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A solar eclipse.
There are solar eclipses every year, and nearly every country has seen one at one point or another, so it is difficult to answer your question. There are many types of eclipses, from ones where only part of the sun is covered, known as a partial eclipse, to ones where the entire sun is covered, known as a total eclipse. A total solar eclipse happens about once every 18 months somewhere in the world. When a total eclipse does occur many countries will see it, and many other countries experience a partial eclipse. A total eclipse in the same place occurs on average about once in every 370 years.
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At that time, total solar eclipses will not happen; they will be a thing of the past. That time is coming; the moon is very slowly moving farther and farther from earth. There would be no Total Solar eclipse if the moon were twice as far from the earth, the reason is that the earth would never fall in the umbra, which is the place where sunlight is completely blocked. Even to this day only a small portion of our earth will ever get to see a total solar eclipse. however a very small portion of earth located right behind the shadow will see a annular solar eclipse, in which a ring of sunlight surrounds the disk of the moon. The ring would be much bigger if the moon was twice the distance.
There will be a total solar eclipse on July 11, 2010, which will cross the south Pacific Ocean, making landfall only on some islands in French Polynesia, Easter Island, and the southern tip of South America. There will be a total lunar eclipse on December 21, 2010, which will be visible (weather permitting!) anywhere in North America. You can see the full list of future and past eclipses at the NASA Eclipse Web Page, link below.
Is that Georgia, the state in the United States, or Georgia, the former Soviet republic in central Asia? No matter; you can use the NASA Eclipse Calculator to view all past and future eclipses worldwide from the year 2000 BCE to 3000 AD, at the link below.
There has never been a total solar eclipse in the City of Los Angeles. However, there was a solar eclipse on September 10, 1923 which was visible in Lompoc and San Diego, but the path of totality was about 10 miles offshore at Los Angeles. On May 22, 1724 there was a solar eclipse that covered the area that would later become Los Angeles. However, the early Spanish pueblo that would become Los Angeles was not established until 50 years later.
The best website for eclipses would be undoubtedly: http://www.eclipse.org.uk/eclipse/ it gives both solar and lunar eclipses.....its easy to use, has gif animation to illustrate how the eclipse is going to look in your place, where will it be total, what path it will cover etc....it also gives details about past and future eclipses.....NASA eclipse website is tad bit complicated.....
The moon needs to be new, which means it is invisible to us because it is rising with the sun. When the path of the shadow of the moon as it rotates past the sun lands someplace on the earth, a total solar eclipse is visible. There is always the shadow, but it does not always fall across the earth because of the differing angles of the moon's shadow according to its position relative to the earth.
The past tense of occur is occurred.
THE PAST Participle of occur is occurred!