Total Solar Eclipse Bedazzles Northern Australians 52
Penurious Penguin writes "Tuesday at 6:38AM (2038 GMT Tuesday) thousands of Australians witnessed a solar eclipse in northern Queensland, where it was the first total eclipse in over 1000 years for the specific region. The most prominent view occurred in Cairns, while elsewhere in locations such as New Zealand, parts of Indonesia and Australia, partial eclipses were visible. Totality lasted approximately two minutes — video and photos can be seen at Universe Today. Scientists are also taking the opportunity to study both land and aquatic wildlife in affected areas."
Bedazzled. (Score:1)
I'd be bedazzled too, if I hadn't seen something for over 1000 years, not because of the view but because of my ripe old age.
Clouds (Score:4, Informative)
60000 visitors to a city with a population of only 150000. There was quite a bit of chaos at the beaches.
Quite the spectacular event except that the wet tropics just entered their summer wet season and this week was the first rain in 6 months. Sadly many of the people actually missed the total eclipse due to cloud cover. However the partial phases should have been seen by all.
Re:Clouds (Score:5, Funny)
What color did they use to bedazzle it?
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OK, let's sing it instead! [youtube.com]
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It was the Northern Australians who were bedazzled. By the eclipse.
This raises many questions. I knew solar eclipses caused superpowers, but also spontaneous human bedazzlings?!
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That sounds like it could be painful. I hope they were drinking at the time!
Northern Australians (Score:2)
I assume you mean expats :)
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I was one of those people on the beach. Stupid cloud :)
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Heh - I live on the Sunshine Coast - it was partially cloudy but clear around the sun for long enough to project the partial eclipse through binoculars onto a sheet of paper. My kids were impressed with that, and with the strange light - kind of like early evening, but without the long shadows.
All I have to say is ... (Score:1)
uh, the 90's called? They want their stuff back. Including your terrible richard simmons impression, for some reason.
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Just so you know, I'm a huge fan of Simmons and was wearing leg-warmers while I wrote that summary. When I first started submitting stories to Slashdot, I was over 1000lbs. Then I found Richard, an industrial sized box of Ritalin, and whole bunch of 8-Tracks.
I started reading your post, then I continued.
Don't keep me in suspense! I need to know what happened to those 8-tracks you put on ritalin!
I was there (Score:3)
I was there, it was amazing. Took a few photos: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10151237864341768.486780.661406767 [facebook.com]
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What a pain, typical. I have the privacy settings for the album wide open, I assume Facebook is screwing its users over again.
Me Too. (Score:2)
Traveled to 12km west of Mt Carbine. No cloud problems - a very small, light cloud moved across the face of the during totality, just to made things interesting. Not many pictures, as I was more interested in seeing it.
You've got to see it.
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That's the same general location that I visited! It was perfect.
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I was probably about 4km east of you then. Cloud passed the sun with about 4 minutes to spare before totality.
Didn't get as many pics as I'd like as I was standing there in amazement trying to see if I could get my brain to believe what it was seeing.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/danack/8184416042/in/photostream [flickr.com]
http://www.flickr.com/photos/danack/8184416212/in/photostream [flickr.com]
http://www.flickr.com/photos/danack/8184416534/in/photostream [flickr.com]
http://www.flickr.com/photos/danack/8184417362/in/photostream [flickr.com]
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I was there too. I tried to see the eclipse back In 1999 (or was it 2000?) in southern England. It was cloudy the whole time except for a short glimpse of partial.
This mornings display was amazing. The clods cleared about 5 mins prior to totality and stayed away. defiantly worth the effort to see if only once!
Solar eclipsed viewed. Gain XP 50000. Advance one geek level. Gain power of hidden sun!!!
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Nice shots, I'm down the south of the country near Hobart and it was heavily clouded and under 50% coverage but got one half-decent pic
Eclipse [tinypic.com]
Total Solar Eclipse Bedazzles Northern Australians (Score:2)
Re:Total Solar Eclipse Bedazzles Northern Australi (Score:5, Funny)
There are more than three. In fact, the Bureau of Meteorology's phone lines were jammed for almost two minutes with calls from Far North Queensland (or Effin' Q as it's usually called) complaining that the sun had gone out early and blaming the southern states for confusing it with their newfangled daylight savings time. The calls stopped when it came back, of course, but they vowed to remember this at the next federal election...
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Considering the stories I heard from my dad about the drapes fading (back in '89, I think it was), that story is far too plausible to dismiss.
There were, if I remember correctly, also worries about a population explosion due to daylight savings. The stories I hear about Queenslanders just baffle me (can anyone really be that dumb?), and I lived there for about 11 years (during which time, I heard most of the stories).
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That one was a semi-joke by a politician who had the tactic of going on with gibberish for three minutes at a time so that TV news crews would have to stop and change film, which made him impossible to pin down in an interview until the days of videotape. He wasn't dumb, he said dumb things but he was an evil manipulative bastard that even set up his own fake Church group (the Logos foundation) just so that he could pretend he had God on hi
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Considering the stories I heard from my dad about the drapes fading (back in '89, I think it was), that story is far too plausible to dismiss.
The drapes fading due to daylight savings is certainly a plausible effect which can be understood intuitively.
People coming home from work often close their drapes to help keep the heat out. During daylight savings, they would be coming home with an additional hour of sunlight than in non-DST times. Thus, daylight savings has the effect of increasing the amount of sunlight to which the drapes are exposed by by an average of one hour per day of daylight savings observed. Over many years, this very well could
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Why wouldn't you leave the drapes closed while you are at work? I'm more likely to open the drapes when I get home, because I want to be able to see out, while obviously when I'm gone that doesn't matter and keeping the house cool(-er) is more important. If I left the drapes open all day, closing them for the last couple hours of daylight to try to keep the heat out is a perfect example of closing the barn door after the horses have escaped.
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All three of them
This.
The area in question is Northern Queensland, no-one, not even the Queenslanders consider them to be fully human, let alone Australian.
Scientists theorise that most of them swam across from New Zealand.
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Far north Queensland is quite densely populated compared with the Northern Territory (Queensland's western neighbour). The NT is more than twice the size of France and has a population of about 200,000.
Thanks for the heads up /. (Score:2)
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Better pictures (Score:5, Interesting)
Wednesday, not Tuesday (Score:1)
Someone forgot about the international date line. It may have been Tuesday GMT, but it was Wednesday local.
Not everyone took precautions.. (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health-fitness/doctors-say-thousands-have-suffered-permanent-eye-damage-from-looking-at-total-solar-eclipse/story-fneuzlbd-1226516924022 [news.com.au]
5% failure rate? Can we get this right for once? (Score:2)
Bedazzled? (Score:3)
"Hey, look a solar eclipse! Wait, why is my jean jacket now covered in rhinestones?"
Total Solar Eclipses... (Score:1)
Wednesday at 6:38am, not Tuesday. (Score:1)
That would be Wednesday at 6:38am in Australia, if it was at 2038 GMT on Tuesday.
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~ P.P.