Early risers got an eyeful of moon this morning, as a Super-Blue-Blood Moon glowed in the western sky. The lunar eclipse began at 4:50 a.m., with totality at 6:50 a.m.
It's not just any lunar eclipse, it's being called a Super Blue Blood Moon. That's the combination of a couple of things: A blue moon is when there are two full moons a month; a super moon is when the moon makes is closest approach to the earth; and a blood moon is the red tint the earth's shadow gives the moon during a lunar eclipse.