'Major lunar standstill' may reveal if Stonehenge is aligned with the moon (2024)

'Major lunar standstill' may reveal if Stonehenge is aligned with the moon (1)

Stonehenge has aligned with the sun on thesolsticesfor thousands of years, but is it possible that it also aligns with the moon? A once-in-a-generation event, known as a "major lunar standstill" is now underway, and scientists are ready to investigate whether ancient people built the monument to align with our natural satellite.

A major lunar standstill occurs every 18.6 years, when the moon rises and sets at a more northerly and southerly place along the horizon than usual, according to astatementfrom the Royal Astronomical Society. What's more, from our perspective on Earth, the moon will reachhigher altitudes in the sky than the summer sunand lower altitudes than the winter sun.

This unique moon cycle is taking place this year and into 2025. "It's a long cycle. Archaeologists haven't had that many opportunities to study it [at Stonehenge],"Jennifer Wexler, senior properties historian with a specialty in prehistoric sites at English Heritage, an organization that oversees historic sites in England, told LiveScience.

Related: Stonehenge's summer solstice orientation is seen in monuments all over the UK in amazing photos

Stonehengehas gone through many phases of building and rebuilding, starting in about 3000 B.C. with the construction of a large, circular ditch that had an inner and outer bank and two entrances.

On the inner circle within this monument, archaeologists have found 56 pits, dubbed Aubrey Holes for John Aubrey, a 17th-century antiquarian who first described them. It's possible the Aubrey Holes once held upright timbers or stones. But somehold cremation burials, as do other locations within Stonehenge. Strangely, many of the cremations are found in the southeastern part of Stonehenge, near three pits that likely once held timber posts, and which appear to align with the southerly moonrise of a major lunar standstill.

It appears that these southeastern burials, both in the Aubrey Holes and around them, remained meaningful, because in about 2500 B.C., when the famous large stones were initially placed, ancient builders put down the so-called four Station Stones in this spot. The long axis of the rectangle these stones form may align with the most southerly rising point of the moon, according to the statement.

'Major lunar standstill' may reveal if Stonehenge is aligned with the moon (2)

"Stonehenge's architectural connection to the Sun is well known, but its link with the moon is less well understood,"Clive Ruggles, professor emeritus of archaeoastronomy at the University of Leicester, said in the statement. "The four Station Stones align with the moon's extreme positions, and researchers have debated for years whether this was deliberate, and — if so — how this was achieved and what might have been its purpose."

Ancient people may have viewed the major lunar standstill as a sacred time, as they "would have been so much more aware of the sky than we are now," Wexler said. "These people also would have also been early farmers, so understanding these cycles would have been extremely important to them."

Perhaps people told their children or grandchildren about the moon's unique placement, she said. "It might have been part of the ancestral connection to Stonehenge as a place."

During observations of the major lunar standstill at Stonehenge, researchers with Historic England, Oxford, Leicester and Bournemouth universities and the Royal Astronomical Society will examine different aspects at the site.

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"We want to understand something of what it was like to experience these extreme Moonrises and sets,"Amanda Chadburn, an archaeologist at the University of Oxford's Kellogg College, said in the statement, "and to witness their visual effects on the stones (for example, patterns of light and shadow), and consider modern influences like traffic and trees, and to document all of this through photography for future study."

Through 2024, the public is invited to Stonehenge for various events, including apop-up planetarium, lectures and an online-onlylivestreamof the southernmost moonrise at Stonehenge in June. The researchers are also collaborating with a team at Chimney Rock, Colorado, the site of a Chacoan settlement that may also align with the moon during the major lunar standstill.

Originally published on LiveScience.com.

Join our Space Forums to keep talking space on the latest missions, night sky and more! And if you have a news tip, correction or comment, let us know at: community@space.com.

'Major lunar standstill' may reveal if Stonehenge is aligned with the moon (3)

Laura Geggel

Live Science Editor

Laura is an editor at Live Science. She edits Life's Little Mysteries and reports on general science, including archaeology and animals. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, Scholastic, Popular Science and Spectrum, a site on autism research. She has won multiple awards from the Society of Professional Journalists and the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association for her reporting at a weekly newspaper near Seattle. Laura holds a bachelor's degree in English literature and psychology from Washington University in St. Louis and an advanced certificate in science writing from NYU.

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    'Major lunar standstill' may reveal if Stonehenge is aligned with the moon (2024)

    FAQs

    'Major lunar standstill' may reveal if Stonehenge is aligned with the moon? ›

    Every midsummer's night, tens of thousands of people gather at Stonehenge to celebrate and witness the rising sun in alignment with the Heel Stone standing outside the circle, but a longstanding hypothesis is that part of the historic structure is also aligned with the moonrise and moonset

    moonrise and moonset
    Moonrise and moonset are times when the upper limb of the Moon appears above the horizon and disappears below it, respectively.
    https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Moonrise_and_moonset
    at what is called a major ...

