NPR
Billions of fish in the Pacific Ocean will be treated to an awe-inspiring celestial event today. That's because a total solar eclipse will be visible over a huge swath of the southern Pacific. Land animals including humans in Chile and Argentina will also get to observe the total spectacle, as will anybody connected to the Internet. And most parts of South America will be able to see a partial eclipse.
BAD NEWS! In 600 million more years, there won't be any more total solar eclipses. Get out enjoy them before they are gone.
Last blue moon of the decade to rise Saturday night
Apollo astronauts left their poop on the moon. NASA ought to go back for that shit. – Vox
But the bigger human footprint on the moon is, arguably, the 96 bagsof human waste left behind by the six Apollo missions that landed there.
Yes, our brave astronauts took dumps on their way to the moon, perhaps even on the moon, and they left behind their diapers in baggies, on humanity’s doorstep to the greater cosmos.
The bags have lingered there, and no one knows what has become ofthem. Now scientists want to go back, and answer a question that has profound implications for our future explorations of Mars: Is anything alive in them?
Geomagnetic storm watch
Geomagnetic storm watch
This weekend at night, if you are in a rural area without much light pollution, look north and you may very well see the Northern Lights. 🌌