Earth and moon on the sun phases of solar eclipse. Elements of this image were furnished by NASA. (19 Studio/Shutterstock)
5 min

For at least 5,000 years, Earthlings have been awestruck by total solar eclipses. But the phenomenon may some day become folklore — well, in 600 million years, give or take.

Every 18 months or so, the moon completely blocks the sun’s light somewhere on Earth to create a total solar eclipse. One is even coming up in April in the United States, when tens of millions of people will be able to experience the phenomenon.