Rare 'double sunrise' captured in Canada by intrepid solar eclipse chasers (photos)
Cloud-dodging eclipse chasers in New Brunswick and Québec, Canada, captured the solar horns, reflections and all kinds of weird views as the sun rose partially eclipsed.

On March 29, while much of Europe saw a partial solar eclipse in mid-morning, in parts of North America, it was possible to see an eclipse sunrise, with clear skies allowing.
Here are some of the spectacular photos taken by intrepid eclipse chasers who scattered across New Brunswick and Québec, Canada, to dodge clouds and get a clear shot of something spectacular.
Related: Solar eclipse shines over Stonehenge in stunning photo from Astrophotographer Josh Dury
The eclipsed sunrise from New Brunswick, Canada
In New Brunswick, the place to be in this region was Moncton, about a two-hour drive to the east of Saint Andrews. "I knew this weather was coming from the southwest, so we went up to the main highway and came back down at a town called Alma on the coast of the Bay of Fundy," said Andrea Girones, an astrophotographer from Ottawa, Canada. "There was a piece of land that could have blocked the sun, so I mapped it in Photo Pills so I knew where the sun was going to come up …it was really cold and very windy."
Girones later published an impressive composite image of the partially eclipsed sun rising.
"With cloud approaching from the west we managed to have an incredibly clear view to the east at dawn and witnessed this lovely event," Girones told Space.com in an email. "Thankfully it was low tide ( "You did check the tides before we left?" asked my concerned husband)"
Girones' photograph blends an unfiltered panorama shot before sunrise and a composite with filtered images of the sun once it rose. Girones then assembled the image in Photoshop.
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The eclipsed sunrise from Québec, Canada
Jörg Schoppmeyer observed the rising eclipsed sun — and a mirage effect — also from Pointe-Lebel, Baie-Comau. "The eclipse was recorded with a Baader Travel Companion 95/560 in 4K," he wrote on YouTube. "The 'thing' on the ocean on the right side is a ship which moves from left to right." It was Schoppmeyer's 65th eclipse.
Further southwest at Les Escoumins, Québec — where the St Lawrence River is very wide — Mike Kentrianakis and Kevin Wood also imaged the "double sunrise."
"Finding this alignment was challenging, to say the least. However, hard work and perseverance paid off, as we witnessed something rarely seen that morning," Wood told Space.com in an email.
Wood found the right place to capture the incredible "double sunrise" at the perfect moment.
"Like headlights through the fog, rising through the morning's murk and mire. The crescent tips of an eclipsed sun break the horizon simultaneously, giving the illusion of two." Wood continued.
Kentrianakis captured a series of dramatic sunrise photographs during the partial solar eclipse.
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Jamie is an experienced science, technology and travel journalist and stargazer who writes about exploring the night sky, solar and lunar eclipses, moon-gazing, astro-travel, astronomy and space exploration. He is the editor of WhenIsTheNextEclipse.com and author of A Stargazing Program For Beginners, and is a senior contributor at Forbes. His special skill is turning tech-babble into plain English.
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