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Nashville will be the largest city to experience totality during Monday's solar eclipse. Thousands of visitors are converging on the "Music City" to look at the spectacle. David Begnaud reports.
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Businesses looking to cash in on the Great American Eclipse are offering customers once-in-a-blue-moon deals
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Memorable photos of the first solar eclipse to cross the U.S. from coast to coast in 99 years
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Millions of people are on the road, traveling from all over the U.S. and the world to the path of totality for that perfect view of the solar eclipse. Eclipse enthusiasts Billy and Sharon Hahs have spent 26 years traveling from Chile to Australia to view total eclipses, but this year the eclipse is coming to them. Adriana Diaz met up with the adventurous Missouri couple.
Jackson, Wyoming, is in the path of totality Monday for the solar eclipse. Jeff Glor reports from Grand Teton National Park, where many believe it will have one of the best views of the celestial phenomenon.
Monday's eclipse, stretching across the United States, may become the most photographed event in history. We asked New York-based photographer and amateur astronomer Stan Honda about some tricks of the trade, and what NOT to do during totality.
NASA estimates a total solar eclipse happens where you live an average of once every 375 years. The path of totality stretches across the U.S. from Oregon to South Carolina. Bill Nye, scientist and CEO of the Planetary Society, joins "CBS This Morning" from Beatrice, Nebraska, to discuss what to expect.
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Lonnie Quinn, chief weathercaster of New York station WCBS, explains the various stages of the solar eclipse.
The tourism industry is trying to cash in on eclipse-related travel experiences. Amtrak is offering special service in Illinois, where the eclipse darkness will last the longest. The train goes from Chicago to Champaign to Carbondale, and then back again. Don Dahler is onboard the train as it heads to Carbondale.
Derrick Pitts, chief astronomer and planetarium director for the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, will observe the solar eclipse from St. Joseph, Missouri. It's within the 70-mile-wide path of totality. Pitts joins "CBS This Morning" from Rosecrans Memorial Airport to discuss what we can learn from the eclipse and why he'll be watching for "shadow bands."
South Carolina is the last state in the solar eclipse's path before it moves over the Atlantic Ocean. Charleston is packed with people eager to see the sun go dark, and some of them will watch from boats along the coast. Mark Strassmann reports.