TLP Repeat Illumination/Libration and Earthshine predictions for: Czech_Republic - Prague



Ill is percentage illumination of the Moon
*Indicates a repeat illumination and libration event to within +/- 1 deg for both
A non-* indicates just repeat illumination to within +/-0.5 deg


2012-May-01 UT 18:17-19:50 Ill=75% Hevelius observed by Emmett on 1826-4-17 *

     Scarcely a trace of nebulae tonight. As long as to June 10 at
     2000UT? A little blackness remained. (P. Moore thinks it
     was a LTP, WSC it was a permanent feature?) Drawing. Seen
     by Nevelius Emmett, J. Boroughbridge, England. The 2006
     Extension catalog by Cameron assigns an ID No. of 4 and a
     weight of 1. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-01 UT 19:36-21:23 Ill=75% Plato observed by Foley_PW on 1983-7-20

     On 1983 Jul 20 at UT 18:50-22:40 P.W. Foley (Kent, UK, 12"reflector, 
     seeing II-III) noted that the south wall of Plato at the 11 o'clock 
     position, at the location of a cleft, was fuzzy on either side of the 
     cleft. There was also a deep red colour along the cleft and the outside 
     wall. The colour had gone by 22:40 though. All other parts of the rim 
     of Plato were clear and distinct. M. Cook (Frimley, UK, seeing III) 
     sketched some obscurations at 22:03UT. At 22:08UT the red colour 
     reduced to a red line and vanished by 22:37. The south wall obscuration 
     varied in size and there was a possible obscuration at the 7 o'clock 
     position. J. Cook (Frimley, UK, seeing II-III) confirmed Foley's and 
     M.Cook's observations. Detail inside the crater was sharp, but colour 
     oppoiste to what is usual. Price (Camberley, UK, seeing IV-V) a few km 
     away had atmospheric ripples affecting his observations. At 21:36UT G. 
     North described the south wall as odd in appearance and the terrain 
     south of this was lacking in detail - this was odd because elsewhere 
     Plato was nice and sharp. At 21:45UT though the north section of the 
     crater was a hazy red. The cameron 206 catalog ID=224 and the weight=5. 
     The ALPO/BAA weight=4.


2012-May-01 UT 20:56-22:52 Ill=76% Sinus_Iridum observed by Clementelli on 2004-5-29

     Sinus Iridum 2004 May 29 UT 20:44 Observed by Clementelli (Rome, Italy, 
     102mm diameter Vixen refractor 80-160x, sky conditions: clear, no wind) 
     "A blue/violet streak, lasting ~10 minutes was seen on the floor of
     Sinus Iridum between crater Bianchini and Promontorium Heraclides. The 
     suspect TLP mybe an effect of instrumental achromatic aberration, but
     there is the small possibility that the effect was real." A UAI 
     observational report. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.


2012-May-01 UT 21:35-23:07 Ill=76% Proclus observed by Darling_D on 1989-7-14

     On 1989 Jul 14 at UT 03:28 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA) found a 
     darkening in the crater Proclus, but the shadow seen by Cook and Moore, 
     from a few hours earlier was not seen. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=371 
     and the weight=2. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-01 UT 22:24-23:07 Ill=76% Alphonsus observed by Bartha_L on 1958-11-22

     On 1958 Nov 22 at UT00:00? Bartha observed a gray spot in Alphonsus 
     crater. The cameron 1978 catalog ID=707 and weight=2. The ALPO/BAA 
     weight=1.


2012-May-01 UT 22:59-23:07 Ill=76% Archimedes observed by Cook_AC on 1979-10-1

     Archimedes 1979 Oct 01 UT 20:57-21:00 Observed by Cook (Frimley, UK, 
     13mm Monocentric + Barlow eyepiece, Seeing IV, transparency: thin 
     cloud) "Red seen on east, blue seen on west - almost certainly spurious 
     colour".


2012-May-01 UT 23:06-23:07 Ill=76% Bullialdus observed by Cook_AC on 1979-10-1

     Bullialdus 1979 Oct 01 UT 21:04-21:07 Observed by Cook (Frimley, UK, 
     13mm Monocentric + Barlow eyepiece, Seeing IV, transparency: thin 
     cloud) "Red seen on east, blue seen on west - almost certainly spurious 
     colour". ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-02 UT 18:18-19:24 Ill=84% Gassendi observed by Cook_AC on 1977-10-23

     On 1978 Oct 23 observing period: UT22:00-22:40 A.C. Cook (Frimley, 
     Surrey, UK, 6" reflector, x144, 6mm Ortho eyepiece, seeing IV, red and 
     blue filters used) saw at 22:10 a secctor on thwe western floor to be 
     mainly bright in the red. The surface was bumpy here. The observer at 
     the time commented that this was probably not a TLP, but no precise 
     explanation given. ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-02 UT 18:18-18:35 Ill=84% Plato observed by North_G on 1981-8-11

     On 1981 Aug 11 at UT21:05-21:36 G. North (England, seeing=poor) 
     detected, in green light, a darkening on the floor of Plato. This 
     effect was not seen elsewhere. J-H Robinson (Teighmouth, Devon, UK) 
     detected on the SSE rim (inner and beyond) a triangle that appeared 
     hazy in a wide range of filters at 21:05UT. However at 21:36UT it was 
     only hazy in green and blue light. No similar effect was seen 
     elsewhere. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=150 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA 
     weight=3.


2012-May-02 UT 18:18-20:39 Ill=84% Torricelli_B observed by North_G on 1995-4-11 *

     Torricelli B 1995 Apr 11 UTC 20:15 Observed by North (UK). "Colour 
     moonblink reaction, and crater dull". BAA Lunar Section report. ALP\BAA 
     weight=3.


2012-May-02 UT 18:40-19:38 Ill=84% Aristarchus observed by Bartlett on 1967-10-15

     Aristarchus 1967 Oct 15 UTC 03:38-03:42 Observed by Bartlett 
     (Baltimore, MD, USA, 4" reflector x280, S=5, T=5) "Ravine in E.glacis 
     invis. for its full length tho normally a sharp black fine line at this 
     time. E.wall craterlet also invisible." NASA catalog weight=4 (high). 
     NASA catalog ID #1051.


2012-May-02 UT 19:17-21:13 Ill=84% Aristarchus observed by Bartlett on 1964-7-21

     On 1964 Jul 21 at UT 02:00-02:23 Bartlett (Baltimore, MD, USA, 5" 
     reflector, x180, S=7, T=5) observed in Aristarchus the following: "Deep 
     ravine on E. glacis interrupted midway of its length by apparent break 
     just below rim of craterlet assoc. with EWBS. Normally, ravine is seen 
     continuous. Probable obsecuration at pt. of break". The Cameron 1978 
     catalog ID=834 and weight=4. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-02 UT 19:46-21:36 Ill=84% Mons_Pico observed by Rawstron on 1934-2-25

     In 1934 Feb 25 at UT 18:30 Rawstron (USA?, 4" refractor, x250, S=6/12) 
     observed in Pico B: "A large patch of haze appeared & drifted off 
     across the mare in same direction as haze from Pico (white patch). It 
     was obs. on 20 other occasions. Drawing". The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=
     410 and weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.


