Explore Myths about Sun
![](/images/icons/sun_re.jpg)
Re was the sun-god and creator of our world. He has a head like a hawk or a ram. The god wore ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_lugh.gif)
For the Celts, who lived in central Europe, Lugh was a Sun god. The underworld god Balor was ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_aztecton.jpg)
For the Aztecs, who lived in central Mexico, Tonatiuh was a Sun god. He was in charge of the ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_aztechuit.gif)
Huitzilopochtli, was the Aztec god of the Sun and the war. He was a blue man fully armed with ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_apollo.jpg)
In Greek mythology, Apollo was the son of Zeus (Jupiter) and Leto (Letona). His twin sister ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_liza.gif)
Liza is a god of the Fon people of West Africa. Liza is represented by the fierce Sun. Usually ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_chinese.jpg)
According to ancient Chinese mythology, there existed ten suns that used to appear in turn ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_maui.jpg)
Maui was a hero of Polynesian mythology. For Maui and his mother the days were too short. Maui ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_japanese.gif)
Amaterasu was the Sun goddess of the oldest Japanese religion called Shinto. When her brother ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_shamash.jpg)
Shamash was a Sun god according to the Sumerian mythology. Sumerians were living more than ...
Read more
More about Myths about Sun
Did you know?
Do you know what the gods
Re,
Tonatiuh, and
Shamash all have in common?
Did you know that in Norse mythology, there is a huge rainbow bridge called Bifrost that connects Midgard, the realm of humans, to Asgard, the home of the gods?
Earth and Space Science Concept of the Day
Do you know what this word or phrase means?
PlasmoidxPlasmoid : A structure of plasma and magnetic fields proposed to explain several natural phenomena including magnetic bubbles in magentospheres and ball lightning
Click on the word to find out!
Research Highlights
Scientists have learned that microbes that live in the soil, like fungi and bacteria, don't produce more carbon dioxide when the climate is warmer. At first these microbes will produce more carbon dioxide,...
Read more![](/olpa/images/soilfungi_small.jpg)