Imagine standing under a sky so dark that the Milky Way stretches across it like a luminous ribbon. This is the experience that International Dark Sky Week aims to bring back. Every April, during the week of the new moon (this year from April 21 to 27), we are invited to turn off our lights and gaze at the stars. The event was initiated by Jennifer Barlow, a high school student of Midlothian, Virginia, in 2003, to combat light pollution. One of the best places to experience the night sky"s beauty 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. Did you know that light pollution prevents us from seeing most of the stars in the Milky Way? By reducing it, we can reconnect with the universe"s beauty and wonder.
International Dark Sky Week
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Autumn in Georgia
-
Holding back the tide
-
Ides of March
-
Dragons Eye, Uttakleiv Beach, Norway
-
West of Windermere
-
Black-tailed prairie dogs, Badlands National Park, South Dakota, USA
-
Spine-cheeked anemonefish
-
From victory to festivity
-
The Nutcracker performed by the Turkish State Opera and Ballet in Ankara
-
Happy St Patricks Day!
-
A rainbow that’s worth the rainfall
-
Cave Dale and Peveril Castle, Derbyshire
-
Fujian Tulou, China
-
World Population Day
-
The Blue City of Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India
-
International Archaeology Day
-
Stonewall uprising anniversary
-
Surrounded by a sea of sand
-
Celebrating Pi Day
-
How sweet to be a star, floating in the blue.
-
Waterfall capital of the world?
-
Reed bunting
-
Finding beauty in ruins
-
Externsteine in the Teutoburg Forest, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
-
Purple crocus flowers, Seven Rila Lakes, Bulgaria
-
Cowes Week
-
Red deer stag in Glen Affric, Scotland
-
Tree frog
-
Big rocks, big heads
-
Squirrel Appreciation Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

