People across the mountains of Western North Carolina turned their eyes to the skies for Monday's solar eclipse.Although the region wasn't in the path of totali
People across the mountains of Western North Carolina turned their eyes to the skies for Monday's solar eclipse.Although the region isn't in the path of totalit
Lifting appreciative eyes to the skies is one of the enduring pleasures of life among the East’s highest peaks, and that includes at night, when soaring summits shoulder out urban light and offer rare, high-elevation opportunities to appreciate the cosmos. The clear, cold nights of winter can’t be beat. The founders of the Astronomy Club of Asheville realized that more than 40
Texas Hill Country, the only part of the United States in the path of both last week’s “ring of fire” and April’s total eclipse, offered a preview of the spectacle to come.