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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Environment
Serina Sandhu

Autumnal Equinox: Five things you probably didn't know about the first day of autumn

Visitors view the autumn foliage of acer trees in the Old Arboretum at Westonbirt in south west England. The Japanese maples are some of the first species to turn red and orange at this famous tree collection, originally planted out in the nineteenth century Victorian heyday of plant hunting ()

Google has marked the start of the autumn equinox with a new doodle of traditional harvest vegetables and a playful squirrel. Here are five things you may not know about the first day of autumn:

What does the term ‘equinox’ mean?

The word means 'equal night'. But daytime and night are not actually equal because although the centre of the sun sets 12 hours after it rises, the day begins when the upper edge of the sun reaches the horizon. Therefore days are still slightly longer.

Is the equinox always on the same day?

It usually falls on the 22 or 23 September but in 1931, it fell on 24 September. The Gregorian calendar does not always match up because the planet takes 365.25 days to orbit around the sun, meaning the equinox day is sometimes delayed a day. The next time it will fall on 24 September will be in 2303.

In pictures: The autumn equinox in Richmond Park

So why do meteorologists say autumn begins on 1 September?

In order to make more accurate comparisons of seasonal weather from year to year, meteorologists often divide the seasons into four three-month periods.

What is the difference between the autumn equinox in the North and South Pole?

People living at the South Pole will be experiencing the first sighting of sunlight in six months, as the autumn equinox marks the first day of spring for them. But residents at the North Pole will marking the beginning of six months of darkness.

How do people celebrate the autumn equinox?

Druids meet at Stonehenge to mark the equinox with music. In China, a harvest festival is celebrated while in those in Korea mark the occasion with a type of Thanksgiving.

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