The Astronomy of Stonehenge

The Astronomy of Stonehenge

A Hybrid lecture via Zoom with Simon Banton

By Mexborough & Swinton Astronomical Society

Date and time

Location

Online

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event.

About this event

  • Event lasts 2 hours 30 minutes

This talk will investigate the astronomical alignments at Stonehenge - both those that are academically accepted and also some others not generally known about. Do they all exist? Are they accurate? Was there really an eclipse prediction mechanism?

The Altar Stone has recently been found to have been sourced from somewhere in NE Scotland and this has profound implications for our appreciation of Stonehenge. Could it have been the monument's founding stone? If so, where was it placed and how does one possible position impact our analysis and understanding?


Our speaker Simon Banton has been an amateur astronomer for 55 years and a Stonehenge geek for more than 30.

His undergraduate degree is in physics and astronomy and in 2010 he abandoned a long career in software development to focus on archaeoastronomy research.

He moved to a small village on Salisbury Plain, took a job as a visitor guide at nearby Stonehenge and spent 6 years (ab)using his staff privileges to carry out careful observations of the monument’s theorised alignments.

Simon has appeared on the BBC’s Sky at Night and Stargazing Live! programmes talking about the astronomy of Stonehenge and leads private tours of the site and its landscape.

In his spare time he enjoys arguing with people online who believe Stonehenge was built by aliens or by Victorians in the 1950s, and writes articles about his research interests on www.stonehengemonument.co.uk.

Organized by

Mexborough & Swinton Astronomical Society

£2.88
Aug 28 · 11:30 AM PDT