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June 26, 2029 — Total Lunar Eclipse — South Pole, Antarctica (Amundsen-Scott station)

Jun 26, 2029 at 3:22 pm
Max View in South Pole
Global Event: Total Lunar Eclipse
Local Type: Total Lunar Eclipse, in South Pole
Begins: Tue, Jun 26, 2029 at 12:34 pm
Maximum: Tue, Jun 26, 2029 at 3:22 pm 1.843 Magnitude
Ends: Tue, Jun 26, 2029 at 6:09 pm
Duration: 5 hours, 35 minutes

All times shown on this page are local time.

Location

June 26, 2029 — Total Lunar Eclipse — South Pole

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The animation shows what the eclipse approximately looks like in South Pole. Stages and times of the eclipse are outlined below. All times are local time (NZST) for South Pole.

TimePhaseEventDirectionAltitude
12:34 pm Tue, Jun 26
Penumbral Eclipse begins The Earth's penumbra start touching the Moon's face.Map direction North 350°
22.7°
1:32 pm Tue, Jun 26
Partial Eclipse begins Partial moon eclipse starts - moon is getting red.Map direction North-northwest 336°
22.6°
2:31 pm Tue, Jun 26
Total Eclipse begins Total moon eclipse starts - completely red moon.Map direction Northwest 322°
22.5°
3:22 pm Tue, Jun 26
Maximum Eclipse Moon is closest to the center of the shadow.Map direction Northwest 310°
22.5°
4:13 pm Tue, Jun 26
Total Eclipse ends Total moon eclipse ends.Map direction West-northwest 297°
22.4°
5:11 pm Tue, Jun 26
Partial Eclipse ends Partial moon eclipse ends.Map direction West-northwest 283°
22.3°
6:09 pm Tue, Jun 26
Penumbral Eclipse ends The Earth's penumbra ends.Map direction West 269°
22.3°

The curvature of the shadow's path and the apparent rotation of the Moon's disk is due to the Earth's rotation.

This total lunar eclipse is fully visible in South Pole. The total lunar eclipse is sometimes called a blood moon, as the Moon turns red.


Eclipses and Transits Visible in South Pole

Eclipse Visibility From South PoleVisibility Worldwide
Sep 18, 2024 Partial Lunar EclipsePartial Lunar Eclipse
Oct 3, 2024 Partial Solar EclipseAnnular Solar Eclipse
Sep 8, 2025 Total Lunar EclipseTotal Lunar Eclipse
Sep 22, 2025 Partial Solar EclipsePartial Solar Eclipse
Feb 17–18, 2026 Partial Solar EclipseAnnular Solar Eclipse

Note: Click on the date link for details in South Pole, or the path map image for global details.

Next total solar eclipse visible in South Pole

Next annular eclipse visible in South Pole

Other eclipses visible in South Pole

Other eclipses worldwide