2012-May-02 UT 20:09-22:06 Ill=85% Aristarchus observed by Darnella on 1967-5-20

     Aristarchus 1967 May 20 UTC 20:15 Observed by Darnella (Copenhagen, 
     Denmark, 3.5?" refractor) "Red spots on S.rim. Moon was low." NASA 
     catalog weight=1 (very low). NASA catalog ID #1036.


2012-May-02 UT 20:09-21:48 Ill=85% Aristarchus observed by Manske_R on 1989-7-15

     Aristarchus 1989 Jul 15 UT 02:00-04:20 Observed by Manske, Weier, 
     Curtis, Keyes, Yanna, Norman, Knutson, Sullivan, Eichman and Radi (Carl 
     Fosmark Jr. Memorial Observatory, Madison, WI, USA, SCT C11) "Manske 
     initially observed a reddish tinge on the SE rim of Aristarchus. The 
     colour was present in different eyepieces. Two other pinkish tinge 
     areas were seen on the SE and NE rims. 4 of the observers did not see 
     colour. Independent confirmation was made by Don Spain (KY) and Smith 
     in LA. Full details can be found on the following web site: 
     http://www.ltpresearch.org/ltpreports/LTP19890715.htm " An ALPO report.


2012-May-02 UT 21:00-22:57 Ill=85% Gassendi observed by Kelsey on 1967-5-20

     On 1967 May 20 at UT 21:05-21:20 Kelsey (Riverside, CA, 8" reflector, 
     x300) using an English Moonblink device found colour on the south west 
     part of the floor. Note that for the times given by Cameron, the Moon 
     was below the horizon from California - so possibly these are local 
     times and these times need to be correctly converted into UT? The 
     Cameron 1978 catalog ID=1037 and weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-02 UT 21:05-00:51 Ill=85% Promontorium_Laplace observed by Beraud on 1970-8-13 *

     Promontory LaPlace 1970 Aug 13 UTC 22:30 Observed by Beraud (England?) 
     "Very dark spot at southmost tip. No other obj. in region gave any 
     shadow. Region must be very high. (spot only 18deg from term. so need 
     have a slope > 18 deg. There is an isolated mt. peak that is high just 
     off, but separate from the Promontory. Pickering Atlas, plate 11E & 
     11B? shows a dark spot there)." NASA catalog weight=1 (very low). NASA 
     catalog ID #1272.


2012-May-02 UT 21:18-22:38 Ill=85% Plato observed by North_G on 1992-5-13

     On 1992 May 13 at UT 20:16-21:29 several observers reported a TLP in 
     Plato mostly concerning the visibility of floor craterlets, however 
     observer seeing varied from III-V. North (UK, 18.25" reflector) 
     reported "Colouration and floor craterlets very prominent. Seeing 
     Antoniadi V, Transparancy Poor.". Foley (Kent, UK, 12" reflector 
     seeing=III-IV) found the floor to be bright and in the better moment of 
     seeing detected floor craterlets. The WNW spot was misty some of the 
     time. Moore (Selsey, UK, 15" reflector, seeing V) had very poor seing 
     conditions. J.D. Cook and M.C. Cook (Frimley, UK, 3.6" reflector, 
     seeing II-III) used a CCD camera at 22:11 UT. The Cameron 2006 catalog 
     ID=445 and the weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.


2012-May-02 UT 21:44-22:01 Ill=85% Bullialdus observed by Cook_AC on 1980-12-18

     On 1980 Dec 18 at UT20:46-23:58 A.C. Cook (Frimley, UK, 12" reflector, 
     40-250x, S=IV and transparency good) found the north west wall to be 
     brighter in red than in blue light, however the effect faded during 
     21:29-21:41UT and was gone by 22:40UT. There was however spurious 
     colour on the north west wall. M. Cook (Frimley, UK) found the central 
     peak to be both bright and diffuse, and brighter in red than in blue 
     light during 20:52-20:57UT, however at "22:53-23:58 c.p. very bright & 
     previous area decreased in size. No detail in white or red, just 
     visible in blue. Sketch (J. Cook) Orange out on NW rim & on NW side of 
     c.p. Similar effects seen on  other craters. (madej) c.p. & W. rim wall 
     very sharp. c.p. disappears in yellow but still seen in purple. 
     (pedler) c.p. > red than blue but no obstruction. W wall interior 
     dusky, darker in blue." A.C. Cook's photo depicts the central peak as 
     very bright. Cameron 2006 catalog TLP ID=120 and weight=5. ALPO/BAA 
     weight=2.


2012-May-02 UT 21:46-23:25 Ill=85% Gassendi observed by Moore_P on 1966-10-25

     Gassindi 1966 Oct 25 UTC 22:30-23:10 Observed by Moore and Moseley 
     (Armagh, Northern Ireland, 10" refractor) and Sartory (England, 8.5" ? 
     reflector) "2 faint blinks (Eng.) on NW (IAU ?) wall. (Indep. 
     confirm.?). NASA catalog weight=5 (very high). NASA catalog ID #987.


2012-May-02 UT 21:54-23:25 Ill=85% Plato observed by Foley_PW on 1983-7-21

     On 1983 Jul 21 at UT 21:02-23:18 P.W. Foley (Kent, UK, 12" reflector, 
     seeing=III) found the region around the cleft on the souther rim to be 
     out of focus - however atmospheric conditions were turbulent until 
     23:18UT. An unsual dark triangular region (long base against rim) was 
     seen to extend from the inner rim at 12 o'clock onto the floor for 13-
     16km. The crater had lots of detail elsewhere. M. Cook (Frimley, UK) 
     found the south east to soth west to be obscured again, but not as 
     badly as she had seen on the 20th July. J. Cook (Frimley, UK) found the 
     dark region had 2 white bands on the side and the south west wall was 
     blurred like it was on the 20th July - this time tough colour was not 
     present. There were also two light patches on the floor. Mosely 
     (Coventry, UK) observed the south wall at x120 and found the wall out 
     of focus at the 11 o'clock location. Through a yellow filter he saw a 
     "white mistiness: on the top of the southern rim and only the south 
     east cleft could be seen (no colour). By 22:40-23:00 the effect had 
     cleared up. No dark triangular patch was seen. When Marshall (Surrey, 
     UK) observed (22:30-03:00) nothing unsual was seen, though a sketch 
     provided shows a light patch on the floor located at 11 o'clock. All 
     observations, made by all observers had some atmospheric turbulence, 
     however trsnparency was good. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=225 and the 
     weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.


2012-May-02 UT 22:01-23:25 Ill=85% Aristarchus observed by Trouvelot on 1880-1-23

     Aristarchus 1880 Jan 23 UTC 20:00? Observed by Trouvelot (Meudon, 
     France) "Luminous light like a luminous cable or shining wall". NASA 
     catalog weight=3. NASA catalog ID #217.


2012-May-02 UT 23:23-01:09 Ill=85% Mons_Pico observed by Findlay on 1976-3-12 *

     Pico 1976 Mar 12 UT 21:00? Observed by Findlay (England?) "A ray seen 
     extended fr. mt. in SW (IAU?) direction -- likened to a hockey stick. 
     (not seen in Pickering's photo atlas at col.=53 deg)." NASA catalog 
     weight=3 (average). NASA catalog ID #1430.


