BF 1715 .02 Copy 1 ■ ^H v j ^■E Class 3 t -J3LL£ Book . Copyright^ COJEXRiGHT DEPOSfC ' / 4 / THE SIXTEEN PRINCIPAL STARS 1824-1948 THEIR POSITIONS AND ASPECTS //£ WITH INSTRUCTIONS FOR USE IN NATIVITIES ALSO EPHEMERIS OF URANUS AND NEPTUNE ( , 1835-1876 Copyright/ 1S9S, By J. G. DALTON / ■•■•" --ft BOSTON OCCULT PUB. CO., 1898. o 54 PREFACE. The meagre account of the fixed stars found in astrological books is in all respects poor indeed, consisting of uncertain positions and fictitious attributes — bad enough, what there is of it, and too much of it, such as it is. This wide vacancy in theory must cause a like defect in the practice. We need to have their true spherical locations and aspects, with their relative lustre, and nothing figmentary. Accordingly we offer here what is the very first attempt toward a rational and cor- rect use of them in natal figures. The principal stars are these, with the new notation (Amer. Eph.) of their magnitudes : This notation is in- versely as to their light, starting with that of Aldebaran as the stand- ard unit : making the brightness of Sirius 2.4 that of Procyon, and 3.4 that of Aldebaran, etc. For any sufficient treatment of nativities it is obviously necessary that a diagram of the heavens should include a number of the brightest stars. For that purpose we have prepared these tables of the positions and aspects of those sixteen of them for a period of 124 years, giving them in the order of their magnitudes as found by late methods. At the given dates' these positions are very exact — rather more so than is needed, partly for the ideal satisfaction of doing the best possible, and for other reasons. They are what are called true apparent places ; that is, without aberration, which is merely a distortion. Up to 1900 the mean R. Asc. and declination were Obtained from the latest precise places in the American Ephemeris and certain astronomical papers connected therewith ; and from 1900 to 1948 they were derived by applying the second differences of the previous 48 years. Mean places were then converted into apparent by Bowditch's tables of nutation, the several factors being properly carried forward ; and the longitudes and so forth 3 Sirius . . ■1.4 Procyon -f 0.5 Canopus ■0.8 (S Centauri 0.7 a Centauri -0.1 Altair . . 0.9 Capella . . . + 0.1 a Orionis .. 0.9 Arcturus . . 0.2 a Crucis 0.9 Vega . . . 0.2 Aldebaran . 1.0 Rigel . . . 0.3 Spica . . 1.1 a Eridani 0.4 Antares • . 1.2 were got by usual formulas. Being apparent places, some of the differ- ences are quite irregular, but the error by proportion within the two- year intervals is for most of the stars extremely small ; in the four-year intervals it is often more, but will be insensible for the uses intended — will never equal the uncertainty in the planets' tabular places, which is often a large fraction of V owing to the defects of theoretical astronomy. Old tables of mean positions can be found, but are considerably inaccurate. It would have been far easier to have made a brief table of that kind for some medium dates, with annual differences, which for each star are nearly uniform. This we have herein done for two other stars not in the tables. Mean places are but average ones, while the apparent are exact, so that our plan, though wrong in idea, will give in the intervals more closely the actual places. Our tables have the only record of the sextiles, and the trines of course are exactly opposite. The formula for these is given on page 9. If a star's latitude were just 60° there could be but one sextile and that would coincide with its longitude ; if more than 