Summer Solstice 2013. June 21, 2013 Steve Owens Leave a comment Go to comments. The northern hemisphere summer solstice occurs today, 21 June 2013 at 0504 UT (which is actually 0604 BST in the UK). But surely the
The longest day of the year — the summer solstice — is almost here. On June 21 2013, at exactly 1:04 am EDT (5:04 UTC), the Northern Hemisphere of the Earth will reach its point of greatest inclination to the Sun. The term
The summer solstice in June is on Friday, meaning its the longest daylight period for 2013 and the start of the astronomical summer in the northern hemisphere. The solstice officially takes place when the Sun reaches its highest point possible at 1:04
Google doodle. The summer solstice of 2013 is celebrated in the latest Google doodle Photograph: Google. The latest Google Doodle celebrates the summer solstice, the longest day of the year, which begins in the UK on Friday when the sun rises at 4.52am.
More than 20,000 people have celebrated the summer solstice at Stonehenge ahead of a "historic moment" in the £27 million transformation of the site. The huge gathering of people marked the event in a "positive, friendly atmosphere" as they waited for
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Summer solstice 2013: Northern Hemisphere's longest day, highest sun of the year
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