No. At the full moon, you may (about once every 6 months or so) get a LUNAR eclipse.
Solar eclipses only happen at the new moon phase, again, about every 6 months.
You can see the catalog of all eclipses from 2000 BCE to 3000 AD on the NASA Eclipse Web Page at the link below.
There are almost no extrusive rocks on the earths surface because they are all under the earths surface. They are mainly lower than the earths surface.
A Lunar Eclipse
the sun
That would be a lunar eclipse.
Their evidence comes from rocks at earths surface.
lunar eclipse
The sky is the atmosphere of Earth and any visible part of the universe, as observed from Earths surface.
Sooner or later, a lunar eclipse is seen by everybody on earth's "surface".
The umbra ans penumbra
a total eclipse
The Moon does, most noticeably during an eclipse. Smaller satellites are tougher, try this experiment: use a golf ball and hold it outside on a sunny day or a cloudy day and then move it closer or farther from the ground. The visible shadow changes based on condition and naturally the size of the satellite --------------- no, too small. The sunlight refracts off of the atmosphere and 'fills in' the shadow cast far before it reaches the surface.
visible light
The moon remains partly visible during a lunar eclipse because light is refracted round the earth by its atmosphere. A lunar eclipse is when the moon passes through earths shadow. A partial eclipse,is when only part of the moon is in earths shadow.Then the moon might look like something took a bite out of it.Unlike a partial eclipse,a total luna eclipse occurs whe the whole moon is in the earths shadow.The moon does not disappear during a lunar eclipse.Earths atmosphere bends and scatters some sunlight,allowing some of the suns rays to reach the moon.Lunar eclipses happen several times a year.
They are used to locate a certain place on a map.
1 hour.
Solar Eclipse
a lunar eclipse