Eclipse '98 lives up to expectations
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Courtesy Telecuracao
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February 26, 1998
Web posted at: 2:17 p.m. EST (1917 GMT)
(CNN) -- Carnival revelers, island-hopping astronomers and
star-chasing cruise liners descended on the Caribbean on
Thursday to watch the moon "swallow" the sun. It was the last
total solar eclipse visible in the Western Hemisphere this
millennium.
Partying to themes such as "voyage to totality," thousands of
cruise ship passengers sailed off the Dutch islands of Aruba
and Curaçao, where a total eclipse of the sun began about
2:12 p.m. AST (1:11 p.m. EST/1812 GMT) Thursday.
The moon blocked all but the sun's corona -- its flaring
outer envelope -- and cast a shadow onto Earth that caused
momentary deep twilight.
Dozens of amateur and professional astronomers converged at a
dusty, windswept point in northwest Curaçao, setting up
equipment and hoping a smattering of clouds would clear.
"We're here to see what the animals do. Are the birds and the
iguanas going to sleep? We want to see what happens,"
explained Oveida Palacio, 35, who was setting up an eclipse
picnic at the site with her family from Curacao.
While the total eclipse was visible only in a narrow strip of
the tropics, a partial eclipse was visible across much of
North and South America.
Total solar eclipses are not rare -- they occur about every
18 months -- but the path often falls on a remote area,
making traveling to view them difficult and expensive.
Scientific interest was especially intense this time around,
because the path of totality was so accessible.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.