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Longest Year Ever – really?

I’m wondering if this year, 2008, is the longest year ever? Economically it certainly feels like it’s dragging on! With too many elections it often felt longish. But really, as time flows, is it the longest?
2008 was a Leap Year so it was already 366 days long.
Now we hear that we will have an extra second added year by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service. The extra second will be added at 23 hours, 59 minutes and 59 seconds Coordinated Universal Time, or 6:59:59 pm EST. The organization extra second is necessary because the Earth’s rotation has gradually slowed down, throwing the timescales of the rotation of the Earth and the one based on atomic time out of sync.
2008 Will Be Just a Second Longer
Now this might throw some of our more detail oriented colleagues into apoplexy. Have some fun with it but be careful out there! Ask your cataloguers to update the MARC time field. Ask your SysAdmin for a report on the impact of the Leap Second issue. Send your director a staffing request for analysis of the union contract impacts of the extra second on payroll this year-end. WooHoo. Make sure they’re humour impaired first.
I seem to recall that the shortest year was the one where the they had to remove 11 days or something like that to align things with the official Leap Years. It had something to do with April Fool’s day too and Orthodox Christmas or maybe I’m just muddled. Any reference librarians out there who want to track this down so I can bore my family over the holidays with more boring trivia? That’s my trademark – boring uncle knowitall.
Is this the longest year?
What was the shortest year?
It was hard enough in Y2K to explain the lack of a year Zero! (Hey, maybe that’s the shortest year – zero!)
I think that maybe the shortest year is the one just before you start school. Time just flows seamlessly from naptime to sandbox.
Stephen

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Posted on: December 10, 2008, 1:53 pm Category: Uncategorized

One Response

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  1. ECTECTBEHHO said

    Came accross your “Lighthouse” when trying to find the report on AOL of 2/3 days ago. That´s because I put a comment in (mistakenly under my email AOL p003353984 ) on the extra second(s) added to the year – plus info that the Spanish have forgotten ( by coverup in 1918 !! )that their time on the clocks was pushed forward by 2 hours then – and now causes problems for the future of tourism in Spain (for one thing at least: foreigners there don´t understand the whole gamut).
    My comment here you probably know from the past:
    The Russian Orthodox Church has STILL NOT changed to those 11 days – but by now they are behind at Christmas by MORE days !
    Cheers.
    (From Cadiz, Spain).