'Mesmerising' shot of Milky Way wins South Downs National Park Dark Skies prize

A "mesmerising" shot of the Milky Way over an Iron Age hillfort has claimed the top prize in the South Downs National Park's astrophotography competition.
A "mesmerising" shot of the Milky Way over an Iron Age hillfort has claimed the top prize in the South Downs National Park's astrophotography competition.

A "mesmerising" shot of the Milky Way over an Iron Age hillfort has claimed the top prize in the South Downs National Park's astrophotography competition.

The contest was held to mark the start of a dark skies festival being held by the park which stretches across Hampshire and Sussex. The national park was awarded International Dark Sky Reserve status in 2016 and is one of just 18 around the world.

The winning shot, titled Milky Way From Cissbury was taken by Neil Jones and shows off the chalk landscape at Cissbury Ring near Worthing, West Sussex.

Judge Graham Bryant, a fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, said: "I like the juxtaposition of the dark monochromatic sky and the colours of the foreground."



Second place in the contest was taken by John Fox with his photo taken at Birling Gap near Eastbourne.

This image of Birling Gap placed second

Judge Tiffany Francis-Baker, author of Dark Skies, said: "It's just a stunning photograph."



The first prize in the Living Dark Skies category was awarded to Anthony Whitbourn, who captured a shore crab at Cuckmere Haven, near Seaford.

Judge Dan Oakley, the park's dark skies ranger, said: "I'd give this picture 10 out of 10. It's really fun, lively and quirky. We don't often see images like this in the national park."