The United States and much of the world saw skies graced by a bright, big moon that was encapsulated in a total lunar eclipse late Sunday evening into early Monday. The supermoon, which comes around once every year, will appear 14 percent larger and 30 percent brighter in the sky before it was engulfed by an eclipse for more than an hour. As if that wasn’t already a spectacular sight, this eclipse is the fourth and final in the so called “blood moons,” a phrase that has become popular to describe the four lunar eclipses we have seen in 2014 and 2015. Another supermoon eclipse will not occur again until 2033.

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