2012-May-03 UT 18:20-18:47 Ill=92% Aristarchus observed by Unknown_Observer on 1978-3-21

     On 1978 Mar 21 at UT 20:57 an Unknown observer observed a TLP in 
     Aristarchus crater. The details for this report are still being looked 
     up in the archives. In view of the uncertain details this TLP has been 
     given an ALPO/BAA weight of 1.


2012-May-03 UT 19:07-20:12 Ill=92% Herodotus observed by Porta on 1965-6-12

     On 1965 Jun 12 at UT > 00:00 an unknown observer (Porta?) reported that 
     the area of Herodotus and the Cobra Head expanded and the colour went 
     to rose. The next night the floor was normal. In filters, phenomenon 
     accentuated in orange. The cameron 1978 catalog ID=880 and weight=3. 
     The ALPO/BAA weight=2.


2012-May-03 UT 19:24-20:40 Ill=92% Aristarchus observed by Foley_PW on 1975-2-23 *

     On 1975 Feb 23 at UT 18:00-00:24 P.W. Foley (Kent, UK, 12 inch 
     reflector, seeing Good), noticed that Aristarchus was a slate-grey 
     tinged with blue, and abnormally bright, fading at UT 18:47, and 
     decreased activity at UT20:45 after a cloudy period. Blue was seen on 
     the northern wall at UT19:00, but at 19:10 no colour, but instead an 
     obscuration. All normal from UT 21:04-21:46 according to Foley. At 
     UT19:00 G. Amery (Reading, UK, 10 inch reflector) noted shadowy grey 
     near the shadow under the south wall, indistinct small area, no colour. 
     At UT 20:00 activity increased. Colour negative fr. 150-300x till 21:10 
     (Hunt, Cambridge, UK, 2.5" refractor, seeing Poor-Very good). Negative 
     fr. 20:20-21:00 in bad seeing, and very good seeing at 200x all 
     negative (colour blink filters). From 23:45-00:20UT (Fitton, 
     Lancashire, UK, 8" reflector). Turner of Sussex, UK with an 8" 
     reflector, observed as well. (confirm. of activity earlier & neg. 
     later). Cameron 1978 catalog ID=1397 and weight=5. ALPO/BAA weight=3. 


2012-May-03 UT 20:00-21:51 Ill=92% Aristarchus observed by Robinson_JH on 1975-4-23

     On 1975 Apr 23 at UT 20:30 J-H Robinson (Teighmouth, Devon, UK, 260mm 
     reflector, x200). Observer was observing since 20:30UT, at 21:00UT 
     though they noticed red on the outside south wall of Aristarchus, a 
     hazy ill defined area that was larger in a red filter than in blue 
     filter, and outside east wall was bright in red. At 21:08UT the outside 
     west wall of Aristarchus no longer gave a colour blink reaction, and at 
     21:22UT the colour blink on the southern end of the crater ceased, but 
     the image blur remained (in both red and blue filters) despite the rest 
     of the crater being sharp in detail. Observations ceased at UT 21:35 
     because the blurring at the southern end seemed to be normal and this 
     was confirmed when checked with photographic atlases. Other craters 
     such as Proclus, Pickering, Tycho, Gassendi, Copernicus, Alphonsus, 
     Plato, Menelaus, Manilius, Linne and Theophilus, showed no colour blink 
     reactions. However Picard had a red bright blink from 20:30-20:40 and 
     the permanant blink on the N. Floor of Fracastorius was detectable. 
     Also Plato floor shadings were clearer in red than in blue - 
     intermittently. This is a BAA lunar section observation. No estimation 
     of transparency or seeing is given, nor any comment on whether spurious 
     colour was seen in any craters visually. ALPO/BAA weight=1. 


2012-May-03 UT 21:33-23:30 Ill=92% Gassendi observed by Moore_P on 1987-9-5

     Gassendi 1987 Sep 05 UT 20:25 Observed by Moore (Selsey, Sussex, UK, 
     Antoniadi III seeing, 12.5" reflector) "Bright craterlet south of 
     central peak, brightness variance". Observation confirmed by Foley 
     later at 21:00? (Kent, UK, 12" reflector). The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=
     306 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA catalog weight=3.


2012-May-03 UT 22:23-23:39 Ill=93% Aristarchus observed by Cook_AC on 1987-9-5

     On 1987 Sep 05 at 20:55UT A.C. Cook (Frimley, UK, 90mm questar 
     telescope, x130, seeing III-IV, Moon 16 deg in altitude) observed a 
     dusky dark gray area just north of Herodotus and just south of the 
     Cobra Head. The interior shadow on the east of Herodotus by comparison 
     wad black and distinct. No change was seen when viewed through a 
     rotated polaroid filter. Apparently D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA) 
     was observing at the same time but had better observing conditions and 
     could see detail in this region, suggesting that it was not a TLP. 
     There is no Cameron entry for this report. The ALPO/BAA weight=1. 


2012-May-03 UT 22:28-23:39 Ill=93% Gassendi observed by Foley_PW on 1987-9-5

     1987 Sep 05 UT 21:00 brightness variation in Gassendi area observed by 
     P.W. Foley (Kent, UK, 12" reflector). Maybe possible confirmation of an 
     earlier TLP seen by Moore. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=306 and weight=
     5. The ALPO/BAA catalog weight=3.


2012-May-03 UT 22:30-23:33 Ill=93% Promontorium_Agarum observed by Louderback_D on 1980-9-22

     On 1980 Sep 22 at UT05:00? D. Louderback (South Bend, WA, USA, 8" 
     reflector, x140 and 2.5" refractor) observed in Promitorium Agarum that 
     one of his pre-designated points, called "A", through to "C and "D" was 
     at least 5 brightness points brighter in red than in blue light. The 
     reverse was true on Sep 25th. Tonight the red seemed to be on a narrow 
     strip on the western edge. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=109 and the 
     weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.


2012-May-03 UT 22:58-23:39 Ill=93% Aristarchus observed by Delano on 1966-10-26

     Aristarchus and Cobra Head 1966 Oct 27 UTC 02:30-03:00 Observed by 
     Delano (New Bedford, Massachusetts, USA, 12.5" reflector, x360) and 
     Corralitos Observatory (Organ Pass, NM, USA, 24" reflector, Moonblink). 
     "C.p. of Aris. noticeably less bright thro blue filter but very bright 
     thru red & no filter. Shadow of c.p. faint & grayish whereas wall shad. 
     were normal black. (confirm. of Gordon, even tho 2h later?). Sketch. 
     C.p. rated 10deg in red & no filter, & 8deg in blue. Other features 
     rated same in all 3. Cobra Head had 2 red patches. Sketches. Not 
     confirmed by Corralitos MB." NASA catalog weight=5. NASA catalog ID 
     989.


