http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/article2621821.ece

The sky at night: 50 things you never knew about the full moon 
So it's not just a matter of superstition. According to a police study, the 
lunar event coincides with an increase in hooliganism. Jonathan Brown and 
Rebecca Bowle shed some light on the celestial phenomenon 

Published: 07 June 2007 
1 The full moon is a lunar phase occurring when the moon is on the opposite 
side of the earth from the sun and all three bodies are aligned in a straight 
line. Viewed from earth, the near side of the moon is fully illuminated by the 
sun giving it the familiar circular appearance. 

2 It is only during a full moon that the dark side of the moon - the hemisphere 
on the opposite side to the sun - is completely dark.

3 Lunar eclipses - caused by the passage of the earth's shadow across the 
illuminated hemisphere - only occur during a full moon. However, because of the 
angle of tilt of both bodies the moon normally passes either north or south of 
the earth's shadow.

4 The chances of being bitten by a dog are twice as high during a full moon, 
according to a study at Bradford Royal Infirmary, which reviewed 1,621 cases of 
dog bite between 1997 and 1999. However, a study at the University of Sydney in 
Australia concluded there was no identifiable relationship between the state of 
the moon and dog bites.

5 Gervaise of Tilbury, a 13th-century canon lawyer, was the first to link the 
full moon with the transformation into a werewolf. Writing in his Otia 
Imperialia he reports cases in the Auvergne, below. The philosopher Gottfried 
Leibniz described the popular work as a "bagful of foolish old woman's tales".

6 The full moon occurs every 29.5 days - the duration of one complete lunar 
cycle.

7 The female menstrual cycle has long been linked to the full phase of the 
moon. One theory is that prehistoric men were more likely to go hunting during 
their womenfolk's period because of taboos associated with blood. The most 
profitable time to hunt was during the full moon and the best way to convince 
the men to return with food was with the prospect of sex.

8 Neo-pagans, including followers of Wicca, hold a monthly ritual based around 
the full moon called an Esbat. The term has been linked to the writings of the 
controversial anthropologist Margaret Murray.

9 The second full moon occurring within a calendar month is called a Blue Moon. 
The latest was seen on 31st May 2007. Far from being a rare event this 
phenomenon occurs once every three years on average.

10 "Blue Moon", which was written by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart in 1934, 
became a standard ballad and was recorded by singers such as Frank Sinatra and 
Bob Dylan. The most famous version was recorded by the doo-wapp band the 
Marcels, above, in 1961, selling more than one million copies.

11 The world's tidal ranges are at their maximum during the full moon when the 
sun, earth and moon are in line. Sailors know the effect as the spring tide - a 
reference to the leap in the water level rather than the season of the year.

12 The only month that can occur without a full moon is February.

13 Farmers refer to the harvest moon, the full moon closest to the autumnal 
equinox, which normally occurs in September. It is also called the elk calling 
moon or the wine moon.

14 A full Moon is considered unlucky if it occurs on a Sunday but lucky on 
Monday or moon day

15 According to superstition a male child is more likely to be conceived at 
full moon.

16 In October 1939 in Springfield, Missouri, the full moon appeared to fall 
from the sky. The event was reported in the local newspaper but was later 
revealed to be a plunging weather balloon.

17 The Gregorian calendar dates Easter as the first Sunday after the 
ecclesiastical full moon - the first to occur after the vernal equinox. It is 
also known as the egg moon.

18 The Chinese Lantern Festival, dating back to the Han dynasty, is staged on 
the 15th day of the 1st lunar month after the new year. Chinese communities 
celebrate across the world by lighting lanterns and feasting on glutinous rice.

19 The Lunar Society, which included Erasmus Darwin, James Watt and Josiah 
Wedgewood, took its name from the practice of holding monthly meetings on the 
Monday nearest to the full moon. Members referred to themselves as the Lunatics.

20 A three-month psychological study of 1,200 inmates at Armley jail in Leeds 
in 1998 showed a rise in violent incidents in the days either side of a full 
moon.

21 Scientists have long battled to explain the "moon illusion" - whereby the 
full moon appears to be larger the closer it is to the horizon. The phenomenon 
is understood to be caused by human perception rather than the magnifying 
effect of the earth's atmosphere.