60°, there is no sextile on the ecliptic. The squares are always 90° from the star's longitude, and from star itself. We know of but one astrologic writer that has given even a hint as to right places on the ecliptic of aspects other than the square — so simple a thing, so important with most of the stars, and, to some extent, with the Moon and Venus. We have given parallels of declination on the ecliptic for eight of these stars, the rest not having any, and the other two points are just opposite to those given. The formula for them is upon page 9. When a star's declination is more than the ecliptic obliquity it has no parallel. The names of the most southern of these stars are popularly unfa- miliar in our latitudes because they do not rise here, but they are to be regarded as of more import than well-known ones of much less lustre that are on the list, or others such as Castor and Pollux. Though often these southern ones cannot be put into an ordinary figure, which rep- resents only a part of the sphere, their squares will always have place in it, and sometimes their other aspects. Putting the stars into a figure should be done by the R. Asc. and declination, for some that have much latitude will otherwise not be in the right houses. Tan decl. X tan lat. of place = sine asc. diff., and 90° -\- that gives the semi-arc, which with the meridian distance fixes the mundane place of the star, as of any other body. The briefest way of indicating them in a figure is to use the numerals here appended to their names, as the latter cannot well be abbreviated enough. The fact that the numbers denote their order of brightness will be an advantage in doing so, and the names may be easily remembered or referred to. It is 4 not advised that all of them should be put into the figure, but to select some which come in the more important houses, and such as are far north and above the horizon or far south and below it, as thus they are more potent by position ; but if the figure be for south latitude the con- ditions last named are to be reversed. Take notice that in certain lat- itudes some of them never rise, others never set. If a star's declination is more than the complement of the latitude of place (its diff. from 90°), it will not rise, or not set, as the case may be, and hence is in no house, but outside the limits of the figure, and can make no mundane aspects, yet it throws some of its zodiacal aspects to various parts of the figure like the rest. It may be well to have in addition the place of rj Argus, the most variable of the great stars, which at intervals of about seventy years is among the very brightest. Its last maximum period was about 1830 to 1850, and the next should be 1900 to 1920. We give below its mean positions, with annual differences, in the middle of those periods, and results will be correct to a small fraction of V for either term of twenty years. When reckoning backward change the -\- signs to — , The sextiles are but about 14° 24' from the longitudes, and may be had more closely by formula on page 9. The place of Eegulus also may be desired, as it is a familiar star, nearly on the ecliptic, and hardly inferior to Antares. Therefore we give its mean place for the middle date of the tables, 1886, and annual differences, which will generally suffice to get its position with less than V of error for any time in the whole period. For dates previous to 1886 the -f- or — signs are to be reversed. Its sextiles are almost precisely 60° from the longitudes, and its parallels may be had by the formula on page 9. V Argfls. Date. R. Asc. A. diff. Decl. A. diff. Long. A. diff. Lat. A. diff. Jan. 1. 