A copper-tinged moon will be visible early tomorrow morning as New Zealand gets the box seat for a rare lunar eclipse.
The hour-long total blocking of the view of the moon will begin around 3am and will be seen from all of New Zealand if the skies are clear.
Stardome Observatory educator David Britten said the moon was likely to take on a copper hue in the early hours of tomorrow morning.
"This is caused by a scattering of sunlight as it passes through the thin ring of the Earth's atmosphere, removing the blue light and passing mainly the red, some of which weakly illuminates the moon."
In a lunar eclipse, the moon is obscured as it passes through the Earth's shadow. Two shadows will cross the moon during the event - the large penumbra (or "almost-shadow"), which dims the moon, and the umbra, a smaller opaque shadow caused by the Earth blocking out the light from the sun to the moon.