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Summer solstice is the longest day of the year. Here's why it can occur on June 20, June 21 or June 22. Plus: Solstice 2025 events in metro Phoenix.
Norway is famously known as the Land of the Midnight Sun, where the sun remains visible for up to 24 hours a day during summer in regions above the Arctic Circle. Discover why Norway earned this ...
Native Youth Olympics athletes showcased their skills during the solstice festival, featuring Inuit stick pulls and Alaskan ...
Do you yearn for long days and short nights? Then this could be the best day of the year for you and your fellow sunlight ...
During the June solstice, no matter where you are on Earth, the sun rises and sets farthest north on your horizon.
Compare hours on the longest day from Florida to Alaska. Fernandina Beach: 14 hours, 7 minutes, 59 seconds; Point Barrow, Alaska: Sun doesn't set; Seattle, Washington: 15 hours, 59 minutes, 18 seconds ...
The longest day of the year - the summer solstice - will be on June 20. The summer solstice falls between June 20 and June 22. June 22 summer solstices are rare. The next one will be in 2203. The ...
He found that on Dec. 21, the date of the winter solstice, the sun's light would have fully illuminated the burial chamber between approximately 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. local time, Savvides wrote in a ...
Compare hours on the longest day from Florida to Alaska. Fernandina Beach: 14 hours, 7 minutes, 59 seconds; Point Barrow, Alaska: Sun doesn't set; Seattle, Washington: 15 hours, 59 minutes, 18 seconds ...
The daylight hours on that day will be 5 hours and 38 minutes longer than on December 20, 2025 (the winter solstice). Because an astronomical year is actually 365.25 days long, ...
Once a year, an astronomical alignment ushers in this seasonal change. Like its winter counterpart, the summer solstice is celebrated across the world—and shrouded in myth.