2023-10-08 19:08:41
Get solar watchers — Saturday is the first of two solar eclipses that will be visible over the next seven months, and the Upstate will get to enjoy part of it. The path of a total annular solar eclipse across the United States on Saturday, October 14, begins in Oregon at 9:13 AM PDT and ends in Texas at 12:03 PM CDT. According to the Great American Eclipse website, “If you can design an eclipse path that maximizes the number of national parks in its path, this is it.” “There will be full shade over Crater Lake National Park, Great Basin National Park, and others in the Four Corners area,” the website says. The partial solar eclipse will also be visible in other parts of the United States. Carolina and Georgia. More news (follows following links.) Voyeurism, Northern student charged with criminal conspiracy, South Carolina man trapped under 16,000-pound equipment, director says Investigation into Greenville County construction site fire, rescuers say: This is what we know in the sky The eclipse will block 45% of the sun and the celestial event will begin at 11:47 am, the maximum eclipse will be at 1:14 pm, and the last total eclipse will be at 2:44 pm. Like what happened on August 21, 2017 at Clemson’s Bowman Stadium. Viewing times vary across the entire viewing area from a few seconds to a minute. Remember to wear solar eclipse glasses or safety glasses if you plan to view the eclipse. Read regarding which glasses to wear here. The next total solar eclipse will occur in parts of the United States on April 8, 2024. The path of totality will extend from Texas to Indiana, across the Mississippi River, and all the way to New York next year. After crossing Maine, the northern region of the state is not in the path of totality, but will still witness an 85% partial eclipse on April 8. The eclipse begins at 1:50 pm and ends at 3:09 pm, with a maximum of 70% eclipse at 4 pm. :24 p.m. Well, the sky view of the next total eclipse in the Upstate won’t happen until March 30, 2052. Here’s what the last total eclipse of 2017 looked like. GREENVILLE, N.C. — Get Solar Watchers — Saturday will be the first of two solar eclipses to take place. See them over the next seven months, and the Upstate will enjoy part of it. The path of the annual total solar eclipse in the United States will begin on Saturday, October 14 at 9:13 AM PDT in Oregon and end at 12:03 PM CDT in Texas. “If you can design the eclipse’s path to maximize the number of national parks in its path, that is it,” she says. Location of the Great American Eclipse. “There will be complete shade over Great Lakes National Park, Great Basin National Park, and others in the Four Corners area,” the website says. The partial solar eclipse will be visible in other parts of the United States, including the Carolinas and Georgia. More news (Story continues following links.) At the top, the eclipse will block 45% of the sun. The celestial event will begin at 11:47 am, the maximum eclipse will reach at 1:14 pm, and end at 2:44 pm. Here’s the final tally On August 21, 2017, the eclipse was visible from Bowman Field in Clemson. Viewing time varies from just a few seconds to 1 minute across the entire viewing area. Remember to wear solar eclipse glasses or safety glasses if you plan to view the eclipse. Read regarding which glasses to wear here. The next total solar eclipse will occur in parts of the United States on April 8, 2024. Next year’s path of totality will extend from Texas into Indiana, along the Mississippi River, into New York and across Maine out of the United States. The northern region of the state is not in the path of totality, but will see regarding 85% of the partial eclipse on April 8. The eclipse shadow will begin at 1:50 p.m., with a maximum of 70% of the eclipse shadow at 3:09 p.m., and end at 4:24 p.m. In fact, the sky’s display of the next total eclipse upstate won’t happen until March 30, 2052. Here’s what the last total eclipse of 2017 looked like.
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