1840 159° / // 43 27 34-5 S8°s. 1 " 11 50 40.5 4- •1 18.8 ^ 19 / // 57 7-4 + 11 49-7 58°s. 1 11 55 3-8 4- 11 0.2 1910 160 23 28.6| 34-S 59° 12 40.3) 18.9 20 54 560 49.4 55 19-5 o-3 Regulus. Jan. 1. 1886 150 1 n 34 304 48.0 12 n. / // 31 26.2 17-47 n 28° / // 14 41.0 11 52.0 o°n. / // 27 39-3 4- 0.13 It should be fully understood that the precision of figures in this table, and in the main tables, is merely a means for getting correct enough positions at special dates ; and these when obtained it is well to set down to the nearest second for any trigonometrical use. For calcu- lations in " directions " the nearest tenth of a minute is the utmost nicety ever wanted, either for stars or any other factors ; and the even minute only may commonly do. As to what specific meaning any " bright particular star " may possibly have, there is nowhere so much as a plausible supposition, and perhaps it is vain to seek ; yet all the guessing and lying authors have freely radiated their darkness about it in futile conjectures, — but not a word of what can be readily known for certain, the positions and aspects of stars, which are presumably very significant in a general way. One or more of the brightest in an angle probably means much, or casting aspects therein, or to the luminaries or planets. Our own experience goes to confirm this, but it is likely that beyond the first eight or ten stars their indications are not very obvious, however situated. A number of notable facts in regard to them appear along the ecliptic. The most remarkable one is that the squares of three very bright ones, Sirius, Canopus and Vega all come at about T and =£= 12° to 14°. Libra having been regarded of old as a violent sign, this perhaps arose, unwit- tingly, from that focus of squares in it. These, when occurring just in an angle, surely must be portentous. We have seen some instances of it in the ascendant, and the persons were of an intense or sort of demonic nature and short-lived. We have a specially authentic nativity where they occur in the midheaven, which came to these squares by arcs measur- ing just to the time, early in life, when the native's best prospects were blighted and whole career changed. Some other cases where aspects on the ecliptic combine are as follows : All those of Aldebaran agree almost exactly with those of Antares ; the squares of a Centauri near SI and sg 28° nearly coincide with a sextile or trine of Arcturus ; and the squares of Arcturus and Spica are close together in about 22° of c 75° s. t V 1 // / // 1 II 1824 o 50 36 6 32 16 50 48 Has on 26 i 3 1 16 33. 55 28 2 8 25 35 27 30 2 43 29 36 55 the ecliptic 32 3 19 36 29 38 23 50 45 1834 3 57 27 39 59 36 4 37 25 4i 41 38 5 20 25 43 29 40 6 4 36 29 45 18 no Aspect 42 6 48 37 47 7 50 39 1844 7 30 47 48 49 46 8 8 36 56 50 23 48 8 44 37 1 Si 52 but the □» 50 9 20 3 53 21 52 9 56 37 1 54 53 50 35 and no 1854 IO 36 36 59 56 33 56 ii 1836 58 58 ° 20 58 12 2 37 1 9 60 12 46 7 1 58 Parallels. 62 13 28 17 3 43 50 30 1864 H 8 27 5 19 66 H 45 34 6 50 68 «5 20 37 37 8 17 Formula for Sex tiles 70 i5 56 36 9 48 of stars with lat. 72 16 35 33 11 26 50 25 less than 6o° : 1874 17 16 32 13 11 76 18 37 33 15 cos 6o° ,. , c 78 18 44 39 t6 49 cos star s lat. 80 82 J 9 20 27 8 31 48 58 18 20 35 50 21 sextile from star's long. The 1884 20 45 38 6 21 46 trines are exactly opposite. 