Total Solar Eclipses with Durations Exceeding 06m 00s

-3999 to -3000 ( 4000 BCE to 3001 BCE )

Introduction

Eclipses of the Sun can only occur during the New Moon phase. It is then possible for the Moon's penumbral, umbral or antumbral shadows to sweep across Earth's surface thereby producing an eclipse. Not all New Moons result in a solar eclipse because the Moon's orbit is tilted about 5 degrees to Earth's about the Sun. Consequently, the Moon's shadows miss Earth at most New Moon's. Nevertheless, there are 2 to 5 solar eclipses every calendar year. There are four types of solar eclipses: partial, annular, total and hybrid[1]. For more information, see Basic Solar Eclipse Geometry.


Solar Eclipses: -3999 to -3000 ( 4000 BCE to 3001 BCE)

During the 10 century period -3999 to -3000 ( 4000 BCE to 3001 BCE[2]), Earth experienced 2387 solar eclipses. The following table shows the number of eclipses of each type over this period.

Solar Eclipses: -3999 - -3000
Eclipse Type Symbol Number Percent
All Eclipses - 2387100.0%
PartialP 846 35.4%
AnnularA 803 33.6%
TotalT 634 26.6%
HybridH 104 4.4%

Annular and total eclipses can be further classified as either: 1) Central (two limits), 2) Central (one limit) or 3) Non-Central (one limit). The statistical distribution of these classes during the 31st century BCE appears in the following three tables (no Hybrids are included since all are central with two limits).

Annular and Total Eclipses
Classification Number Percent
All 1437100.0%
Central (two limits) 1411 98.2%
Central (one limit) 16 1.1%
Non-Central (one limit) 10 0.7%
Annular Eclipses
Classification Number Percent
All Annular Eclipses 803100.0%
Central (two limits) 787 98.0%
Central (one limit) 11 1.4%
Non-Central (one limit) 5 0.6%
Total Eclipses
Classification Number Percent
All Total Eclipses 634100.0%
Central (two limits) 624 98.4%
Central (one limit) 5 0.8%
Non-Central (one limit) 5 0.8%

Long Total Solar Eclipses

The longest central[3] solar eclipses of this period are:

          Longest Total   Solar Eclipse:   -3735 Apr 07      Duration = 07m12s
          Longest Annular Solar Eclipse:   -3124 Nov 24      Duration = 11m36s
          Longest Hybrid  Solar Eclipse:   -3011 May 11      Duration = 01m47s

Long Total Solar Eclipses are relatively rare. The following catalog lists concise details and local circumstances for all Total Solar Eclipses with durations exceeding 06m 00s. The Key to Catalog of Solar Eclipses contains a detailed description and explanation of each item listed in the catalog. For eclipses from -1999 to +3000, the Catalog Number in the first column serves as a link to a global map of Earth showing the geographic visibility of each eclipse. The date and time of the eclipse are given at the instant of greatest eclipse[4] in Terrestrial Dynamical Time. The Saros Number in the sixth column links to a table listing all eclipses in the Saros series. The Key to Solar Eclipse Maps explains the features plotted on each map.

The data presented here are based in part on the Five Millennium Canon of Solar Eclipses: -1999 to +3000.



Catalog of Long Total Solar Eclipses: -3999 to -3000


                      TD of
Catalog  Calendar   Greatest          Luna Saros Ecl.           Ecl.                Sun Sun  Path Central
Number     Date      Eclipse     ΔT    Num  Num  Type  Gamma    Mag.   Lat.   Long. Alt Azm Width   Dur.
                                  s                                      °      °    °    °   km

