Community Corner

Blood Moon Centerpiece of Coming Lunar Eclipse: The View from Peters

The Oct. 8, 2014, eclipse, the second in the lunar tetrad, is also called a hunter's moon.

The second of the year’s four total lunar eclipses – creating what is often called a “blood moon” – will occur just before sunrise Wednesday, Oct. 8.

The eclipse is the Northern Hemisphere’s hunter’s moon – the name for the full moon after the harvest moon, says EarthSky.org, and the show is often phenomenal.

During the sky-watching buzz leading up to the total lunar eclipse in April 2014, the term lunar tetrad was coined to name the four eclipses in a row, the organization says. Each eclipse is separated from the other by six lunar months (six full moons).

Find out what's happening in Petersfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

When to Watch

Early risers can catch the lunar eclipse as it begins around 5:18 a.m. in Western PA; the maximum eclipse should take place at 6:55 a.m. ET.

Find out what's happening in Petersfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Local Forecast

Pittsburgh area viewers could easily catch the eclipse. Early forecasts from the National Weather Service show mostly clear skies Tuesday overnight into Wednesday morning.

Why the Eerie Name?

According to EarthSky, a full moon almost always takes on a copper hue during a total lunar eclipse, caused by light dispersion from the Earth’s sunrises and sunsets.

“Thus the term blood moon can be and probably is applied to any and all total lunar eclipses,” EarthSky reports.

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