this post was submitted on 20 Jan 2024
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Screaming, flying cicadas will soon make a reappearance – but it's not going to be your average spring emergence. For the first time since the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, two broods of cicadas – XIX and XIII – will come out of the ground simultaneously after more than a decade of eating to transform into adults.

There are seven species of periodical cicadas – three that appear every 17 years and four that appear every 13. Smaller groups of those species, called broods, will spend those durations underground, where they will spend time eating and growing before they come out of the ground to become adults.

While it's not uncommon for people to come across the insects every spring, what makes this year different is the fact that two broods, one with a 17-year-span and one with a 13-year-span, will appear at the same time, cicada tracking site Cicada Safari says. It will be the first time since 1803 – when Thomas Jefferson was president of the U.S. and the Louisiana Purchase was made – that Broods XIII and XIX will be seen at the same time.

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[–] norbert@kbin.social 34 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I remember the last time a couple broods lined up and cicadas were everywhere. It was sometime in the 90s, maybe 95 or 96; my brother and I took some acid and went down into this national forest. I remember standing around talking and turning the headlights on for some reason and several cicadas were all over both of us. We played it off like it wasn't freaky as hell but I still remember it 20+ years later.

edit: it was 1998, Brood IV and XIX