It's Once in a Blue Moon All Over Again - Los Angeles Times
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It’s Once in a Blue Moon All Over Again

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Look up into the sky tonight and you will see an event that happens only--dare we say it?--once in a blue moon.

The full moon you spot will be the second full moon of the month, a phenomenon known in modern folklore as the “blue moonâ€--even though it will appear its usual white or ivory color.

“It’s a vagary of the calendar . . . a natural consequence of the moon that is traveling at its own speed and our absolutely bonkers calendar,†said Ed Krupp, director of the Griffith Observatory.

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Two full moons in one month actually occur about once every 2 1/2 years, clearly more often than the blue-moon phrase suggests. What makes tonight’s blue moon distinct is that it follows closely on the heels of January’s two full moons, making 1999 a double blue-moon year, something that happens only four to six times a century, astronomers say.

The last time there was a double blue moon year in the Pacific time zone was 1980; the next won’t happen until 2018.

Philip Hiscock, folklore archivist at the Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada, has traced the lineage of the term “blue moon†for several years.

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In his research, he discovered at least nine different uses of the term “blue moon,†including the familiar “once in a blue moon,†dating back to the 16th century.

Astronomers consider the blue moon a nonevent--just another full moon. Hiscock and others readily admit it is a cultural, rather than a scientific, phenomenon.

“Just because it’s modern and silly doesn’t mean it isn’t entertaining. This prompts people to begin thinking about the moon, the calendar, about how light is scattered,†Krupp said.

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“In my view that’s great!â€

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