Imagine standing under a sky so dark that the Milky Way stretches across it like a luminous ribbon. This is the experience International Dark Sky Week aims to bring back. Every April, during the week of the new moon (this year from April 21 to 27), people are encouraged to gaze at the stars. The event was founded in 2003 by Jennifer Barlow, an American high school student, to raise awareness of light pollution. One of the best places to experience a pristine night sky in the United States is Joshua Tree National Park in southeastern California, an International Dark Sky Park. Here, the absence of artificial light allows visitors to see the stars as our ancestors once did.
International Dark Sky Week
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
A future built on the past
-
All hail the mighty mangrove!
-
A kiss and a sigh
-
Nuit Blanche Toronto
-
Let the Great Backyard Bird Count begin!
-
Blurring the lines with wearable art
-
Rethymno, Crete, Greece
-
Guanacos in Torres del Paine National Park, Chile
-
Black-and-white ruffed lemur in Madagascar
-
Eurasian red squirrel in Northumberland, England
-
Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming
-
Coral Reef Awareness Week
-
Milky Way over the Elbow River in southern Alberta
-
Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes in Death Valley National Park, United States
-
St. James Tidal Pool, Cape Town, South Africa
-
Aqueduct, Arkadia Park, Poland
-
High above the Aegean Sea
-
Fossils of belemnites and ammonites, Jurassic Coast, UK
-
Racing through the five boroughs
-
Yungang Grottoes, Datong, China
-
Black-naped monarch
-
American bison
-
More of a moustache than a beard?
-
World Maritime Day
-
Bangkok, Thailand
-
Finnish Independence Day
-
This lake is no mirage
-
Skipper butterfly on an Echinacea flower
-
Summer solstice
-
Bathing boxes at Brighton Beach, Australia
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