86 21 21 10 23 H 88 21 56 11 24 44 90 22 34 8 26 19 1892 23 15 6 28 2 50 16 94 23 5838 7 29 50 96 24 42 11 3i 40 98 25 25 20 33 27 Formula for Parallels 1900 26 7 30 35 9 of stars with dccl. less than 04 08 27 28 21 33 38 45 45 38- 4i 11 12 5o 11 the ecliptic obliquity : 12 16 29 55 38 42 44 ' 48 40 sine star's decl. . , r 3 1 24 54 20 sine eel. obi. 1920 24 32 33 45 57 39 14 24 55 54 40 37 50 4 Par. from cp-r^o; also = cos _ 28 35 11 21 57 T1 c .46 long, of Par. from^-Vf 0. 32 36 37 22 I 22 1936 37 55 39 3 1 4 37 40 39 14 39 7 52 49 58 44 40 32 49 ii 8 48 41 5i 58 1 4: 24 a Centauri, 3. Date. R . Asc. Decl. Long. Lat. * * Jan.l. 216° 6o° s. PI 27° 42° s. ^ 9 Vf 1 4° / »/ / II 1 a 1 // // / // 1824 56 12 6 7 16 21 3i 46 59 io o 1 54 32 49 26 5» 217° 2I 217 l8 6 35 17 52 49 28 34 16 28 7 1 19 16 52 2 54 35 •37 30 2 4 28 20 35 56 4 i7 36 54 32 3 46 7 57 21 57 3i 59 5 39 38 12 Has no 1834 5 32 8 30 23 21 32 3 7 8 39 35 36 7 28 9 6 24 55 6 8 45 4i 5 38 9 35 9 42 26 35 9 10 28 42 43 40 11 50 10 17 28 18 13 12 13 44 22 42 H 8 10 49 29 58 16 13 56 46 1844 16 21 11 17 31 31 32 18 15 32 47 3i 46 18 22 11 43 32 57 21 17 48 54 48 20 12 12 9 34 18 24 18 23 50 12 Parallels 50 21 55 12 37 35 37 27 IQ 45 5i 29 52 23 40 13 9 37 2 30 21 12 52 5i 1854 25 32 13 44 38 33 32 34 22 46 54 19 56 27 36 H 20 40 11 37 24 27 55 55 58 29 50 14 56 4i 53 40 26 12 57 35 60 32 8 15 28 43 35 43 27 56 59 I5 c •> 13 on the 62 34 23 15 57 45 11 32 46 29 34 47 1864 36 29 16 23 46 39 49 31 5 2 12 66 38 22 16 49 48 5'2 32 29 3 3 1 68 40 7 17 16 49 19 56 33 5i 4 47 70 4i 50 17 47 50 4232 59 35 16 6 7 72 43* 40 18 21 52 HI33 2 36 48 7 34 ecliptic. 1874 45 41 18 57 53 471 5 38 27 9 7 76 47 53 19 33 55 29 9 40 ulio 46 78 80 50 52 11 29 20 20 6 36 57 58 11 28° 49 12 14 41 43 56 12 37 H 25 1 82 54 38 21 2 19 33 17 45 10 15 29 1884 56 35 21 28 1 42 20 46 -35li6 50 86 58 218° 2 ; 21 54 3 2 23 47 57 18 5 N. B. The 88 6 22 24 4 23 26 49 21 19 25 number to 90 1 53 22 57 5 49 33 30 50 50 20 49 each star 1892 3 51 23 32 7 24 33 52 27 22 20 94 6 24 8 9 4 36 54 io|23 58 denotes 96 8 18 24 42 10 47 39 55 55 25 38 only its 98 10 36 25 13 12 26 33 42 57 38 27 H place in the 1900 12 49 25 41 13 59 46 59 Ix o H 28 45 list; 04 16 40 26 32 16 44 5i 2 il 3 3i 25 08 20 10 27 32 19 29 33 58 4 53 34 4 No. 1 has 12 24 11 28 43 22 40 34 4 8 10 37 10 less than 16 28 47 29 49 26 4 10 11 39 40 29 four times 1920 33 8 30 43 29 6 16 14 46 43 26 the light 24 36 47 3i 36 3i 46 23 i7 32 46 1 28 40 23 32 4i 34 39 34 29 20 2948 48 of No. 16. 32 44 4i 33 52 37 58 35 23 54 52 2 1936 48 40 34 5i 40 56 41 26 58 54 54 40 52 4i 35 5i 43 54 48 30 1 57 jgo 47 44 56 2I9 ° 43 36 50 46 53 34 54 33 5 xo 4i 48 37 49 49 52 35 36 10 3 35 10 Capella, 4. Date. R Asc. Decl. L ong. Lat. * * Jan.l. 75 45° n. □ 19° 22 n. cp 2. j° n 16° i // / // / // / II I 11 / 11 1824 55 53 48 32 24 13 5i 44 15 48 32 39 26 5» 76° J 35 2 5 . 54 44 16 50 33 18 28 38 27 27 44 l 9 13 ■>5 41 30 2 8 44 28 56 44 20 42 37 10 Has no 32 4 6 48 55 30 26 45 22 12 38 40 1834 6 12 49 9 3 2 2 5i 45 13 48 40 16 36 8 26 24 33 45 46 25 3i 41 59 38 10 50 37 35 33 46 27 20 43 47 40 13 17 49 47 37 27 46 29 13 45 41 Parallels. 42 15 43 52 39 15 46 3i 1 47 29 1844 18 55 41 5i 46 32 46 49 13 46 20 7 49 58 42 35 46 34 21 50 49 48 22 6 50 3 44 2 46 35 48 52 16 50 24 3 12 45 34 46 37 20 53 48 on the 52 26 6 25 47 8 46 38 54 55 22 1854 28 i7 39 48 49 5i 46 40 35 57 3 56 30 3S50 53 50 37 46 42 23 58 7 c 15 ' 5« 58 33 651 4 52 29 46 44 42 60 35 32 10 54 !9 46 46 6 2 33 ecliptic. 62 37 53 J 4 5^ 5 46 47 5*1 4 19 1864 40 3 16 57 42 51 46 49 29! 5 56 6(5 42 45 1 20 59 20° I4 46 5i .0 7 27 68 44 1 27 42 46 52 29 8 56 70 46 1 39 2 14 46 54 1 10 28 ■«•«»- 72 48 1051 53 3 53 47 55 39 12 7 1874 50 2952 7 5 39 5i 47 57 26 13 53 76 52 55 19 7 30 47 59 77 o 17I15 44 78 80 82 55 57 S9 22 45 n »o 59 52 26 30 32 9 11 12 22 9 47 47 47 47 1 3 2 4 9*7 56(19 34 21 35 23 1 Strictures. Star positions are 1884 2 77 ? 