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Solarigraph with the sun paths between July 2018 and May 2019 in a street at Valladolid, Spain

Solarigraphy is a concept and a photographic practice based on the observation of the sun path in the sky (different in each place on the Earth) and its effect on the landscape, captured by a specific procedure that combines pinhole photography and digital processing.[1][2] Invented around 2000, solarigraphy (also known as solargraphy) uses photographic paper without chemical processing, a pinhole camera and a scanner to create images that catch the daily journey of the sun along the sky with very long exposure times, from several hours to several years.[3][4] The longest known solarigraph was captured over the course of eight years.[5][6] Solarigraphy is an extreme case of long-exposure photography, and the non-conventional use of photosensitive materials is what makes it different to other methods of sun paths capture such as the Yamazaki's "heliographys".[7]

Beginnings

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Previous experiments with long exposures on photosensitive papers and with registration of the sun arcs in the sky were done at the end of the 1990s in Poland by the students Paweł Kula, Przemek Jesionek, Marek Noniewicz and Konrad Smołenski and in the 1980s by Dominique Stroobant, respectively.[8] In 2000, Diego López Calvín, Sławomir Decyk and Paweł Kula started a global and synchronized photographic work known as "Solaris Project". This work, which mixes together art and science, is based on the active participation through the Internet of people interested in the apparent movement of the Sun, that is photographed with artisan pinhole cameras loaded with photosensitive material and subjected to very long exposures of time.[9]

Characteristics

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Solarigraphs are images that show real elements that cannot be seen with the naked eye representing the apparent trajectories of the sun in the sky due to the rotation of the Earth on its axis. They are mostly made with pinhole cameras and very long exposures, from one day to six months between the winter solstice and the summer solstice or vice versa. The images show the different paths of the Sun the observer has according to the respective latitude over the earth's surface.[3][10]

The cameras are loaded with photosensitive materials (mainly photographic paper in black and white) so that the sunlight produces a direct blackening on the surface. The trajectories of the sun and the landscape image appear directly on the surface of the paper forming a negative that is digitised and treated with image processing software. These images also provide information about the periods in which the sun does not appear to be shining as it is hidden by clouds, which provides information about the weather.[1][3]

Technical basis and procedure

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Situation of a solarigraphic camera, a can, stuck to a building to obtain the upper photo

The key to the technique is the nature of photographic paper that darkens by direct light without having to develop it, thus giving the low sensitivity necessary for such long exposures. Although lenses can be used in obtaining solarigraphs with exposure times of a few hours, for longer exposures a pinhole through which the light enters the camera is more convenient. For this purpose home-made pinhole cameras, usually made of using empty drink cans, film canisters or recycled plastic tubes.[11]

A photographic paper for black and white is placed inside the container that acts as a camera, and once the camera is fixed in the chosen place, usually pointing east, south or west, the pinhole is uncovered allowing the light to enter until the camera is collected.

The image, already visible at that time on the paper, is negative and ephemeral, since the light continues to expose the emulsion if it is shown, so it is necessary to protect the paper from the light and scan it so it can be viewed in a useable format. This second digital part of the process includes inverting the image to make it positive and usually increasing the contrast. Different circumstances make solarigraphs to show different colours depending on the colour of the light and the paper chosen, but also on conditions such as temperature and humidity at different times of impression, in addition to chemical changes in the paper during exposure.[1]

References

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from Grokipedia
Solarigraphy is a lensless photographic technique that employs pinhole cameras to record the Sun's paths across the sky through prolonged exposures, typically spanning several months to a full year, producing images known as solargraphs that trace the luminous arcs of the Sun's daily motion against static landscapes on light-sensitive paper without the need for chemical development.[1][2] The technique originated in November 2000 as part of the Solaris project, initiated by Polish artists Sławomir Decyk and Paweł Kula alongside Spanish collaborator Diego López Calvín, who coined the term "solarigraphics" to describe their experimental captures of solar trails using rudimentary pinhole setups.[1] Over the subsequent decades, solarigraphy evolved from a niche artistic endeavor into a globally practiced method, with notable contributions from figures such as Finnish photographer Tarja Trygg, who between 2005 and 2016 created an extensive world map of solar paths by coordinating exposures at various latitudes.[1] In practice, a solarigraph involves constructing a simple, light-tight pinhole camera—often from everyday materials like tin cans or bottles—loaded with black-and-white photographic paper positioned to face the Sun's predominant arc, where it remains fixed outdoors for the duration of the exposure to accumulate the Sun's light trails while under exposing surrounding elements.[1][2] The resulting paper negative, which reveals the Sun's figure-eight analemma pattern modulated by seasonal changes and geographic location, is typically scanned and inverted digitally for positive prints, emphasizing solarigraphy's ecological advantage of bypassing darkroom chemicals.[1] As a subset of pinhole photography and an element of space art, solarigraphy highlights the interplay between time, light, and human observation, fostering international collaborations and exhibitions that visualize the universality of solar motion across diverse environments.[2][1] It also holds educational value, enabling accessible explorations of astronomical phenomena like the Sun's apparent path variations due to Earth's tilt and orbit.[3]