2012-May-03 UT 23:00-23:39 Ill=93% Anaximander observed by Fisher_W on 1963-11-28

     On 1963 Nov 28 at UT 22:30-00:00 Fisher (Colefax, CA, USA, 8" 
     Newtonian reflector)observed a yellow on crater rims adjacent to
     Anaximander. Yellow colour also seen on Aristarchus that night. 
     The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-04 UT 19:49-21:27 Ill=97% Proclus observed by Coates_J on 1973-1-17

     Proclus 1973 Jan 17 UTC 21:35 Observed by Coates and Neville (both in 
     England, 8" reflector x240) "Walls brilliant, dull white spot seen just 
     S. of center of floor. Not nearly as bright as walls." NASA catalog 
     weight=2 (low). NASA catalogue ID #1359.


2012-May-04 UT 21:51-23:45 Ill=98% Aristarchus observed by Livesey_R on 1996-10-25

     Aristarchus 1996 Oct 25 UTC 19:05-19:55 Observed by Livesey (Scotland, 
     65mm reflector x88) "red colour seen along E/SE rim and along S.edge of 
     SW ray - colouration not visible on other craters. Observations 
     terminated by hazy cloud drifting over Moon. Observer remarked that it 
     looked like chromatic aberation, but telescope was a reflector and no 
     colour was seen elswehere on the Moon. Cook (Frimley, Surrey, UK) 
     19:48-19:55 noted red on E. rim exterior and on SE part of central 
     peak, and blue on N. rim - strongly suspected spurious colour".
     ALPO/BAA weight=1. 


2012-May-04 UT 22:02-23:49 Ill=98% Plato observed by Billington_R on 1975-0-29

     1975 Apr 18?? UT16:05-23:44 R. Billington (6cm refractor, x35 and x56). 
     TLP faded at 17:50 but prominent again later. Intensity 8 at 16:05, 6.5 
     at 17:50 and 8 at 23:44. This is a BAA Lunar Section report.


2012-May-04 UT 22:10-23:49 Ill=98% Aristarchus observed by Bartlett on 1964-7-23

     1964 Jul 23 UTC 04:45-06:07 Observed by Bartlett (Baltimore, MD, USA, 
     5" reflector, x180, S=1-4, T=3) "S.region of floor was granulated &
     rated 6deg bright, rest of crater 8deg. Floor there was distinctly 
     yellow-brown. Had never seen browns or yellows before June 25, 1964. 
     (seeing true color of ground?)."NASA catalog weight=4 (good). NASA 
     catalog ID #835.


2012-May-04 UT 22:18-23:49 Ill=98% Bullialdus observed by Robinson_JH on 1979-10-4

     Bullialdus 1979 Oct 04 UT 20:24-21:25 JH-Robinson (Devon, UK, 
     260mm Newt. x200 Seeing Antoniadi IV-V, Transp.=haze) observed a two 
     bright points on the south west floor patch to be brighter in red than 
     in blue at 21:12. The effect was still present at 20:36 but back to 
     normal by 20:43-20:48. Amery (Reading, UK) found a possible brownish 
     tinge on the west wall, though spuroius colour was present elsewhere on 
     the Moon. Foley found the WSW corner darkened in blue light. Cook found 
     pink on south rim of Bullialdus and Pedler found Bullialdus to be a 
     confused mass with bright and dusky spots and patches - no colour seen.
     Cameron 2006 catalog ID=72 and weight=0. ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-04 UT 23:00-23:49 Ill=98% Gassendi observed by Cameron_W on 1961-8-25

     Gassendi 1961 Aug 25 UTC 01:00-02:00 Observed by Cameron (Adelphi, MD, 
     USA, 3.5" reflector x160) "Crater had a capital gamma-shaped string of 
     star-like pts. (only abnormal thing noted)." NASA catalog weight=1 
     (very low). NASA catalog ID #745.


2012-May-04 UT 23:11-23:49 Ill=98% Aristarchus observed by Foley_PW on 1979-10-4

     On 1979 Oct 04 at UT21:05-23:40 P.W. Foley (Kent, UK, 12" reflector, 
     x360, seeing=II) detected colour in Aristarchus (and also in Bullialdus 
     - there was a TLP alert at this time for Bullialdus) but nowehere else 
     on the Moon. Aristarchus had a CED brightness value of 3.8 at 21:05 
     (though at this time no colour) and 3.4 at 23:40 and the floor was now 
     slate blue/gray in colour. Other features remained constant in 
     brightness. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=72 and the weight=0. The 
     ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-05 UT 21:38-21:53 Ill=100% NE_Limb observed by Unknown_Observer on 1963-12-30

     On 1963 Dec 30 at UT11:00 many observers reported seeing a red glow on 
     the North East (IAU?) limb of the Moon. This was also captured on a 
     photograph. Cameron suggests eclipse geometry as an explanation. Thye 
     Cameron 1978 catalog ID=792 and weight=1. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-05 UT 21:54-22:45 Ill=100% Mare_Fecunditatis observed by Emersen_G on 2000-1-21

     On 2000 Jan 21 UT04:40 G. Emersen (Golden, CO, USA, 30cm focal length 
     lens with Wratten 25 ref filter) took 43 CCD images of the eclipse of 
     the Moon and on one of them at 04:40UT (exposure 0.3 sec) a relatively 
     bright spot appeared in the southern part of Mare Fecunditatis. The 
     spot looks sharper than the rest of the Moon and so might be a cosmic 
     ray? CCD images taken from Washington D.C. by A.C. Cook at this time, 
     do not show this spot, however exposures were at intervals of 0.25 sec 
     and so might have missed this spot if it happened during image readout. 
     The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-05 UT 22:15-23:45 Ill=100% Grimaldi observed by Herbert_M on 1976-11-6

     On 1976 Nov 06 at UT 18:26 M. Herbert (10x50 binoculars, Western 
     Supermare, UK) noticed a thin line that appeared to be dark red (almost 
     black) around the gassendi area. This is  BAA Lunar Section report. The 
     ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-05 UT 22:22-23:45 Ill=100% Lunar_Eclipse observed by Besanceas on 1901-11-25

     On 1901? Nov 25/25 at 23:00UT Besanceas (France?) observed: "During 
     lun. ecl. (mid-ecl. at 0118 on 26th) a bright area seen on moon. 
     Another(?) obser. saw an obj. like a fiery comet leave the moon! (Date 
     given by Midllehurst was 1900 but must be wrong-not FM then. FM in 1900 
     but no ecl. Partial ecl. on 10/27/01 at 0315. Ref. by M is wrong = 
     157)". The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=310 and weight=1. The ALPO/BAA 
     weight=1.


2012-May-05 UT 22:52-23:38 Ill=100% Picard observed by Bogdanovich on 1927-12-8

     On 1927 Dec 08 at 20:00 Bogdanovich (Russia) Picard: "Crater, after 
     coming out of shadow after ech. was unsually hazy. next FM it was back 
     to normal". The cameron 1978 catalog ID= and weight=3. The ALPO/BAA 
     weight=2.


2012-May-05 UT 23:00-23:45 Ill=100% Schickard observed by Wollridge on 1934-2-28

     Schickard 1934 Feb 28 UTC 22:00? Observed by Wollridge (Broomsgrove, 
     England, 6.5" reflector) "Well-known crater form obj. presented 
     anomalous, misty appearance of white spots. Confirmed by Moore in 1939, 
     1941. NASA catalog weight=3 (average). NASA catalog ID #411.


