Kiwis last night witnessed the longest partial lunar eclipse fully visible from Aotearoa in more than 800 years.
The moon's face was 97 per cent covered by the deepest part of the Earth's shadow, turning the lunar surface briefly red.
Josh Kirkley, an astronomy educator at the Stardome Observatory and Planetarium, says the reason this particular eclipse - dubbed a blood micro moon - is special is because of the long time it was on display.