Community Corner
Another Supermoon to Rise Monday Over Cedar Falls
Look to the night sky Monday, July 22, 2013, to catch a glimpse of a "giant" moon as its fullest and closest point.

Written by Emily Henry
A slightly less "super" but no less spectacularΒ supermoonΒ will brighten the skies above West Des MoinesΒ Monday night, just a month after the last supermoon.
It might be hard to catch this one though.Β The Cedar Falls AccuWeather.com stargazing forecast is poor, with skies expected to beΒ mostly cloudy Monday evening,Β possibly obscuring theΒ viewing of a large, brightΒ moon.
A "supermoon" is defined as beingΒ a new or full moon that occurring at or nearΒ its closest approach to Earth in a given orbit,Β according toΒ EarthSky.com. July's occurrence will actually be the third "supermoon" of the year. Although technically this month's displayΒ is a "perigee full moon,"Β everyone other than pedanticΒ astrologers will be callingΒ a "supermoon," thanks toΒ to a generousΒ definitionΒ coined in recent decades by an astrologer.
There are between four and sixΒ supermoons a year on average,Β according toΒ EarthSky.com.
Where is the best place in Cedar FallsΒ to watch these types of astrological events? Tell us in the comments
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