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          5 Incredible U.S. Spots to Stop and See the Stars

          Alaska, California, Hawaiʻi, New Mexico, Pennsylvania

          5 Incredible U.S. Spots to Stop and See the Stars

          Mike Sessions / Mauna Kea Summit Adventures
          1 of 1

          In absolute darkness, gazing up at the brilliance of the universe can be a humbling, enlightening experience.

          Yet the volume and intensity of most major cities’ lights make worthwhile stargazing difficult, if not nearly impossible. Here are five U.S. locales, from a tropical island to the arctic wilds, where dark skies and vast star fields await your inner astronomer.

          Maunakea, Hawaiʻi

          On Hawaiʻi Island, the largest island in the state ofHawaiʻi, the 4,207-meter summit of dormant volcano Maunakea is virtually free of light pollution and crowned with one of the planet’s premier observatories. It’s also the only place in the USA you can see the entire Southern Cross constellation. Your destination will be theMaunakea Visitor Information Station at the volcano’s 2,800-meter level.

          View of the night sky from the Maunakea Visitor Information Station

          View of the night sky from the Maunakea Visitor Information Station
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          Mike Sessions / Mauna Kea Summit Adventures

          Chaco Culture National Historical Park, New Mexico

          At thisdesert archaeological park, located243 kilometers by car fromAlbuquerque,New Mexico, you’ll marvel at brilliant constellations, planets and galaxies amid pure darkness, as the site’s Ancestral Puebloan people did 1,000 years ago. Many of the Chaco civilization’s stone buildings were constructed to align with solar and lunar cycles, giving today’s impressive ruins an astronomical tie to the prehistoric past.Evening Night Sky Programs include a peek through the small Chaco Observatory’s 635-millimeter telescope.

          A starry backdrop lights up ancient ruins from the Chaco civilization

          A starry backdrop lights up ancient ruins from the Chaco civilization
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          Chaco Culture National Historical Park

          Denali National Park & Preserve, Alaska

          The park’s wild, isolated location, 386 kilometers north ofAnchorage,Alaska, makes it a fine stargazing spot. But it’sDenali‘s high latitude that earns it a well-deserved reputation as a stellar place to view theaurora borealis, also known as the northern lights. The colorful phenomenon — curtains of green, red, blue and violet light waving across the night sky — occurs when solar winds mingle with Earth’s magnetic fields and atmosphere to put on a dazzling spectacle.


          Plan your visit between September and April, when darkness abounds andauroral activity is more frequent, and make sure to pack warm layers.    

          The northern lights as seen from Denali National Park & Preserve

          The northern lights as seen from Denali National Park & Preserve
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          Death Valley National Park, California

          Famed for its fantastic geology and extreme heat,Death Valley also boasts some of the country’s darkest skies courtesy of a remote desert location near the border of Western statesCalifornia andNevada. About 193 kilometers from the casino lights ofLas Vegas, you’ll find an expansive horizon and a sky typically clear of clouds.


          Travelers can lodge at one of the park’s two smalltourist developments, Furnace Creek or Stovepipe Wells, but should drive to dark spots like theBadwater Basin orMesquite Flat Sand Dunesfor the best stargazing. Join a ranger-guided stargazing program in the winter, among othernighttime opportunities.

          Cherry Springs State Park, Pennsylvania

          A mere 293 kilometers from the big-city lights ofPittsburgh,Pennsylvania,exceptional darkness and a dome of stars envelop this wooded wilderness perched at an elevation of 700 meters. A clearing among the park’s namesake cherry trees, the Astronomy Observation Field attracts telescope-toting star watchers from all over the Eastern U.S. Registration and a fee are necessary to access the field, but the Night Sky Viewing Area, opposite from the field, requires neither. In optimum viewing conditions, the Milky Way galaxy shines so bright as to cast your shadow on the ground. Meteor showers, such as the Perseids in August, and the park’s popularevents draw large crowds.

          The fluorescent Milky Way as seen from Cherry Springs State Park

          The fluorescent Milky Way as seen from Cherry Springs State Park
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          Terence Dickinson / Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
          Explore more
          The Anaheim Packing District food hall, renovated from a former citrus packing house

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          Anaheim

          The Colorado Street Bridge, with Beaux Arts-style arches, built in 1913

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          Pasadena

          The famous horseshoe-shaped pier

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          Redondo Beach

          Viewing the La Jolla coastline from the sea cliffs

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          San Diego

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