The Earth Is Spinning Faster—Here's Why July and August Will Have Record-Short Days
From the point of view of the sun, it takes Earth roughly 86,400 seconds (24 hours) to complete one full rotation. This changes slightly from day to day, and these small variations are measured with atomic clocks. The number of milliseconds above or below 86,400 seconds is referred to as length of day.
Until 2020, the shortest length of day ever recorded was -1.05 milliseconds, meaning it took the Earth 1.05 milliseconds less than 86,400 seconds to complete one rotation. Since then, Earth has beaten this record every year, with the shortest day of all being -1.66 milliseconds.
This month,TimeandDate reports that Earth will get close to its previous record. On July 9, the length of date is expected to be -1.30 milliseconds, followed by -1.38 milliseconds on July 22 and -1.51 milliseconds on August 5.
"Nobody expected this," Leonid Zotov, a leading authority on Earth rotation at Moscow State University, told the outlet. "The cause of this acceleration is not explained." Zotov added that most scientists believe it is something inside the Earth. "Ocean and atmospheric models don't explain this huge acceleration," he said.
Despite this acceleration, Zotov predicts that Earth will slow down soon. "I think we have reached the minimum," he told TimeandDate. "Sooner or later, Earth will decelerate." In the meantime, scientists will continue to study the reason behind Earth's length of day variations.
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Others look like "skulls with desiccated skin and sunken eye sockets, and still others appear to be wailing phantasms like the banshees of Irish lore," Janusek wrote. Adjacent to the Sunken Temple is a platform complex known as the "Kalasasaya," researchers Brian Bauer and Charles Stanish wrote in "Ritual and Pilgrimage in the Ancient Andes: The Islands of the Sun and the Moon," (University of Texas Press, 2001). An "artificial pyramid" known as the Akapana also resides in the area surrounded by the moat. This monument had six stone terraces, a massive 656 by 820 feet (200 by 250 m) base and was more than 54 feet (16.5 m) high, according to Bauer and Stanish's book. The Akapana dwarfed all other buildings at Tiwanaku and was likely a center of political and sacred power. When archaeologists excavated the northwest portion of the pyramid, they unearthed the skeletons of 21 people, who may have been from groups Tiwanaku conquered, according to Young-Sánchez's book. Several of the bones bear deep cut marks that suggest the bodies were hacked apart just before or soon after death, before being buried at the pyramid's base, according to the book. Outside of the moat area, and located to the southwest, is a massive, unfinished platform known as the Pumapunku (also spelled Puma Punku). The main platform was nearly 1,600 feet (488 m) wide and was covered with overlapping T-shaped terraces, according to Janusek's main entranceway was on the west side. "One moved up the stairway through stone portals, some covered with lintels carved as totora reed bundles and into a narrow, walled, passage" Janusek wrote. This passage then led to an "inner courtyard" with a "sunken paved patio." Janusek noted that water seems to have played a central role in the rites that took place on the platform. The Choquepacha spring, which is southwest of the structure, has stone conduits built around it. Around A.D. 1000, Tiwanaku fell into decline, and the city was eventually abandoned. It collapsed around the same time the Wari culture, based to the west in what is now Peru, also fell. The timing has led scientists to wonder whether environmental change in the Andes played a role in the collapse of both civilizations. But while Tiwanaku was abandoned, its memory lived on in the mythology of the people of the Andes. "Even after its abandonment, Tiwanaku continued to be an important religious site for the local people," s archaeologist Alexei Vranich wrote in an "Archaeology" magazine article. It later became incorporated into Inca mythology as the birthplace of humankind, Vranich wrote, and the Inca built their own structures alongside the ruins. Editor's note: this article was originally published on Feb. 1, 2013 and updated on July 3, 2025 to include information about the newfound Palaspata temple in Bolivia.