How people watched solar eclipses in the last century
A photographic history of different methods used to view a solar eclipse
Onlookers will have an opportunity to view a rare astronomical event on Monday, Aug. 21: a total solar eclipse across the U.S.
Here's a look some of the methods people have used to catch a glimpse of an eclipse — not always safely — from the beginning of the 20th century to the present day.
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Telescopes large and small
On Jan. 14, 1907, people in Kazakhstan use telescopes to view a solar eclipse from a snow-covered peak in the Tian-Shan mountains.
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Bellows camera
Would-be astronomers in Paris gaze upward, aligning a bellows camera and other optical equipment, including a telescope, toward a total eclipse of the sun on April 17, 1912.
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Goggles
This woman looks at a solar eclipse through goggles set in a mask at an unknown location on April 8, 1921.
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Nursing section
A group of nurses observe the June 29, 1927, solar eclipse through special dark glasses in Lancashire, England.
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Protective film
Eclipse watchers squint through protective film as they view a partial eclipse of the sun from the top deck of New York's Empire State Building on Aug. 31, 1932.
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Water bucket
One of the lowest-tech ways to witness the eclipse is to fill a bucket with water and look at the reflection, which these children at the South Harringay school in London did on June 30, 1954.
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Cardboard viewer
Ginnie Bailey reaches for a cardboard viewer held by her father, Robert Bailey, as the eclipsed sun begins to burn through a cloud cover that all but obscured a view of the total solar eclipse in Valdosta, Georgia, on March 7, 1970.
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'Sun peep mask'
About 1,000 astronomers and spectators, including someone wearing a 'sun peep mask,' gathered at Observatory Hill in Goldendale, Wash., to watch a solar eclipse on Feb. 26, 1979.
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Video monitor
And if you can't get outside, there's always video. These participants stay overnight at the Exploratorium in San Francisco to view the millennium's last solar eclipse, using high-speed internet connections and video links from a field station on the path of totality in Amasya, Turkey, on Aug. 11, 1999.
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