Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Texas Star Party (TSP) is a large annual star party in the United States. TSP was started by Deborah Byrd , members of the Austin Astronomical Society, and McDonald Observatory in August 1979. It was a weekend gathering of amateur astronomers at Davis Mountains State Park near McDonald Observatory in far west Texas.
Deborah Byrd (born March 1, 1951, in San Antonio, Texas) is an American science journalist. She is editor-in-chief of EarthSky, which presents science news and night sky information. The website served more than 21 million users in 2019, according to Google Analytics. [1]
Texas Sky Festival Park August 6, 1997 Phoenix: Blockbuster Desert Sky Pavilion: August 8, 1997 San Bernardino: Blockbuster Pavilion: August 10, 1997 Greenwood Village: Coors Amphitheatre: August 12, 1997 George: The Gorge Amphitheatre: August 15, 1997 Concord: Concord Pavilion: August 16, 1997 Mountain View: Shoreline Amphitheatre
Editors@star-telegram.com. After the total solar eclipse earlier in the week, there’s yet another occasion upcoming for Fort Worth residents to gaze into the North Texas sky.
Tuesday presents a rare solar occurrence that will be featured above the Texas sky. Call it a holy celestial trinity, if you will. In just mere hours, a full moon, super Harvest Moon, and partial ...
The festival was launched in 2018, the same year that Scott released his album of the same name. [5] The motivations of the festival were described as “bring[ing] back the beloved spirit and nostalgia of AstroWorld, making a childhood dream of Travis’ come true.“ [6] The original lineup featured mostly hip-hop artists such as Young Thug, Post Malone, Metro Boomin and Scott himself.
Did you see a string of lights move across the sky over North Texas on Thursday night, more than a dozen of them in a straight line? The startling sight around 9:44 p.m., coming from the western ...
The following week, crowd management expert and head of L.A.-based firm Crowd Management Strategies Paul Wertheimer, who served on a task force following The Who concert disaster (1979), told The Washington Post only an independent commission would provide a satisfactory analysis; he also told Texas Monthly until festival organizers were found ...