On Saturday, the moon crossed in front of the sun, creating an annular solar eclipse that could be seen by residents across sections of North, Central, and South America. A “ring of fire” was visible in the sky above the zone of totality, when the moon appeared slightly smaller than the sun. Photographers in several countries captured the phenomenon, and images of some of its many observers.
A ‘Ring of Fire’ Eclipse Over the Americas
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Read moreAn image of the annular solar eclipse is reflected in the sunglasses of a young woman at the Astronomical Observatory of the National Autonomous University of Honduras, in Tegucigalpa, on October 14, 2023. #
Orlando Sierra / AFP / Getty -
Read moreA woman uses a collapsible steamer basket to cast shadows of the eclipsed sun on a white board during the solar eclipse in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico, on October 14, 2023. #
Ricardo Arduengo / AFP / Getty -
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Read moreHundreds of images of the partial eclipse appear on the ground in the shade of a tree in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on October 14, 2023. The small gaps between leaves behave like pinhole lenses, showing the outline of the eclipsed sun on the ground. #
Jose Luis Gonzalez / Reuters -
Read moreIsaac Medina (center) and Jazmin Gonzalez (center right) watch the "ring of fire" solar eclipse before their wedding ceremony in Merida, Mexico, on October 14, 2023. #
Martin Zetina / AP -
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