A Solstice Moon
Rising opposite the setting Sun, Junes Full Moon occurred within about 28 hours of the solstice. The Moon stays close to the Suns path along the ecliptic plane and so while the solstice Sun climbed high in daytime skies, Junes Full Moon remained low that night as seen from northern latitudes. In fact, the Full Moon hugs the horizon in this June 21 rooftop night sky view from Bursa, Turkey, constructed from exposures made every 10 minutes between moonrise and moonset. In 2024 the Moon also reached a major lunar standstill, an extreme in the monthly north-south range of moonrise and moonset caused by the precession of the Moons orbit over an 18.6 year cycle. As a result, this June solstice Full Moon was at its southernmost moonrise and moonset along the horizon.