History and Origins

Invention and Early Development

Solarigraphy is a specialized form of long-exposure pinhole photography that records the sun's path across the sky over extended periods, typically an entire year, using photosensitive paper inside a light-tight camera body without any chemical development during the exposure.[1] The resulting images, known as solarigraphs, trace the sun's daily arcs as continuous light trails, often revealing seasonal variations in its position due to Earth's tilt and orbit.[1] The technique was conceived in 2000 by Polish photographers Sławomir Decyk and Paweł Kula, in collaboration with Spanish artist Diego López Calvín, as part of the inaugural Solaris project aimed at synchronizing global solar path recordings.[4][1] This invention built on longstanding pinhole photography traditions, which provided the foundational optics for projecting undistorted light without lenses.[1] Initial experiments by Decyk, Kula, and Calvín involved constructing basic pinhole cameras from everyday materials such as tin cans or cardboard tubes sealed with light-proof tape, loaded with black-and-white photographic paper to serve as the recording medium.[5] These early setups featured a precisely sized pinhole—typically 0.3 to 0.5 millimeters in diameter—to project the sun's light onto the paper, with exposures beginning at several weeks to capture successive daily solar arcs and gradually extending to six months or a full year for comprehensive annual traces.[5][1] The first documented solarigraphs emerged from these Polish origins, where Decyk and Kula conducted foundational tests in locations like Poznań and Szczecin amid the post-1990s resurgence of experimental photography in Eastern Europe, emphasizing low-cost, site-specific environmental recording.[5]

Key Practitioners and Milestones

One of the pioneering figures in solarigraphy's popularization is British pinhole photographer Justin Quinnell, who began sharing detailed online tutorials and conducting workshops on the technique around 2010, significantly boosting its adoption among amateur photographers worldwide.[6] His accessible instructions, including DIY camera designs using everyday materials like beer cans, emphasized long exposures of six months or more to capture solar arcs, making the practice approachable for global hobbyists.[7] A major milestone in solarigraphy's early development occurred in 2006 with the launch of the Global Project of Pinhole Solargraphy by Finnish artist and educator Tarja Trygg, which coordinated contributions from participants across multiple international sites to comparatively map and document solar paths.[8] This collaborative effort highlighted variations in solar trajectories by latitude and fostered a community-driven approach, collecting hundreds of images to visualize the sun's annual journey from diverse locations.[9] Trygg's initiative, part of her doctoral research at Aalto University, marked a shift toward solarigraphy as a participatory art and science project, expanding its reach beyond individual experiments.[1] The technique evolved technically in the late 2000s, with digital scanning emerging as a standard method for capturing and sharing solargraphs around 2008, enabling high-resolution digitization of exposed photographic paper without traditional development.[10] Some practitioners in the 2010s experimented with color photographic paper, producing vivid trail visualizations that incorporated spectral hues from sunlight exposure.[11] This allowed for more dynamic representations of solar movement, as seen in community-shared examples from global pinhole photography networks. A recent highlight came in 2024 with the "Engraving in Time" exhibition at Charles University in Prague, curated by artists Artem Koval and Maciej Zapiór, which celebrated over two decades of solarigraphy by showcasing innovative pinhole techniques that "engrave" solar trails into shapes and text through timed exposures.[12] This event underscored the technique's maturation, blending art, astronomy, and education to reflect its enduring impact since the early 2000s.

