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Total Eclipse

Astrology Topocentric systemTransformed

Total Eclipse. See "Umbral Eclipse."
Transitor. A transiting planet or other transiting body.

 


Total Eclipse When the whole of the eclipsed body (either Sun or Moon) is blocked out and darkened.

In the eighteenth century, however, it suffered a total eclipse and did not undergo a revival until around the turn of the century.

The total Eclipse of July 4, 336 B.C. at 6.3° Cancer; the total Eclipse of April 2, 303 B.C. at 7.5° Aries; the annular Eclipse of January 5, 29 B.C. at 12.6° Capricorn; and the annular Eclipse of October 4, 590 A.D. at 13.

Eclipses occur in different degrees of exaction - a total eclipse will make the Moon virtually disappear, while a partial eclipse can take a shadowy bite out of it or make Moon turn red.

The third phase occurs in September (15th) 2009, but a total eclipse of the Sun in August (22nd) conjunct Saturn will instigate the events of that phase of the cycle.

The New Moon is so closely aligned with the Sun on the Moon's Nodes that it is causing this total eclipse. A Total Solar Eclipse on the Summer Solstice is rare enough, but we also have a a "galactic eclipse" alignment.

If the Moon is completely immersed in the Earth's shadow a total eclipse results; otherwise, a partial eclipse.

Thursday, May 15, 2003 (in Europe, the early morning hours of Friday, May 16, 2003) saw the first Lunar eclipse of 2003. This total eclipse was visible from ...

the millions, dates protracted backward toward a mythical creation era that happened 3 millennia before they were written down, and when our studies uncover Mayan predictions of the first pre-dawn appearance of the planet Venus or a total eclipse, ...

See also: Eclipse, Solar, Astrology, Sun, Planet

Astrology Topocentric systemTransformed

 
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