Did you look up early Wednesday morning? If you did, you may have caught the rare celestial event known as a “Super Blue Blood Moon.”
A blue moon, total lunar eclipse and supermoon all took place this morning. The last time this rare event happened was over 150 years ago.
“It’s a pretty special event,” Ralph Crewe, with the Carnegie Science Center in Pittsburgh, told Butler Radio.
Crewe says not only was the moon extremely full, and eclipsed in some areas, but it also turned a red color.
The best time to see the moon in our area was about 6:45 a.m. Some told us they walked outside, but couldn’t see anything.
NASA said the West Coast had the best view.