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ECLIPSE
  

To see the law of recurrence of corresponding eclipses in the successive periods let us suppose the line of conjunction ES1 to be that at which there is a very small eclipse, visible only in high northern or southern latitudes. At the end of 18 years 11 days a second eclipse will occur along a line nearly half a degree nearer EN, the line of nodes. The successive eclipses will occur at the same interval through about ten periods, or 180 years, when the line of conjunction will pass within 11° of EN. Then the eclipse will be central, whether annular or total depending on circumstances: in the first one the central lines will pass only over the polar regions; but in successive eclipses of the series it will pass nearer and nearer to the equator until the conjunction line coincides with the node. The path of centrality will then cross in the equatorial region. During 22 or 23 more recurrences the path will continually approach to the opposite pole and finally leave the earth entirely. The entire number of central eclipses in any one series will generally be about forty-five. Then a series of continually diminishing partial eclipses will go on for about ten periods more. The whole series of eclipses will therefore extend through about sixty-five periods; and interval of time of about twelve hundred years.

Another remarkable eclipse period recurs at the end of 358 lunations. At the end of this period the line of mean conjunction ES1 falls so near its former position relative to the node that we find each central eclipse visible in our time to be one of an unbroken series extending from the earliest historic times to the present, at intervals equal to the length of the period. The recurring eclipses in this period do not, however, have the remarkable similarity of those belonging to the Saros, but may differ to any extent, owing to the different positions of the line of conjunction with respect to the moon’s perigee. Moreover, they recur alternately at the ascending and descending node. The length of the period is 10,571·95 days, or 29 Julian years less 20·3 days. Hence 18 periods make 521 years, so that at the end of this time each eclipse recurs on or about the same day of the year. As an example of this series, starting from the eclipse of Nineveh, June 15, 763 B.C., recorded on the Assyrian tablets, we find eclipses on May 27, 734 B.C., May 7, 705 B.C., and so on in an unbroken series to 1843, 1872 and 1901, the last being the 93rd of the series. Those at the ends of the 521-year intervals occurred on June 15, O.S., of each of the years 763, 242 B.C., A.D. 280, 801, 1322 and 1843. As the lunar perigee moves through 242·4° in a period, the eclipses will vary from total to annular, but at the end of 3 periods the perigee is only 7·1° in advance of its original position relative to the node. Hence in a series including every third eclipse the eclipses will be of the same character through a thousand years or more. Thus the eclipses of 1467, 1554, 1640, 1727, 1814, 1901, 1988, &c., are total.

IV. Chronological Lists of Eclipses of the Sun.

The following is a brief chronological enumeration of those total eclipses of the sun which are of interest, either from their historic celebrity or the nature of the conclusions derived from them. In numbering the years before the Christian era the astronomical nomenclature is used, in which the number of the year is one Notable eclipses.less than that used by the chronologists. The Chinese eclipses are passed over, owing to the generally doubtful character of the records pertaining to them.

—1069 June 20 and —1062 July 31; total eclipses recorded at Babylon.

—762, June 14; a total eclipse recorded at Nineveh. Computation from the modern tables shows that the path of totality passed about 100 m. or more north of Nineveh.

—647, April 6; total eclipse at or near Thasos, mentioned by Archilochus.

—584, May 28; the celebrated eclipse of Thales. For an account of this eclipse see Thales.

—556, May 19, the eclipse of Larissa. The modern tables show that the eclipse was not total at Larissa, and the connexion of the classical record with the eclipse is doubtful.

—430, August 3; eclipse mentioned by Thucydides, but not total by the tables.

—399, June 21; eclipse of Ennius. Totality occurred immediately after sunset at Rome. The identity of this eclipse is doubtful.

—309, August 14; eclipse of Agathocles. This eclipse would be one of the most valuable for testing the tables of the moon, but for an uncertainty as to the location of Agathocles, who, at the time of the occurrence, was at sea on a voyage from Syracuse to Carthage.

F. K. Ginzel (Spezieller Kanon der Finsternisse) has collected a great number of passages from classical authors supposed to refer to eclipses of the sun or moon, but the difficulty of identifying the phenomenon is frequently such as to justify great doubt as to the conclusions. In a few cases no eclipse corresponding to the description can be found by our modern table to have occurred, and in others the latitude of interpretation and the uncertainty of the date are so wide that the eclipse cannot be identified.

