State College  

Sundial: 913
State/Province:  Pennsylvania Country:  USA
Dial Type:  Horizontal Dial Condition:  Excellent
  Latitude and Longitude: 40° 48.341' N  77° 42.132' W
Location:
  • On the campus of The Pennsylvania State University at State College, in the Arboretum
 
Description:
  • The Dr. Joel N. Myers Sundial monumental sundial is truly a masterpiece in time. The 11 foot tall black granite gnomon seems to grow out of a larger granite block. Time is marked by the several rows of low, large flat stones, 25 in all. They are set for summer solstice (first row), equinox (second row that has the stones all in a liner), and winter solstice (only for 10am-2pm. The stones themselves are too large for precise time telling, but the use of colored dots painted on the stones allows you to tell exact civil time using the tip of the sundial's shadow on the solstices and equinox.

    There is a 26th stone "a stone across the walkway under the Hosler Oak. This stone marks the direction of the gnomon's shadow at noon on the solstices as it would have been 65 million years ago..."
 
General Information:
  • Owner: Penn State University, University Park Campus
  • Designer: Mark Mennin, with assistance by Chris Palma
  • Builder: Mark Mennin
  • Construction Date: 2011
 
References: Web Links:
  • www.youtube.com/watch?v=Io5kOEYA3Vo

    and read the attachment PDF below about the Myers Sundial, a gift from 1961 Penn State alumnus, Dr. Joel N Myers, founder of AccuWeather. Dr. Chris Palma helped with the technical aspects of the sundial with construction by Mark Mennin.

    http://www.statecollege.com/news/local-news/joel-n-myers-sundial-dedicated-at-penn-state-arboretum,883409/

Attachments Available:

Last Revised: 2020-01-21 21:01