Beaver Blood Moon: 2022’s last lunar eclipse to take place on Nov. 8

Beaver Blood Moon: 2022’s last lunar eclipse to take place on Nov. 8

Next week will see the final lunar eclipse of the year.
It will also be the final one for a while, said one astronomy teacher who lives nearby Ottawa.
Gary Boyle says the eclipse — with the moon passing through Earth’s shadow — will take place during the predawn hours of Tuesday, Nov. 8, with Eastern, Atlantic and Newfoundland time zones seeing most of the event until moonset.

The celestial display will also be visible in the rest of Canada, albeit at earlier hours. Maximum duration of the eclipse is three hours and forty minutes.
On October 28, 2023, a partial lunar eclipse will take place that will be visible from eastern North America, according to Boyle.
On March 14, 2025, the entire continent of North America will witness the next total eclipse.
Next week’s full moon is also called a Beaver Moon.
the website Almanac claims.

Because it occurs in the month when beavers start building their lodges, it is known as a Beaver Moon.
According to the website, other titles for the full moon include Digging, Deer Rutting, Whitefish, Frost, and Freezing.
The Beaver Blood Moon is the name given to lunar eclipses, which are sometimes referred to as Blood Moons.
The eclipse times for Canada are listed below:
5:39 a.m.: The partial umbral eclipse starts. Moon enters the shadow of the earth.
6:46 a.m.: Total lunar eclipse starts.

Moon changes to a deep orange or crimson.
Optimum eclipse time: 6:51 a.m. Beginning to set in the west is the eclipse moon.
The whole lunar eclipse concludes when the moon sets.
An umbral partial eclipse ends when the moon sets.
5:09 a.m.: The partial umbral eclipse starts. Moon enters the shadow of Earth.
6:16 a.m.: Total lunar eclipse starts. Moon changes to a deep orange or crimson.
Maximum eclipse: at 6:59 a.m. Beginning to set in the west is the eclipse moon.
Partial umbral eclipse begins: 4:09 a. m. Moon enters the shadow of Earth.

5:16 a.m.: Total lunar eclipse starts. Moon changes to a deep orange or crimson.
Maximum eclipse: at 5:59 a.m. midway during the eclipse.
6:41 a.m.: The total moon eclipse ends. As the moon sets in the west, it starts to emerge from the shadow.
3:09 a.m.: The partial umbral eclipse starts. Moon enters the shadow of Earth.
4:16 a.m.: Total lunar eclipse starts. Moon changes to a deep orange or crimson.
Maximum eclipse: at 4:59 a.m. midway during the eclipse.
5:41 a.m.: The total moon eclipse ends. Moon begins to leave the shadow.

End of the partial umbral eclipse: 6:49 a.m. Moon emerges from earth’s shadow.
2:09 a.m.: The partial umbral eclipse starts. Moon enters the shadow of Earth.
3:16 a.m.: Total lunar eclipse starts. Moon changes to a deep orange or crimson.
Optimum eclipse time: 3:59 a.m. midway during the eclipse.
4:41 a.m.: The total moon eclipse ends. Moon starts to emerge from the gloom.
End of the partial umbral eclipse: 5:49 a.m. Moon emerges from Earth’s shadow.
1:09 a.m.: The partial umbral eclipse starts. Moon will rise as the eclipse begins.

2:16 a.m.: Total lunar eclipse starts. Moon changes to a deep orange or crimson.
Maximum eclipse: at 2:59 a.m. midway during the eclipse.
3:41 a.m.: The total moon eclipse ends. Moon starts to emerge from the gloom.
End of the partial umbral eclipse: 4:49 a.m. Moon exits Earth’s shadow..

The Beaver Blood Moon, the final lunar eclipse of 2022, will occur on November 8

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