The total lunar eclipse on March 3 will be the last until New Year’s Eve 2028


Enjoy total lunar eclipse on March 3 because it will be the last one for a long time.

Observers across eastern Asia, Australia, the Pacific and western North America will see the Martian full moon – known as the “worm moon” – pass through Earth’s shadow, turning a reddish copper color for 58 mesmerizing minutes. But when the moon emerges from Earth’s umbra — the deepest part of Earth’s shadow — there won’t be another total lunar eclipse for nearly three years. A lunar break will begin and will not end until an orderly timed total lunar eclipse on New Year’s Eve 2028-2029. Here’s why – and why 2029 will be a year that marks the end of not just one drought, but three spectacular ones”blood moon“Total Lunar Eclipses.

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