A Total Solar Eclipse Will Be Visible Above Pennsylvania This Spring
By Beth Price-Williams|Published January 19, 2024
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Beth Price-Williams
Author
A professional writer for more than two decades, Beth has lived in nearly a dozen states – from Missouri and Virginia to Connecticut and Vermont – and Toronto, Canada. In addition to traveling extensively in the U.S. and the U.K., she has a BA in Journalism from Point Park University (PA), a MA in Holocaust & Genocide Studies from Stockton University (NJ), and a Master of Professional Writing from Chatham University (PA). A writer and editor for Only In Your State since 2016, Beth grew up in and currently lives outside of Pittsburgh and when she’s not writing or hanging out with her bunnies, budgies, and chinchilla, she and her daughter are out chasing waterfalls.
Start counting down to an epic celestial event that’s so big it will plunge some parts of Pennsylvania into total darkness – for anywhere from 40 seconds to more than three minutes – this spring. If you miss out, you’re out of luck, at least for the next couple of decades. April’s total solar eclipse will be the last of its kind in the contiguous United States until 2044. That means now is the time to start making plans to catch the solar eclipse in 2024 in Pennsylvania.
Learn more about the total solar eclipse on the official website of NASA.
Do you plan to see the total solar eclipse in 2024 in Pennsylvania? Where will you watch it? Let us know in the comments! If you’re heading to Erie for the solar eclipse in April, both Presque Isle State Park and Erie Bluffs State Park are among the many good places to view it.
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