• Washington DC |
  • New York |
  • Toronto |
  • Distribution: (800) 510 9863
Friday, December 5, 2025
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
New Edge Times
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Arts
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    Video: The 10 Best Books of 2025

    Video: The 10 Best Books of 2025

    FROM ITALY TO HOLLYWOOD, VERONICA VITALE’S SURVIVOR VOICE GAINS GROUND IN THE GRAMMYS® CONVERSATION

    FROM ITALY TO HOLLYWOOD, VERONICA VITALE’S SURVIVOR VOICE GAINS GROUND IN THE GRAMMYS® CONVERSATION

    Video: 3 Cozy Books We Love

    Video: 3 Cozy Books We Love

    Video: ‘Wicked: For Good’ Tells a Story Through Color

    Video: ‘Wicked: For Good’ Tells a Story Through Color

    SURREY AUTHOR MAKES NATIONAL WAVES WITH NIGHTMARISH FICTION

    SURREY AUTHOR MAKES NATIONAL WAVES WITH NIGHTMARISH FICTION

    Darrell Hudson Expands Bigbarrell Empire with New Ventures, Emphasizing Community and Innovation

    Darrell Hudson Expands Bigbarrell Empire with New Ventures, Emphasizing Community and Innovation

    Video: ‘Wicked: For Good’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘Wicked: For Good’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    “JAYSOEAZY Strips It Back: ‘Give Me A Blunt’ EP Drops Friday with Raw Acoustic Edge”

    “JAYSOEAZY Strips It Back: ‘Give Me A Blunt’ EP Drops Friday with Raw Acoustic Edge”

    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Arts
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    17 Three-Ingredient Appetizers, So You Can Enjoy the Party, Too

    17 Three-Ingredient Appetizers, So You Can Enjoy the Party, Too

    The Most Popular Recipes of 2025

    The Most Popular Recipes of 2025

    Video: Best Clothing Stores in the Country

    Video: Best Clothing Stores in the Country

    These 7 Cookies Will Be the Life of Every Party

    These 7 Cookies Will Be the Life of Every Party

    How Should I Store Sweet Potatoes?

    How Should I Store Sweet Potatoes?

    Our Best Recipes for Thanksgiving Leftovers

    Our Best Recipes for Thanksgiving Leftovers

    From Molecules to Mathematics: Exploring Physics-Inspired Approaches to Ultra-Fast Protein Modelling

    From Molecules to Mathematics: Exploring Physics-Inspired Approaches to Ultra-Fast Protein Modelling

    Need Vegan Thanksgiving Dishes? These Will Wow Everyone.

    Need Vegan Thanksgiving Dishes? These Will Wow Everyone.

    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
  • Reviews
  • Trending
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Arts
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    Video: The 10 Best Books of 2025

    Video: The 10 Best Books of 2025

    FROM ITALY TO HOLLYWOOD, VERONICA VITALE’S SURVIVOR VOICE GAINS GROUND IN THE GRAMMYS® CONVERSATION

    FROM ITALY TO HOLLYWOOD, VERONICA VITALE’S SURVIVOR VOICE GAINS GROUND IN THE GRAMMYS® CONVERSATION

    Video: 3 Cozy Books We Love

    Video: 3 Cozy Books We Love

    Video: ‘Wicked: For Good’ Tells a Story Through Color

    Video: ‘Wicked: For Good’ Tells a Story Through Color

    SURREY AUTHOR MAKES NATIONAL WAVES WITH NIGHTMARISH FICTION

    SURREY AUTHOR MAKES NATIONAL WAVES WITH NIGHTMARISH FICTION

    Darrell Hudson Expands Bigbarrell Empire with New Ventures, Emphasizing Community and Innovation

    Darrell Hudson Expands Bigbarrell Empire with New Ventures, Emphasizing Community and Innovation

    Video: ‘Wicked: For Good’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘Wicked: For Good’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    “JAYSOEAZY Strips It Back: ‘Give Me A Blunt’ EP Drops Friday with Raw Acoustic Edge”

    “JAYSOEAZY Strips It Back: ‘Give Me A Blunt’ EP Drops Friday with Raw Acoustic Edge”

    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Arts
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    17 Three-Ingredient Appetizers, So You Can Enjoy the Party, Too

    17 Three-Ingredient Appetizers, So You Can Enjoy the Party, Too

    The Most Popular Recipes of 2025

    The Most Popular Recipes of 2025

    Video: Best Clothing Stores in the Country

    Video: Best Clothing Stores in the Country

    These 7 Cookies Will Be the Life of Every Party

    These 7 Cookies Will Be the Life of Every Party

    How Should I Store Sweet Potatoes?