22 Timber harvests in South America and South-east Asia are avoided during the 
full moon because it causes the sap to rise in trees, which in turn attracts 
deathwatch beetles which can devastate crops.

23 Thousands of revellers gather each month on the beach at Koh Phangan in 
Thailand, below, to celebrate the full moon and dance the night away.

24 The native American Algonquin tribes in New England give each full moon of 
the year a name such as the beaver moon, the sturgeon moon and the strawberry 
moon.

25 The next full moon will occur on 30 June 2007.

26 The full moon may appear round, but is actually shaped like an egg with the 
pointed end facing earth.

27 The dark spots on the full moon that create the nursery-rhyme man in the 
moon image are actually basins filled up to five miles deep with basalt, a 
dense mineral. Other facial features are actually "seas" of frozen lava and 
sharp, rugged mountains.

28 In China, the dark shadows forming the man in the full moon are seen as a 
toad. The toad is considered one of the five poisons of yin. It is believed 
that eclipses occur when the toad in the full moon tries to swallow the moon 
itself.

29 The Moonlight Sonata, by Ludwig von Beethoven, left, is probably the most 
widely recognised classical work associated with the full moon. The name comes 
not from the composer but from a critic who compared the piece to the effect of 
moonlight on Lake Lucerne.

30 The innuit of Greenland believe the full moon is a hungry god, Anningan, who 
is intent on eating his sister, the sun goddess, Malina. Their cat-and-mouse 
sibling chase follows the cycle of the day, with Malina rising as Anningan sets 
and the cycle of the moon, with the chase waning when the moon is full.

31 The RAF used the moon to launch its first successful attack on a German city 
when planes attacked Lubeck in 1942.

32 Wesak, the most important of the Buddhist festivals, left, is celebrated on 
the full moon in May. It celebrates the Buddha's birthday and, for some 
Buddhists, also marks his birth and death.

33 The full moon is the brightest object in the night sky. It has an apparent 
magnitude of -12.6 compared with the Sun's of -26.8.

34 The Slovakian psychiatrist Eugen Jonas created a method of birth control and 
fertility based on the full moon.

35 An analysis of the birthdays of 4,256 babies born in a clinic in France 
found no relationship between the full moon and fertility.

36 A study by Tübingen University, Germany, claimed that police reports for 50 
new and full moon cycles showed that the moon is responsible for binge drinking.

37 A telescopic drawing of the full moon by the English mathematician Thomas 
Harriot, right, from early August 1609, is the first on record and preceded the 
Italian physicist Galileo's study by several months.

38 Renaissance artists traditionally depicted the moon as a crescent rather 
than in its full phase.

39 The full moon is said to be at perigee when it is full at the same moment 
its orbit brings it closest to the earth. However, the moon appears 
imperceptibly brighter at this time.

40 The Great Moon Hoax of 1835, above, was perpetrated by Richard Adams Locke 
for the New York Sun. His story claimed that the eminent scientist Sir John 
Hershel had spotted furry winged men resembling bats on the surface of a full 
moon.

41 The full moon is at its highest altitude from the Earth during the winter 
seaaon.

42 Some insomnia sufferers claim to sleep worse during a full moon; although 
others say they sleep more soundly.

43 It is a common misperception that the first Apollo landing occurred during a 
full moon. This did not occur until more than a week later.

44 The moon is 10 times brighter when it is full than when it is in a quarter 
phase.

45 Pagans believe the most mystical time at Stonehenge is when the full moon 
wanes leaving the earth to be reunited with her lover, the sun at dawn.

46 The honeymoon is named after the full moon in June. As it fell between the 
planting and harvesting of crops this was traditionally the best month to get 
married.

47 The oldest lunar calendar, showing the full moon was discovered in caves at 
Lascaux in France. It dates back 15,000 years and marks the phases of the moon, 
with a series of dots depicting the days in the cycle.

48 In 2001, the first test match between Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe had to be 
postponed by one day due to new Siri Lankan government rule, which bans playing 
sport on a full moon.

49 The Californian grunion only spawns on the three or four nights after the 
highest tide associated with each full moon. The fish come ashore to lay their 
eggs.

50 In a study of 1,000 tonsillectomy operations, 82 per cent of post-operative 
bleeding crises occurred nearer the full moon than the new moon, according to 
the Journal of the Florida Medical Association. 


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