December 12, 2025

FacebookTwitterInstagramYouTube
  • Home
  • Events
  • NEWS
    • Top Stories
    • National News
    • National Sports
  • Contests
  • Media
    • Photos
    • Videos
  • On-Air
    • Kat & Ku`ehu
    • G. Cruz
    • Kaohu James
  • Podcasts
    • KWXX Mauna Loa Eruption Updates
    • Island Conversations
    • COVID-19 Interview
  • Contact
  • Info
  • FCC Applications
  • Advertise
  • Search
MENU
  • Home
  • Events
  • NEWS
    • Top Stories
    • National News
    • National Sports
  • Contests
  • Media
    • Photos
    • Videos
  • On-Air
    • Kat & Ku`ehu
    • G. Cruz
    • Kaohu James
  • Podcasts
    • KWXX Mauna Loa Eruption Updates
    • Island Conversations
    • COVID-19 Interview
  • Contact
  • Info
  • FCC Applications
  • Advertise
  • Search

Moon to Turn Red During Total Lunar Eclipse

March 10, 2025 at 5:20 am tdemartini
  • Blogs
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Reddit
  • +1
  • Pocket
  • LinkedIn
total-lunar-eclipse

(AP) — A total lunar eclipse will flush the moon red Thursday night into Friday morning across the Western Hemisphere.

The best views will be from North America and South America. Parts of Africa and Europe may catch a glimpse.

Lunar eclipses happen when the moon, Earth and sun align just so. The Earth casts a shadow that can partially or totally blot out the moon.

During a partial lunar eclipse, Earth’s shadow appears to take a bite of the moon. The full moon is covered during a total eclipse and blushes coppery red because of stray bits of sunlight filtering through Earth’s atmosphere.

Lunar and solar eclipses happen anywhere from four to seven times a year, according to NASA. A partial lunar eclipse graced skies in the Americas, Africa and Europe last September and the last total lunar eclipse was in 2022.

The so-called blood moon will be visible for about an hour starting at 2:26 a.m. Eastern on Friday morning. Peak viewing will be close to 3 a.m. Eastern.

To see it, venture outside and look up — no need for eclipse glasses or any special equipment.

“As long as the sky is clear, you should be able to see it,” said Shannon Schmoll, director of Abrams Planetarium at Michigan State University.

The setting of the moon may make it harder to see the eclipse in Europe and Africa.

“This is really an eclipse for North and South America,” said astronomy expert Michael Faison from Yale University.

If you miss out, mark your calendar for Sept. 7. Another total lunar eclipse will sweep across parts of Asia, Africa, Australia and Europe. Parts of the Americas will get their next taste in March 2026.

Civilizations have viewed and interpreted lunar eclipses for thousands of years. Ancient people knew more about the celestial bodies than we give them credit for, said historian Zoe Ortiz.

“They were looking at the night sky and they had a much brighter vision than we do today,” said Ortiz with the University of North Texas.

Aristotle noticed that the shadow the Earth cast on the moon during a lunar eclipse was always curved, observations proving that the Earth is round.

And a civilization in ancient Mesopotamia saw the blood red moon as a bad omen for the king. The people installed a substitute king on the throne around the time of the eclipse to protect their ruler from any bad will.

“If there’s ever a movie plot,” said Ortiz, “that’s the one.”

 

© copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved

AP Photo

Previous Story
Mountain View Woman Charged With Isaiah Fourshey Prosecution Released
Next Story
Carolina Panthers CB Jaycee Horn makes history with record-breaking $100M contract extension

Facebook

KWXX FM

Twitter

Tweets by KWXX

"Hawaii's Feel Good Island Music Radio Station"

Info

  • Home
  • Contests
  • Socialize
  • Contact Us
  • Station Info
  • EEO
  • FCC Public File (KWXX)
  • FCC Public File (KAOY)

National News

Colorful close-up of overlapping TIME Magazine covers^ highlighting diverse headlines on world leaders^ politics^ business^ and social issues. Calgary^ Alberta^ Canada. Dec 1^ 2025

TIME magazine names the “Architects of AI” as their 2025 Person of the Year

protest sign reading: "Free Abrego Garcia Now" Return Him To his family! Bring back all of the illegally disappeared! NEW YORK^ NEW YORK USA - May 1^ 2025 on International Workers' Day in Lower Manhattan.

Federal Judge orders ‘immediate’ release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia from ICE cu...

Social

Facebook Facebook Twitter Twitter Instagram Instagram YouTube YouTube
KWXX – Hilo, HI © 2025 Powered by OneCMS™ | Served by InterTech Media LLC
Are you still listening?
3628718300
Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
d7c7998905897838c71e71d412109044d8a79278
1
Loading...