During the last quarter moon, the moon appears as a half-circle, illuminated on the left side when viewed from the Northern Hemisphere. This phase occurs about three weeks after the new moon, and the right side is in shadow. The moon rises around midnight and sets around noon, making it visible in the morning sky. The last quarter marks the transition toward the waning crescent phase.
Waning Gobbous, nearly third quarter.
The last quarter moon appears as a half-moon shape, with the left half illuminated and the right half in shadow (for observers in the Northern Hemisphere). This phase occurs about three weeks after the new moon, indicating that the moon is transitioning from a waxing gibbous to a waning crescent. It rises around midnight and sets around noon, making it visible in the morning sky.
it was a cresent.
full moon
I'm unable to display pictures as I'm a text-based assistant. However, you can easily find pictures of a quarter moon by searching online or in astronomy books. It looks like a semicircle with just a quarter of the moon's surface illuminated by sunlight.
A quarter
Of what year? On Nov 2oth 2008 the moon was waning in the last quarter.
There were none. The quarter has been produced since 1796.
250,000
it does
See the related links for an image of a standard quarter rest note in music notation.
During March, 2010: 7th . . . Last Quarter 12th . . Apogee 15th . . New Moon 23rd . . First Quarter 28th . . Perigee 30th . . Full Moon Note that this is only the schedule for March of 2010. It was different in 2009, and it'll be different again in 2011.
There are pictures of all U.S. quarter designs at the Related Link.
It looks like pancakes with syrup on them.
It features a bear coming at you.
In a way, it kind of does.
It portrays King Kamehameha the Great.