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Sky-watchers see ‘blood moon’ in total lunar eclipse
Reuters
Apr. 15, 2014 9:41 am, Updated: Apr. 15, 2014 12:24 pm
Parts of the world, including Eastern Iowa, saw a rare celestial event on Tuesday when the Earth's shadow fell across the moon, turning it orange.
The lunar eclipse unfolded over three hours beginning at about 2 a.m. EDT, when the moon began moving into Earth's shadow. A little more than an hour later, the moon could be seen eclipsed and bathed in an orange, red or brown glow.
Depending on local weather conditions, the eclipse was visible across a swath of the United States.
Viewers from Florida to California and beyond went to viewing parties and social media and other websites to gawk and share photos of the so-called 'blood moon.”
A small crowd of stargazers who gathered on a roadside north of Los Angeles saw a sliver of still-illuminated moon and a reddish shadow cast across the lunar orb.
Others who were not so lucky took to Twitter to complain about cloud cover in New Jersey and Pittsburgh. An image of rain-streaked windows under impenetrable Atlanta skies could be seen. In the Pacific Northwest city of Seattle the skies were equally overcast.
The eclipse also was visible from Australia, New Zealand and all of the Americas.
Precise coloring depends primarily on the amount of volcanic ash and other aerosols floating in the atmosphere, SpaceWeather.com reports.
The celestial show was over by over by 5:30 a.m. EDT, NASA said on Twitter.
Eclipses occur two or three times per year when the sun, Earth and the full moon line up so that the moon passes through Earth's shadow.
Tuesday's eclipse will be the last full lunar eclipse visible from the United States until 2019, NASA said.
A composite of six separate photographs of Tuesday morning's lunar eclipse, merged in Photoshop. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)
The lunar eclipse is seen over Veterans Memorial Building in downtown Cedar Rapids early Tuesday morning, April 15, 2014, over Cedar Rapids. The bright blue star Spica in the constellation Virgo can be seen to the lower right of the moon. The eclipse is the first of a tetrad, or four lunar eclipses in a row, with another in October and two in 2015. (Liz Martin/The Gazette-KCRG)
The moon glows red as the lunar eclipse nears totality early Tuesday morning, April 15, 2014, over Cedar Rapids. The bright blue star Spica in the constellation Virgo can be seen to the lower right of the moon. The eclipse is the first of a tetrad, or four lunar eclipses in a row, with another in October and two in 2015. (Liz Martin/The Gazette-KCRG)
The moon glows red as the lunar eclipse nears totality early Tuesday morning, April 15, 2014, over Cedar Rapids. The bright blue star Spica in the constellation Virgo can be seen to the lower right of the moon, and Mars is at upper right. The eclipse is the first of a tetrad, or four lunar eclipses in a row, with another in October and two in 2015. (Liz Martin/The Gazette-KCRG)