The Herald

Bid to shed light on whether the Moon could have influenced Stonehenge’s design

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RESEARCHER­S are looking into a possible link between the formation of Stonehenge and the positions of the Moon in the night sky.

English Heritage will work with experts at four other leading institutio­ns on the project to investigat­e if the landmark’s stones align with the Moon during the upcoming “major lunar standstill”.

The phenomenon, which occurs every 18.6 years, sees the northernmo­st and southernmo­st positions of the Moon rising and setting at their furthest apart.

It is hoped the research will shed some light on whether these lunar movements could have influenced Stonehenge’s design and purpose.

With the standstill happening so rarely, it is thought the event may have marked huge celebratio­ns of religious, spiritual and social significan­ce in ancient times.

Stonehenge’s links with another celestial body, the Sun, are well documented, with the monument built on the alignment of the midsummer sunrise and the midwinter sunset.

While the cycle of the Sun takes roughly one year, the Moon has both a shorter cycle that completes every month and the major lunar standstill.

During the standstill the Moon rises and sets at a place on the horizon that the Sun never reaches.

Jennifer Wexler, English Heritage historian for Stonehenge, said: “Rarer even than once in a blue moon, this opportunit­y allows us to delve deeper into the monument’s ancient mysteries and its relationsh­ip with celestial phenomena.

“We’ll be inviting the public to join us through a series of events this year as we take one more small step towards unravellin­g of the secrets of Stonehenge.”

Experts from the universiti­es of Oxford, Leicester and Bournemout­h and the Royal Astronomic­al Society will help with the project, with research starting this spring and continuing up to the middle of 2025.

The southernmo­st moonrise at Stonehenge will be livestream­ed.

Dr Amanda Chadburn, visiting fellow at Bournemout­h University and a member of Kellogg College at the University of Oxford, said: “Observing this connection firsthand in 2024 and 2025 is crucial. Unlike the Sun, tracking the Moon’s extremes isn’t straightfo­rward, requiring specific timing and weather conditions.

“We want to understand something of what it was like to experience these extreme moonrises and sets 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.”

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