Of medieval eclipses we mention only the dates of those visible in England, referring for details to the works mentioned in the bibliography. The letter C following a date shows that the eclipse is mentioned in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles. The dates in question are:—

A.D. 538, February 15, C. (partial).  A.D.  878, October 29, C.
540, June 12, C. (partial).  885, June 15.
594, July 23. 1023, January 24.
603, August 12. 1133, August 1, C.
639, September 3. 1140, March 20, C.
664, May 1, C. 1185, May 1, C.
733, August 14 (annular). 1191, June 23, C. (annular).
764, June 4 (annular). 1330, July 16.

Besides these, the tables show that the shadow of the moon passed over some part of the British Islands on 1424, June 26; 1433, June 17; 1598, March 6; 1652, April 8; 1715, May 2; 1724, May 22. Of these the eclipse of 1715 is notable for the careful observations made in England, and published by Halley in the Philosophical Transactions. The next dates are 1927, June 29, when a barely total eclipse will be seen soon after sunrise in the northern counties near the Scottish border, and 1999, August 11, when the moon’s shadow will graze England at Land’s End.

We give below, in tabular form, a list of the principal total eclipses during the 19th and 20th centuries, omitting a few visible only in the extreme polar regions, and some others of which the duration is very short. The first column gives the civil date of the point on the earth’s surface at which the eclipse is central at noon. The next two columns give the position of this point to the nearest degree. The fourth column shows the Greenwich astronomical time of conjunction in longitude. The next column gives the duration of the total phase at the noon-point; this is sometimes 0·1′ less than the absolutely greatest duration at any point. Next is given the node near which the eclipse occurs; and then the number in the Saros. Corresponding eclipses at intervals of 18 y. 11 d. have the same number, and occur near the same node of the noon, which is indicated in the next column.

