JUPITERASC
Well-known member
A COMPLETE GUIDE TO THE 20 March 2015 TOTAL SOLAR ECLIPSE http://www.universetoday.com/119241/a-complete-guide-to-the-march-20th-total-solar-eclipse/
20 March 2015 is the vernal equinox
also known as the first official day of spring in the northern hemisphere.
This year, it coincides with a new moon and a full solar eclipse
The moon will completely cover the sun as it shines over the Arctic.
A partial solar eclipse will be visible to much of Europe, northern Africa and parts of Asia.
This unique occurrence is the beginning of a series of four March Equinox/Solar Eclipse occurrences
that will happen at 19-year intervals this century, for the first time since the 1600s.
Also this year have three Friday the 13ths
(last month, this Friday and again in November)
March equinox/eclipse of 2015 is the first in a series of four spring equinox solar eclipses
that will repeat themselves this century, at 19 year intervals.
2015, 2034, 2053 and 2072
~ each one of these years will see a solar eclipse ~
as our moon temporarily blocks the light of the sun
coinciding with the first day of spring, the day when the sun evenly distributes its light across the planet’s hemispheres.
This pattern will repeat ~ but not until 2387
when there will be a series of five Vernal Equinox Solar Eclipses at 19 year intervals, lasting until 2463.
And so we’re not just experiencing a one-off event on March 20th
we’re experiencing the start of a series which will shape the course of the 21st century
and won’t recur again for another 315 years.
We are entering a new pattern of rotation
(one that has happened before; one that will happen again)
that will last the next 76 years, or about 3 generations,
then disappear for three centuries https://medium.com/@emjacobi/what-h...des-with-the-first-day-of-spring-b35db3a508ca
20 March 2015 is the vernal equinox
also known as the first official day of spring in the northern hemisphere.
This year, it coincides with a new moon and a full solar eclipse
The moon will completely cover the sun as it shines over the Arctic.
A partial solar eclipse will be visible to much of Europe, northern Africa and parts of Asia.
This unique occurrence is the beginning of a series of four March Equinox/Solar Eclipse occurrences
that will happen at 19-year intervals this century, for the first time since the 1600s.
Also this year have three Friday the 13ths
(last month, this Friday and again in November)
March equinox/eclipse of 2015 is the first in a series of four spring equinox solar eclipses
that will repeat themselves this century, at 19 year intervals.
2015, 2034, 2053 and 2072
~ each one of these years will see a solar eclipse ~
as our moon temporarily blocks the light of the sun
coinciding with the first day of spring, the day when the sun evenly distributes its light across the planet’s hemispheres.
This pattern will repeat ~ but not until 2387
when there will be a series of five Vernal Equinox Solar Eclipses at 19 year intervals, lasting until 2463.
And so we’re not just experiencing a one-off event on March 20th
we’re experiencing the start of a series which will shape the course of the 21st century
and won’t recur again for another 315 years.
We are entering a new pattern of rotation
(one that has happened before; one that will happen again)
that will last the next 76 years, or about 3 generations,
then disappear for three centuries https://medium.com/@emjacobi/what-h...des-with-the-first-day-of-spring-b35db3a508ca