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A total solar eclipse on March 30, 2052 will stretch across central Mexico and several states, including Georgia, South Carolina, the Florida panhandle and small parts of Alabama, Louisiana and Texas.
Another total solar eclipse will not be visible from the US until 2044, but New England residents will have to wait much longer.
The final total solar eclipse whose path intersects the contiguous United States in the 21st century occurs May 11, 2078. Like the eclipse in 2052, this one also tracks through the southeastern ...
The next solar eclipses where parts of he continental U.S. will experience totality won't be until 2044 and 2045.
Florida's capital will have seen totality in four solar eclipses between 1918 and 2052, setting a major astronomical record and making it one of the most eclipsed cities across the contiguous U.S ...
The next solar eclipse that will cover about half the sun here in Washington, D.C. will not be until January of 2029. The next major partial eclipse will be in June of 2048, then again in March 2052.
The best places to see the great American solar eclipse on April 8, 2024, will be Texas, though the path also passes through Arkansas and up to Maine.
March 30, 2052, in the Southeast North Carolina is just a hair off from the path of totality for a total solar eclipse on March 30, 2052.
After 2044, the next opportunities for total solar eclipse viewing in the Lower 48 will occur in 2045 and 2052.
Across parts of the United States, Mexico and Canada, would-be eclipse-gazers are on the move for what could be a once-in-a-lifetime event.
Another total solar eclipse won’t cross the U.S. until 2045, then again in 2052. (The Lehigh Valley will one day find itself in the path of totality — but not until 2079.) ...
Yesterday, the US experienced one of the biggest astronomical events of the decade: a total solar eclipse that crossed the country from coast to coast for the first time since 1918. If you’re ...