“An ancient equinox observatory”
The astronomical calendar at America's Stonehenge marks many important days in ancient cultures. These includes the Solstices, Equinoxes, Cross Quarter Days as well as a True North Alignment. The term Solstice means "sun stands still". On summer solstice (the longest day of the year) which falls around June 21st and Winter Solstice (the shortest day of the year) which falls around December 21st, the sun will rise over one monolith and set over another. The same thing happens on the Equinoxes. The equinoxes occur when the sun is over the equator. On those days daylight and darkness are equal meaning 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness. The equinoxes are approximately March 21 and September 21. The cross quarter days mark the days between the solstices and equinoxes. Old Celtic calendars observed Cross Quarters. Unlike modern calendars that define the start of a season on a Solstice or Equinox, the Celts perceived Solstices and Equinoxes as events occurring mid-season, with the seasons actually beginning and ending on the Cross Quarters. You may have noticed that many of these ancient holidays fall very close to many holidays we see on our calendars today. Some of the cross quarter days we've adapted into our calendar are February 1st which is now groundhog day or candlemas, May 1st or May Day which although not celebrated as much these days was a big holiday for many around the world, November 1st has been adapted as Halloween and Christmas falls within a couple of days of the Winter Solstice. USING THE ASTRONOMICAL CALENDAR TO DATE THE SITE The astronomical alignments at America's Stonehenge are very useful in determining the time period that the site was built. Due to the earths tilt, the alignments are slightly off. The degree that the sun is off on these stones is a dating technique we use to figure out when the stones were put into place. OTHER ANCIENT OBSERVATORIES There are many other ancient observatories throughout the world including Easter Island, Stonehenge in England, The Temple of Karnak and Pyramid of Giza in Egypt, Machu Picchu in Peru, Chichen Itza in Mexico, Calendar I and II in Vermont, The Gungywamp in Connecticut and America's Stonehenge to name just a few.
Went here for a fun day trip with a friend who happens to be an anthro-archeologist specializing in Algonquian peoples. Complete and utter bullshit, the stuff they try to pass off as Native American. I have seen some beautifully crafted canoes, none of which look anything like that rotten log this place had. Not to mention the script they say is Goidelic–jus look up the Ogham alphabet. They do have some artifacts that are Phonecian but there's no indication that they were from the site. The fact that they charge money for this place is appalling, and a clear violation of the 1990 Arts & Crafts Act, because the site was without a doubt crafted by William Goodwin in the 1930s.
The only reason I gave this two stars instead of one is because the land itself is beautiful, and the alpacas are great. But that's no consolation for the fact that the Stone family turns profit from a false sacred site on stolen Pennacook land
I took my son there a few years back. It was pretty neat. I will probably go again sometime with my grandkids.
Cool place to go if you're in to this sort of thing. Even our 6 and 8 year old liked it.
Another great place we went on our tour of the North east.
If you're looking for a place to spend an hour or so—perhaps dig for some gemstones, see some alpacas, and have a picnic—this is a great road stop. Agreed it's a little pricey, but worth it in the end.
Great little hike and time outside. The alpacas were very friendly!
Pricey but worth the money. If you get into the history and the astronomy it is very cool. If you are not into those things it will seem like a really pricey nature walk. The alpacas are cute. There are chipmunks and squirrels everywhere enjoying acorns from the hundreds of oak trees. A nice pit stop during an east coast road trip.
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America's Stonehenge
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- Sun - Sat: 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
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