1 < * 35 H 17 5i 47 6 322 30 got by the great 86 88 4 5 o| 5852 4 1 5i 15 17 49 22 47 47 7 9 36 8 24 25 3 3^ instruments, and 90 8 4 53 S 19 3 48 10 4Q 2 7 16 are precisely sure. 1892 10 20 19 20 46 48 [2 33 28 SQ Those of planets 94 12 45 3i 22 35 5i 48 H 22 30 49 are given by 96 98 1900 15 i7 19 13 37 *54 53 40 44 46 24 26 27 24 13 56 48 48 47 16 iS *9 11I32 034 4236 37 26 9 theory, are much less exact, and even bv the latest 01 23 59 53 53 3i 47 22 4739 13 tables most of 08 2S 54 H 34 3 5i 48 25 5^142 17 12 16 32 37 35 30 54 4 1 56 37 4i 34 17 48 48 29 33 2o'45 3 49 47 3o them are varying 1920 4i 59 55 44 38 48 36 2552 5* from the observed places. 24 28 45 50 57 7 11 36 47 50 38 49 48 5i 48 39 42 25 36 55 59 l8 o 5i 2 32 54 54|55 59 54 28 48 46 14 2 4 1 1936 59 78 x f56 M 57 >t° 45 48 49 32 5 58 40 3 7 36 28 1 2 48 52 49 9 16 44 7 58 4i 4 20 48 56 7 12 33 48 12 20 54 7 39 51 48 59 25 15 52 11 Vega, 5. . p Date. R. Asc. Decl. I .ong. Lat. Jan.L 277° 38° n. V? 12° 6i° n. / // / 11 1 1! 1 11 1824 44 52 37 28 51 14 44 32 Has on 26 45 54 4i 52 55 28 46 5i 5i s"4 28 30 47 46 37 58 55 59 32 48 39 38 57 28 44 3o the ecliptic 1834 49 37 59 n° 5 36 50 39 1 3 48 38 5i 45 3 2 38 40 52 52 38 10 4 30 44 27 no Aspect 42 53 59 21 6 20 1844 55 2 33 8 3 46 56 1 44 9 39 48 56 56 38 52 11 10 44 26 50 57 50 56 12 39 but the □, 52 58 46 57 H 14 1854 59 278° 47 52 57 15 55 56 38 59 r 7 43 58 1 59 39 4 J 9 35 44 24 60 3 6 14 21 26 and no 62 4 10 26 23 11 1864 5 10 38 24 50 Q6 6 6 39 48 26 21 68 7 53 27 5i 44 22 70 i 56 54 29 23 Parallels. 72 55 54 3i 2 1874 9 59 39 55 32 49 76 11 5 40 34 40 78 12 13 8 36 3i 44 20 80 13 18 20 38 J 9 82 H 20 33 40 1884 i5 i7 43 4i 33 86 16 12 40 50 43 4 88 i7 5 52 44 33 44 18 The D and some 90 18 3 53 46 10 1892 19 6 53 47 55 of the planets 94 20 12 40 57 49 45 96 98 21 22 19 2 5 41 4 IS 5i 53 37 26 44 16 may reach the * 1900 23 28 28 55 9 of this st*r, mostly 01 08 2 5 27 21 12 47 52 58 1 14 14 ^ * 19 44 14 when in \ff with 12 16 29 3i 17 33 41 42 55 12 4 8 49 33 2-3 lat. n. ; and its A 1920 33 18 36 11 25 44 12 when in 53 24 35 26 5 1 H 55 with like lat. s. 28 37 20 42 52 18 7 32 39 32 43 21 47 44 9 1936 41 3i 12 25 4 40 43 3i 26 28 22 44 45 3 1 40 3i 4i 44 6 48 47 3i 54 35 12 Arcturus, 6. Date. R. Asc. Decl. Long. Lat. * * Par ■. decl. n Jan.l. 211° 20° n. _A- 2I C 30 n. n 27 / 1 6° 8 2 9° SI o° 1 if / // / a / // 1 II / 11 / 11 1 11 1824 54 48 6 2 46 si 51 30 24 21 9 33 40 13 19 47 26 56 8 5 28 48 38 25 25 59 11 16 38 5 21 55 28 57 22 4 55 50 10 20 27 30 12 5i 35 54 24 6 30 5« 34 4 22 51 39 5i 15 28 57 H 22 33 29 26 3i 32 59 2T oo48 3 46 53 9 10 30 24 15 54 30 33 29 27 1834 i 2 9 3 6 54 46 5 31 59 17 33 27 14 32 46 36 2 35 2 24 56 29 5i 33 4 o| 19 1923 4i 36 19 38 4 6 1 4i 58 2 ,o J 9 50 55 35 2821 10 20 10 39 50 40 5 37 59 II 49 37 17 23 4 l 7 1 42 59 42 7 5 c IQ U 59 y 20 2 44 39 424 56 H : 9 45 4i 1844 8 28 45 3 43 40 40 45 2 b 40 12 4 47 56 46 9 44 59 12 5 18 50 35 42 1828 18 9 57 50 3 48 10 56 58 39 6 48 30 43 46,29 50 7 38 52 22 50 12 9 58 4 8 17 2 5 45 i33i 21 4 55 55 5 52 13 27 57 25 9 50 20 46 44 32 56 ss 28 ' H° 58 jo 20 1854 '4 53 56 44 11 34 5o 16 48 2634 42 12 1 48 56 16 21 56 2 13 19 1 1 50 936 30 54 46 5 14 58 17 53 55 19 15 11 5 51 59 38 24 5i 27 8 33 60 r 9 22 54 39 i7 2 50 53 47 40 16 48 39 11 21 62 20 46 54 2 18 47 49 55 55 30 42 4 46 17 13 43 1864 22 4 53 29 20 24 50 57 5 43 43 44 12 15 48 (Mi 23 17 52 56 21 56 45 58. ,8=34 45 17 42 1 17 59 68 24 29 52 22 23 24 40 3 1 46 48 39 29 20 3i 70 25 46 51 45 24 56 49 35 1 3i 48 21 36 2823 32 72 27 8 51 4 26 35 30 3 7 50 2 