Longest partial lunar eclipse in nearly 600 years set for tonight
A once-in-half-a-millennia near-total lunar eclipse event will be visible over the Okanagan tonight, Nov. 18, if the weather cooperates.
The partial eclipse will take 3 hours, 28 minutes and 23 seconds to run its course, according to NASA, which is the longest partial eclipse in 581 years.
“There hasn’t been a longer partial lunar eclipse since Feb. 18, 1440 (3 hours, 28 minutes and 46 seconds) and it will remain the longest partial lunar eclipse for 648 years until Feb. 8, 2669 (3 hours, 30 minutes and 2 seconds),” said a NASA blog post.
Speaking with Vernon Matters, Okanagan Science Centre programmer Kevin Aschenmeier said locally, the eclipse will begin at around 10 p.m.











