Roughly 5,000 years ago, ancient inhabitants of the British Isles somehow dragged as many as 40 giant stones—the heaviest weighing an estimated 16 tons—onto this grassy plateau in what is now England"s Lake District National Park in Cumbria. They then grouped them into the stone circle at Castlerigg, seen here casting shadows from the low winter sun. Archeologists believe stone circles were arranged to align with solar and lunar positions. They were used in elaborate rituals to celebrate occasions like today"s winter solstice, the shortest day (and longest night) of the year in the Northern Hemisphere.
Shadows on the solstice
Today in History
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A tree of many memories
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Storseisundet Bridge, Norway
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Martin Luther King Jr. Day
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World Whale Day
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Aït Benhaddou, Morocco
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Fall color sweeps across the West
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Bamburgh Castle, Northumberland, England
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Protecting wildlife today and tomorrow
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Space Week isnt over yet!
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World Water Day
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Big sky at Big Bend
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‘Hello’ from zero degrees longitude
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A wild, craggy corner of the United States
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Dance of the egret
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Everglades National Park marks 90 years
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It’s World Migratory Bird Day
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The monsoon arrives in the desert
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A willowy welcome to spring
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Welcome to the drainpipe of the Pacific
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World Bicycle Day
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Fibonacci Day
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The migrating monarchs of Michoacán
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Bald cypress trees in Georgia
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Are you older than this lake?
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Ubud, Bali, Indonesia
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Space is for everyone
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International Day for Biological Diversity
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A young jaguar on a riverbank, Pantanal, Brazil
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Carlsbad Caverns National Park in New Mexico
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