33 6 26 54 1874 28 37 50 22 28 21 25 4 51 51 5i 29 3630 24 76 30 84 2 39 30 12 J 9 6 4o,53 44 26 i8,33 42 78 3i 39 48 58 32 3 49 14 8 29 55 37 23 2436 36 80 33 5 48 21 33 5° 9 10 H 57 27 20 57 39 3 82 34 24 47 47 35 3° 4 11 52 59 , 7° 9 ' 43 18 50 4i 10 1884 35 39 47 14 37 3 49 13 22 o 1 16 44 43 16 86 36 5 1 46 41 38 32 48 55 14 47 2 16 *4 22 45 38 88 38 5 46 5 40 2 5° 16 17 3 47 11 32 48 28 90 39 26 45 25 4i 39 45 17 52 5 25 8 17 51 43 1892 40 53 44 43 43 23 40 !9 34 7 12 4 5i 55 9 94 42 23 44 45 12 48 35 21 21 9 4 J 27 c ,28 30 58 2 o 32 1 30 96 43 55 43 J 9 47 4 29 23 11 10 58 58 "' 98 45 22 42 40 48 53 24 24 57 12 48 55 57 4 3 1900 46 44 42 5 50 35 19 26 37 14 33 53 48 6 12 04 49 12 4i 53 39 48 9 29 37 17 4i 49 30 10 30 08 5t 43 39 47 & 2 ,q 42|47 59 32 36 20 48 43 45 16 15 12 54 38 38 22 12 49 36 2 i 2 4 23 36 59 23 1 16 57 2T ,c4Q 37 1 3 55 39 39 40 28 10 3i 16 28 44 1920 •- 1 21 35 52 7 16 29 42 5731 35 27 2 32 S8 24 2 46 34 46 10 16 *9 45 52 34 39 22 27 37 33 28 5 2 5l33 28 T 3 27 47 9 48 5937 54 16 14 43 46 32 8 26 32 3 17 5 46 59 ^2 33]4i 37 9 42 50 18 1936 n 7 30 49 20 26 4«j 55 46,44 58 r 4 26< 59 2 28 55 ,0 32 40 13 48 29 35 23 47 39 59. >qO O48 18 17 o3 43 44 ib 29 28 22 27 8 29 2 ' 9 13 5i 40 54 9 5 51 48 19 10 27 9 30 29 19 5 27 55 3 49 3 10 57 13 Rigel, 7. Date. R Asc. Decl. L ong. Lat. * * Par. decl. s. Jan.l. 76- 8 C s. ni4° 31 s. cp 20 59 9 o y 6 28 50,31 10 52 5i 10 40 45 25 3i 30 9 4i 28 12,31 48 1854 52 37 25 47 6 8 30 3i 50 2 22 27 27132 33 56 54 10 22 10 48 54 29 33 38 4 11 26 43 33 17 58 55 46 21 59 50 46 28 35 29 6 3 26 14 33 46 60 57 21 52 52 36 27 37 19 7 54 25 58 34 2 62 58 77° f{ 48 54 22 26 39 4 9 39 54 6 1864 45 56 8 25 40 4i 11 18 53 7 6i> 1 34 21 4i 57 3i 24 42 12 12 . 49 45 15 68 2 50 32 59 15° ° * 32 23 43 4i 14 19 25 24 34 36 70 4 9 20 22 45 12 15 5i 24 48 35 12 72 f 34 21 5 2 11 21 46 5i 17 30 24 4 35 56 1874 6 20 5i 3 57 8 20 48 36 19 17 23 20 36 40 76 8 4i 38 5 48 19 50 27 21 9 22 46 37 H 78 10 17 3o 7 39 18 52 18 23 27 33 80 11 49 26 9 26 17 54 5 24 48 20 40 82 13 15 20 23 11 6 *7 55 45 26 28 20 40 1884 H 34 T 9 12 39 8 16 57 17 28 2 22 15 37 45 86 15 5i 13 14 9 15 58 2I e 46 29 3i 21 59 38 1 88 17 9 20 2 15 39 14 16 3i 2 21 27 38 33 90 18 3 2 !9 47 i7 16 13 1 52 32 39 20 45 39 15 1892 20 1 32 19 12 3 36 34 24 20 1 39 59 94 21 36 !9 20 5o 8 11 5 25 36 M J 9 23 40 37 96 23 12 10 22 41 10 7 16 38 6 19 4i 98 24 45 5 24 30 9 9 5 39 56 18 50 10 1900 26 13 19 2 26 13 8 10 46 41 39 49 11 04 28 5i 18 54 29 17 8 7 13 5i 44 43 18 35 4i 25 08 3i 29 31 32 20 5 16 53 47 47 17 3042 30 12 34 30 18 2 35 5i 3 20 23 5i l 9 16 5 43 55 16 37 42 17 45 39 34 8 1 24 5 55 2 15 25 44 35 1920 40 35 40 42 55 7 59 27 26 5«m< 325 15 22 44 38 24 43 9 28 45 55 57 30 25 1 1U 25 H 53 45 7 28 45 54 17 1 49 6 56 33 35 4 37 13 34 46 26 32 49 2 16 35 .S2 45 54 37 13 8 17 12 2i|47 39 1936 S 1 52 l 9 56 2 7 52 40 29 11 35 11 39 48 21 40 54 4i 16 3 59 16 2 ° 50 43 46 H 53 10 59 49 1 44 57 78° 11 15 48 2 37 48 47 3 18 12 10 21 49 39 48 15 33 5 56 46 50 21 21 3i 9 44 5o 16 14 a Eridani, 8 • Date. R. Asc. Decl. Long. Lat. * * Jan.l. 22° 58 s. H 12° 59° s. K 1 H 23° / II / II / II / 11 / 11 / // 1824 47 31 7 52 48 58 22 12 44 18 53 37 26 48 30 7 18 50 42 12 46 7 55 17 28 49 25 6 45 52 16 12 47 43 56 50 HO SO 24 6 13 53 48 13 49 21 58 14 Has no 32 51 27 5 39 55 18 13 50 48 59 24 c ,48 1834 52 40 5 2 56 58 22 14 52 36 i9 36 53 58 4 22 5 8 1 ,c 43 6 34 14 54 25 3 1 38 55 17 3 40 J 4 56 18 4 5' 40 56 31 2 59 2 28 M 58 2 o 12 6 44 Parallels 42 57 38 2 20 4 18 15 4 8 33 1844 58 3« 1 45 6 2 22 15 I 50 10 15 46 59 71O JT •i 30 1 12 7 39 15 3 29 11 49 48 40 9 10 15 5 13 18 .00 1 32 ° C7° 7 10 4i 16 6 36 H 46 on the 52 2 4 2 SQ 5/ 31 12 16 16 8 M 16 18 1854 3 59 58 51 13 59 22 16 9 59 17 58 56 5 18I58 10 15 49 17 11 53 19 45 58 6 3457 28 17 42 17 13 47 21 37 60 7 43 56 49 *9 34 17 15 40 23 28 ecliptic 62 8 45 56 13 21 20 *7 17 27 25 14 1864 9 4i 55 39 23 22 17 '9 8 26 5* 'M> 10 37 55 7 24 32 18 20 44 28 21 68 n 36 54 35 26 2 18 22 .18 29 46 70 12 44 54 27 36 19 23 55 3i 16 72 13 59 53 21 29 16 19 25 39 32 53 1874 15 18 52 40 3i 5 22 19 27 30 34 39 76 78 16 17 36 47 52 5 l 18 32 34 56 50 19 20 29 3i 22 17 36 30 23 For the truest 80 18 51 50 4 1 36 38 20 33 7 40 10 students a proper 82 19 48 50 7 38 20 20 34 52 41 47 astronomy 1884 20 43 49 35 39 54 22 21 36 30 43 18 of the solar 86 21 42|49 4 4 1 24 21 38 4 44 44 system should 88 22 4648 29 42 50 21 39 38 46 15 locate its main 1)0 23 5947 51 44 34 21 4i 17 47 52 objects, the planets, in their 1892 94 2 5 26 1747 35 1 4° 11 29 4° 48 21 11 21 22 21 43 44 4 55 49 5i 38 27 96 27 49 45 49 50 6 22 46 5i S3 20 98 28 55 45 iO 5i 56 22 48 43 55 8 path, the Zodiac. 1900 29 54 44 36 53 39 22 50 29 56 49 The official 04 31 , 45 43 32 56 46 23 53 40 59 25 < 2 ° 3 5« books give 08 33 58I42" 22 59 , 1° 52 22 23 5 6 ,o 5i 53 12 36 34 4i I 3 T 25 24 28 6 22 only their 16 3« 58 39 41 7 II 24 4 19 10 3 1920 24 28 40 42 45 55 50 13 38 37 36 32 28 10 13 16 35 38 52 25 ■ 25 22 26 7 10 H 48 55 13 13 16 19 23 21 30 for the uses of materialists. 32 47 49 34 51 20 33 26 17 59 23 7 1936 49 59 33 40 23 54 27 21 24 26 23 40 52 10 32 28 27 14 27 24 49 2 9 39 44 54 l 9 3i l 7 30 35 28 28 14 32 55 48 56 29 30 5 33 56 22 28 3i 40 36 12 15 Procyon, 9. Date. R. Asc. Decl. Lon g- Lat. * * Par. decl. n. Jan.l. 112° 5° n. £5 2 -3° 15° s. 8 24 ^2 2° cp 14° w i5° / // / // / // / // / II / II f // 1 11 1824 3i 32 40 7 21 47 59 5 42 IO 1 24 21 49 38 11 26 33 6 39 44 23 26 6 43 49 3 3 20 54 39 6 28 34 33 23 24 57 7 45 20 4 34 20 4 39 q6 30 35 56 39 6 26 24 9 46 48 6 1 19 21 40 39 32 37 20 38 53 27 53 10 48 16 7 29 18 46 41 "4 1834 38 5o 42 29 28 59 10 49 51 9 4 18 i6 ! 4i 44 36 40 28 30 31 10 11 5i 33 J o 46 17 42 42 18 38 42 11 38 15 32 58 12 53 22 12 34 17 2 42 58 40 43 56 37 56 34 49 13 55 13 14 25 16 13 43 47 42 45 39 33 36 37 15 57 2 16 13 15 17 44 43 1844 47 16 37 9 38 19 59 17 58 25° 44 - *9 17 55 '4 J 9 45 41 46 48 46 36 37 39 54 18 *9 29 13 47 48 50 10 29 41 23 19 1 48 20 57 12 42! 18 50 5i 34 14 42 5i 21 3 16 22 26 12 347 57 52 53 236 2 44 24 23 4 49 ^3 58 II 2948 3i 1854 54 38 35 5o 46 4 59 24 6 >o 2q 38 10 5549 5 56 56 J 9 35 47 51 26 8 17 27 24 IO «4 49 46 58 5« 4 35 16 49 4i 28 10 7 29 14 9 26 50 34 60 59 IT ,o4S 34 54 5i 30 30 n 57 31 3 8 3 J 5' 29 62 1 * J 26 30 53 14 32 13 5i 32 37 7 33 52 27 1864 2 57 34 7 54 50 59 33 t5 18 34 22 6 37 53 23 66 4 2233 47 56 20 35 16 47 35 52 5 49 54 11 68 5 45 32 57 47 36 18 15 37 19 5 9 54 5i 70 7 11 l 9 59 24 ^ oi7 37 19 45 38 49 4 35 55 25 72 8 44 33 8 54 38 21 23 40 26 4 3 55 57 1874 10 ■ 24 3^ 54 2 39 59 39 23 8 42 10 3 26 56 34 76 12 8 37 4 29 4 1 24 58J44 2 4i |57 19 78 13 53 32 16 6 l 9 42 26 4845 5o 1 49 58 n 80 15 33 3i 53 8 5 43 28 34,47 36 1 ,o5259 5 56| [6° 8 82 17 7 30 9 44 44 30 I 4!49 15 59 4 1884 18 34 3i 9 1 1 16 59 46 3i 46!5o 46 S9 5I 55 86 19 5830 52 12 44 47 33 i4|52 M 58 22 1 38 88 21 23 38 14 13 48 34 44|53 43 57 46 2 14 90 22 54 26 15 49 5o 36 19 55 18 57 12 2 48 1892 24 32 30 13 17 32 59 5i 38 3 57 T 56 35 3 25 94 26 15 29 56 19 21 53 39 52 58,,o 50 55 5i 4 9 96 28 36 21 11 55 4i 43 40 54 59 5 1 98 29 42 29 12 22 59 56 43 3i 2 27 54 1 5 59 1900 3i 18 28 47 24 40 59 l6 c 58 45 12 4 8 53 2 6 58 04 34 10 28 7 27 4i 2 48 H 7 9 5t 22 8 38 08 37 1 27 40 30 4i 5 5i 15 10 8 5o 10 9 5o 12 40 18 27 12 34 9 7 54 42|i3 35 48 54 11 6 16 43 47 26 3i 37 49 10 58 26° 2 3| i7 J 5 47 IO 12 50 1920 46 56 25 44 41 8 13 1 42 20 34 45 17 14 43 24 49 44 25 9 44 5 16 4 40 23 30 43 49 16 1 1 28 52 44 24 44 47 15 l 9 7 50 26 39 42 39 17 21 32 56 10 24 11 50 5i 22 n 27 30 !5 4 1 IO 18 50 1936 59. 