2012-May-05 UT 23:05-23:45 Ill=100% Aristarchus observed by Kruger on 1889-7-12

     On 1889 Jul 12 at 20:52-21:00UT, Kruger of Gotha? or Kiel? Germany, 
     using a 6" reflector (x33), saw a brilliant Aristarchus in the 
     surrounding gloom during an eclipse. The brilliance was striking. 
     Cameron 1978 catalog ID=263 and weight=2.


2012-May-05 UT 23:14-23:45 Ill=100% Aristarchus observed by Chernov on 1961-8-26

     On 1961 Aug 26 at UT 01:25-01:41 Chernov (Russia, 6x binoculars) found 
     that during a penumbral phase of a solar eclpse Aristarchus appeared as 
     a bright white point easily seen in 6x binoculars. At the same time the 
     fissure near Aristarchus and Herodotus. (Schroter's Valley?) could be 
     seen, but not easily. The cameron 1978 catalog ID=746 and weight=2. The 
     ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-05 UT 23:16-23:45 Ill=100% Copernicus observed by Moore_P on 1982-1-9

     On 1982 Jan 09 at UT21:37 P. Moore? (Selsey, UK) observed that 
     Copernicus was brighter than or equal to Aristarchus. However this was 
     during a total eclipse of the Moon. Cameron 2006 catalog ID=162 and 
     weight=5. ALPO/BAA weight=2.


2012-May-11 UT 03:18-03:27 Ill=69% Aristarchus observed by Foley_PW on 1985-5-9

     On 1985 May 09 at UT 22:50-03:10 P. Foley (Kent, UK) observed the whole 
     of Aristarchus to be a strong violet color. No colour was seen 
     elsewhere on the Moon. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID is 272 and the weight is 2. The ALPO/BAA weight      is 2. 


2012-May-11 UT 03:18-03:27 Ill=69% Torricelli_B observed by Foley_PW on 1985-5-9

     On 1985 May 09/10 at UT 22:50-03:10 P.W. Foley (Kent, UK) found that 
     Torricelli B was very bright in Earthshine and was blue in colour. The 
     Cameron 2006 catalog ID=272 and the weight=2. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.


2012-May-12 UT 02:20-03:14 Ill=59% Lichtenberg observed by Barcroft on 1940-10-22

     Lichtenberg area 1940 Oct 22 UT 06:00? Observed by Barcroft (Madera, 
     CA, USA, 6" reflector) "Only slightly redish color this nite, comp. 
     with previous nites (see #'s 467 & 477)" NASA catalog weight=3 
     (average). NASA catalog ID #478. ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-13 UT 02:29-02:41 Ill=48% Earthshine: sporadic meteors

2012-May-14 UT 01:04-03:23 Ill=38% Aristarchus observed by Sekiyuchi on 1970-7-26 *

     Aristarchus 1970 Jul 26 UT 15:00? Observed by Sekiyuchi (Tokyo, Japan, 
     36" reflector) "Polarimetric and photoeletric anomalies on Moon" NASA 
     catalog weight=5 (very high). NASA catalog ID #1268.


2012-May-15 UT 02:56-03:21 Ill=28% Lambert observed by OConnell_R on 2009-7-16

     2009 Jul 16 UT 09:54 R. O'Connell (Gainesville, FL, USA, 180mm 
     Mak-Cass + CCD camera) imaged an unnamed moutain (unofficial IAU 
     name: Undest), near Lambert to be looking almost light a bright 
     flare. Observer pretty certain that this was just sunlight 
     catching a sunward facing slope. The ALPO/BAA TLP weight of 1.


2012-May-16 UT 01:38-03:20 Ill=20% Elger observed by Merosi on 1970-8-27 *

     Elger 1970 Aug 22 UTC 02:35-02:43 Observed by Merosi (Pecs?, Hungary, 
     6" reflector x150). "Brightening in dark beyond term., 3deg size, 1.5x 
     size of Elger. Not variable for 5 min. but decreased & became in-vis. 
     after 0243h. No high peaks there." NASA catalog weight=3 (average). 
     NASa catalog ID #1275.


2012-May-24 UT 18:49-19:18 Ill=13% Mare_Crisium observed by Mayemson on 1958-10-16

     North of Mare Crisium 1958 Oct 16 UT 18:00? Observed by Mayemson 
     (England?) "Bright spot in dark part" NASA catalog weight=2 (low). NASA 
     catalog ID #700.


2012-May-25 UT 19:00-19:53 Ill=20% W_Limb observed by Haywood_J on 1883-11-4

     A lunar aurora on the dark limb was seen by Heywood and others of 
     Westville, Ohio, USA, using a 2" refractor at x60. Observer saw 
     misty like light in dark part, not like earthshine - seen 
     repeatedly by him and others in Nov., Dec, and Mar 29, 30 1884. 
     Displays on Moon similar similar effects on Earth/Aurora? Cameron 
     1978 catalog ID=239 and weight=4. ALPO/BAA weight=3.


2012-May-25 UT 19:38-19:55 Ill=20% Earthshine: sporadic meteors

2012-May-26 UT 18:51-20:11 Ill=29% Macrobius observed by Barcroft on 1939-10-19

     Macrobius 1939 Oct 19 UT 02:00? Observed by Barcroft (Madera, CA, USA, 
     6" reflector) "Reddish-brown hue (unusual) usually absent" NASA 
     catalog weight=2 (low). NASA catalog ID #463.


2012-May-26 UT 18:51-20:12 Ill=29% Aristarchus observed by Classen on 1967-4-15

     On 1967 Apr 15 at UT 19:15-21:00 Classen (Pulsnitz Observatory, East 
     Germany, 8" refractor) found that Aristarchus was very bright and the 
     atmospheric seeing was very good until 21:00UT. Nothing unsual was seen 
     on 16th and 17th April. Cameron reports that this was the first TLP 
     seen by this group. The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=1022 and the weight=3. 
     The ALPO/BAA weight=2.


2012-May-26 UT 18:51-19:58 Ill=29% Aristarchus observed by Foley_PW on 1979-3-4

     On 1979 Mar 04 at UT18:15-21:45 P.W. Foley, (Kent, UK, 12" reflector, 
     x180, seeing II-I) noticed that Aristarchus was unusually bright 
     (though colourless) - the northern part being the more brilliant. Other 
     features seen but less visible, though still quite obvious. A CED 
     brightness reading of 0.3 was recorded - the highest ever so far. Amery 
     (Reading, UK, 19?" reflector, 50-100x, obtained photographs. The 
     Cameron 2006 catalog ID=46 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.


2012-May-26 UT 18:51-19:58 Ill=29% Grimaldi observed by Foley_PW on 1979-3-4

     On 1979 Mar 04 at UT18:15-21:45 P.W. Foley, (Kent, UK, 12" reflector, 
     x180, seeing II-I) noticed that although other features in Earthshine 
     were quite obvious, Grimaldi was not, though at x200 (should this be 
     20:00?) Grimaldi "shone with a brilliance to that of a thin cresecent 
     of 2-3d". Amery (Reading, UK, 19?" reflector, 50-100x, obtained 
     photographs. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=46 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA
     weight=3.


