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by throw0101a 1613 days ago
If the "nearest city" includes the edge of the suburbs, then perhaps. But there's a whole lot of sprawl in the US that has smeared the population across the landscape, with corresponding strip malls that have blazing lights 24/7.

There are a lot of hot spots on this map:

* https://www.lightpollutionmap.info/

For the US, one-third of the population lives in coastal counties:

* https://www.census.gov/library/stories/2019/07/millions-of-a...

Two-thirds of the US population lives within 100mi (160km) of the border:

* https://www.aclu.org/other/constitution-100-mile-border-zone

1 comments

I think the pictures that show the entire eastern seaboard as lit up may be misleading if one assumes they represent ground-level experience.

While I haven't been engaged in amateur astronomy for a long time, I vaguely remember an event/meeting years ago that was not that far out in the country, and just a few miles/minutes travel away from the "strip malls" made a huge difference. Northern lights were visible and I think the Milky Way.

I have been out west where it is really dark, so whether or not my recollection is accurate, I do know what undisputedly dark skies are like.