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  • A partial solar eclipse is seen through the trees in this view from Lake Forest Park a few miles north of Seattle. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times, 2014)
    Partial solar eclipse
  • Totality is seen from 40,000 feet above the Pacific as a special Alaska Airlines charter jet is the first to experience the solar eclipse. The flight took off from Portland, Ore., in pursuit of the eclipse. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times, 2017)
    Totality above the Pacific
  • Solar eclipse of the sun shot from Seattle Center Monday, August 21, 2017.  92% of the sun was obscured by the moon in Seattle. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times, 2017)
    92% from Seattle Central
  • It promised to be a once in a lifetime event, but Venus transiting the sun might best be seen in someone else's lifetime.  Clouds obscured the sun forcing the cancelation of many viewing parties.  Still, for the moments when the clouds parted the spec on the sun that was Venus was visible. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times, 2012)
    Transit of Venus
  • This photo (one in a series of three) shows the moon moved across the sun in a partial eclipse on May 9th, 1967. Seattle Times photographer Roy Scully observed the phenomenon through a break in clouds that blanketed much of the Seattle area. (Roy Scully / The Seattle Times, 1967)
    Syzygy stardust
  • The eclipse reached totality at 10:19:34 a.m. [August 21, 2017] in Madras, Ore. Seattle Times photographer Greg Gilbert snapped this photo using a 300mm lens with a 1.4 extender and a 10X neutral density filter. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times)
    A shot in the dark
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