Scientific and Photographic Principles

Astronomical Basis of Solar Paths

The apparent daily path of the Sun across the sky, as observed from Earth, traces an arc due to the planet's rotation on its axis once every 24 hours, but the position and extent of this arc vary seasonally because of Earth's axial tilt of approximately 23.5 degrees relative to its orbital plane around the Sun.[13] This tilt causes different hemispheres to receive more direct sunlight at different times of the year, resulting in the Sun's path shifting northward or southward in declination—the angular distance of the Sun north or south of the celestial equator—over the course of the year.[14] For instance, during the Northern Hemisphere summer, the North Pole tilts toward the Sun, elevating the solar arc's maximum height, while in winter, the tilt directs sunlight away, lowering the arc and shortening daylight duration.[15] The solar declination, denoted as δ, quantifies this north-south shift and can be approximated using the formula
δ=23.45×sin(360×(284+n)365), \delta = 23.45^\circ \times \sin\left( \frac{360^\circ \times (284 + n)}{365} \right),
where n is the day of the year (with January 1 as n=1). This equation derives from fundamental orbital mechanics: Earth's orbit is nearly circular, and the 23.5° obliquity (axial tilt, ε) projects onto the ecliptic plane, such that the declination represents the component of this tilt perpendicular to the equator at a given orbital position θ (the true anomaly adjusted for the equinox). Specifically, the exact declination is δ = \arcsin(\sin \epsilon \sin \theta), where θ approximates the angular position from the vernal equinox; the sinusoidal formula simplifies this by fitting the annual variation, with the constant 284 accounting for the offset to perihelion (around early January) to align the cycle with the calendar year.[16] Over a full year, these varying declinations cause the Sun's position, when plotted at the same local time each day from a fixed location, to trace an analemma—a figure-eight pattern reflecting both the tilt-induced north-south oscillation and the slight eastward-westward deviation from Earth's elliptical orbit and orbital speed variations.[17] Full-year solarigraphs capture this overlapping set of daily arcs as the analemma's trails, providing a visual record of the Sun's annual celestial locus.[18] Geographic latitude further modulates the appearance of these solar paths: at the equator (0° latitude), the Sun's daily arc passes nearly overhead year-round with minimal seasonal height variation, while at higher latitudes, the arc's maximum altitude decreases (or increases in summer for northern latitudes), and its duration adjusts accordingly due to the angle of incidence.[19] In polar regions, such as above 66.5° N (the Arctic Circle), the effects are extreme; near the summer solstice, when declination reaches +23.5°, the Sun remains continuously above the horizon for 24 hours, tracing a low, circular path parallel to the horizon rather than rising and setting, while the winter solstice yields prolonged darkness with no visible arc.[20][21] These latitude-dependent variations establish the context for the diverse solar trails observed in solarigraphy worldwide.

Fundamentals of Pinhole Imaging

Pinhole imaging forms the basis of solarigraphy by allowing light to enter through a small aperture, creating an inverted image on the recording medium without the use of a lens. The principle relies on geometric optics and diffraction: rays from a point source passing through the aperture converge to form a blurred spot due to the wave nature of light, with the optimal pinhole diameter balancing sharpness and light transmission. This diameter is given by the formula $ d = \sqrt{f \times \lambda \times k} $, where $ f $ is the focal length (distance from pinhole to recording surface), $ \lambda $ is the wavelength of light (approximately 550 nm for visible light), and $ k $ is a constant approximately 1.9 for maximum sharpness according to Lord Rayleigh's criterion.[22] In solarigraphy, black and white photographic paper serves as the recording medium, leveraging its orthochromatic sensitivity to blue and green wavelengths, which align with the dominant spectrum of sunlight. The paper's emulsion consists of silver halide crystals (typically silver bromide or chloride) suspended in gelatin; exposure to light liberates electrons that reduce silver ions, forming stable clusters of metallic silver known as the latent image. Over extended periods, these exposures accumulate without significant fading of the latent image, as the gelatin matrix protects the silver specks from recombination or migration, enabling the buildup of density from repeated low-intensity illuminations.[23][24] A key challenge in solarigraphy's ultra-long exposures is reciprocity failure, where the emulsion's response deviates from the ideal reciprocity law (exposure = intensity × time). For exposures exceeding 1 hour, the effective sensitivity decreases, with the ISO rating roughly halving for every logarithmic increase in time beyond 1 second, necessitating durations of 6-12 months to achieve sufficient density for visible solar trails. This failure arises from inefficient electron trapping and reduced development efficiency at low light levels, but the cumulative nature of solar exposure compensates by integrating daily solar passages.[25] Solar trails in solarigraphy manifest as light streaks resulting from the pinhole's point projection of the sun's apparent position, which moves across the sky due to Earth's rotation at 15 degrees per hour. Each daily arc traces a segment of the annual path, with the pinhole's geometry inverting and projecting the sun's locus as a continuous curve modulated by seasonal variations in declination.[1]

