We have had rather a feast of eclipses recently. And there is more to come - six lunar months later this year, on September 28, there is another total eclipse of the moon. The Easter lunar eclipse we saw on Saturday night was bright and clear and not altogether unusual. You can expect to see one at least every 18 years and 10 and days when the sun and moon are both back in the same orbital positions relative to planet Earth. This is the so-called Saros period which was known to the Babylonians as the repeat cycle for eclipses.
There is a clay tablet found in the ruins of Babylon and now lodged in the British Museum, the so-called Saros Tablet, that records the 18-year cycle of eclipses over a period of 500 years, listing the incumbent Kings of Babylon at the time of each eclipse. The list includes Nebuchadnezzar, Cyrus the Great, Darius the Great and Xerxes the Great, down to the last kings of Babylon in the 1st century BC.
Two weeks ago the Herald highlighted the extreme 14m high tides along the Normandy coast of France that submerged the causeway connecting Mont St Michel to the mainland. This is not the result of climate change and rising sea levels but is part of the same 18-year Saros cycle known to the Babylonians.
The previous day, March 20, there was a total eclipse of the sun and it was this alignment of sun and moon that led to the exceptionally high tides which will repeat in 18 years when they are again in the same location relative to Earth. Interestingly, because of that extra one third of a day noted above in the exact Saros period, the next solar eclipse in the cycle will not be seen in the same location but roughly one third of the way further around the globe. It will take three Saros periods, 54 years and 31 days, before the sun is eclipsed again at more or less the same location on Earth. This cycle was also known to the ancients and is referred to as an Exeligmos period - when sun, moon and Earth are all again in the same position. These are the "fixed laws of the heavens" referred to in several books of the Bible.