Space
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Eric’s Black Sun Eclipse Website
Reviewed May 16, 1999 by Dr. Eric Flescher, a teacher from Olathe, Kansas , USA who is affiliated with the site. Website with information about eclipse, accounts by people of eclipses, information about eclipse including the upcoming August, 1999 eclipse, eclipse trip information, eclipse trivia, 10 myths of eclipses online presentation, photos. There is also a kid’s room, teachers lounge, eclipse chaser’s page and links to other eclipse astronomy sites. Also in June, European 1999 Eclipse Puzzle Search and more.
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Eric’s Black Sun Eclipse Website
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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Eclipse Cam
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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Earth and Moon Viewer
Reviewed April 25, 1999 by a reader from Lubbock, Texas who is not affiliated with the site. This site is wonderful for adults and children. You can choose a satellite in orbit and view the earth from it. If you go to the site at night in the U.S.A. and choose the China satellite, you will see the China Wall clearly. That’s because it’s daytime there but you should also hope there aren’t too many clouds so you can see everything. You can also look at the moon and learn about the planets. It is an amazing site for learning.
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Earth and Sky: Skywatching
"Ever wish you had an experienced astronomer standing by your side to guide you to the nightly show? Now you do. Meet Deborah Byrd, Skywatching columnist. "Each day’s segment is designed to guide your eye to something you can see that night, or the next morning before dawn. It might be a constellation, a star, or a planet. Or it might be a celestial event, such as an eclipse." In addition to this feature, teachers and lower-elementary kids have their own sections, accessible from the lunar menu at the top of each page."
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Earth Impact
Small space rocks enter the earth’s atmosphere on a daily basis. Most burn up but some make it to the surface. In either case they make little impact and are certainly not life threatening unless you are unlucky enough to have one fall on your head. Of concern are the larger interplanetary bodies - asteroids and comets - which we now know have collided with the earth in the past and which pose a real threat to human life. Be sure to read about "massive pale blue fireball" that exploded above the Tunguska River valley in Siberia in 1908.
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Doomsday Asteroid
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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Destiny Apollo
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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Cosmiverse: The Online Portal for Space and Science
Reviewed August 9, 2000by DB,a reader fromDallas, Texaswho is affiliated with the site.The only true portal for space and science enthusiasts.
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Contact Light
""This web site offers a nostalgic and personal look back at man’s first voyages to the Moon, not from the perspective of a participant, nor from that of a historian, but instead from my own perspective as a young teenager and avid follower of the space program and Project Apollo."Kipp Teague recalls his thirteenth birthday. He remembers the embarrassment of the singing Black Angus waitresses as they delivered a cupcake topped with a sparkler, and the thrill of watching the "black & white images as Armstrong and Aldrin hopped about on the moon." "At about 1 a.m., I switched off the TV. July 20, 1969 had come to an end, and along with it had also ended my first day as a teenager.""
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