Technical Creation Process

Building the Solarigraph Camera

Constructing a solarigraph camera involves assembling a simple pinhole device capable of withstanding outdoor exposure for extended periods, typically using readily available household and photographic supplies to ensure light-tightness and durability.[26] Key materials include a light-tight container such as an aluminum can or a 35mm film canister to serve as the camera body, black photographic paper like Ilford Multigrade RC for the recording medium, aluminum foil for creating the pinhole, and black tape for sealing all joints and edges.[26][7][27] The pinhole is fabricated by first cutting a small square of aluminum foil and then using a fine needle or drill to punch a precise hole measuring 0.3-0.5 mm in diameter, with the optimal size approximated by the formula $ d \approx 0.04 \sqrt{f} $ (where $ d $ is the diameter in mm and $ f $ is the focal length in mm, typically 50-100 mm for these containers) to achieve a balance between image sharpness and sufficient light intake for long exposures.[28][7] Assembly begins by lining the interior of the container with black paper or matte black paint to minimize internal reflections and stray light, ensuring the surface opposite the pinhole is covered.[29] The pinhole foil is then securely attached over a pre-cut aperture in the front of the container using black tape, with a removable tape flap added as a temporary shutter.[7] Loading occurs in a darkroom: the black photographic paper is inserted either flat (for linear perspectives in shorter containers like film canisters) or curved along the interior wall (for panoramic cylindrical views in cans), with the emulsion side facing the pinhole and positioned to leave a small gap around the aperture for unobstructed projection.[26][27] All seams are sealed with black tape to maintain light-tightness.[7] Given that the camera must endure weather exposure for 6-12 months, selections prioritize corrosion-resistant options; in humid environments, plastic bottles or canisters are recommended over metal to prevent rust and degradation.[30][26]

Conducting Exposures and Retrieval

Site selection for solarigraphy exposures prioritizes locations that provide an unobstructed view of the sun's annual path, typically elevated positions such as rooftops, poles, or trees to minimize interference from buildings, foliage, or ground-level obstacles. In the Northern Hemisphere, cameras are oriented southward (or toward the equator) to capture the full analemma arc, while southern orientations are used in the Southern Hemisphere; sites should also be secure against human tampering or animal disturbance, often placed high enough to deter casual interference.[26][7] The exposure setup begins with loading light-sensitive photographic paper into the camera in complete darkness to avoid premature exposure, followed by sealing the pinhole with opaque tape as a shutter. The camera is then positioned with the pinhole facing the equator and secured firmly to a stable structure, such as nailing it to a tree trunk, using cable ties, or applying gaffer tape to withstand wind and vibrations over extended periods. For optimal results, installations often commence around the winter solstice to align with the sun's lowest path, enabling a complete annual trace over 182 to 365 days.[26][7][29] During the exposure, no interventions are recommended to maintain the uninterrupted light accumulation, though practitioners may deploy multiple cameras at a site for redundancy against failure from environmental factors. The sun's trail begins to appear faintly after 1 to 3 months as cumulative light builds density on the paper, but the most vivid and complete analemma emerges after a full year, with brighter lines corresponding to clearer summer days.[26][1] Key challenges include weatherproofing the camera against rain, snow, and UV degradation, achieved by using sealed containers like aluminum cans or tins and positioning lids downward in wet climates to prevent moisture ingress. Tampering or accidental displacement poses risks, mitigated by inconspicuous placement and robust fixation; despite these hurdles, the process relies on the camera's simplicity to endure without maintenance.[7][29] Retrieval requires careful handling in low light to prevent fogging, starting with covering the pinhole with tape before removal from the site, followed by transport to a darkroom environment where the exposed paper can be safely extracted and inspected. This step concludes the fieldwork phase, preserving the exposed image for subsequent processing.[26][29]

