Quote:
Originally Posted by cybereye
"Photographers around the world turned out to capture the spectacle, which appeared in daylight in some parts of the globe."
Daylight you say... can someone explain this to me please... would it be seen in daylight (very long daylight hours) in a northern spring?
Cheers,
Mario
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Mario, unless the observer was close to the South Pole, it is a ridiculous claim to make. The Full Moon is opposite the sun, so either one is up, or the other.
Maybe for some people in Antarctica, Southern tip of NZ, or somewhere like that
I would have to check where the Moon was during daytime for those places.
Sounds a bit odd.