Total solar eclipse on 8 April will be first to touch province since 1979, and Niagara Falls is declared one of the best places to view

Tourists on the American side of Niagara Falls on 29 March. Photograph: Canadian Press/Rex/Shutterstock

The region of Canada surrounding the city that contains a side of – and shares a name with – Niagara Falls has declared a state of emergency as it prepares to welcome up to a million visitors for the solar eclipse in early April.

The total solar eclipse on 8 April will be the first to touch the province since 1979, and Niagara Falls was declared by National Geographic to be one of the best places to see it.

The Ontario city – which also shares a name with an upstate New York municipality on the other side of Canada’s border with the US – is in the path of totality, where the moon will entirely block the sun’s rays for a few minutes.

Niagara Falls mayor Jim Diodati said earlier in March that he expects the most visitors his city has ever seen in a single day.

The regional municipality of Niagara is proactively invoking a state of emergency to prepare for the event. The declaration announced Thursday sets in motion some additional planning tools to prepare for the day, which could involve major traffic jams, heavier demands on emergency services and cellphone network overloads.

The eclipse will reach Mexico’s Pacific coast in the morning, cut diagonally across the US from Texas to Maine, and exit in eastern Canada by late afternoon. Most of the rest of the continent will see a partial eclipse.

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