The island of La Palma in the Canaries archipelago pioneered the idea of a "dark skies" law back in 2007. It seems to have worked. It still houses most of Europe's active research observatories.<p><a href="https://www.starlight2007.net/index_option_com_content_view_article_id_185_itemid_80_lang_en.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.starlight2007.net/index_option_com_content_view_...</a><p>Light pollution is one of these less discussed impacts of our ever expanding economic activity. While it affects astronomers directly, it degrades quality of life for everybody. In the Netherlands there is almost no place in the country to actually see a dark sky (the Milkyway).<p>We are slowly trapping ourselves within a giant envelope of chemical (gas, particulate), sound, light and other electromagnetic pollutions, hoping that it will all work out ok without corrective action.
I did an astronomy tour experience at a high-end home setup in San Pedro De Atacama. That area is really special and I'm glad people are trying to save the things that make it great.
Been there twice. Love the place and it's ultra dark skies.<p>Once we were driving on the road from Calama to San Pedro de atacama at night and we felt that it's weird that for 50kms these clouds are in the same position in sky and haven't moved. Only till we stopped and realized that those clouds were the Magellanic clouds that were visible with naked eyes from inside the car. That's the darkness of this place. It's worth preserving.
For a closer area with dark skies, SE Oregon has a lot of really remote places.<p><a href="https://visitbend.com/journal/best-spots-for-stargazing-bend-oregon/" rel="nofollow">https://visitbend.com/journal/best-spots-for-stargazing-bend...</a>
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