Reserve your place now to watch the Perseid Meteor Shower on August 13, 2010 at the Integratron in Landers, CA! This event is a benefit for the Mojave Desert Land Trust.
Event Information

Bring your folding chair or picnic blanket and watch the annual Perseid meteor shower on the grounds of the mysterious Integratron. Enjoy star and meteor gazing with friends while helping the Land Trust preserve our beautiful desert night skies. You will also experience dramatic projections of telescopic deep space images onto the Integratron Dome, by the Southern California Desert Video Astronomers. Joshua Tree National Park interpretive rangers will provide information on our night skies, the threats they face, and how your contributions help save them. This popular event has sold out for the last two years running, so order tickets today!

When:
August 13, 8:00pm-12:00am (or stay overnight)

Where:
The Integratron in Landers, CA (for directions: www.integratron.com)

The Perseids are considered by many to be the best meteor shower of the year, sometimes peaking at 50 per hour. This year's show should be a great one, since the moon will be a thin crescent. Meteor-watching does not get any better than in the Mojave Desert, one of the last places in the country where you can still see the Milky Way with the naked eye. By saving land from development, the Mojave Desert Land Trust helps keep our night skies dark, and our stars and meteors bright. Be a part of that effort, and enjoy the Perseid show!

Pre-Registration is required! For more info call 760-366-5440.

Reserve your tickets here:
In order to receive MDLT discounted member pricing, your membership must be current. Ticket price of $50 includes one MDLT membership.


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Included in the ticket price of $45/person
($50 for non-members):
*Overnight camping is available for an additional $30 per person. Enjoy the full Integratron experience! Continental breakfast included. (Kids 12 & under FREE)

To view a Perseid local news video, click here (then click on the Integratron picture).

For more info about the Perseid meteor shower, read on...

About the Perseid meteor shower:
The Perseid is the most famous of all meteor showers. It never fails to provide an impressive display and, due to its summertime appearance, it tends to provide the majority of meteors seen by non-astronomy enthusiasts.

There are other, weaker meteor showers going on around the same time as the Perseids, but the Perseids will generally appear to move much faster across the sky than meteors from the other showers. In fact, the Perseids are among the fastest moving meteors we see every year. Another way to know if the meteor you saw was a Perseid is to mentally trace the meteor backwards. If you end up at Perseus then you have probably seen a Perseid meteor!

What is a meteor shower?
An increase in the number of meteors at a particular time of year is called a meteor shower. Comets shed the debris that becomes most meteor showers. As comets orbit the Sun, they shed an icy, dusty debris stream along the comet's orbit. If Earth travels through this stream, we will see a meteor shower. Depending on where Earth and the stream meet, meteors appear to fall from a particular place in the sky, maybe within the neighborhood of a constellation.

How did “Perseid” get its name?
Meteor showers are named by the constellation from which meteors appear to fall, a spot in the sky astronomers call the radiant. For instance, the radiant for the Leonid meteor shower is located in the constellation Leo. The Perseid meteor shower is so named because meteors appear to fall from a point in the constellation Perseus.

© 2010 Mojave Desert Land Trust. 6393 Sunset Road, Joshua Tree, CA 92252 • 760.366-5440 • Fax 760.366.9103 • info@mojavedesertlandtrust.org

Photo donated by Wally Patcholka