Unix Timestamp -77310000

    seconds · 58 years ago

    ⚡ Quick Answer

    -77310000 = Jul 21, 1967, 05:00:00 AM UTC

    ISO 8601: 1967-07-21T05:00:00.000Z

    Negative timestamp — represents a date before January 1, 1970 UTC.

    Output Formats

    ISO 8601

    1967-07-21T05:00:00.000Z

    RFC 2822

    Fri, 21 Jul 1967 05:00:00 GMT

    Human Readable

    Friday, July 21, 1967 at 05:00:00 AM UTC

    Unix Seconds

    -77310000

    Unix Milliseconds

    -77310000000

    Day of Week

    Friday

    Advertisement

    Timezone Breakdown

    UTC

    Jul 21, 1967, 05:00:00 AM UTC

    US Eastern

    Jul 21, 1967, 01:00:00 AM GMT-4

    US Pacific

    Jul 20, 1967, 10:00:00 PM GMT-7

    UK London

    Jul 21, 1967, 06:00:00 AM GMT+1

    Japan Tokyo

    Jul 21, 1967, 02:00:00 PM GMT+9

    Australia Sydney

    Jul 21, 1967, 03:00:00 PM GMT+10

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What date is Unix timestamp -77310000?

    Unix timestamp -77310000 represents Friday, July 21, 1967 at 05:00:00 AM UTC. This is 58 years ago from the current time.

    Is -77310000 in seconds or milliseconds?

    -77310000 has 8 digits, which means it is in seconds. Multiply by 1,000 to get milliseconds: -77310000000.

    How do I convert -77310000 in JavaScript?

    // Normalized to Unix seconds: -77310000
    const tsSec = -77310000;
    new Date(tsSec * 1000).toISOString();
    // "1967-07-21T05:00:00.000Z"

    How do I convert -77310000 in Python?

    import datetime
    ts = -77310000
    dt = datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(
        ts, tz=datetime.timezone.utc)
    print(dt.isoformat())
    # "1967-07-21T05:00:00.000Z"

    What is the Unix timestamp for right now?

    Use our live timestamp converter to get the current Unix timestamp. In JavaScript: Math.floor(Date.now() / 1000). In Python: int(time.time()). In bash: date +%s.

    Need to convert a different timestamp?

    Our full converter supports seconds, milliseconds, microseconds, 25+ timezones, and auto-detection.

    Open Full Converter →
    Advertisement

    Related Guides & Tutorials

    // developers also read