2012-May-26 UT 18:51-19:45 Ill=29% Aristarchus observed by Johnson_G on 1985-4-26

     G Johnson of Swanton, MD, USA used a 2" refractor at f/12.
     Aristachus revealed as a red spot on a photo of the Moon. This
     was similar to another photo obtained on 1988 Apr 21st. Frame (with 3
     exposures present)reveals a dim star like point near Campanus on 
     exposure 1. Expsoure 2 shows it a little east on the Earth-lit 
     part. Exposure 3 shows it off the south-east limb. Apparently 20
     minutes later took 2 exposures and frame 18 was a double. The
     second exposure revealed an object farther from the limb but the
     first exposure does not show the object. The two high power exposures 
     do not show it. Cameron could not see the spots that Johson describes
     on his slides, but did see several spots (defects?) on the 
     8 and 12 second exposures near Hevelius and also on the 20 second
     exposure near to Hecataeus only. BAA members observed star like 
     flashes a few hours earlier - near Aristarchus. One BAA member, Madej, 
     had seen a green glow in Arisarchus in two places in two eyepieces.
     Cameron 2006 Catalog extension ID=265 and weight=2. 


2012-May-26 UT 18:51-19:45 Ill=29% Campanus observed by Johnson_G on 1985-4-26

     G Johnson of Swanton, MD, USA used a 2" refractor at f/12.
     Aristachus revealed as a red spot on a photo of the Moon. This
     was similar to another photo obtained on 1988 Apr 21st. Frame (with 3
     exposures present)reveals a dim star like point near Campanus on 
     exposure 1. Expsoure 2 shows it a little east on the Earth-lit 
     part. Exposure 3 shows it off the south-east limb. Apparently 20
     minutes later took 2 exposures and frame 18 was a double. The
     second exposure revealed an object farther from the limb but the
     first exposure does not show the object. The two high power exposures 
     do not show it. Cameron could not see the spots that Johson describes
     on his slides, but did see several spots (defects?) on the 
     8 and 12 second exposures near Hevelius and also on the 20 second
     exposure near to Hecataeus only. BAA members observed star like 
     flashes a few hours earlier - near Aristarchus. One BAA member, Madej, 
     had seen a green glow in Arisarchus in two places in two eyepieces.
     Cameron 2006 Catalog extension ID=265 and weight=2. 


2012-May-26 UT 18:51-19:45 Ill=29% Hecataeus observed by Johnson_G on 1985-4-26

     G Johnson of Swanton, MD, USA used a 2" refractor at f/12.
     Aristachus revealed as a red spot on a photo of the Moon. This
     was similar to another photo obtained on 1988 Apr 21st. Frame (with 3
     exposures present)reveals a dim star like point near Campanus on 
     exposure 1. Expsoure 2 shows it a little east on the Earth-lit 
     part. Exposure 3 shows it off the south-east limb. Apparently 20
     minutes later took 2 exposures and frame 18 was a double. The
     second exposure revealed an object farther from the limb but the
     first exposure does not show the object. The two high power exposures 
     do not show it. Cameron could not see the spots that Johson describes
     on his slides, but did see several spots (defects?) on the 
     8 and 12 second exposures near Hevelius and also on the 20 second
     exposure near to Hecataeus only. BAA members observed star like 
     flashes a few hours earlier - near Aristarchus. One BAA member, Madej, 
     had seen a green glow in Arisarchus in two places in two eyepieces.
     Cameron 2006 Catalog extension ID=265 and weight=2. 


2012-May-26 UT 18:51-19:45 Ill=29% Hevelius observed by Johnson_G on 1985-4-26

     G Johnson of Swanton, MD, USA used a 2" refractor at f/12.
     Aristachus revealed as a red spot on a photo of the Moon. This
     was similar to another photo obtained on 1988 Apr 21st. Frame (with 3
     exposures present)reveals a dim star like point near Campanus on 
     exposure 1. Expsoure 2 shows it a little east on the Earth-lit 
     part. Exposure 3 shows it off the south-east limb. Apparently 20
     minutes later took 2 exposures and frame 18 was a double. The
     second exposure revealed an object farther from the limb but the
     first exposure does not show the object. The two high power exposures 
     do not show it. Cameron could not see the spots that Johson describes
     on his slides, but did see several spots (defects?) on the 
     8 and 12 second exposures near Hevelius and also on the 20 second
     exposure near to Hecataeus only. BAA members observed star like 
     flashes a few hours earlier - near Aristarchus. One BAA member, Madej, 
     had seen a green glow in Arisarchus in two places in two eyepieces.
     Cameron 2006 Catalog extension ID=265 and weight=2. 


2012-May-26 UT 18:51-19:31 Ill=29% Proclus observed by Darling_D on 1989-2-11

     On 1989 Feb 11 at UT23:30-01:39 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA, 12.5" 
     reflector, x159, seeing=7/10) observed a linear east to west feature in 
     Proclus. D. Weier (WI, USA, 11" reflector, x378) found the NNW part of 
     the crater to be brighter than expected and confirmed the prescence of 
     the east to west feature - this crossed the shadow on the east floor 
     and over into Mare Crisium. R. Manske (WI, USA) detected another 
     "streak" parallel to this. All observers suspect that the linear 
     features were due to raised topography on the floor of Proclus - 
     however Cameron comments that there does not seem to be any linear 
     features on the floor of Proclus to cause these effects. The Cameron 
     2006 catalog ID=351 and the weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.


2012-May-26 UT 19:39-20:25 Ill=29% Earthshine: sporadic meteors

2012-May-27 UT 19:51-20:49 Ill=39% Ross_D observed by Cross on 1964-6-17

     On 1964 Jun 17 at UT 04:15-05:01 Cross et al. (Whittier, CA, USA, 19" ? 
     reflector, S=7-8) observed near Ross D: "Gas cloud. Motion". The 
     Cameron 1978 catalog ID=818 and weight=4. The ALPO/BAA weight=4.


2012-May-27 UT 19:56-20:49 Ill=39% Alphonsus observed by Wise on 1967-4-16

     Alphonsus 1967 Apr 16 UTC 20:20 Observed by Wise (England, 6.5" 
     reflector, x90) "Prominent glint on c.p., duration 1s. (forunner of red 
     patch in #1024?)" NASA catalog weight=3 (average). NASA catalog ID #
     1023 (weight=3) - Note Sun 7.1 deg below the horizon at the date and 
     time given - suspect a mistake in the catalog?.


2012-May-27 UT 19:41-20:51 Ill=39% Earthshine: sporadic meteors

2012-May-28 UT 18:53-19:33 Ill=49% Alphonsus observed by Sartory on 1966-5-27

     Alphonsus 1966 May 27 UT 21:10 Observed by Sartory, Moore, Mosely 
     (England and Ireland, 8.5" reflector, 10" refractor) "Red colour on 
     central peak area" NASA catalog weight=5 (very high). NASA catalog ID 
     937.


