Look closely and you"ll see a snake slithering down the steps of the Temple of Kukulcan (aka El Castillo or The Castle), in Chichen Itza, Mexico. Not a real snake, it"s an image created by natural light and shadows only during the spring and fall equinoxes. The equinox (which means equal night in Latin) is either of the two times each year—like today, the first day of fall—when the Earth"s orbit and position cause the sun to pass directly over the equator, creating equal amounts of daylight and darkness. According to Mayan legend, on both equinoxes this pyramid is visited by Kukulcan, the feathered serpent god. Thousands of spectators gather to watch and celebrate as seven triangles of light slide down the pyramid, illustrating Kukulcan"s descent.
Stepping into autumn
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Angkor, Cambodia
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Tiny fliers head south
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Storks ready for takeoff
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Celebrating 78 years of Everglades National Park
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Snow on the temple
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Saint Andrews Day
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Coral Reef Awareness Week
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Zelenci Nature Reserve, Slovenia
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Diving into the underwater nirvana
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Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah
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Shadows on the solstice
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World Space Week begins
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Storm rolls over the grasslands
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’Chess on ice’
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Art in the high desert
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Pearl of the Adriatic
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Manatee Appreciation Day
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Sea Slug Day
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Darwin Day
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Badlands National Park in South Dakota
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Celebrating Pie Day is as easy as, well…
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Rock of ages
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In celebration of America’s national bird
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Up, up, and away for Hot Air Balloon Day
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A viewer with a view
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Combating extinction with citizen science
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Winter at Valley Forge
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A midsummer twilight s dream
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Big wheels on a big mountain
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Entoloma hochstetteri mushroom at Lake Mahinapua, New Zealand
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