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Solstitial phenomena - December 21/22 1999 - last solstice/lunar fix of the century
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| Sun enters Capricorn at 07:44 on December 22, 1999 - the actual point of solstice, commonly known as the |
| first day of winter. Full Moon occurs at 17:31 on December 22 - Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). |
| This year's Full Moon is the first to occur on the Winter Solstice, December 22, for 133 years. |
| Since the Full Moon on the Winter Solstice occurs in conjunction with a lunar perigée (point in the Moon's |
| orbit closest to the Earth), the Moon appears about 14% larger than it does at apogée (the point in its orbit |
| farthest from the Earth - during summer). This makes it appear brighter. |
| The Earth is also several million miles closer to the sun at present - during the Winter Solstice - than it is at |
| Summer Solstice (June 22). Mean distance from the Sun is 93million miles - variable. Sunlight striking the |
| Moon at this perihelion (closest point to the sun) is therefore about 7% stronger at this time, making the Moon |
| appear still brighter. |
| This is also the closest perigée of the Moon all year. (The moon's elliptical orbit is constantly shifting, forming & |
| deforming because of variation in the Earth's gravitational field.) That, combined with the Earth's perihelion, |
| makes for an unbeatably bright orb in the winter sky. |
| If the skies are clear (they are tonight - one night before full - December 21st -), then it is possible to drive on |
| a hill road without headlights and see quite clearly. [We don't recommend you try it on the motorway]. |
| This phenomenon has not occurred for 133 years - the last time it did occur was on December 21st, 1866. It |
| is told that on that night the Lakota Sioux took advantage of the combination of date & lunar condition to |
| ambush soldiers in Wyoming Territory. Their medicine men had foretold the lunar-solar event. |
| As darkness falls about 4p.m. in Northeast Scotland on the winter solstice, the full moon will be rising |
| [declination varies with altitude - see your own horizon]. At point of complete night, about an hour later, the |
| moon will become full and its luminescence brighter than any it has shone for the last 133 years. It will not |
| happen again for approximately another 100 years. |
| Perhaps just one more phenomenon to add to this year's events: total solar eclipse, Grand Cross; solstitial full |
| moon. |
| No wonder our ancestors built fires to celebrate such celestial occurrences: this one is remarkable. |
| Happy Solstice |
| Marian Youngblood |
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| ©1998-2004 Friends of Grampian Stones - Editor: Marian Youngblood |