    How Should I Store Sweet Potatoes?

    Our Best Recipes for Thanksgiving Leftovers

    Our Best Recipes for Thanksgiving Leftovers

    From Molecules to Mathematics: Exploring Physics-Inspired Approaches to Ultra-Fast Protein Modelling

    From Molecules to Mathematics: Exploring Physics-Inspired Approaches to Ultra-Fast Protein Modelling

    Need Vegan Thanksgiving Dishes? These Will Wow Everyone.

    Need Vegan Thanksgiving Dishes? These Will Wow Everyone.

    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
  • Reviews
  • Trending
No Result
View All Result
New Edge Times
No Result
View All Result
Home Science

Live Updates: Millions Await the Eclipse’s Dark Path Across a Continent

by New Edge Times Report
April 8, 2024
in Science
Live Updates: Millions Await the Eclipse’s Dark Path Across a Continent
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

For centuries, people have been clamoring to glimpse solar eclipses. From astronomers with custom-built photographic equipment to groups huddled together with special glasses, this spectacle has captivated the human imagination.

In 1860, Warren de la Rue captured what many sources describe as the first photograph of a total solar eclipse. He took it in Rivabellosa, Spain, with an instrument known as the Kew Photoheliograph. This combination of a telescope and camera was specifically built to photograph the sun.

Credit…Ann Ronan Pictures, via Getty Images

Forty years later, Nevil Maskelyne, a magician and an astronomy enthusiast, filmed a total solar eclipse in North Carolina. The footage was lost, however, and only released in 2019 after it was rediscovered in the Royal Astronomical Society’s archives.

Video

Video by Nevil Maskelyne/BFI.CreditCredit…Nevil Maskelyne/BFI

Telescopic Vision

For scientists and astronomers, eclipses provide not only an opportunity to view the moon’s umbra and gaze at the sun’s corona, but also to make observations that further their studies. Many observatories, or friendly neighbors with a telescope, also make their instruments available to the public during eclipses.

Fredrik Hjalmar Johansen, Fridtjof Nansen and Sigurd Scott Hansen observing a solar eclipse while on a polar expedition in 1894.

Women from Wellesley College in Massachusetts and their professor tested out equipment ahead of their eclipse trip (to “catch old Sol in the act,” as the original New York Times article phrased it) to New London, Conn., in 1922.

Credit…The New York Times

A group from Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania traveled to Yerbaniz, Mexico, in 1923, with telescopes and a 65-foot camera to observe the sun’s corona.

Credit…The New York Times

Dr. J.J. Nassau, director of the Warner and Swasey Observatory at Case School of Applied Science in Cleveland, prepared to head to Douglas Hill, Maine, to study an eclipse in 1932. An entire freight car was required to transport the institution’s equipment.

Credit…The New York Times

Visitors viewed a solar eclipse at an observatory in Berlin in the mid-1930s.

Credit…Imagno, via Getty Images

A family set up two telescopes in Bar Harbor, Maine, in 1963. The two children placed stones on the base to help steady them.

Credit…Associated Press

An astronomer examined equipment for an eclipse in a desert in Mauritania in June 1973. We credit the hot climate for his choice in outfit.

Credit…Jonathan Blair/Corbis, via Getty Images

Indirect Light

If you see people on Monday sprinting to your local park clutching pieces of paper, or with a cardboard box of their head, they are probably planning to reflect or project images of the solar eclipse onto a surface.

Cynthia Goulakos demonstrated a safe way to view a solar eclipse, with two pieces of cardboard to create a reflection of the shadowed sun, in Lowell, Mass., in 1970.

Credit…Jospeh Dennehy/The Boston Globe, via Getty Images

Another popular option is to create a pinhole camera. This woman did so in Central Park in 1963 by using a paper cup with a small hole in the bottom and a twin-lens reflex camera.

Credit…John Orris/The New York Times

Amateur astronomers viewed a partial eclipse, projected from a telescope onto a screen, from atop the Empire State Building in 1967.