Date at
Noon-Point.
Point where
Central at Noon.
Greenwich M.T.
of conjunction
in Longitude.
Duration
of
Totality.
Node. Series. Regions Swept by Shadow.
 Lat.   Long.   d. h.  m. m.
 1803, Feb. 21 11 S. 136 W. 21 9 20 4·2  Asc. 1  Pacific Ocean, Mexico.
 1804, Aug. 5 38 S. 66 W. 5 4 6 1·2  Desc. 2  Pacific Ocean, Chile, Argentina.
 1806, June 16 42 N. 66 W. 16 4 22 4·6  Desc. 3  New England, Atlantic, Africa.
 1807, Nov. 29 11 N. 2 E. 28 23 48 1·4  Asc. 4  Central Africa, Areolia.
 1810, April 4 12 N. 154 E. 3 13 41  Ann.  Desc. 5  Pacific Ocean, Borneo.
 1811, Mar, 24 39 S. 26 W. 24 2 19 3·4  Desc. 6  South Atlantic to and across South Africa.
 1814, July 17 31 N. 84 E. 16 18 33 6·6  Asc. 7  Africa, Central Asia, China.
 1815, July 6 88 N. 175 W. 6 11 52 3·2  Asc. 8  Polar Regions, Western Siberia.
 1816, Nov. 19 43 N. 30 E. 18 22 9 1·8  Desc. 9  Eastern Europe, Central Asia.
 1817, Nov. 9 7 S. 149 E. 8 13 53 4·7  Desc. 10   Burma, Pacific Ocean.
 1821, Mar. 4 8 S. 96 E. 3 17 50 4·3  Asc. 1  Indian and Pacific Oceans.
 1822, Aug. 16 36 S. 176 W. 16 11 22 1·4  Desc. 2  Australia, Pacific Ocean.
 1824, June 26 47 N. 175 W. 26 11 43 4·4  Desc. 3  Pacific Ocean, Japan, China.
 1825, Dec. 9 9 N. 127 W. 9 8 27 1·5  Asc. 4 Pacific Ocean, Mexico.
 1828, April 14 18 N. 39 E. 13 21 18 0·3  Desc. 5 Northern Africa, India.
 1829, April 3 32 S. 149 W. 3 10 24 4·1  Desc. 6  South Pacific Ocean.
 1832, July 27 24 N. 28 W. 27 2 2 6·8  Asc. 7  West Indies and across Central Africa.
 1833, July 17 78 N. 76 E. 16 19 16 3·5  Asc. 8  North-eastern Asia and Polar Regions.
 1834, Nov. 30 40 N. 101 W. 30 6 48 1·9  Desc. 9  Southern and Western United States.
 1835, Nov. 20 10 S. 20 E. 19 22 31 4·6  Desc. 10   Central Africa, Madagascar.
 1839, Mar. 15 6 S. 31 W. 15 2 14 4·4  Asc. 1  South America, Africa, Egypt.
 1840, Aug. 27 34 S. 72 E. 26 18 45 1·6  Desc. 2  Africa, Madagascar, Indian Ocean.
 1842, July 8 51 N. 77 E. 7 19 2 4·1  Desc. 3  Spain, France, Russia to China, and Pacific Ocean.
 1843, Dec. 21 8 N. 102 E. 20 17 10 1·6  Asc. 4  Indian and North Pacific Oceans and India.
 1846, April 25 25 N. 75 W. 25 4 49 0·9  Desc. 5  Mexico, West Indies, Africa.
 1847, April 15 24 S. 90 E. 14 18 22 4·7  Desc. 6  Indian Ocean, Australia.
 1850, Aug. 7 18 N. 142 W. 7 9 34 6·8  Asc. 7 Pacific Ocean.
 1851, July 28 70 N. 34 W. 28 2 41 3·7  Asc. 8  Scandinavia, Russia and North America.
 1852, Dec. 11 37 N. 127 E. 10 15 32 2·0  Desc. 9  China, Pacific Ocean.
 1857, Mar. 25 4 S. 155 W. 25 10 30 4·5  Asc. 1  Pacific Ocean, Mexico.
 1858, Sept.  7 33 S. 41 W. 7 2 16 1·7  Desc. 2  Peru, South Brazil, Uruguay.
 1860, July 18 56 N. 31 W. 18 2 21 3·7  Desc. 3  British America, France, Egypt.
 1861, Dec. 31 9 N. 29 W. 31 1 55 1·8  Asc. 4  Caribbean Sea to North Africa.
 1864, May 6 32 N. 173 E. 5 12 14 1·4  Desc. 5  Pacific Ocean.
 1865, April 25 16 S. 30 W. 25 2 13 5·3  Desc. 6  Brazil to Central Africa.
 1868, Aug. 18 10 N. 103 E. 17 17 12 6·8  Asc. 7  India to Pacific Ocean.
