Thousands flock to French Polynesia for solar eclipse

The various stages of a total solar eclipse
File photo shows the various stages of a total solar eclipse. Avatar director James Cameron will be among thousands of visitors turning their eyes skywards in French Polynesia on Sunday for the islands' first solar eclipse in 350 years.

Avatar director James Cameron will be among thousands of visitors turning their eyes skywards in French Polynesia on Sunday for the islands' first solar eclipse in 350 years.

The Canadian film-maker is one of more than 5,000 tourists expected in the Pacific islands for the eclipse, a mini-boom likely to bring in around 8.4 million euros (10.6 million dollars) for the local economy, according to tourism minister Steeve Hamblin.

The eclipse is due between 7:00 am and 10:30 am local time (1700 and 2030 GMT), leaving those on the islands to choose between two major global events: the eclipse and the football World Cup final.

"You will also be able to see the eclipse from Easter Island and the Cook Islands, but the will be best in French Polynesia," Hamblin told AFP.

The influx of visitors is welcome in the French territory where tourism has been hit by a cyclone and a tsunami in recent months.

Sky-gazers in Tahiti's main town Papeete will see a 98.8 percent eclipse at 8:27 am on Sunday, while those in the centre of the Tuamotu archipelago, east of Tahiti, will see the sun completely obscured.

On the isolated atolls of Pukapuka et Tatakoto, the eclipse is expected to last four minutes and 41 seconds.

The Tuamotus, little used to large crowds, are expecting as many as 2,000 visitors, while Hao, one of the more developed atolls, is planning to use school buildings to accommodate an expected influx of more than 1,000.

All the hotels on Tahiti, the most heavily-populated island, are fully booked in what is a gloomy time for tourism in French Polynesia.

Air Tahiti, which runs inter-island services, is laying on 16 extra flights to the Tuamotus, while two cruise ships, a ferry and numerous sailing boats are also offering trips to see the spectacle.

An airliner from local long-haul carrier Air Tahiti Nui will fly over the Tuamotus throughout the eclipse with 300 passengers on board, while another plane from Australia will carry scientists from US space agency NASA at high altitude for the best observation conditions.

American astronomer Glenn Schneider, who has travelled to Polynesia to watch the event, said the area would not see a similar eclipse before August 4, 2176.

Local health authorities have launched an awareness campaign after a number of Polynesians damaged their eyesight during the last eclipse by watching it without proper protection for their eyes.

"This can lead to loss of vision by damaging the retina and sometimes it can be completely irreversible," Henri-Pierre Mallet, an official with the French Polynesian health service, told AFP.

Nearly 120,000 pairs of special sunglasses have been ordered and gone on sale in opticians, supermarkets and pharmacies.

(c) 2010 AFP

Citation: Thousands flock to French Polynesia for solar eclipse (2010, July 9) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2010-07-thousands-flock-french-polynesia-solar.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Rainy forecast douses plans to view Easter Island eclipse

0 shares

Feedback to editors