
Summer Solstice Marker - PFNP - Holbrook, Arizona, U.S.A.
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Max and 99
N 34° 58.472 W 109° 47.639
12S E 610088 N 3870882
A Summer Solstice marker is at Puerco Pueblo at the Petrified Forest National Park. This village was inhabited between A.D. 1250 and 1380.
Waymark Code: WM18PEK
Location: Arizona, United States
Date Posted: 09/05/2023
Views: 4
About 11 miles south of the north entrance to the park, visitors can pull over in the Puerco Pueblo village, read some interesting markers and then take the short trail (.3 miles) out to the overlook. At the south end of the trail is a marker that explains how this Summer Solstice rock was used.
The per vehicle fee to enter the park is $25, but discounts are offered for an annual pass as well as a Sr. discount and the America the Beautiful pass. Check the park's website for the 5 free entrance days offered each year. The Painted Desert to the north is included in this fee.
Text on marker:
A solstice is an astronomical event that happens twice annually as the Sun reaches its highest or lowest points in the sky. Here in the Northern Hemisphere, June 20th is usually the longest day of the year and is referred to as the summer solstice.
These photographs illustrate how sunlight from the rising summer solstice Sun flows down the cleft in the boulder in front of you. The play of light and shadow on the spiral petroglyph changes as the Sun rises and moves across the sky. From between June 14th to the 28th a shaft of light forms, moving down the side of the adjacent boulder, until it touches the center of the spiral within a few minutes of 9:00 am. The full interaction of the solar marker takes about an hour, shown in each photograph below.
Why would the inhabitants of Puerco Pueblo want to mark the date of the solstice? Prehistoric peoples used solar calendars to plan their lives around the changing seasons. For agricultural people knowing when to plant crops or expect summer rains is vital for survival. Solstice days marked important points in the seasonal calendar and formed the cornerstones of annual ceremonial cycles. This importance persists in the ceremonial calendars of contemporary indigenous communities where the year is divided in two by the summer and winter solstices.
In Petrified Forest National Park researchers have identified over a dozen calendric petroglyph sites and many more exist throughout the Southwest. These features demonstrate the importance of marking the passage of the changing season to prehistoric peoples and their descendants.
Sundial Type: Scratch dial
 Related Web Site: [Web Link]

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