    What rare lunar event could reveal whether Stonehenge was aligned with the moon? ›

    This major lunar standstill is due to happen in January 2025, but from now until mid-2025, the moon may appear, to a casual observer, to be unusually low and high in the night sky during the lunar month. Stonehenge's station stones are thought by some to be aligned with the lunar standstill.

    What is the lunar standstill in 2024? ›

    Because the Moon changes little during a standstill, the phenomenon can be observed for the remainder of 2024 and into the year 2025. The last time a standstill like this happened was in 2005. Friday night, June 21, and into Saturday morning, June 22, an astronomical event that only happens every 18.6 years occurred.

    How Stonehenge may align with the moon based on rare 18.6 year lunar cycle? ›

    Stonehenge is famous for its alignments with the sun, but did you know that the ancient monument may have also been carefully designed to align with the movements of the Moon? 2024 is a special year as an astronomical phenomenon called the 'major lunar standstill' occurs.

    What happens during a lunar standstill? ›

    A major lunar standstill happens every 18.6 years when the moon rises and sets at its most extreme points on the horizon while also climbing to its highest and lowest points in the sky, making it appear in the night sky longer. This year marks the first “major lunar standstill,” also known as a “lunistice,” since 2006.

    What is the only astronomical event that Stonehenge is aligned with? ›

    The whole layout of Stonehenge is therefore designed in relation to the solstices, which are the extreme limits of the sun's movement. The solstice axis is also marked by the Station Stones, which are placed at the corners of a rectangle around the edge of the surrounding circular ditch.

    What is the lunar alignment of Stonehenge? ›

    Every midsummer's night, tens of thousands of people gather at Stonehenge to celebrate and witness the rising sun in alignment with the Heel Stone standing outside the circle, but a longstanding hypothesis is that part of the historic structure is also aligned with the moonrise and moonset at what is called a major ...

    What is the 33 year cycle? ›

    It takes 33 years for the cycle of lunar years to get back to the original position. In simple terms,33 year cycle, a lunar month can also be defined as the time the moon takes to pass through each of its phases (new moon, half moon and full moon) and return back to its original position.

    Are humans going to the moon in 2024? ›

    The flight would slip from late 2024 to no earlier than September 2025. This was due to some safety issues that need to be fixed on Orion. Consequently, Artemis 3, which is supposed to involve the first crewed lunar landing since 1972, will take place no earlier than September 2026.

    What is the 18.6 year lunar standstill cycle? ›

    Called a “major lunar standstill,” this natural phenomenon only occurs every 18.6 years. The standstill is not just one day, but a period of about two years when the moon rises and sets at more northerly and southerly spots along the horizon than normal.

    Why does the moon wobble every 18.6 years? ›

    The 18.6-year cycle is caused by the precession of the plane of the lunar orbit, while this orbit maintains a 5° tilt relative to the ecliptic. At the peak of this cycle, the Moon's declination swings from -28.8° to +28.8° each month.

    What is the rarest thing to happen to the moon? ›

    According to NASA, a blue moon only occurs once every two or three years on average—and a blue moon that is also a supermoon is even rarer. While a “super blue moon” can occasionally happen twice within two months, at other times, it could be 20 years before the phenomenon repeats.

    What would happen to Earth if the moon were to stand still? ›

    If the earth stops spinning suddenly, the atmosphere will continue to spin. This means very high speed winds, i.e., approximately 1670 Km/hr which is earth's rotational velocity. The winds will also cause erosion to the earth's crust. If the moon truly stopped orbiting, it would simply fall into the earth.

    What will happen if there is no moon on the Earth? ›

    It is the pull of the Moon's gravity on the Earth that holds our planet in place. Without the Moon stabilising our tilt, it is possible that the Earth's tilt could vary wildly. It would move from no tilt (which means no seasons) to a large tilt (which means extreme weather and even ice ages).

    What is the rarest lunar phenomenon? ›

    This natural phenomenon, known as a "major lunar standstill," occurs only once every 18.6 years and lasts around two years. It is already taking place and it's in its full glory during full moons.

    What is the rarest thing to happen to the Moon? ›

    According to NASA, a blue moon only occurs once every two or three years on average—and a blue moon that is also a supermoon is even rarer. While a “super blue moon” can occasionally happen twice within two months, at other times, it could be 20 years before the phenomenon repeats.

    What rare mineral was found on the Moon? ›

    Hematite, a mineral composed of ferric oxide (Fe2O3), has been found on the Moon. This mineral is a product of a reaction between iron, oxygen, and liquid water. Oxygen from the Earth's atmosphere may cause this reaction as indicated by there being more hematite on the side of the Moon facing the Earth.

    What is the rarest moon phase to see? ›

    The super blue blood moon features three different astronomical events. First, the blue moon, when there is two full moon falls in a calendar month, the second full moon is called Blue moon. The word came from the phrase 'Once in a Blue Moon' means something is rare. Blue Moon happens once in every two or three years.

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