New Moon, First Quarter, Full Moon, and Last Quarter are the four phases of the Earth's Moon.
The first moon landing was on Sunday, July 20, 1969.
The first landing on the moon, by Apollo 11, was on Sunday, July 20, 1969.
A day on the moon is about 29.5 Earth days long, which is roughly equivalent to a lunar month. A year on the moon, however, is about the same length as a year on Earth, as it takes the moon approximately 27.3 Earth days to complete one orbit around the Earth.
July 20th 1969 was on a Sunday .
JULY 20, 1994
New Moon made $26.27 million for the first opening day.
Unmarked means it is not on cover and not cancelled. Which means it can't be a First Day of Issue. A First Day of Issue cover could cost 2 or 3 dollars. The individual stamp can be purchased for less than a dollar.
First issue means the first one e.g. the issue of the 'Girl Talk' issue, the first one, then the next one.
First issue means the first one e.g. the issue of the 'Girl Talk' issue, the first one, then the next one.
Take it to a coin dealer or a local coin show, but don't expect much, the first day issue stuff has very low resale values.
Every lunar month when the moon appears as a crescent on the first day, to eventually become a full moon, that crescent, that thin almost invisible first day of the moon is called a "new moon".
The stamp alone is around $1. You could get around $2 for the first day cover, it has a nice cachet and is pristine.
First Day Covers typically run $1 to $2 each depending on condition and who made them.
$1.50 (Scott Specialized Catalog of US Stamps 2011, page 405(First Day Covers))
First Day Covers are valued at about a $1 each. You could probably sell it to a dealer for half that if it is in perfect condition.
First full moon day