Greetings fellow dialists,
Thibaud's question about the equinox is not easily answered but Tbom, in his
book "Megalithic sites in Britain" attempts it. He says that you find the
number of days in a year (easy) and the solstice points (harder) from
markers of star rise and sunrise. From this you divide the days between
successive solstices and set up a mark. You then have a choice, either to
work in isolation and refine your mark over meny years to take care of what
are now leap years or travel to another megalithic observatory and compare
observations to compare the date. He writes: "..when we find indications of
the same declinations in Cumberland, Lewis, Wales and Caithness we must
consider the possibility that the calendar dates throughout this wide area
were in phase".
Frank 55N 1W

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Th. Taudin Chabot
Sent: 18 December 2004 11:30
To: [email protected]
Subject: equinox in the stone age.....


Roger,

Because the subject was mentioned I realised I have still a question about
orientation points to which I never found an acceptable answer. Perhaps you
or somebody else on the list know the right answer.

In the old times like Stonehenge it was easy to find the midwinter and
midsummer spots of sunrise and sunset, just look and make a mark.
But how did they find the spots of sunrise and sunset at the equinox?
Halving the distance between summer and winter is rather rough and would
only work with a completely horizontal horizon, no hills etc.
Measuring day/night  length was stil not possible as far as I know.
Measuring the heigth of the sun (or shadow length) at noon was to far ahead
in the knowledge I guess (an other way of halving between summer and
winter).
Did they realise that the equinox was special and in what way?

Thibaud Chabot

At 18:37 13-12-2004, Roger Bailey wrote:
>Bonjour François,
>
>I gave a similar presentation at the NASS Conference in Banff August 2002
>entitled "Shadow vs. Horizon Archaeoastronomy". In this presentation I
>develop the idea that civilization started with seasonal markers, the
>astronomical alignments of monuments. I discuss historical ages in
>astronomy, horizon archaeoastronomy, winter solstice, equinox phenomenon,
>heliacal rising  and Medicine Wheels.
>
>I would be happy to send you and others the 31 slides as a 528 kb pdf or
>4.23 MB PowerPoint ppt file. The files are large because of the pictures
and
>a simple animation of the Kukulcan equinox sunset shadow phenomenon.
>
>Your request comes at a good time, as the Winter Solstice approaches.
>
>Regards,
>
>Roger Bailey
>Walking Shadow Designs
>N 48.6, W 123.4
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of f.pineau2
>Sent: December 12, 2004 12:14 PM
>To: SUNDIAL LIST
>Subject: alignment
>
>
>Hello all
>I am preparing a talk about astronomical alignment in all kind of
monuments.
>So I would grateful to receive links to website about this toppic.
>For example:
>Stonehenge, Carnac and others megaliths alignments
>Egyptian Pyramids and alignments with stars
>Inca, Aztec, Mayas monuments orientation
>churches and cathedrals orientation
>Indoor meridian in church
>memorial monuments with special orientation or enlightned by sun on special
>time.
>and all kind ...
>Thank you by advance
>-----------------------------------------------------------------
>François PINEAU
>37000 TOURS
>FRANCE
>47° 23' 24" N , 0° 41' 19" E
>http://perso.wanadoo.fr/cadrans-solaires/
>----------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>-
>
>-

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  • equinox Frank Evans

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