1806: The last time Cleveland experienced a total solar eclipse.
2444: The next time Cleveland will experience a total solar eclipse.
124 miles: the width of the eclipse's path of totality.
10-20 degrees: the range the temperature can drop during a total solar eclipse.
229 seconds of totality in Downtown Cleveland.
233 seconds of totality in Avon Lake.
3:08 p.m.: eclipse enters Ohio.
3:19 p.m.: eclipse exits Ohio.
2,200 miles per hour: the speed at which the eclipse will move through Ohio.
$269,000,000 of economic impact in South Carolina during the 2017 total solar eclipse.
200,000 visitors expected in Cleveland for the total solar eclipse.
31,600,000 people live in the path of totality.
5: the number of solar eclipses that can happen in a year, mostly over oceans.
3: the number of years Ohio was a state of the United States, before the last total solar eclipse.
10: the number of years between Cleveland's founding and the city's last total solar eclipse. (At that time, it was spelled "Cleaveland.")
Read More About the 2024 Total Solar Eclipse:
Once-In-a-Lifetime: Cleveland's Total Solar Eclipse Puts a Spotlight on Northeast Ohio
How to Gear Up for the 2024 Total Solar Eclipse in Cleveland
The Total Solar Eclipse will Bring a Magical Shared Experience to Cleveland: Essay
Total Solar Eclipse Cleveland Party Guide: Where to Be in Northeast Ohio on April 8
What to Expect at the 2024 Total Solar Eclipse in Cleveland
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