Others wore special suits to watch the eclipse.
Looking directly at the sun can permanently damage retina tissue, so people observing solar eclipses have to protect their eyes. During totality, when the moon completely blocks the sun, it's safe to look with the naked eye.
Some viewers made DIY eclipse-viewing tools using cardboard boxes. These boxes function somewhat like a pinhole camera, allowing a viewer to see a projection of the eclipse.
But NASA recommends watching this type of phenomenon using a solar filter like the ones in special eclipse glasses.
At 4:38 p.m. ET, the solar eclipse became visible from land.
La Serena, Chile was the first city along the path of totality.
People camped out with blankets and telescopes in the riverside town of Bella Vista in Argentina.
The ring of light visible surrounding the moon during an eclipse is the solar corona, the hot, gaseous layer of the sun's atmosphere that's normally invisible and difficult to study.
When the moon was fully covering the sun, the skies darkened, making the afternoon briefly look like twilight. The solar corona kept some light in the sky, though.
Studying the corona can help scientists learn more about how the sun's atmosphere affects our power grids, telecommunications infrastructure, and satellites.
Because the eclipse occurred late in the afternoon, the coming sunset made for a colorful finale to the only total solar eclipse of the year.
The solar eclipse ended at 4:44 p.m. local time near Buenos Aires, Argentina. For its next total solar eclipse, South America will have to wait until December 14, 2020.