2012-May-28 UT 19:57-21:11 Ill=50% Arnold observed by Jean on 1968-9-30

     Arnold 1968 Sep 30 UT 02:30-02:45 Observed by Jean et al (Montreal, 
     Canada, 4" refractor, 6" reflector) "Reddish color (chrom. aberr.?, 
     prog of peri & apoo. obs). NASA catalog weight=0 (unreliable). NASA 
     catalog ID #1091. ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-28 UT 19:57-21:11 Ill=50% Barrow observed by Jean on 1968-9-30

     Barrow 1968 Sep 30 UT 02:30-02:45 Observed by Jean et al (Montreal, 
     Canada, 4" refractor, 6" reflector) "Reddish color (chrom. aberr.?, 
     prog of peri & apoo. obs). NASA catalog weight=0 (unreliable). NASA 
     catalog ID #1091.


2012-May-28 UT 19:57-21:11 Ill=50% Gartner observed by Jean on 1968-9-30

     Gartner 1968 Sep 30 UT 02:30-02:45 Observed by Jean et al (Montreal, 
     Canada, 4" refractor, 6" reflector) "Reddish color (chrom. aberr.?, 
     prog of peri & apoo. obs). NASA catalog weight=0 (unreliable). NASA 
     catalog ID #1091.


2012-May-28 UT 19:57-21:11 Ill=50% Goddard observed by Jean on 1968-9-30

     Goddard 1968 Sep 30 UT 02:30-02:45 Observed by Jean et al (Montreal, 
     Canada, 4" refractor, 6" reflector) "Goddard was vis. 1-3min 
     (terr.cloud?)."NASA catalog weight=1 (very low). NASA catalog ID #1091.


2012-May-28 UT 19:57-21:11 Ill=50% Goldschmidt observed by Jean on 1968-9-30

     Goldschmidt 1968 Sep 30 UT 02:30-02:45 Observed by Jean et al 
     (Montreal, Canada, 4" refractor, 6" reflector) "Reddish color (chrom. 
     aberr.?, prog of peri & apoo. obs). NASA catalog weight=0 (unreliable). 
     NASA catalog ID #1091.


2012-May-28 UT 19:57-21:11 Ill=50% Mare_Marginis observed by Jean on 1968-9-30

     Mare Marginis 1968 Sep 30 UT 02:30-02:45 Observed by Jean et al 
     (Montreal, Canada, 4" refractor, 6" reflector) "M.Marg. very dark; blue 
     dark cloud moving W-E disappearing at term. swept over M.Marg."
     NASA catalog weight=1 (very low). NASA catalog ID #1091. ALPO/BAA 
     weight=1.


2012-May-28 UT 19:57-21:11 Ill=50% Sacrobosco observed by Jean on 1968-9-30

     Sacrobosco 1968 Sep 30 UT 02:30-02:45 Observed by Jean et al (Montreal, 
     Canada, 4" refractor, 6" reflector) "Sacrob was vis. 1-3min 
     (terr.cloud?)." NASA catalog weight=1 (very low). NASA catalog ID 1091.


2012-May-28 UT 19:57-21:11 Ill=50% Schneckenberg observed by Jean on 1968-9-30

     Schneckenberg 1968 Sep 30 UT 02:30-02:45 Observed by Jean et al 
     (Montreal, Canada, 4" refractor, 6" reflector) "Dark spot in center of 
     Schenk" NASA catalog weight=2 (low). NASA catalog ID #1091.


2012-May-28 UT 19:57-21:11 Ill=50% W_Bond observed by Jean on 1968-9-30

     W.Bond 1968 Sep 30 UT 02:30-02:45 Observed by Jean et al (Montreal, 
     Canada, 4" refractor, 6" reflector) "Reddish color (chrom. aberr.?, 
     prog of peri & apoo. obs). NASA catalog weight=0 (unreliable). NASA 
     catalog ID #1091.


2012-May-28 UT 20:04-21:11 Ill=50% Maginus observed by Lord_CJR on 1975-5-18

     On 1975 May 18 at UT2115-2245 C. Lord (St Annes-on-sea, Lancashire, UK, 76mm f/16 refractor, x170, Wratten 25, and 44a Moon blink filters used, Transparency 4.5/5, no wind). The east (IAU?) flank of      Maginus, and gthe interior, appeared to be partly obscured. No other features in a similar position      along the terminator were obscured. No colour blink was detected with the filters, though a pronou     nced red/int blink was noted; the device emploted a N.D. x4 filter. By 21:45UT the floor was no lon     ger obscured and only Magninus G was masked in a white haze; however immediately adjacent to the te     rminator was an ill defined mistyu patch lying where the outer flank of maginus would have been vis     ible. The obscuration was only seen to  advantage in blue and int. light, and the blue/int blink wa     s only very slight.


2012-May-28 UT 19:42-20:24 Ill=50% Earthshine: sporadic meteors

2012-May-28 UT 20:49-21:11 Ill=50% Alphonsus observed by Wise on 1967-4-17

     Alphonsus and limb 1967 Apr 17 UTC 21:30 Observed by Wise (England, 
     6.5" reflector, x90) "3 dark patches (Alphonsus) prominent. Suspected 
     red patch (blink ?). (indep. confirm. of Cross 1h later?)." NASA 
     catalog weight=3 (average). NASA catalog ID #1024.


2012-May-28 UT 20:49-21:11 Ill=50% Plato observed by Wise on 1967-4-17

     Plato 1967 Apr 17 UTC 21:30 Observed by Wise (England, 6.5" reflector, 
     x90) "Suspected a blink, (red?)" NASA catalog weight=2 (low). NASA 
     catalog ID #1025.


2012-May-28 UT 20:49-21:11 Ill=50% W_Limb observed by Wise on 1967-4-17

     On 1967 Apr 17 UT 21:30 Observed by Wise (England, 6.5" reflector, x90) 
     saw a brilliant object nr. E(ast. ?) limb (West Lim IAU?) for 15m. 
     Check on star maps neg. (indep. confirm. of Cross 1h later?)." NASA 
     catalog weight=3 (average). NASA catalog ID #1024.


2012-May-29 UT 18:54-19:43 Ill=61% Proclus observed by Farrant on 1967-4-18

     Proclus 1967 Apr 18 UTC 18:40-18:45 Observed by Farrant (Cambridge, 
     England, 8" reflector x175) "Crater appeared quite dark, even bright 
     ring was subdued & seemed thicker than normal. Drawing." NASA catalog 
     weight=3 (average). NASA catalog ID #1028. ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-29 UT 19:45-20:54 Ill=61% Alphonsus observed by Smith on 1966-5-28

     Alphonsus 1966 May 28 UT 23:00-01:00 Observed by Smith (England, 10" 
     reflector) Birney (VA?, USA, 8" refactor + Moonblink) Corralitos Obs. 
     (NM, USA, 24" reflector + Moonblink) "Red patches (Smith), Trident Moon 
     Blink device suspected(?? log)earlier at 22:40. Birney observed at 
     2300-0100?, and gave indep. confirm? Corralitos did not confirm MB 
     (however they report Gassendi-- misident. ?)" NASA catalog weight=5 
     (very high). NASA catalog ID #938.


2012-May-29 UT 20:17-21:17 Ill=61% Earthshine observed by Kolovos_G on 1992-6-9

     On 1992 Jun 09 at UT 18:52 G. Kolovos, Thessaloniki, 40.63111N, 
     22.9597W, height 28m, Greece) photographed two blue spots on the 
     terminator region of the Moon in one of a series of Ektachrome film 
     pictures. The rest of the Moon was a white-yellow colour. The ALPO/BAA 
     weight=2.