 1869, Aug. 7 61 N. 145 W. 7 10 8 3·8  Asc. 8  United States and Alaska.
 1870, Dec. 22 36 N. 5 W. 22 0 19 2·1  Desc. 9  Gibraltar, Northern Africa, Sicily.
 1871, Dec. 12 12 S. 118 E. 11 16 2 4·4  Desc. 10   Southern India, Northern Australia.
 1875, April 6 2 S. 83 E. 5 18 36 4·7  Asc. 1  Indian Ocean, Siam, Pacific.
 1876, Sept. 17 33 S. 156 W. 17 9 54 1·8  Desc. 2  Pacific Ocean.
 1878, July 29 60 N. 139 W. 29 9 40 3·2  Desc. 3  United States and Canada.
 1880, Jan. 11 10 N. 160 W. 11 10 40 2·1  Asc. 4  Pacific Ocean, California.
 1882, May 17 39 N. 63 E. 16 19 34 1·8  Desc. 5  Egypt, Central Asia, China.
 1883, May 6 9 S. 147 W. 6 9 58 6·0  Desc. 6  Pacific Ocean, Caroline Islands.
 1886, Aug. 29 3 N. 14 W. 29 0 54 6·6  Asc. 7  South America, Central Africa.
 1887, Aug. 19 53 N. 102 E. 18 17 39 3·8  Asc. 8  Northern Europe, Siberia, Japan.
 1889, Jan. 1 37 N. 138 W. 1 9 8 2·2  Desc. 9  California, Oregon, British America.
 1889, Dec. 22 12 S. 13 W. 22 0 52 4·2  Desc. 10   Central Africa and South America.
 1893, April 16 1 S. 37 W. 16 2 35 4·8  Asc. 1  Venezuela to West Africa.
 1894, Sept. 29 34 S. 86 E. 28 17 43 1·8  Desc. 2  East Africa, Indian Ocean.
 1896, Aug. 9 65 N. 112 E. 8 17 2 2·7  Desc. 3  North Europe, Siberia, Japan.
 1898, Jan. 22 13 N. 69 E. 21 19 24 2·3  Asc. 4  East Africa, India, China.
 1900, May 28 45 N. 45 W. 28 2 50 2·1  Desc. 5  United States, Spain, North Africa.
 1901, May 18 2 S. 97 E. 17 17 38 6·5  Desc. 6  Sumatra, Borneo.
 1904, Sept. 9 5 S. 133 W. 9 8 43 6·4  Asc. 7  Pacific Ocean.
 1905, Aug. 30 45 N. 12 W. 30 1 13 3·8  Asc. 8  Canada, Spain, North Africa.
 1907, Jan. 14 39 N. 89 E. 13 17 57 2·3  Desc. 9  Russia, Central Asia.
 1908, Jan. 3 12 S. 145 W. 3 9 44 4·2  Desc. 10   Pacific Ocean.
 1911, April 28 1 S. 155 W. 28 10 26 5·0  Asc. 1  Australia, Polynesia.
 1912, Oct. 10 35 S. 33 W. 10 1 41 1·8  Desc. 2  Colombia, Ecuador, Brazil.
 1914, Aug. 21 71 N. 2 E. 21 0 27 2·1  Desc. 3  Scandinavia, Russia, Asia Minor.
 1916, Feb. 3 16 N. 62 W. 3 4 6 2·5  Asc. 4  Pacific Ocean, Venezuela, West Indies.
 1918, June 8 51 N. 152 W. 8 10 3 2·4  Desc. 5  British Columbia, United States.
 1919, May 29 4 N. 18 W. 29 1 12 6·9  Desc. 6  Peru, Brazil, Central Africa.
 1922, Sept. 21 12 S. 106 E. 20 16 38 6·1  Asc. 7  East Africa, Australia.
 1923, Sept. 10 38 N. 128 W. 10 8 53 3·6  Asc. 8  California, Mexico, Central America.
 1925, Jan. 24 42 N. 44 W. 24 2 46 2·4  Desc. 9  United States.
 1926, Jan. 14 10 S. 82 E. 13 18 35 4·2  Desc. 10   East Africa, Sumatra, Philippines.
 1927, June 29 78 N. 84 E. 28 18 32 0·7  Asc. 11   England, Scotland, Scandinavia.
 1929, May 9 1 S. 89 E. 8 18 8 5·1  Asc. 1  Sumatra, Malacca, Philippines.
 1930, Oct. 21 36 S. 155 W. 21 9 47 1·9  Desc. 2  Pacific Ocean, Patagonia.
 1932, Aug. 31 78 N. 109 W. 31 7 55 1·5  Desc. 3  Canada.
 1934, Feb. 14 19 N. 168 E. 13 12 44 2·7  Asc. 4  Borneo, Celebes.
 1936, June 19 56 N. 101 E. 18 17 15 2·5  Desc. 5  Greece to Central Asia and Japan.
