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Only 12 People on Earth Saw This 'Ring-of-Fire' Eclipse. Here's How One Improvised to Capture a Once-in-a-Lifetime Photo From Antarctica
Summary by Space
4 Articles
4 Articles
An annular solar eclipse, known as the “ring of fire”, occurred on February 17, 2026 on Antarctica. However, almost no one in the world could see it in its full form. Only 12 people, isolated in a scientific base in the middle of the frozen continent, observed the phenomenon.
Back in February, a researcher finally caught the rare event, but only learned afterwards how privileged they were.
Only 12 people on Earth saw this 'ring-of-fire' eclipse. Here's how one improvised to capture a once-in-a-lifetime photo from Antarctica
A remote Antarctic research team became the only people on Earth to witness a rare annular solar eclipse — and one scientist had to improvise to capture it.
·United States
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Total News Sources4
Leaning Left1Leaning Right1Center1Last UpdatedBias Distribution34% Left, 33% Center, 33% Right
Bias Distribution
- 34% of the sources lean Left, 33% of the sources are Center, 33% of the sources lean Right
34% Left
L 34%
C 33%
R 33%
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