2012-May-29 UT 20:24-21:30 Ill=61% Mons_Hadley observed by Miranda on 1971-7-31

     On 1971 Jul 31 at UT 18:40 Miranda (Plaui, Brazil, 4"refractor, 80x, 
     160x, Moon 70deg in altitude) observed an intermittent and curious 
     brilliance on top of a peak (with irregular reflection) north of Mons 
     Hadley (5E, 27N). The Cameron 1978 catalog ID= and weight=2. The 
     ALPO/BAA weight=2.


2012-May-29 UT 21:06-21:30 Ill=61% Plato observed by Carle on 1952-2-5

     On 1952 Feb 05 at UT 02:00? J.Carle (USA, 8" reflector, x180) observed 
     the following in Plato: "A shadow in a depression, or a cloud, or an 
     optical illus.? Oval dark area nr. center, disappeared in 15m clear & 
     prominenet at first then vanished 4 of 14 spots nr. center continuously 
     seen while remaining ones seen only momentarily. (seeing?) Drawing 
     includes sketch on March 7. His sketch shows 18 spots, 13 same as 
     here". The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=549 and the weight=2. The ALPO/BAA 
     weight=2.


2012-May-29 UT 21:18-21:30 Ill=61% Mare_Humorum observed by Dixon_M on 1989-2-15

     On 1989 Feb 15 at UT 03:15-03:30 M. Dixon (Palenque Ruins, Mexico, 7x35 
     binouculars) observed a point of light that was very bright in or near 
     Mare Humorum. It was visible for 5 minutes then vanished. The Cameron 
     2006 catalog ID=353 and weight=1. The ALPO/BAA weight=1. 


2012-May-30 UT 18:59-19:56 Ill=71% Kies observed by Jean on 1984-6-9

     On 1984 Jun 09 at UT 04:55-05:14 P. Jean (Outremont, Canada) detected 
     in the dark side of the Moon, a few km east of Kies crater, a bright 
     point that should not be poking out of the shadow (according to Foley). 
     The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=244 and the weight=3. The ALPO/BAA 
     weight=2.


2012-May-30 UT 19:01-19:48 Ill=71% Alphonsus observed by Wise on 1966-5-29

     Alphonsus 1966 May 29 UT 21:45-22:15 Observed by Wise (England, 4.5" 
     reflector, x125). and Corralitos Observatory (NM, USA). "Glint lasting 
     1.5s. (onset of Smith's anomaly? Specular reflection should last 
     longer). Not confirmed by Corralitos MB, (however they report Gassendi? 
     misident., or did they obs. another feature?). At UT 22:45 Smith and 
     Brown (England, UK, 10" reflector) observed reddish patches in 
     Alphonsus. Negative results from Brown though at 21:21Ut and 22:25UT). 
     The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=939 and 940 and weight=4. The ALPO/BAA 
     weight=3.


2012-May-30 UT 19:11-19:40 Ill=71% Proclus observed by Cook_MC on 1982-2-3

     M.C. Cook (Frimley, UK) got an abnormally low brightness reading for
     Proclus, despite nearby Censorinus being normal. Crater Extinction
     Device used. The Cameron 2006 Extension catalog ID was 163 and the 
     weight was 3. The ALPO/BAA weight was 2 too.


2012-May-30 UT 19:34-21:29 Ill=72% Lambert_Gamma observed by Khachatryan_S on 2008-8-11

     f/12 GoTo scope, x62-x154, seeing: best and transparency=6) observed 
     that an unoficially named mountain (Lambert Gamma or Mons Undest), near 
     Lambert, had a "very strong glow", especially the part that was facing 
     the line of the terminator and this was brighter than the side facing 
     away. The No other object nearby was casting as much light, even Mons 
     La Hire. The effect was seen for 40 minutes and the glow was present 
     throughout. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-30 UT 19:39-23:24 Ill=72% Archimedes observed by Miranda on 1971-8-1 *

     On 1971 Aug 01 at Ut 19:00 Miranda (Plaui, Brazil, 4" refractor, x80) 
     observed two grooves going from east to west, broadening toewards the 
     west, across Archimedes. A drawing was supplied. Apparently this was 
     the first time that this was ever seen. Cameron suggests rays? and also 
     says that in fact a similar phenomenon reported before in neasrly the 
     same position (Apollo 15 watch?). The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=1303 and 
     weight=2. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-30 UT 20:41-21:45 Ill=72% Proclus observed by Darling_D on 1989-2-16

     On 1989 Feb 16 at UT02:46-03:01 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA, 3" 
     refractor, x140, seeing=6/10) found that the brightness of the rim of 
     Proclus was 9.0 (normal?). The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=354 and the 
     weight=0. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-30 UT 21:39-21:45 Ill=72% Gassendi observed by Henshaw_W on 1967-10-13

     Gassendi 1967 Oct 13 UTC 19:17-20:00 Observers: Henshaw (Mansfield, UK, 
     8.5" reflector x112) and Corralitos Observator (Organ Pass, NM, USA, 
     24" reflector) "Phenomenon (brightening ?) nr. NW (ast. ?) lasting for 
     3s. Cont'd for 45m but nothing else unusual, (nr. Gass or in it?). 
     Corralitos MB did not confirm." NASA catalog weight=3 (average). NASA 
     catalog ID #1050.


2012-May-31 UT 18:56-20:40 Ill=81% Proclus observed by Darling_D on 1989-2-17

     On 1989 Feb 17 at UT00:55 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA, 12.5" 
     reflector, x248) found that the brightness of the rim of Proclus was 
     9.0, the north west wall to be 9.5, the west wall to be 5.2, and the 
     east wall 8.2 (normal?). The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=355 and the 
     weight=1. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.


2012-May-31 UT 19:17-21:13 Ill=82% Ross_D observed by Harris on 1964-6-21

     On 1964 Jun 21 at UT 03:43-05:44 Harris, Cross and Helland (Whittier, 
     CA, USA, 19" reflector) observed south of Ross D: "Moving dark area". 
     The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=819 and weight=4. The ALPO/BAA weight=4.


2012-May-31 UT 19:30-20:49 Ill=82% NE_Limb observed by Logue_DA on 1955-1-5

     On 1955 Jan 05 at 01:00-01:30 UT D.A. Logue (Larchment, PA, USA, 15cm 
     reflector at x340, seeing Good) saw a strange blue light above the 
     surface of the Moon where the night and the day meet. He observed this 
     light for more than 30 min and it did not appear to move. It appeared 
     like a star in that the rays of light came from it. The observer adds 
     that he first thought thst the objects was a star, but later decided 
     that it had to be on the Moon itself. A drawing shows the blue spot 
     near the rugged south east limb of the Moon. The editor of the 
     Strolling Astronomer (Vol 8, No. 11-12, Nov-Dec 1954, p146) was unable 
     to identify the craters drawn. The editor speculates that the observer 
     saw a high mountain peak with its summit in sunlight and detached from 
     the illuminated regions - however this would not explain the blue 
     colour. Note this is an ALPO observation and does not apear in the 
     Cameron catalogs. ALPO/BAA weight=2.