A calendar of the moon is a moon phase calendar. This shows when a full moon will be, quarter moon, etc.
Here is a link to a moon phase calendar: * http://www.calendar-365.com/moon/moon-calendar.html
It can start at any part of the lunar cycle; but when used in a calendar, it is common to start it at a new moon.
Although the Gregorian calendar has "months", it is not in any way governed by the phases of the moon. It is strictly a solar calendar, so its emphasis is to remain in sync with the solstices and equinoxes, the characteristics of the Earth's orbit of the sun. Only lunar calendars, like the Muslim calendar, and lunisolar calendars, like the Jewish calendar, are based on the phases of the moon, with each month beginning at the time of the new moon.
The Hebrew calendar is a lunisolar calendar; it follows both the moon and the sun. Each month begins at the time of the new moon like a lunar calendar, but seven out of every nineteen years have thirteen months each instead of twelve to keep the calendar in sync with the seasons.
Moon phase calendars can be found across the web through calendar sites, military sites,and calendar sites. The most famous place to find a calendar of moon phases is through the Farmer's Almanac. You can find it online in digital form and in bookstores, and even in grocery stores in physical form.
A calendar that is based on the phases of the moon.
Here is a link to a moon phase calendar: * http://www.calendar-365.com/moon/moon-calendar.html
The Islamic calendar is a lunar calendar.
Yes, Babylon did have a calendar, based on the moon and sun.
Our modern months have nothing to do with the moon's cycle, but there is a calendar based on lunar months.
It is based on the moon instead of the sun.
A purely solar calendar, such as the Gregorian calendar that is commonly used, has no connection to the cycles of the Moon, and is tied strictly to the solar year. Months are pretty much arbitrary. In a lunar calendar, the month always begins at the new moon, and dates always occur on the same phase of the Moon. A purely lunar calendar (such as the Islamic calendar) does not synchronize with the solar year at all. A luni-solar calendar such as the Hebrew calendar is primarily tied to the Moon, but also adds "leap months" periodically to maintain a rough match with the solar year.
It can start at any part of the lunar cycle; but when used in a calendar, it is common to start it at a new moon.
The calendar is set to be released later this year in September or Octoberhttp://www.newmoonmovie.org/2009/06/new-moon-calendar-with-new-official-image/
You can find moon calendar for year 2010 at calendarlabs.com
Yes.
Yes, the Mayans developed a sophisticated lunar calendar that tracked the phases of the moon. Their calendar system, known as the Tzolk'in, consisted of 260 days based on the cycles of the moon and was separate from their solar calendar.