----- -3999 Jun 14  01:59:34  86400 -74193  -56   T    0.2492  1.0765  32.1N 143.3E  75 168  256  06m17s
----- -3984 Mar 01  19:15:19  86400 -74011  -53   T    0.2535  1.0706   4.7S 109.3W  75 160  237  06m12s
----- -3966 Mar 13  02:47:48  86400 -73788  -53   T    0.1884  1.0747   5.4S 138.2E  79 156  246  06m21s
----- -3948 Mar 23  10:16:59  86400 -73565  -53   T    0.1201  1.0781   5.5S  26.6E  83 153  254  06m27s
----- -3930 Apr 03  17:41:24  86400 -73342  -53   T    0.0475  1.0806   5.4S  83.7W  87 151  260  06m31s
----- -3912 Apr 14  01:04:14  86400 -73119  -53   T   -0.0268  1.0823   4.9S 166.5E  88 331  265  06m34s
----- -3894 Apr 25  08:24:10  86400 -72896  -53   T   -0.1037  1.0830   4.5S  57.4E  84 330  268  06m36s
----- -3876 May 05  15:45:30  86400 -72673  -53   T   -0.1796  1.0828   4.2S  52.0W  80 331  270  06m38s
----- -3858 May 16  23:07:07  86400 -72450  -53   T   -0.2549  1.0815   4.1S 161.7W  75 332  271  06m38s
----- -3840 May 27  06:31:26  86400 -72227  -53   T   -0.3279  1.0795   4.5S  87.7E  71 334  270  06m37s

----- -3822 Jun 07  13:59:08  86400 -72004  -53   T   -0.3979  1.0765   5.4S  23.9W  67 337  268  06m33s
----- -3807 Feb 23  07:04:06  86400 -71822  -50   T   -0.0969  1.0718  25.4S  79.8E  84 351  235  06m15s
----- -3804 Jun 17  21:32:16  86400 -71781  -53   T   -0.4628  1.0729   6.8S 137.2W  62 341  265  06m26s
----- -3789 Mar 06  14:43:54  86400 -71599  -50   T   -0.0382  1.0754  19.1S  35.6W  88 349  244  06m39s
----- -3786 Jun 29  05:11:13  86400 -71558  -53   T   -0.5227  1.0685   8.8S 107.5E  58 344  260  06m12s
----- -3771 Mar 16  22:16:55  86400 -71376  -50   T    0.0265  1.0784  12.1S 150.2W  89 165  253  06m58s
----- -3753 Mar 28  05:45:29  86400 -71153  -50   T    0.0950  1.0805   4.5S  95.7E  85 164  261  07m09s
----- -3735 Apr 07  13:09:55  86400 -70930  -50   T    0.1674  1.0819   3.6N  17.9W  80 162  267  07m12s
----- -3717 Apr 18  20:32:36  86400 -70707  -50   T    0.2412  1.0823  11.9N 131.3W  76 161  272  07m06s
----- -3699 Apr 29  03:52:45  86400 -70484  -50   T    0.3170  1.0817  20.5N 115.7E  71 161  277  06m51s

----- -3681 May 10  11:14:17  86400 -70261  -50   T    0.3917  1.0802  29.1N   2.5E  67 160  280  06m29s
----- -3663 May 20  18:36:29  86400 -70038  -50   T    0.4658  1.0777  37.7N 110.6W  62 160  283  06m01s
----- -3612 Feb 28  02:38:09  86400 -69410  -47   T   -0.1086  1.0739  24.3S 148.0E  84 338  241  06m01s
----- -3594 Mar 10  10:17:25  86400 -69187  -47   T   -0.1695  1.0765  24.1S  34.9E  80 334  251  06m04s
----- -3576 Mar 20  17:50:14  86400 -68964  -47   T   -0.2358  1.0783  23.7S  76.7W  76 331  260  06m05s
----- -3558 Apr 01  01:17:55  86400 -68741  -47   T   -0.3063  1.0792  23.2S 172.9E  72 329  267  06m05s
----- -3540 Apr 11  08:41:51  86400 -68518  -47   T   -0.3797  1.0793  22.8S  63.3E  68 328  275  06m03s
----- -3522 Apr 22  16:03:26  86400 -68295  -47   T   -0.4551  1.0784  22.7S  45.9W  63 328  281  06m01s
----- -3495 May 23  06:18:20  86400 -67960  -28   T   -0.6869  1.0759  29.7S  95.0E  46 343  336  06m15s
----- -3477 Jun 03  13:42:52  86400 -67737  -28   T   -0.6158  1.0749  21.4S  20.3W  52 347  307  06m33s

