That can only mean one thing: daylight saving time is coming to an end. The U.S. has been changing the clocks twice a year since the 1970s after multiple failed attempts at observing daylight ...
The official time change will take place promptly at 2:00 a.m. on Sunday, 3 November. That will be when Americans will have to turn their clocks back one hour. It is worth mentioning that not all ...
It is officially spooky season since the clocks have turned back by an hour, marking the end of British Summer Time (BST). Each year the clocks change twice, once in spring and once in autumn ...
The tradition began after intervention by railway officials at Edinburgh Waverley Station. The station, which is one of the busiest in Scotland, is located just below the clock tower. In the era ...
Clocks in multiple countries in Europe will move back one hour early on Sunday, marking the end of daylight saving time. This seasonal time shift happens twice a year, switching to daylight saving ...
Then comes an asteroid (or maybe it’s a volcanic eruption), followed by a time-lapse Ice Age that swells and thaws in a matter of seconds. It’s hard not to be reminded of “The Tree of Life ...
The clocks will go back by one hour at 2am on Sunday, October 27. Tomorrow's switch will see the UK jump from British Summer Time, also known as Daylight Saving Time, to Greenwich Mean Time.
With the clocks going back by one hour this weekend, it can be a welcome chance to spend a bit more time in bed – even if the darker evenings make it feel like winter is really on its way.