Tuesday, June 18, 2019

The Grand Canyon is officially an International Dark Sky Park. Here's what that means

If you're planning on touring the Grand Canyon National Park during the daytime, reconsider. The park's got one of the world's best night skies. The park was just certified as an International Dark Sky Park, which means it's got a "distinguished quality of starry nights," according to the International Dark-Sky Association. That's no easy rank to score. The certification process has taken nearly three years, during which time the park has been converting most of its 5,000 light fixtures to "dark-sky compliant." In the next few years, the park said, 90% of Grand Canyon lights will become night-sky friendly. One of the association's greater goals is combating light pollution and protecting the night sky. It has been working to identify the "negative impacts of artificial light at night on human health, wildlife and climate change."Dark sky friendly lights are fixtures that minimize glares and reduce light trespass and sky glow...MORE 

Mercy. Light can "trespass", cause "pollution" and impact "climate change". It can even cause "sky glow" at night. Now I've seen women glow at night, but...uh...I thought that was a good thing.

Hank Williams would have had nothing to do with this. He wanted "no more darkness" and just wanted to see the light. Here, give him a listen:

https://youtu.be/LB-B_SpiF9Q

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