----- -3471 Jan 29  22:33:46  86380 -67667  -44   T    0.1767  1.0646  13.3S 154.5W  80 180  215  06m03s
----- -3459 Jun 13  21:12:47  85977 -67514  -28   T   -0.5493  1.0728  14.1S 137.8W  57 351  282  06m40s
----- -3453 Feb 10  06:34:17  85792 -67444  -44   T    0.2193  1.0677   9.4S  82.6E  77 176  226  06m22s
----- -3441 Jun 25  04:47:05  85390 -67291  -28   T   -0.4864  1.0699   7.7S 103.7E  61 355  260  06m36s
----- -3435 Feb 20  14:26:34  85206 -67221  -44   T    0.2687  1.0703   4.3S  38.8W  74 172  237  06m35s
----- -3423 Jul 05  12:28:24  84806 -67068  -28   T   -0.4297  1.0664   2.4S  15.8W  65 359  240  06m23s
----- -3417 Mar 03  22:11:27  84622 -66998  -44   T    0.3244  1.0724   1.8N 159.0W  71 169  248  06m42s
----- -3405 Jul 16  20:15:10  84223 -66845  -28   T   -0.3780  1.0621   1.8N 135.9W  68   3  220  06m00s
----- -3399 Mar 14  05:49:56  84041 -66775  -44   T    0.3853  1.0737   8.7N  81.7E  67 166  258  06m40s
----- -3381 Mar 25  13:21:07  83461 -66552  -44   T    0.4523  1.0743  16.4N  36.5W  63 163  269  06m30s

----- -3363 Apr 04  20:48:25  82883 -66329  -44   T    0.5222  1.0739  24.6N 154.2W  58 161  280  06m12s
----- -3301 Jun 07  08:36:08  80905 -65560  -35   T   -0.2682  1.0696   2.9N  30.8E  74 338  235  06m08s
----- -3283 Jun 17  16:05:17  80337 -65337  -35   T   -0.3350  1.0690   1.5N  83.5W  70 342  238  06m14s
----- -3265 Jun 28  23:40:13  79770 -65114  -35   T   -0.3970  1.0676   0.5S 160.3E  67 346  239  06m15s
----- -3247 Jul 09  07:22:06  79205 -64891  -35   T   -0.4534  1.0656   3.0S  42.0E  63 350  240  06m11s
----- -3229 Jul 20  15:12:03  78642 -64668  -35   T   -0.5033  1.0631   6.1S  78.8W  60 355  239  06m01s
----- -3214 Apr 07  08:01:31  78184 -64486  -32   Tm   0.0363  1.0662   2.2S  27.1E  88 162  217  06m03s
----- -3196 Apr 17  15:20:28  77625 -64263  -32   T    0.1094  1.0696   6.1N  87.5W  84 162  228  06m16s
----- -3178 Apr 28  22:37:26  77067 -64040  -32   T    0.1849  1.0722  14.5N 158.2E  79 162  239  06m21s
----- -3177 Apr 18  15:55:06  77037 -64028  -22   T   -0.5588  1.0758  32.0S  84.7W  56 338  294  06m02s


Catalog of Long Total Solar Eclipses: -3999 to -3000


                      TD of
Catalog  Calendar   Greatest          Luna Saros Ecl.           Ecl.                Sun Sun  Path Central
Number     Date      Eclipse     ΔT    Num  Num  Type  Gamma    Mag.   Lat.   Long. Alt Azm Width   Dur.
                                  s                                      °      °    °    °   km

----- -3160 May 09  05:56:01  76512 -63817  -32   T    0.2597  1.0738  22.9N  43.8E  75 162  248  06m18s
----- -3159 Apr 28  23:16:26  76482 -63805  -22   T   -0.4853  1.0759  23.2S 158.8E  61 340  279  06m23s
----- -3142 May 20  13:15:34  75959 -63594  -32   T    0.3344  1.0746  31.2N  70.5W  70 163  256  06m07s
----- -3141 May 10  06:35:50  75929 -63582  -22   T   -0.4105  1.0750  14.7S  43.2E  66 343  265  06m37s
----- -3123 May 20  13:56:09  75378 -63359  -22   T   -0.3367  1.0731   6.7S  72.2W  70 345  252  06m41s
----- -3105 May 31  21:17:33  74829 -63136  -22   T   -0.2642  1.0704   0.9N 172.8E  75 348  237  06m35s
----- -3087 Jun 11  04:41:11  74282 -62913  -22   T   -0.1940  1.0668   7.9N  57.9E  79 351  222  06m21s
----- -3001 Apr 22  10:45:29  71704 -61851  -29   T   -0.3246  1.0757  14.3S  32.5W  71 330  258  06m02s


