During the April solar eclipse, there may be an increase in deadly vehicle accidents, according to scientists.
After looking at data from the 2017 solar eclipse, researchers from the University of Toronto discovered that over 1,000 more people died in car accidents in the United States in the three days leading up to and following the celestial event.
While 114 people die in car accidents per day in the United States on average, at least 189 people died every day during the solar eclipse week four years ago.
Millions of people are hitting the highways as they flee their hometowns for cities in the path of totality, which is why driving is on the rise.
More than 3.7 million individuals will travel to one of fourteen states—including Maine, Kentucky, Idaho, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Texas—to witness the solar eclipse on April 8.
Due to its advantageous position to witness the eclipse, Texas is expected to receive the greatest number of travellers, ranging from 270,000 to an estimated one million, while Indiana will host 131,000 to 522,000.
There are still places to stay and cars to hire, but prices have skyrocketed. Dallas, in particular, saw a 571 percent increase in hotel reservations in the days preceding the solar eclipse, so prices really jumped.
Not only have hotel rates increased by a staggering 81% in Waco, Texas, but they have also increased by 33% in Cleveland and 34% in Austin.