Credit…Neal Boenzi/The New York Times

Back in Central Park, in 1970, Irving Schwartz and his wife reflected an eclipse onto a piece of paper by holding binoculars on the edge of a garbage basket.

Credit…Eddie Hausner/The New York Times

Children in Denver in 1979 used cardboard viewing boxes and pieces of paper with small pinholes to view projections of a partial eclipse.

Credit…Denver Post, via Getty Images

A crowd gathered around a basin of water dyed with dark ink, waiting for the reflection of a solar eclipse to appear, in Hanoi, Vietnam, in 1995.

Credit…Hoang Dinh Nam/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Staring at the Sun (or, How Not to Burn Your Retinas)

Eclipse-gazers have used different methods to protect their eyes throughout the years, some safer than others.

In 1927, women gathered at a window in a building in London to watch a total eclipse through smoked glass. This was popularized in France in the 1700s, but fell out of favor when physicians began writing papers on children whose vision was damaged.

Credit…H.F. Davis/Topical Press Agency, via Getty Images

Another trend was to use a strip of exposed photographic film, as seen below in Sydney, Australia, in 1948 and in Turkana, Kenya, in 1963. This method, which was even suggested by The Times in 1979, has since been declared unsafe.

Credit…Norman Brown/Sydney Morning Herald, via Getty Images
Credit…Mohamed Amin/Camerapix

Solar eclipse glasses are a popular and safe way to view the event (if you use models compliant with international safety standards). Over the years there have been various styles, including these large hand-held options found in West Palm Beach, Fla., in 1979.

Credit…The Palm Beach Bost, via ZUMA

Parents and children watched a partial eclipse through their eclipse glasses in Tokyo in 1981.

Credit…The Asahi Shimbun, via Getty Images

Slimmer, more colorful options were used in Nabusimake, Colombia, in 1998.

Ricardo Mazalan/Associated Press

In France in 1999.

Credit…Patrick Aventurier/Gamma-Rapho, via Getty Images

And in Iran and England in 1999.

Credit…Kaveh Kazemi/Getty Images
Credit…Mirrorpix, via Getty Images

And the best way to see the eclipse? With family and friends at a watch party, like this one in Isalo National Park in Madagascar in 2001.

Credit…Francois Lochon/Gamma-Rapho, via Getty Images

For centuries, people have been clamoring to glimpse solar eclipses. From astronomers with custom-built photographic equipment to groups huddled together with special glasses, this spectacle has captivated the human imagination.

In 1860, Warren de la Rue captured what many sources describe as the first photograph of a total solar eclipse. He took it in Rivabellosa, Spain, with an instrument known as the Kew Photoheliograph. This combination of a telescope and camera was specifically built to photograph the sun.

Credit…Ann Ronan Pictures, via Getty Images

Forty years later, Nevil Maskelyne, a magician and an astronomy enthusiast, filmed a total solar eclipse in North Carolina. The footage was lost, however, and only released in 2019 after it was rediscovered in the Royal Astronomical Society’s archives.

Video

Video by Nevil Maskelyne/BFI.CreditCredit…Nevil Maskelyne/BFI

Telescopic Vision

For scientists and astronomers, eclipses provide not only an opportunity to view the moon’s umbra and gaze at the sun’s corona, but also to make observations that further their studies. Many observatories, or friendly neighbors with a telescope, also make their instruments available to the public during eclipses.

Fredrik Hjalmar Johansen, Fridtjof Nansen and Sigurd Scott Hansen observing a solar eclipse while on a polar expedition in 1894.

Women from Wellesley College in Massachusetts and their professor tested out equipment ahead of their eclipse trip (to “catch old Sol in the act,” as the original New York Times article phrased it) to New London, Conn., in 1922.

Credit…The New York Times

A group from Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania traveled to Yerbaniz, Mexico, in 1923, with telescopes and a 65-foot camera to observe the sun’s corona.

Credit…The New York Times

Dr. J.J. Nassau, director of the Warner and Swasey Observatory at Case School of Applied Science in Cleveland, prepared to head to Douglas Hill, Maine, to study an eclipse in 1932. An entire freight car was required to transport the institution’s equipment.

Credit…The New York Times

Visitors viewed a solar eclipse at an observatory in Berlin in the mid-1930s.