Calendar

The Gregorian calendar is used for all dates from 1582 Oct 15 onwards. Before that date, the Julian calendar is used. For more information on this topic, see Calendar Dates. The Julian calendar does not include the year 0. Thus the year 1 BCE is followed by the year 1 CE (See: BCE/CE Dating Conventions ). This is awkward for arithmetic calculations. Years in this catalog are numbered astronomically and include the year 0. Historians should note there is a difference of one year between astronomical dates and BCE dates. Thus, the astronomical year 0 corresponds to 1 BCE, and astronomical year -1 corresponds to 2 BCE, etc..


Predictions

The coordinates of the Sun used in these predictions are based on the VSOP87 theory [Bretagnon and Francou, 1988]. The Moon's coordinates are based on the ELP-2000/82 theory [Chapront-Touze and Chapront, 1983]. For more information, see: Solar and Lunar Ephemerides. The revised value used for the Moon's secular acceleration is n-dot = -25.858 arc-sec/cy*cy, as deduced from the Apollo lunar laser ranging experiment (Chapront, Chapront-Touze, and Francou, 2002).

The largest uncertainty in the eclipse predictions is caused by fluctuations in Earth's rotation due primarily to tidal friction of the Moon. The resultant drift in apparent clock time is expressed as ΔT and is determined as follows:

  1. pre-1950's: ΔT calculated from empirical fits to historical records derived by Morrison and Stephenson (2004)
  2. 1955-present: ΔT obtained from published observations
  3. future: ΔT is extrapolated from current values weighted by the long term trend from tidal effects

A series of polynomial expressions have been derived to simplify the evaluation of ΔT for any time from -1999 to +3000. The uncertainty in ΔT over this period can be estimated from scatter in the measurements.


Footnotes

[1] Hybrid eclipses are also known as annular/total eclipses. Such an eclipse is both total and annular along different sections of its umbral path. (See: Five Millennium Catalog of Hybrid Solar Eclipses)

[2] The terms BCE and CE are abbreviations for "Before Common Era" and "Common Era," respectively. They are the secular equivalents to the BC and AD dating conventions. (See: Year Dating Conventions )

[3] Central solar eclipses are eclipses in which the central axis of the Moon's shadow strikes the Earth's surface. All partial (penumbral) eclipses are non-central eclipses since the shadow axis misses Earth. However, umbral eclipses (total, annular and hybrid) may be either central (usually) or non-central (rarely).

[4] Greatest eclipse is defined as the instant when the axis of the Moon's shadow passes closest to the Earth's center. For total eclipses, the instant of greatest eclipse is virtually identical to the instants of greatest magnitude and greatest duration. However, for annular eclipses, the instant of greatest duration may occur at either the time of greatest eclipse or near the sunrise and sunset points of the eclipse path.


Acknowledgments

Special thanks to Dan McGlaun for extracting the individual eclipse maps from the Five Millennium Canon of Solar Eclipses: -1999 to +3000 for use in this catalog.

The Besselian elements used in the predictions were kindly provided by Jean Meeus. All eclipse calculations are by Fred Espenak, and he assumes full responsibility for their accuracy. Some of the information presented on this web site is based on data originally published in Five Millennium Canon of Solar Eclipses: -1999 to +3000

Permission is freely granted to reproduce this data when accompanied by an acknowledgment:

"Eclipse Predictions by Fred Espenak and Jean Meeus (NASA's GSFC)"


Eclipse Links

Five Millennium Catalog of Solar Eclipses

Ten Millennium Catalog of Long Solar Eclipses

Catalog of Solar Eclipse Saros Series

World Atlas of Solar Eclipse Paths

2007 May 11