Nothing.. the eclipse keeps going on the way it should. People can't effect such a stupid thing in reality. People are dumb. My dog said for me to answer this question. Dogs are better thna humans.... TAKE THAT SOCIETY.
This is completely unrelated. There are no known health effects of lunar eclipses, or solar eclipses for that matter, on people - pregnant or otherwise.
The people who happen to be watching it exclaim "Oh look ! An eclipse !" and then go on about their business. The people who don't happen to be watching are not aware that anything has happened.
people die
Most people may think lunar eclipses occur more often because lunar eclipses are visible from a larger geographic area on Earth compared to solar eclipses. Lunar eclipses also last longer and are easier to observe with the naked eye, making them seem more common. However, in reality, both lunar and solar eclipses occur at about the same frequency.
Watching people in college is an observable behavior. In fact, there are probably a lot of theses and dissertations written specifically about the behaviors observed during college.
People thought eclipses were the start of the end
There are around 350,000,000 people watching TV at any given moment. This is an estimate as people turn the TV off and on throughout the day.
what happened was the people fought to keep there place in the party
People got evacuated
people die
Eclipses do not cause or induce seizures, but for people who are prone to seizures, it is possible that one might occur (entirely by coincidence!) during an eclipse. There is no known connection between them.
They are about equal in number. The difference is in how many people SEE the eclipse. During a solar eclipse, only people along the path of totality can see the eclipse, and that's a pretty narrow track. For a lunar eclipse, everybody on the night side of the Earth can see it.