If you mean "one moon" as the Indians used the phrase to measure time, then the length of a lunar cycle (from one full moon to the next) would be just over 29.5 days.
One moon is equal to about a month because one "moon cycle" takes about one month. Either that, or it's one night.
No, the full moon can only be seen in one hemisphere at a time due to the position of the Earth and the moon relative to the observer. When it is a full moon in the northern hemisphere, it is a new moon in the southern hemisphere, and vice versa.
Just one, Earth.
The new Moon occurs every month when the moon sets just after sunset. From one new moon to the next, there is a time of about 29 1/2 days.
Earth is the only planet with just one known moon.
The Moon (not surprisingly) is just a moon. It's a "natural satellite" of the Earth. It is not a planet.
Just the one.
You can get one in mount moon and just look around for the others
Not so much the moon but the sun. It lights the world. The moon is just a planet god created for a second planet.
no one discovered the moon...you can see it from anywhere on earth (just about)
The moon takes about 25 hours to circle the earth, so just like any place in the world, the moon rises about an hour later each night. During the full moon, it rises just about sunset and when the moon is new, it rises with the sun. There are 6 time zones in Canada and this needs to be factored in as well.
7 days (that took just one minute to answer)
Just one the same as most of the harvest moon games=)
no. also about saving the world
If you mean "one moon" as the Indians used the phrase to measure time, then the length of a lunar cycle (from one full moon to the next) would be just over 29.5 days.
You can't just get a pink moon orchid, you have to plant a moon orchid and see if it is a pink one, if not try again.