Developing and Digitizing Images

After retrieval, the exposed photographic paper bears a visible print-out image of the sun's paths, requiring no chemical development due to the prolonged exposure that directly activates the emulsion. To prevent further light-induced changes and ensure longevity, the paper may optionally be immersed in a standard fixer, such as sodium thiosulfate solution, for 5-10 minutes to remove unexposed silver halides. Handle and view the paper in dim light immediately after extraction to avoid additional exposure.[1][31] Once stabilized, the image is digitized using a flatbed scanner set to a resolution of 1200-2400 DPI to capture fine details of the solar trails. The scanned image, which appears as dark trails on a lighter background, is then inverted digitally to produce white trails against a black field, with contrast and levels adjusted in software such as Adobe Photoshop to enhance visibility and tonal range.[32] For presentation, the images can be enlarged into physical prints using traditional darkroom techniques or combined into digital composites, such as panoramic views from multiple exposures. Unfixed paper may be scanned directly upon retrieval to preserve the ephemeral image, though it carries a risk of fading due to residual light sensitivity, necessitating fixation within weeks to ensure longevity.[1] Monochrome paper is preferred for its high-contrast rendering of the sun's paths without chemical processing.[32]

Applications and Cultural Impact

Artistic Interpretations and Exhibitions

Solarigraphy has emerged as a compelling medium in contemporary art, producing abstract "sun drawings" that trace the sun's arcs across the sky over extended periods, evoking themes of time's passage, ephemerality, and the interplay between celestial motion and earthly landscapes. These images, captured through simple pinhole exposures lasting months or years, transform the invisible rhythm of solar movement into visible, luminous trails that blend seamlessly with foreground elements like trees or urban structures, fostering a meditative reflection on human impermanence within the cosmos.[1][33] Artists have extended solarigraphy's aesthetic potential into immersive installations, merging photographic processes with sculptural interventions to manipulate solar trails into deliberate forms, such as text or geometric patterns, thereby "engraving" time as a tangible artistic substance. This fusion highlights the technique's versatility beyond documentation, positioning it as a tool for conceptual exploration at the nexus of art, astronomy, and environmental awareness.[12] Notable exhibitions have showcased solarigraphy's artistic depth, including Tarja Trygg's solo show "The Amazing World of Solarigraphy" at ARS Longa Gallery in Helsinki, Finland, in January 2022, which displayed global pinhole captures to illustrate diverse sun paths and their poetic variations.[34] In 2023, Heather Palecek's solargraphs were featured in "A Pinelands Portrait: Art of the Pine Barrens" at Stockton University Art Gallery, New Jersey, where her tree-mounted exposures captured seasonal light streaks amid preserved natural ecosystems, emphasizing site-specific beauty.[35] More recently, the 2024 exhibition "Engraving in Time: From Simulations to Reality" at Charles University in Prague, curated by Maciej Zapiór and Artem Koval, presented innovative solarigraphy works transitioning from digital simulations to physical prints, exploring controlled exposures up to eight years to sculpt solar narratives.[12] Key practitioners have interpreted solarigraphy to convey layered meanings, with Tarja Trygg's global collaborative project integrating participant-submitted images from varied locales to underscore cultural and latitudinal differences in solar visibility, fostering a collective artistic map of human-solar relations.[8] Heather Palecek employs the medium to journal environmental contexts, mounting cameras in wild settings to produce works that memorialize fleeting natural light patterns against backdrops of forests or fields, infusing each piece with a sense of place-bound transience.[33] Similarly, Zapiór and Koval innovate by engineering devices that shape sun trails into symbolic motifs, bridging analog photography with electronic precision to comment on time's malleability in artistic creation.[12] Solarigraphy's cultural resonance extends to land art traditions, inspiring site-specific interventions that document gradual landscape transformations, as seen in the Solargraphic Slow Time Project by Walking The Land artists, where dispersed pinhole cameras across the UK mapped slow temporal shifts in rural terrains over seasons.[36] These works serve as enduring memorials to ecological dynamics, capturing subtle environmental evolutions like seasonal foliage changes or light variations, thereby contributing to discourses on climate and preservation through visually poetic, non-invasive documentation.[33]

