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Solar Eclipse 2017: Where To See It In Virginia, DC

The solar eclipse will be visible in Virginia and D.C. on Aug. 21. Patch has rounded up some viewing tips and places to watch it.

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ALEXANDRIA, VA — For the first time in nearly a century, the path of the total solar eclipse will stretch across North America, and Virginia and D.C. will have a partial solar eclipse with great viewing spots. The once-in-a-lifetime event will take place on Monday, Aug. 21. This is the first time a solar eclipse will be visible across the U.S. since 1918.

On the East Coast, the eclipse will start shortly after 1 p.m. and reach totality just before 3 p.m. The best viewing area in Virginia is in the southern region, since the eclipse's path with go through the Carolinas. Northern Virginia and D.C. will see about 81 percent of the sun covered during the event; Richmond and Virginia Beach will see 85. Towns like Roanoke, Blacksburg and Danville have the best view in the state — about 90 percent of the sun covered. (Subscribe to a Virginia Patch News Alert and Newsletter. For DC readers, Get Patch’s daily newsletter and news alerts. Or like us on Facebook. Or, if you have an iPhone, download the free Patch app.)

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South Carolina and Nashville are in the path of the totality, if you want to make the trek. The total eclipse viewing corridor will stretch across 14 states, according to NASA. The first sighting in the U.S. on Aug. 21 will be in Lincoln Beach, Oregon, at 9:05 a.m. PDT (12:05 p.m. EST) and will last be seen in Charleston, South Carolina, at 4:05 p.m.

If you can’t travel to a location for the viewing, you can see NASA’s live stream of the eclipse here.

Weather forecast for the afternoon

Hopefully the skies can stay clear, at least when the solar eclipse is visible on the East Coast. But it looks like thunderstorms may be in the forecast after 2 p.m. According to the National Weather Service, Northern Virginia has a 40 percent chance of precipitation.

Where and when to watch the total solar eclipse

While everyone in North America will be able to see at least a partial solar eclipse, proximity to the spectacle of the 70-mile-wide total eclipse corridor is within driving distance. The path of the Great American Eclipse through the region will clip the mountains of North Carolina before it cuts its trajectory through the Upstate of South Carolina, Columbia, then the coast.

There are also a number of places to watch the phenomenon in Virginia and D.C.:

You can also use this interactive Google map to find the spot of the longest eclipse. And an interactive map with additional events throughout the U.S. is found here.

Patch will update this with more events as they're announced. Where will you be viewing the eclipse? Let us know in the comments section and share your eclipse photos with Patch on Facebook.

Learning A Ton Of New Science From 2 Minutes Of A Total Solar Eclipse


Solar eclipse viewing tips

Looking directly at the sun is unsafe, and the only safe way to look directly at the uneclipsed or partially eclipsed sun is through special “eclipse glasses” with solar filters, warns NASA, which offers these tips:

contributed to this article.

Image via NASA

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