Countdown begins for the 'Great American Eclipse' of 2017

The total solar eclipse of March 8 to 9, 2016, in its totality. This is a still image from a NASA webcast from Micronesia. Credit: NASA TV

In a year, a large swath of the United States will fall under the shadow of the moon during a historic eclipse that's already generating buzz.

On August 21, 2017, the eclipse will travel a path from sea to shining sea: from Oregon, moving east through Idaho and Wyoming, then eventually through Tennessee and South Carolina.

This eclipse will be one for the record books. According to Space.com, there hasn't been an a total solar eclipse that's gone coast-to-coast across the U.S. since 1918, and according to USA Today, this is the first time a total solar eclipse has been seeable only in this country since its founding.

Solar eclipses occur when the moon is exactly between the sun and the Earth.

The shadow the moon casts will be on average 67 miles wide, Space.com says, and it will be traveling very quickly- 2,400 mph when it hits Oregon. The last time a total solar eclipse could be seen in the mainland United States was 1979. Not only that, according to Space.com, this is the first total solar eclipse that goes from coast to coast since 1918.

Looking at the track below from Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, the eclipse path won't fall anywhere near Detroit. If you're looking to book a hotel somewhere along the path, you should probably move quick - Oregon media reports that hotels are already sold out for the celestial event.

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