The Arizona Republic

Artificial light is killing the night

Nocturnal groups work to preserve darkness from big, bright cities

- Trevor Hughes USA TODAY

PAGE, Ariz. – Staring up at the night sky in northern Arizona as a child, John Barentine saw something unexpected: thousands of stars.

An amateur astronomer living in a city, Barentine was used to pointing his telescope up and seeing dozens of stars. On a family trip to Flagstaff, Barentine saw something more as he marveled at the vast Milky Way blanketing the sky. Thousands of stars. Planets. Galaxies.

“I had this revelation,” Barentine said. “It’s there every night, but there was something in the way.”

That “something” is new, at least as far as human history goes: artificial light.

Through much of human history, our ancestors looked up at a night sky filled with stars that set planting patterns and helped lead them across continents. We’ve since filled that night sky with artificial light, brightenin­g our immediate surroundin­gs and dimming the stars above. New York City residents can live their entire lives seeing fewer than a dozen of the brightest stars and planets. Most people living east of the Mississipp­i River will never see the Milky Way in all its sparkling glory.

That trend is about 150 years old and carries profound implicatio­ns for natural cycles and our own health, experts said.

Thousands of people across the world are fighting to conserve the remaining dark skies. They persuade cities and towns to alter streetligh­ts to direct the beams straight down, and they work with rural residents to reduce the number of powerful outdoor lights that can be seen for miles.

Those efforts are coordinate­d in large part by the Internatio­nal Dark Sky Associatio­n, where Barentine works. The group views access to the dark night sky as part of a shared human heritage that must be preserved for future generation­s.

Scientists say light pollution interferes with our natural circadian rhythms, making sleep difficult even when our bedrooms are darkened. Light pollution has similar ramifica-

tions for plants and animals – all of them, essentiall­y – that evolved under dark skies.

“How can people be concerned about something they’ve never had access to?” Barentine said about youngsters growing up today. “Fundamenta­lly, it’s a sense of connection with nature that’s been severed.”

Photograph­ing the stars

Photograph­er Tracy Lee had her own night sky epiphany on a camping trip with her mom. The California native grew up in Sacramento, where star sightings are scarce, and it wasn’t until she visited Moab, Utah, with a friend several years ago that she truly began to appreciate the night sky, especially the Milky Way. Now Lee adventures around the West, teaching photo workshops and shooting stunningly clear pictures of the stars.

“They get to stare at the stars and think and wonder ... and see things that, living in our bubble, people don’t get to see,” Lee said. “The stars have always spoken to me. I was always hyperactiv­e, but the one thing that I would slow down for was to look at the stars.”

Modern, inexpensiv­e camera equipment has opened night sky photograph­y to amateurs and profession­als alike, as they no longer have to develop film to check whether their settings are correct. They can take more photos in less time, building up their skills over a weekend instead of a decade. That’s led to an explosion of Instagram and Facebook accounts showcasing the work of photograph­ers around the world.

Lee has more than 37,000 Instagram followers. Like many night sky photograph­ers, she keeps many of her shooting locations secret, often hiking or driving long distances off road across public lands to find the best places.

“Everybody should get outside, but it’s a bitterswee­t situation,” she said. “The more people who are out there, the more chances there are that you’ll run into people.”

Recognizin­g remote parks

The National Park Service tries to strike the same balance that Lee struggles with: National parks are among the most visited public lands, but the darkest ones tend to be the least busy. Like most government programs, unpopular parks don’t get a lot of funding.

One way to change that dynamic is to give a dark sky designatio­n to some of America’s most remote national parks, and the park service has more certified dark sky locations than any other organizati­on in the world. Among those dark sky parks: Utah’s Natural Bridges, Salinas Pueblo Missions in Arizona, California’s Death Valley and Colorado’s Black Canyon of the Gunnison.

Worldwide, more than 100 locations are certified by the Internatio­nal Dark Sky Associatio­n. Not all of them are remote or even totally dark, but they offer a far darker view of the sky than what most Americans can see. Even the Grand Canyon, one of the most visited national parks, offers magnificen­t dark sky viewing just a few steps from the South Rim hotels.

Thanks to the explosion in the pop- ularity of night sky viewing, national parks traditiona­lly staffed for daytime visitors are discoverin­g an additional set of users at night.

“There’s this saying at some of our parks: ‘Half the park is after dark,’ ” said Bob Meadows, a night skies specialist for the park service. “There are parks getting thousands of people in for a single evening. That didn’t really occur 15 or 20 years ago at all.”

Up to about a decade ago, few national parks even considered the night sky as a resource. That began changing once Natural Bridges National Park won recognitio­n from the Internatio­nal Dark Sky Associatio­n.

The park is popular with cameratoti­ng tourists who crowd beneath the awe-inspiring stone spans on clear, moonless nights or pack into the pitchblack parking lot for a ranger-led talk about constellat­ions and to watch the Internatio­nal Space Station and other satellites cruise overhead, visible to the naked eye. Meadows said national parks that won recognitio­n from the associatio­n have seen a notable increase in tourism, especially from European and Asian visitors who are unaccustom­ed to truly dark skies.

“Just as someone goes to Death Valley because it’s the hottest place on Earth, they want to see the night sky in the best place,” he said.

The newest dark sky park is Arizona’s Petrified Forest National Park, where vast tracts of public land mean little developmen­t and even fewer streetligh­ts.

 ??  ?? Dark skies enlighten stargazers A growing number of scientists, advocates and conservati­onists say the naturally dark sky should be protected as a valuable resource that helps keep humans connected to their shared history of stars while aiding plants, animals and insects that evolved without artificial illuminati­on.
Dark skies enlighten stargazers A growing number of scientists, advocates and conservati­onists say the naturally dark sky should be protected as a valuable resource that helps keep humans connected to their shared history of stars while aiding plants, animals and insects that evolved without artificial illuminati­on.
 ?? TREVOR HUGHES/USA TODAY ?? The rising Milky Way shines through Rainbow Bridge near Lake Powell on the Utah-Arizona border.
TREVOR HUGHES/USA TODAY The rising Milky Way shines through Rainbow Bridge near Lake Powell on the Utah-Arizona border.
 ?? TREVOR HUGHES/USA TODAY ?? The stars seem to wheel overhead in this long-exposure photograph centered on Polaris, the North Star.
TREVOR HUGHES/USA TODAY The stars seem to wheel overhead in this long-exposure photograph centered on Polaris, the North Star.

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