Credit…Imagno, via Getty Images

A family set up two telescopes in Bar Harbor, Maine, in 1963. The two children placed stones on the base to help steady them.

Credit…Associated Press

An astronomer examined equipment for an eclipse in a desert in Mauritania in June 1973. We credit the hot climate for his choice in outfit.

Credit…Jonathan Blair/Corbis, via Getty Images

Indirect Light

If you see people on Monday sprinting to your local park clutching pieces of paper, or with a cardboard box of their head, they are probably planning to reflect or project images of the solar eclipse onto a surface.

Cynthia Goulakos demonstrated a safe way to view a solar eclipse, with two pieces of cardboard to create a reflection of the shadowed sun, in Lowell, Mass., in 1970.

Credit…Jospeh Dennehy/The Boston Globe, via Getty Images

Another popular option is to create a pinhole camera. This woman did so in Central Park in 1963 by using a paper cup with a small hole in the bottom and a twin-lens reflex camera.

Credit…John Orris/The New York Times

Amateur astronomers viewed a partial eclipse, projected from a telescope onto a screen, from atop the Empire State Building in 1967.

Credit…Neal Boenzi/The New York Times

Back in Central Park, in 1970, Irving Schwartz and his wife reflected an eclipse onto a piece of paper by holding binoculars on the edge of a garbage basket.

Credit…Eddie Hausner/The New York Times

Children in Denver in 1979 used cardboard viewing boxes and pieces of paper with small pinholes to view projections of a partial eclipse.

Credit…Denver Post, via Getty Images

A crowd gathered around a basin of water dyed with dark ink, waiting for the reflection of a solar eclipse to appear, in Hanoi, Vietnam, in 1995.

Credit…Hoang Dinh Nam/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Staring at the Sun (or, How Not to Burn Your Retinas)

Eclipse-gazers have used different methods to protect their eyes throughout the years, some safer than others.

In 1927, women gathered at a window in a building in London to watch a total eclipse through smoked glass. This was popularized in France in the 1700s, but fell out of favor when physicians began writing papers on children whose vision was damaged.

Credit…H.F. Davis/Topical Press Agency, via Getty Images

Another trend was to use a strip of exposed photographic film, as seen below in Sydney, Australia, in 1948 and in Turkana, Kenya, in 1963. This method, which was even suggested by The Times in 1979, has since been declared unsafe.

Credit…Norman Brown/Sydney Morning Herald, via Getty Images
Credit…Mohamed Amin/Camerapix

Solar eclipse glasses are a popular and safe way to view the event (if you use models compliant with international safety standards). Over the years there have been various styles, including these large hand-held options found in West Palm Beach, Fla., in 1979.

Credit…The Palm Beach Bost, via ZUMA

Parents and children watched a partial eclipse through their eclipse glasses in Tokyo in 1981.

Credit…The Asahi Shimbun, via Getty Images

Slimmer, more colorful options were used in Nabusimake, Colombia, in 1998.

Ricardo Mazalan/Associated Press

In France in 1999.

Credit…Patrick Aventurier/Gamma-Rapho, via Getty Images

And in Iran and England in 1999.

Credit…Kaveh Kazemi/Getty Images
Credit…Mirrorpix, via Getty Images

And the best way to see the eclipse? With family and friends at a watch party, like this one in Isalo National Park in Madagascar in 2001.

Credit…Francois Lochon/Gamma-Rapho, via Getty Images
Previous Post

Trump Says Abortion Law Should Be Left to the States

Next Post

What’s fueling the rise in arm injuries across MLB? A dangerous ‘cocktail’ of causes

Related Posts

A Writer Who Delights in Demystifying the Arcane and Obscure
Science

A Writer Who Delights in Demystifying the Arcane and Obscure

by New Edge Times Report
September 26, 2025
Video: Trump Pushes Unproven Link Between Tylenol and Autism
Science

Video: Trump Pushes Unproven Link Between Tylenol and Autism

by New Edge Times Report
September 23, 2025
Video: Why the U.S. Might Lose the Space Race
Science

Video: Why the U.S. Might Lose the Space Race

by New Edge Times Report
September 20, 2025
Leave Comment
New Edge Times

© 2025 New Edge Times or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Arts
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
  • Reviews
  • Trending

© 2025 New Edge Times or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In