Cloudy and gloomy conditions that gripped the Twin Cities over the weekend look to hang around, spelling bad news for anybody here hoping to see Monday's solar eclipse.
Minnesota is not in the path of totality where the entire sun will be blocked by the moon for about three to four minutes. But nearly three-quarters of the sun will be covered in the Twin Cities at the peak of the eclipse at 2:02 p.m., rising to nearly 80% across southeastern Minnesota, according to NASA.
But only if the clouds clear, so cross your fingers. The National Weather Service gives the Twin Cities only a 19% chance of seeing any part of the first total eclipse in the United States since 2017. The chances are worse farther to the north, with a less than 10% chance in places such as Fargo and Grand Forks, N.D., and just 1% in Duluth and International Falls.
There is just enough time to get to Cedar Rapids and Des Moines in Iowa where odds are greater than 80% the astronomical event will be visible. Chicago is looking good, too, with a 95% chance of clear skies.
Locally, the Science Museum of Minnesota and the University of Minnesota's Bell Museum will host eclipse activities throughout the day, whether clouds shroud the celestial phenomena or not. Dakota County Parks will host a viewing party at Schaar's Bluff in Spring Lake Park Reserve in Hastings.
Network TV also will show images of the eclipse, which will start about 12:10 p.m. in southern Texas, then move across Texas into the Ohio River Valley and culminate in the northeast by mid-afternoon. In total, 15 states will see a total solar eclipse, NASA said.
In 2017, more than 215 million people viewed the last solar eclipse in person or electronically. More could watch this time as this year's eclipse is "more exciting due to differences in the path, timing, and scientific research."
NASA has put together a table to show how much of the eclipse you can see and where, weather permitting,
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