The increased traffic and spectacle of the total solar eclipse on Monday could imperil motorists, with researchers warning that fatal collisions increased during previous eclipses and law enforcement bracing for the event.
The area of totality was only about 70 miles wide in 2017 – this year's eclipse will have a 115-mile band, NASA estimates.
"The 2017 total solar eclipse was widely anticipated because the path of totality (locations experiencing a total eclipse) fell within 300 miles of driving distance for a third of all individuals in the U.S. An estimated 20 million people in the U.S. traveled away from home to another city to view the eclipse, resulting in substantial road traffic," the researchers wrote in the paper. "We hypothesized that the eclipse was associated with increased risks of a fatal car crash."
Road traffic fatality rates increased from an average of 7.9 per hour to 10.3 per hour on average during the three-day window surrounding the eclipse, researchers found.
"In absolute terms, this averaged to 1 extra crash-involved person every 25 minutes and 1 extra crash fatality every 95 minutes," the authors wrote.
The hours just after the totality had a 50% higher risk of fatal accidents than average on the road, the study showed.
The total increase is in line with major holidays like Thanksgiving and July 4 weekend, they said.
The study focused on fatal crashes – while it's likely that less severe accidents also increased, Redelmeier told Live Science that "we just don't have the data on that."
Just in western New York, experts are predicting an influx of up to 1 million eclipse chasers, New York State Police Public Information Officer James O'Callahan told Fox News Digital. Just over 2 million people live in the region, according to census data.
Law enforcement and municipal officials have spent the last year planning for the astronomical event, with their focus primarily on traffic safety, he said. An additional 100 to 150 state troopers will be pulled into the region, primarily for traffic control.
A large part of preparing for the event involved analyzing previous eclipse events. That included places like Oregon in August 2017, where masses of traffic took more than 20 hours to clear in some places as tourists traveled to and from their watch spots.
Impacted cellphone service, traffic jams and decreased mobility for first responders in the event of an emergency are all potential dangers. The Niagara region on the Canadian side of Niagara Falls declared a state of emergency for April 8 in light of those concerns.
Some cities, like Niagara Falls in New York, are taking steps to keep revelers in town after the event has concluded to space out departing traffic:
"We're actually advocating for people to not leave immediately once the totality has been completed, [but] to stick around, like when you tailgate at a football game. [This is to] let traffic go; sit around and enjoy the entertainment that will be there so it will be easier to get out," a mayor's office spokesperson told Fox News Digital, mentioning that area vendors, musicians and nighttime fireworks would be available.
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