The last of the SuperMoon full moons of spring (at 14° Gemini) is the one that looks most suspicious to me, in terms of headline-making tidal extremes and storm and seismic risk, for any number of reasons. For one thing, it closely coincides with the June 4 solar transit of Venus. And then there’s the fact that this particular full moon happens to be a lunar eclipse, with the Moon just a few hours from its peak declination south of the celestial equator at the time. It’s a combination that indicates a formidable confluence of solar energy as well as solar and lunar torque on the skies, seas and crust of our home planet. Apart from these considerations, this one will also be essentially tied for the second-closest SuperMoon full moon of the year – which means it should quite the visual spectacle to behold rising in the east after sunset.
As usual, you can expect a higher-than-normal batch of strong storms (high winds and heavy precipitation) during this SuperMoon, along with an upsurge in newsworthy seismic activity (Magnitude 5+ earthquakes and volcanic eruptions). I make the effective geocosmic shock window associated with the June 4 SuperMoon lunar eclipse to run from the 1st through the 7th – although this will come on the heels of storm and seismic disturbances from the 28th into the 31st, associated with the Moon’s May 29 southward crossing of the celestial equator. There’s an extended risk window associated with the Venus transit across the Sun, which does include storm and seismic activity but focuses more specifically on geomagnetic disturbances. It’s extended because of the Sun’s 25-day rotational period.
http://www.astropro.com/forecast/predict/2012-06.html