Editing Talk:1879: Eclipse Birds

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It's strange the shadow is coming from the top and not from one side, isn't ? I would be frightened too... [[Special:Contributions/141.101.88.52|141.101.88.52]] 07:56, 21 August 2017 (UTC)
 
It's strange the shadow is coming from the top and not from one side, isn't ? I would be frightened too... [[Special:Contributions/141.101.88.52|141.101.88.52]] 07:56, 21 August 2017 (UTC)
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:Not so much. 100% of total eclipses happen at noon. Picture the geometry in your head: when can the moon be exactly between Earth and sun? [[User:Nitpicking|Nitpicking]] ([[User talk:Nitpicking|talk]]) 19:12, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
 
:Not so much. 100% of total eclipses happen at noon. Picture the geometry in your head: when can the moon be exactly between Earth and sun? [[User:Nitpicking|Nitpicking]] ([[User talk:Nitpicking|talk]]) 19:12, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
::"100% of total eclipses happen at noon"... No, 100% do not. You can get a typical Totality, for any given location on the path that will experience one, surprisingly close to dawn and dusk. Even at the moment of sunrise/sunset.
 
::Though the next TSE is hybrid ('only' annular at its extremities, where it's so lw), even its point of maximum (if that's what you mean) will be at 04:17:56 UTC at 9.6°S 125.8°E, which gives it a local time (geographical, not political) of about 12:40, by my calculations, and there's a lot more wriggle-room for Totalities at significantly higher (N/S) latitudes to be heading further still away from local noon. And, don't forget, the higher latitudes also have the Sun's maximum angle above the horizon be correspondingly closer to the horizon too, for more circumpolar eclipse tracks instead of equator-crossing ones. Then you'd never get the shadow overhead. [[Special:Contributions/172.69.79.185|172.69.79.185]] 23:06, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
 
  
 
Would "Kachunk" and "clank clank clank" be onomatopoeia to describe the moving of the blood cauldron, rather than the bird sound? Or, given that the sounds are shown in the same manner as the rest of the bird noises, could this be the birds deliberately mimicking the sound that moving a cauldron could make?  Or am I just reading in far too much into this, there is no hidden meaning, and I really need to get out more? [[Special:Contributions/141.101.107.150|141.101.107.150]] 11:17, 21 August 2017 (UTC)
 
Would "Kachunk" and "clank clank clank" be onomatopoeia to describe the moving of the blood cauldron, rather than the bird sound? Or, given that the sounds are shown in the same manner as the rest of the bird noises, could this be the birds deliberately mimicking the sound that moving a cauldron could make?  Or am I just reading in far too much into this, there is no hidden meaning, and I really need to get out more? [[Special:Contributions/141.101.107.150|141.101.107.150]] 11:17, 21 August 2017 (UTC)

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