Educational and Scientific Uses

Solarigraphy serves as a valuable tool in educational settings, particularly for hands-on projects that illustrate Earth's orbital dynamics and seasonal variations. Students can construct simple pinhole cameras using upcycled materials like tin cans, combining principles of photography and astronomy to capture the Sun's path over extended periods, such as six-month exposures that visually plot the solstices and demonstrate axial tilt.[37] These activities foster practical understanding of celestial mechanics, allowing learners to observe how the Sun's apparent motion varies by latitude and season without relying on complex equipment.[37] In scientific contexts, solarigraphy contributes to citizen science initiatives, with global projects amassing nearly 10,000 images from over 100 countries to document solar trajectories and support astronomical research.[37] Participants contribute data that validates solar position models by comparing observed paths against theoretical predictions, revealing daily and seasonal variations in the Sun's altitude.[37] For instance, paired exposures from locations like Kuwait and Madrid (December 2023 to June 2024) highlight latitudinal differences in solar arcs, aiding in the refinement of models for solar panel efficiency and shadow analysis.[37] Quantitative analysis of solarigraph trails enables measurements of latitude or axial tilt through trail lengths and curvatures, though pinhole diffusion introduces minor inaccuracies. Such evaluations provide empirical data on atmospheric influences, including indirect insights into light pollution via trail visibility in urban versus rural settings.[37] Events like the 2025 Solarigraphy Meeting in Prague, Czech Republic, further bridge education and science by integrating workshops for teachers on trajectory analysis relative to Earth's motion, emphasizing solarigraphy's role in public outreach and interdisciplinary learning.[38]

Community and Notable Works

Global Projects and Collaborations

One of the pioneering global initiatives in solarigraphy is the World Map of Solargraphs project, launched in 2005 by artist Tarja Trygg in collaboration with international volunteers. This ongoing effort crowdsources pinhole solargraphs from participants worldwide to document and map the sun's seasonal paths across diverse latitudes, creating a comprehensive visual atlas of analemmas. Contributors, including photographers, students, and astronomers from countries such as Finland, Poland, Turkey, and the Czech Republic, submit images to fill geographical gaps, emphasizing the technique's accessibility and collaborative nature.[39] International collaborations have further strengthened the solarigraphy community through organized events like the Solarigraphy Meetings, which bring together artists, scientists, and educators. The 2023 meeting, hosted by the Astronomical Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences and the Czech Astronomical Society at Ondřejov Observatory, explored solarigraphy's intersections with astronomy and conceptual art. Building on this, the 2025 meeting in Prague, held June 19–22, continued to foster cross-border data sharing and discussions on integrating solarigraphy into educational curricula, welcoming participants from various experience levels to present on exposure techniques and geophysical applications.[40][38] Online communities play a vital role in sustaining global participation, with forums such as Reddit's r/Solargraphy serving as hubs for enthusiasts to exchange tips on camera construction, exposure durations, and image processing. These platforms facilitate knowledge transfer and inspire synchronized projects, such as those timed to equinoxes for capturing straight solar tracks. A recent example is the "Solarigraphy across Borders" initiative, highlighted in a 2025 publication, which connects artistic solarigraphy with geophysical observations to trace the sun's trajectory and promote international dialogue on environmental patterns.[41][42]

Iconic Examples and Collections

British pinhole photographer Justin Quinnell's 2008 "Slow Light" series, featuring six-month exposures from Bristol including the iconic arc over the Clifton Suspension Bridge, exemplifies solarigraphy's ability to blend urban architecture with celestial motion, highlighting latitude-specific variations in sun paths through his accessible beer-can cameras deployed during global teaching travels.[43][44] The Global Project of Solargraphy, initiated by Finnish artist Tarja Trygg in 2005, has amassed an extensive online archive at Solarigraphy.com, comprising hundreds of user-submitted images from participants worldwide that map diverse sun trails and foster collaborative documentation of annual solar patterns.[8][1] A notable contemporary example is Quinnell's 2024 three-month exposure over Stonehenge, which visually aligns solstice sun paths with the monument's ancient astronomical features but reveals incomplete arcs due to tampering—seven of eight cameras were destroyed—illustrating the technique's vulnerability to external interference in exposed sites.[45]

References

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