 1937, June 8 10 N. 131 W. 8 8 43 7·1  Desc. 6  Pacific Ocean, Peru.
 1940, Oct. 1 19 S. 16 W. 1 0 42 5·7  Asc. 7  Colombia, Brazil, South Africa.
 1941, Sept. 21 30 N. 114 E. 20 16 39 3·3  Asc. 8  Central Asia, China, Pacific Ocean.
 1943, Feb. 4 47 N. 176 W. 4 11 31 2·5  Desc. 9  China, Alaska.
 1947, May 20 2 S. 25 W. 20 1 44 5·2  Asc. 1  Argentina, Paraguay, Central Africa.
 1948, Nov. 1 37 S. 82 E. 31 18 3 1·9  Desc. 2  Central Africa, Congo.
 1952, Feb. 25 22 N. 39 E. 24 21 17 3·0  Asc. 4  Nubia, Persia, Siberia.
 1954, June 30 62 N. 5 W. 30 0 27 2·5  Desc. 5  Canada, Scandinavia, Russia, Persia.
 1955, June 20 15 N. 117 E. 19 16 12 7·2  Desc. 6  Ceylon, Siam, Philippines.
 1958, Oct. 12 26 S. 139 W. 12 8 52 5·2  Asc. 7  Chile, Argentina.
 1959, Oct. 2 23 N. 6 W. 2 0 32 3·0  Asc. 8  Canaries, Central Africa.
 1961, Feb. 15 53 N. 53 E. 14 20 11 2·6  Desc. 9  France, Italy, Austria, Siberia.
 1962, Feb. 5 4 S. 179 E. 4 12 11 4·1  Desc. 10  New Guinea.
 1963, July 20 62 N. 126 W. 20 8 43 1·5  Asc. 11  Alaska, Hudson’s Bay Territory.
 1965, May 30 4 S. 137 W. 30 9 14 5·3  Asc. 1 Pacific Ocean.
 1966, Nov. 12 38 S. 43 W. 12 2 27 1·9  Desc. 2 Bolivia, Argentina, Brazil.
 1970, Mar. 7 25 N. 88 W. 7 5 43 3·3  Asc. 4 Mexico, Georgia, ? Florida
 1972, July 10 67 N. 111 W. 10 7 40 2·7  Desc. 5 North-East Asia, North-East America and Atlantic Ocean.
 1973, June 30 19 N. 6 E. 29 23 39 7·2  Desc. 6 South America, Africa and Atlantic Ocean.
 1974, June 20 32 S. 107 E. 19 16 56 5·3  Desc. 12  South-West Australia and Indian Ocean.
 1976, Oct. 23 31 S. 95 E. 22 17 10 4·9  Asc. 7 Africa, Australia, Indian and Pacific Oceans.
 1977, Oct. 12 16 N. 127 W. 12 8 31 2·8  Asc. 8 Venezuela, Pacific Ocean.
 1979, Feb. 26 61 N. 77 W. 26 4 47 2·7  Desc. 9 United States, British America, Pacific Ocean, N. Polar Sea. 
 1980, Feb. 16 1 N. 48 E. 15 20 52 4·3  Desc. 10  Africa, Atlantic and Indian Oceans, and India.
 1981, July 31 54 N. 127 E. 30 15 53 2·2  Asc. 11 Pacific Ocean, Asia.
 1983, June 11 7 S. 111 E. 10 16 38 5·4  Asc. 1 Java, Atlantic Ocean.
 1984, Nov. 22 39 S. 170 W. 22 10 58 2·1  Desc. 2 Pacific Ocean, Patagonia.
 1987, Mar. 29 17 S. 6 W. 29 0 45 0·3  Asc. 13  Atlantic, Equatorial Africa.
 1988, Mar. 18 28 N. 146 E. 17 14 3 4·0  Asc. 4 Indian and Pacific Oceans, Sumatra.
 1990, July 22 72 N. 142 E. 21 14 54 2·6  Desc. 5 Finland, North Atlantic.
 1991, July 11 22 N. 105 W. 11 7 6 7·1  Desc. 6 Pacific Ocean, Hawaii, Central America.
 1992, June 30 26 S. 5 W. 30 0 19 5·4  Desc. 12  South Atlantic.
 1994, Nov. 3 36 S. 31 W. 3 1 36 4·6  Asc. 7 Pacific Ocean, South America.
 1995, Oct. 24 10 N. 110 E. 23 16 37 2·4  Asc. 8 Pacific and Indian Oceans.
 1997, Mar. 9 71 N. 154 E. 8 13 16 2·8  Desc. 9 North-East Asia, Arctic Sea.
 1998, Feb. 26 6 N. 81 W. 26 5 27 4·4  Desc. 10   Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, Central America.
 1999, Aug. 11 46 N. 18 E. 10 23 8 2·6 Asc. 11   Central and Southern Europe touching England.