THE Harvest supermoon rising over the mobile telephone transmitter on George Hill in Crediton, was captured on camera by Crediton photographer Paul McLoughlin on Wednesday, September 18.
The Harvest Moon Supermoon lunar eclipse put on a spectacular show for people worldwide with some of the lunar eclipse visible to 50 per cent of the world's population.
The partial lunar eclipse reached its darkest phase, when the moon is most obscured by the Earth's darkest shadow - the umbra - at approximately 2.44am on September 18.
We'll have to wait until March 13 and 14, 2025 for the next lunar eclipse which will be a dramatic total lunar eclipse. During a total lunar eclipse, the entire lunar disk will turn hazy red as it plunges into Earth's shadow.
This eerie color change is why a total lunar eclipse is also known as a Blood Moon.
The full phase of the lunar eclipse will be visible across the US, with some portion of the eclipse visible across Europe.