26th December 2015
|
The Moon appearing from out of a bank of cloud on the horizon. |
After a few days of cloudy sunsets around the Winter
Solstice I wasn’t holding much hope of getting a picture of the Minor Winter
Lunar Standstill Moonrise. Here is a link to what exactly a Lunar Standstill is
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_standstill
Clive Ruggles would be widely acknowledged as being one of
the leading archaeoastronomers in the British Isles and he conducted a
statistical analysis of the Stone Rows of Cork & Kerry in 1996 (see link
for the paper
http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-iarticle_query?1996JHAS...27...55R&defaultprint=YES&filetype=.pdf)
and from this he conclusively shows that they are aligned to the various
standstills of the Moon at it’s Major & Minor points in the cycle. This cycle
takes 18.6 years to complete, so the next time the moon will be back at this
extreme in the cycle will be in 2033. Why the ancients were so concerned with
the Moons cycle is anyone’s guess.
From using an app on my phone called Sunsurveyor & also
a handy tool here at
http://photoephemeris.com/ I calculated that the Stone Row
at Barbaha in North Tipperary was possibly aligned to the Moonrise on the
Winter Minor Lunar Standstill. As far as I can make out the Standstill is more
of a “season” rather than one exact date (although statistically I’m sure there
is a precise point in the cycle that is the exact Standstill) but sometimes
moonrise or moonset occurs during the day and would not be possible to view as
it is too bright. For the period around Christmas this year both the position
the moon rises and the time of day makes it possible to view. The only other
factor to consider is the weather.
So to take me back to the start of this, the weather has
been pretty cloudy in Tipperary for the last few days and not conductive to
celestial observations. The forecast for Christmas Day was terrible and the
best shot at it I thought was Christmas Eve. I headed up to Barbaha on
Christmas Eve and with a lot of cloud with a few small patches of sky it wasn’t
looking very promising. I took a few photos up at the stone row before a hail /
sleet shower came in and the whole sky turned grey. At this stage I decided it
was best to leave it and head home to a warm house. I waited in the car with a
nagging feeling not to go just yet. As luck would have it, I went to turn the
car at a gate down from where I parked and on turning I saw the clouds where
starting to be pushed away from the area where the moon was predicted to rise.
I quickly donned all my wet gear and ran back up to the row.
The Moon rose exactly where it was supposed to and due to
the optical illusion known as the Moon Illusion the Moon appears much larger
than in the photographs below and as such was visually even more accurate than
my photos. It was great to finally get proof of something that I had long
thought about and it looks as if this row can now be dubbed “The Moonstones of
Tipperary”. It is also aligned to the Minor Standstill Summer Moonset in the
other direction and hopefully there may be a few opportunities to confirm this
later next year when it comes very close to the position for this alignment.
On a less positive note, one of the stones here at Barbaha stone
row fell in 2010, probably due to undermining of the soil around it by water
(mainly rainfall) and possibly cattle rubbing up against it. It would be great
now that this row has been shown to be of great importance to get the stone
re-erected as it once stood only a short time ago. I understand it is mainly
down to a question of funding for an excavation here. I would guess that the
size of the area that would be excavated as part of a restoration would be
quiet small and so you would hope that it wouldn’t be that costly. Perhaps if
there are any benefactors out there or archaeologists that would be interested
in pushing for funding etc I would certainly like to be of help in any way I
can.
|
The sky when I initially arrived at the hill. |
|
Greyed over and starting to snow and sleet down. |
|
My first zoomed in attempt with my camera. |
|
Disappearing behind a bank of cloud. |
|
Reappearing again. |
|
I messed around with the settings to try and get some more detail of the moon. |
|
One last picture before it disappeared into grey clouds. |