Partial solar eclipse on Mar. 29
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A partial solar eclipse will take place on Saturday, March 29, and will be visible throughout most of North America, Europe, as well as some parts of North and West Africa, and Northern Asia.
From Gizmodo
The first solar eclipse of 2025 occurred at sunrise on Saturday, March 29, with eastern Canada, the northeastern U.S., Europe and Africa all getting a glimpse.
From Forbes
NASA provided specific times for when the partial eclipse starts, reaches its maximum and ends in several cities around the world, including multiple in the Northeastern U.S.
From AOL
Read more on News Digest
There was an opportunity Thursday night to catch the March 2025 "Blood Moon," a phenomenon that colors the full moon in shades of red, orange and yellow during a total lunar eclipse.
Here’s why and how the moon can look yellow, orange or red without an eclipse and when Friday's total lunar eclipse blood moon will reach totality.
March's full moon, the Worm Moon, is extra special. Here's how bad weather won't keep Redding from seeing the striking view.
Did you see the total lunar eclipse on March 14? Several of my friends on social media commented that the moon appeared darker than usual during the eclipse and wondered why that was the case.
Besides, storms were on the way. When I stepped outside after supper to see whether setting my alarm made any sense, all I could see of the worm moon was a tiny, lighted patch of sky flashing through a gap between hurrying clouds.