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I think the solstice pages need to be united, w/ redirects from summer and winter. There also need to be diagrams, a picture is worth a thousand words.
"Please note that this midsummer is not the middle of summer, if summer is defined as the warm time of year, because of delayed heating effect. Indeed, summer may be defined to begin with the summer solstice."
On the winter page, it states that "Astronomically, it begins with the winter solstice.".
Whereas on the Winter solstice page, it states that "In some reckonings, the winter solstice is the first day of winter"
Both descriptions are correct, but is it possible to make these two articles allign better? -- Kelby 21:34, 3 Jun 2004 (UTC)
Blueshade's 2005-04-06t11:10z edit states that the summer solstice is regarded as the start of summer in countries other than the USA also. Anyone have sources for this?
— Jeandré, 2005-04-07t11:23z
You may want to separate seasons from astronomical events. Seasons have everything to do with weather, astronomical events have very little to do with weather. Seasons vary from region to region, country to country, and indeed within countries. I think it is plausible to say that San Antonio, Texas has vastly different weather than New Haven, Connecticut. Your summer is defined on how your weather is where you are. For example, here are the seasons in San Antonio:
Of course, that can change from year to year...one December we had a 88° F Christmas day. A good resource to read is the Straight Dope external link. - -- JRed 19:59, Jun 23, 2005 (UTC)
In the UK the 21st of June might be called "Midsummer's Day", but it is also regarded as the beginning of Summer.
The orbital diagram is beautiful, but misleading. It suggests that the earth's axis points in a different direction at different seasons of the year. It does not. The earth's axis should be tipped in the same direction for both the summer and winter solstice illustrations. You should then change the direction from which the sunshine comes from -- from the right in one, and from the left in the other -- just as it actually does when the earth shifts position by 180 degrees in its orbit. I'd omit the illustration for the equinoxes entirely. Anything you would draw would suggest that the earth's axis is oriented straight up and down, which is of course not correct. In reality, the sunlight would be streaming perpendicular to the page, which is not possible to draw in a two-dimensional illustration. User:BartBenjamin
It would also probably be better to use the terms "December Solstice" and "June Solstice" instead of "winter" and "summer." That way, it is correct for all hemispheres. That is how the International Planetarium Society solves this dilemma for its members located in both hemispheres.
User:BartBenjamin
Hmm, in my humble opinion, we should state summer and winter solstice, as this is what most people are interested in. However, I am unsure about the statement in the page that the summer solstice is in June. What I have been taught is that the summer solstice is relative to your hemisphere. I'm unsure what astronomers have to say about this, but as a meteorologist I've always heard the summer and winter solstice being relative to your hemisphere.
A reference from "Meteorology Today" by C. Donald Ahrens states: "the seasons are reversed in the Southern Hemisphere. Hence, in the Southern Hemisphere, this same day (June 21) is the winter solstice"
It is a little bit of a stretch to say that "people in the northern hemisphere" were the ones who discovered the solstices. There is evidence of advanced civilizations in South America that also, according to calendaric evidence; show that Olmec, Mayan, Aztecs and Incas probably understood these as well. ---- Julien Deveraux 17:08, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
The summary states that the June solstice occurs on June 21/22 but the table of dates and times shows it's on June 20/21. Please could someone who knows the correct dates fix this? Chardir 10:09, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
I've said in edit summary, Xiazhi exactly means summer solstice. Disambiguation should cover this article. This is useful to readers. People looking for summer solstice may be also interesting in it. Yao Ziyuan 12:32, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
This is a special case. Since "summer solstice" is a common concept, but English Wikipedia has both summer and winter solstices in one single article, result of summer solstice as a disambiguation. If you don't agree with me, add a "see also" section, moved it to that section, but not remove it. Yao Ziyuan 14:03, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
This should absolutely not be a dab page. The two albums don't not make equal precedence for the summer solstice. The rest are specific celebrations of the summer solstice. Arguments against making this a redirect to solstice? Cburnett 18:28, 21 June 2007 (UTC)
There is a move discussion in progress on Wikipedia talk:Disambiguation which affects this page. Please participate on that page and not in this talk page section. Thank you. — RMCD bot 20:00, 9 October 2019 (UTC)
![]() | Disambiguation | |||
|
I think the solstice pages need to be united, w/ redirects from summer and winter. There also need to be diagrams, a picture is worth a thousand words.
