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- 15 Facts About the Summer Solstice - Mental Floss
The summer solstice is the longest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere, so soak up some of those direct sunbeams (safely, of course) and celebrate the start of summer with these 15 facts
- 7 Facts About the June Solstice | The Old Farmers Almanac
7 Summer Solstice Facts Let’s get on with some fun facts about the June solstice: “Solstice” comes from the Latin words sol (sun) and sistere (to stand still) On the summer solstice, the Sun’s path stops advancing northward each day and appears to stop in the sky before going back the other way
- 10 Fascinating Facts About the Summer Solstice - TIME
For those looking to pass the time during those extra hours of natural sunlight for reading, below TIME rounds up some surprising facts about the summer solstice and its history
- 21 Sunny Facts About the Summer Solstice - The Fact Site
In the Northern Hemisphere, the summer solstice occurs on June 20, 21 or 22 In the Southern Hemisphere, it occurs on December 20, 21, 22 or 23 The Earth’s axial tilt during the summer solstice is 23 44 degrees, which makes the North and South Poles point as close as possible to the Sun
- 10 Things About the June Solstice - timeanddate. com
The solstice around June 21st is the longest but not the hottest day The Sun is farthest away from Earth in northern summer Find out solstice fun facts!
- 10 Interesting Facts About the Summer Solstice - WorldAtlas
Summer solstice typically occurs between June 20th and 22nd and signals the beginning of summer All planets in the solar system experience summer solstice at different periods For example, the midsummer on Mars is experienced just days after the one on earth
- 40 Summer Solstice Trivia Questions and Answers - Trivilez
Read 40 Summer Solstice Trivia Quiz and explore fun facts about the longest day, ancient traditions, and global celebrations
- 8 fascinating facts about the summer solstice - Sky HISTORY
Perhaps one of the most unilaterally celebrated phases of the Sun is the summer solstice Celebrated on 21st June in the Northern Hemisphere and 21st December in the Southern Hemisphere, the summer solstice is the longest day on Earth
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