by Case » Sun Jun 10, 2007 2:05 pm
The
spectacular picture link suggests it is somewhere
(50N 05W) over Europe (the south-east corner of England) at 10.13h UTC.
Here's the path of the 1999 solar eclipse.
It was a hot day in summer, so just clouds, no ice.
I remember driving to Germany to see the total eclipse, but the weather forecast made me drive to France, where we got a lucky break in the clouds at the
moment supreme.
The [url=http://theastropages.com/articles/articles011.htm]spectacular picture[/url] link suggests it is somewhere [url=http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&q=%2B50,-05&ie=UTF8&ll=50.000000,-5.000000&t=k&z=5&om=1](50N 05W)[/url] over Europe (the south-east corner of England) at 10.13h UTC.
[url=http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/SEmono/TSE1999/TSE1999Map/T99Fig6.jpg]Here[/url]'s the path of the 1999 solar eclipse.
It was a hot day in summer, so just clouds, no ice.
I remember driving to Germany to see the total eclipse, but the weather forecast made me drive to France, where we got a lucky break in the clouds at the [i]moment supreme.[/i]