The moon comes between Earth and the sun—already partly obscured by the horizon—over Changchun, China, Thursday morning.
The next solar eclipse, on July 1, will be even more obscure than tonight's—visible from only a small patch of ocean off Antarctica, said Williams College eclipse expert Jay Pasachoff, whose work has been funded by the National Geographic Society's Committee for Research and Exploration. (The Society owns National Geographic News.)
"No airplane flights seem to be passing through that region at the proper time," he said. "So it is probable that no human will see it."
Published June 2, 2011
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