#NPRNightSky: Send Us Your Pix Of The World's Least Light-Polluted Skies

In Namibia, a clear view of the Milky Way is a nightly norm. Arctic-Images/Getty Images hide caption
In Namibia, a clear view of the Milky Way is a nightly norm.
Arctic-Images/Getty ImagesWhen you look out your window at night, can you see the stars? Or are the heavens just a murky haze?
If you're not seeing stars, you're not alone. A new report says that 80 percent of the world lives under light-polluted skies — and the Milky Way is hidden from more than a third of humanity. Blame it on the artificial lights that shine at night.
Click here to subscribe to our weekly global health and development email. NPR hide caption
So who gets those pristine, ink-black sky conditions? You can, of course, find a great night sky in any country — as long as you're far from city lights. But according to the study, the 20 countries with the least light pollution are in Africa and Oceania.
Here's the list: Chad, Central African Republic, Madagascar, Guinea, Somalia, Ethiopia, Liberia, Niger, Sierra Leone, Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi, Guinea-Bissau, Papua New Guinea, Eritrea, Mali, Tanzania, Solomon Islands, Mauritania, Uganda and Sudan.
Here at Goats and Soda, we'd love to see photos of the starry night skies if you live — or have spent time — in one of these countries. (Or even if you don't live there and have a great night sky photo, send it along.)
Tweet your photos to @NPRGoatsandSoda with the hashtag #NPRNightSky from now until Wednesday, June 22, and we'll feature some of them on our blog.
Need inspiration? Here are some photos we found on Twitter:
That Home#Ethiopia - The #beautiful night sky in the Simien #Mountains National Park.#photo Credit:Joshua P Shefman pic.twitter.com/ausG8EdVot
— Pezzani (@RetweetEthiopia) February 14, 2015
The night sky is pretty special out here in Northern Tanzania! pic.twitter.com/tN40gHwp7v
— Sam Stewart (@SamStewartPhoto) September 15, 2015
Shot of the beautiful night sky from the @VolunteerUganda lodge. The lack of light pollution was incredible. #uganda pic.twitter.com/FLz9uT18Sc
— Chapperz ⎊ (@ChapperzTV) January 19, 2015