditionally marks a change of seasons -- from spring to summer in
Earth's Northern Hemisphere and from fall to
winter in Earth's Southern Hemisphere.
Pictured above is the 2005 Summer Solstice celebration at
Stonehenge in
England.
The event was rare because
Stonehenge was not always open to the public,
and because recent summer solstices there had been annoyingly cloudy.
In 2005, however, thousands of people gathered at sunrise to see the sun rise
through the
4,000 year old solar monument.
Even given the precession of the Earth's rotational axis
over the millennia, the Sun continues to rise over
Stonehenge in an
astronomically significant way.
In fact, the photographer was able to find a good spot where the
rising Sun
appeared over one of Stonehenge's massive standing stones.