"Please note that this midsummer is not the middle of summer, if summer is defined as the warm time of year, because of delayed heating effect. Indeed, summer may be defined to begin with the summer solstice."
On the winter page, it states that "Astronomically, it begins with the winter solstice.".
Whereas on the Winter solstice page, it states that "In some reckonings, the winter solstice is the first day of winter"
Both descriptions are correct, but is it possible to make these two articles allign better? -- Kelby 21:34, 3 Jun 2004 (UTC)
Blueshade's 2005-04-06t11:10z edit states that the summer solstice is regarded as the start of summer in countries other than the USA also. Anyone have sources for this?
— Jeandré, 2005-04-07t11:23z
You may want to separate seasons from astronomical events. Seasons have everything to do with weather, astronomical events have very little to do with weather. Seasons vary from region to region, country to country, and indeed within countries. I think it is plausible to say that San Antonio, Texas has vastly different weather than New Haven, Connecticut. Your summer is defined on how your weather is where you are. For example, here are the seasons in San Antonio:
Of course, that can change from year to year...one December we had a 88° F Christmas day. A good resource to read is the Straight Dope external link. - -- JRed 19:59, Jun 23, 2005 (UTC)
In the UK the 21st of June might be called "Midsummer's Day", but it is also regarded as the beginning of Summer.
The orbital diagram is beautiful, but misleading. It suggests that the earth's axis points in a different direction at different seasons of the year. It does not. The earth's axis should be tipped in the same direction for both the summer and winter solstice illustrations. You should then change the direction from which the sunshine comes from -- from the right in one, and from the left in the other -- just as it actually does when the earth shifts position by 180 degrees in its orbit. I'd omit the illustration for the equinoxes entirely. Anything you would draw would suggest that the earth's axis is oriented straight up and down, which is of course not correct. In reality, the sunlight would be streaming perpendicular to the page, which is not possible to draw in a two-dimensional illustration. User:BartBenjamin
It would also probably be better to use the terms "December Solstice" and "June Solstice" instead of "winter" and "summer." That way, it is correct for all hemispheres. That is how the International Planetarium Society solves this dilemma for its members located in both hemispheres.
User:BartBenjamin
Hmm, in my humble opinion, we should state summer and winter solstice, as this is what most people are interested in. However, I am unsure about the statement in the page that the summer solstice is in June. What I have been taught is that the summer solstice is relative to your hemisphere. I'm unsure what astronomers have to say about this, but as a meteorologist I've always heard the summer and winter solstice being relative to your hemisphere.
A reference from "Meteorology Today" by C. Donald Ahrens states: "the seasons are reversed in the Southern Hemisphere. Hence, in the Southern Hemisphere, this same day (June 21) is the winter solstice"
It is a little bit of a stretch to say that "people in the northern hemisphere" were the ones who discovered the solstices. There is evidence of advanced civilizations in South America that also, according to calendaric evidence; show that Olmec, Mayan, Aztecs and Incas probably understood these as well. ---- Julien Deveraux 17:08, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
The summary states that the June solstice occurs on June 21/22 but the table of dates and times shows it's on June 20/21. Please could someone who knows the correct dates fix this? Chardir 10:09, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
I've said in edit summary, Xiazhi exactly means summer solstice. Disambiguation should cover this article. This is useful to readers. People looking for summer solstice may be also interesting in it. Yao Ziyuan 12:32, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
This is a special case. Since "summer solstice" is a common concept, but English Wikipedia has both summer and winter solstices in one single article, result of summer solstice as a disambiguation. If you don't agree with me, add a "see also" section, moved it to that section, but not remove it. Yao Ziyuan 14:03, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
This should absolutely not be a dab page. The two albums don't not make equal precedence for the summer solstice. The rest are specific celebrations of the summer solstice. Arguments against making this a redirect to solstice? Cburnett 18:28, 21 June 2007 (UTC)
There is a move discussion in progress on Wikipedia talk:Disambiguation which affects this page. Please participate on that page and not in this talk page section. Thank you. — RMCD bot 20:00, 9 October 2019 (UTC)