• 2024 Total Solar Eclipse Guide
  • 2017 Eclipse Photos From Madras Oregon Trip
  • Contact Marc
  • Marc’s Non Eclipse Photos and Videos
  • Speaker Parts
  • Resources: Posts, Links, Etc.
  • Why the Shadow Sweeps West to East

Eclipse Photos From Madras Oregon

We all should look up more often. Tens of millions of Americans pulled their heads out of their work and their cellphones this week to witness a rare total solar eclipse, which created an eerie midday twilight as it rolled 3,000 miles across the country, spooking the birds and cows and leaving vast crowds of normally crabby humans cooing and exclaiming like children. Even for those of us who had to settle for a partial eclipse, it was thrilling—a reminder that we are passengers on a rock swinging through the solar system in a celestial dance choreographed by forces beyond our control. Awe is an uplifting emotion. It is good to feel small, to see that beyond the mundane lies a great mystery.

Like most people, I look up too infrequently. But seeing the sky always changes my mood for the better. Look up: The heavens are full of wonders even when the Moon isn’t blocking the Sun. Every dawn and sunset is an astonishment of gorgeous light and startling, shifting color. All day, clouds tinged with gray, pink, and orange pass overhead like windblown thoughts, scudding across a canvas of depth-less blue. At night, countless starts silently smolder in the black infinity, many or most of them (we now know) orbited by their own necklace of swirling planets and moons. Is anyone looking back when you look up? Why is the universe so incomprehensively vast, with billions of galaxies, each containing billions of stars? Wondering about such things is somehow comforting—a welcome departure from the news, Twitter, and Instagram. This week, a great darkness fell upon America, and it was easy to understand why eclipses terrified the ancients, who saw them as portents of doom. But then the Sun returned, advising is: Light defeats darkness. This, too, shall pass.

William Falk, Editor-in-chief, The Week

_________________________________________________________________________________________

Also, for an additional excellent report on the 2017 eclipse and further photos and links, see Glen Schneider’s website at the address below…

You may have met our umbraphile friends friends Glenn Schneider and Craig Small at the Madras pizza party. Glenn is an Astronomer and Principal Investigator at UofA for the EXoplanetary Circumstellar Environments and Disk Explorer (EXCEDE). From 1994 he served as the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS; a second generation instrument installed on the Hubble Space Telescope) Project instrument scientist, at the University of Arizona’s Steward Observatory. Glenn, Craig and his crowd watched the eclipse from a different site in Madras (not the High School Football Field). Here is his website entry:

http://nicmosis.as.arizona.edu:8000/ECLIPSE_WEB/ECLIPSE_17/TSE2017_REPORT.html

__________________________________________________________________________________________

2017_eclipse-100 2017_eclipse-174 2017_eclipse-175 2017_eclipse-176 2017_eclipse-177 2017_eclipse-178 2017_eclipse-179 2017_eclipse-101 2017_eclipse-102 2017_eclipse-103 2017_eclipse-104 2017_eclipse-105 2017_eclipse-106 2017_eclipse-107 2017_eclipse-108 2017_eclipse-109 2017_eclipse-110 2017_eclipse-111 2017_eclipse-112 2017_eclipse-113 2017_eclipse-114 2017_eclipse-115 2017_eclipse-116 2017_eclipse-117 2017_eclipse-118 2017_eclipse-119 2017_eclipse-120 2017_eclipse-121 2017_eclipse-122 2017_eclipse-123 2017_eclipse-124 2017_eclipse-125 2017_eclipse-126 2017_eclipse-127 2017_eclipse-128 2017_eclipse-129 2017_eclipse-130 2017_eclipse-131 2017_eclipse-132 2017_eclipse-133 2017_eclipse-134 2017_eclipse-135 2017_eclipse-136 2017_eclipse-137 2017_eclipse-138 2017_eclipse-139 2017_eclipse-140 2017_eclipse-141 2017_eclipse-142 2017_eclipse-143 2017_eclipse-144 2017_eclipse-145 2017_eclipse-146 2017_eclipse-147 2017_eclipse-148 2017_eclipse-149 2017_eclipse-150 2017_eclipse-151 2017_eclipse-152 2017_eclipse-153 2017_eclipse-154 2017_eclipse-155 2017_eclipse-156 2017_eclipse-157 2017_eclipse-158 2017_eclipse-159 2017_eclipse-160 2017_eclipse-161 2017_eclipse-162 2017_eclipse-163 2017_eclipse-164 2017_eclipse-165 2017_eclipse-166 2017_eclipse-167 2017_eclipse-168 2017_eclipse-169 2017_eclipse-170 2017_eclipse-171 2017_eclipse-172 2017_eclipse-173 2017_eclipse-180 2017_eclipse-181 2017_eclipse-182 2017_eclipse-183 2017_eclipse-184 2017_eclipse-185 2017_eclipse-186 2017_eclipse-187 2017_eclipse-188 2017_eclipse-189 2017_eclipse-190 2017_eclipse-191 2017_eclipse-192 2017_eclipse-193 2017_eclipse-194 2017_eclipse-195 2017_eclipse-196 2017_eclipse-197 2017_eclipse-198 2017_eclipse-199 2017_eclipse-200 2017_eclipse-201 2017_eclipse-202 2017_eclipse-203 2017_eclipse-204 2017_eclipse-205 2017_eclipse-206 2017_eclipse-207 2017_eclipse-208 2017_eclipse-209 2017_eclipse-210 2017_eclipse-211 2017_eclipse-212 2017_eclipse-213 2017_eclipse-214 2017_eclipse-215 2017_eclipse-216 2017_eclipse-217 2017_eclipse-218 2017_eclipse-219 2017_eclipse-220 2017_eclipse-221 2017_eclipse-222 2017_eclipse-223
[Show thumbnails]

Related Images:

OUR LATEST BOOK: The 2024 Total Solar Eclipse Guide

NEW: 2024 Eclipse Tees


https://teespring.com/stores/audiblerush

WATCH: Youtube Video About the 2024 Eclipse

LISTEN: Eclipse Radio Interview

Checkout UCI Conversations Kevin Bossenmeyer show. Courtesy of University of California Irvine’s radio station (KUCI 88.9 FM, KUCI.ORG):

https://audiblerush.com/learning/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/radio-show.mp3

Copyright