Stonehenge dawn patrol: Modern-day druids and others celebrate summer solstice
(Finnbarr Webster / Getty Images)
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What better way to celebrate the summer solstice than at Stonehenge, the 5,000-year-old stone circle in Wiltshire, England. Visitors and modern-day druids gathered to see the sunrise marking the start of the longest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere.
Bathed in the rising sun
(Ben Birchall / Associated Press)
Come one, come all
(Ben Birchall / AP)
(Finnbarr Webster / Getty Images)
Visitors participate in yoga exercises. (Finnbarr Webster / Getty Images)
(Finnbarr Webster / Getty Images)
(Ben Birchall / Associated Press; Finnbarr Webster / Getty Images)
The sun rises between the stones as crowds of people gather to celebrate the dawn of the summer solstice with personal reflection and yoga exercises.
Dawn’s golden light
(Ben Birchall / Associated Press)
English Heritage, which cares for historic sites, tweeted that it was an “occasion full of love and friendship.”
Parting shot
(NEIL HALL / EPA/Shutterstock)
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