14° r 5 * 20 23 34 54 6 25 H 43 33 30 39 37 20 23 40 2 1 22 56 57 25 2I 28 i7 58 36 44 38 2 21 58 44 5 24 22 19 36 3i 21 14 39 58 36 26 23 34 48 8 30 21 4i 3 52 35 24 30; 43 M 34 51J25' 9 ' 16 /3 Centauri, 10. Date. R. A« 5C. Decl. Long. Lat. * * Jan.l. 207 C > 59° s. IU 21 44° s. =£= c u Vf 7 c / II / II / // 1 11 1 II / II 1824 52 42 3i II 21 9 6 56 29 40 12 37 26 54 55 3i 44 22 48 57 3i 21 H 16 28 56 57 32 15 24 21 58 32 54 15 47 30 58 2oS" , 48 32 45 25 49 6 59 34 24 17 15 32 O 35 33 18 27 19 7 35 54 18 43 Has no 1834 2 25 33 55 28 53 2 37 30 20 16 36 4 23 34 34 30 36 3 39 H 21 57 38 6 33 35 15 32 25 4 4i 4 23 46 40 8 5i 35 55 34 16 6 42 57 25 36 42 11 12 36 3i fr 5 7 6 44 46 27 24 1844 13 29 37 5 37 48 7 46 3029 6 46 15 35 37 36 39 23 8 48 5 30 40 48 i7 30 3« 6 40 52 9 49 35 32 8 50 19 18 38 3« 42 20 10 5i 5 33 36 Parallels 52 21 6 39 13 43 53 7 11 52 38 35 8 1854 23 2 39 52 45 34 12 54 20 36 48 56 25 9|40 32 47 21 13 56 8| 3 8 34 58 27 2541 12 49 12 14 5« 040 24 60 29 47 4i 50 5i 2 15 59 6 o 52 42 13 62 32 6 42 24 52 47 7 16 1 37 43 57 on the 1864 34 16 42 56 54 24 17 3 15 45 33 66 36 15 43 26 55 54 18 4 46 47 -> 68 38 4 43 57 57 23 19 6 15 48 30 70 39 52 44 31 58 22° 54 20 7 47 50 72 4i 45 45 9 32 7 21 9 26 5i 37 ecliptic. 1874 43 49 45 49 2 17 22 11 13 53 22 76 46 3 46 28 4 6 2 3 13 3 55 9 78 48 25 47 7 5 59 24 14 56 57 1 80 50 46 47 43 7 45 25 16 44 58 go 47 •» • ^ 82 53 48 14 9 25 7 26 18 24 26 1884 S5 3 48 45 10 57 27 19 57 I 57 86 56 55 49 15 12 26 28 21 27 3 24 The re.il Astrology on 88 90 5 o 2 °9° 43 34 49 50 48 25 13 15 55 3i 29 29 22 24 57 34 4 6 53 28 1892 94 2 4 35 46 5i 5i 4 45 i7 19 14 4 7 30 31 2b 28 18 8 8 9 10 59 sphere is in 96 7 7 52 24 20 55 33 30 1 n 49 practice mere 98 9 29 53 22 43 34 3i 50 13 3<> 'strology, a 1900 11 47 53 32 24 25 35 33 33 15 17 poor thing with 04 15 49 54 33 27 28 7 36 36 38 18 19 little head to it. 08 19 27 55 40 30 30 3S 39 41 21 l 9 There is a 12 23 34|56 59 33 59 40 43 12 24 46 true Starry 16 28 1758 15 37 4i 42 46 56 28 26 Science on high 1920 32 47 59 6o° 20 41 1 44 50 iS 3i 45 which astronomy 24 36 371 21 44 7 46 53 18 34 4i & the other thing 28 40 2l| I 32 47 10 4 S .0 30 37 49 both fail to show. 32 44 44 2 52 50 47 50 941 25 1936 48 52 4 54 3 52 3 27 44 39 40 53 2 5 8 57 2% o ° 19 7 54 6 45 47 53 44 57 210 12 6 16 36 56 10 3 5i 8 48 25 7 24 3 53 58 13 22 54 23 — — > 17 Altair, 11. Date. R. Asc. Decl. Long. Lat. * * Par. decl. a. Jan.l. 295 v 8 C n. Vf 29 29 n. / A 1° H 24 T 21° n 8° / 11 / /■• 1 // / '/ 1 u / it t II 1 n 1824 33 10 24 38 17 52 iS 34 17 8 18 36 33 8 26 52 26 34 39 25 2 19 33 33 18 49 20 17 34 19 25 4i 28 36 23 21 7 33 20 23 21 5i 35 21 24 39 ^ 30 37 18 40 22 37 33 21 53 23 21 36 8 23 52 ( 32 38 37 25 54 24 8 33 23 23 24 52 36 44 23 16 1834 40 1 26 6 25 45 18 31 25 26 30 37 13 22 47 36 4 1 3* 19 27 29 3i 26 44 28 15 37 43 22 i7 38 43 6 35 29 20 30 28 35 30 6 38 23 21 37 40 44 44 26 55 3i 13 30 30 27 31 58 39 18 20 42 42 46 l 9 27 l 9 33 3 30 32 18 33 49 40 26 19 34 1844 47 50 27 43 34 47 18 30 34 2 35 33 41 37 18 23 46 49 H 28 5 36 24 30 35 38 37 9 42 41 17 J 9 48 50 32 24 37 55 30 37 9 3« 40 43 35 16 25 50 5i 50 39 39 25 29 38 39 40 11 44 15 15 45 52 53 12 28 5i 41 29 40 14 41 46 44 43 15 17 1854 54 40 29 4 42 42 18 29 4 1 56 43 28 45 13 H 47 56 56 14 l 9 44 3i 28 43 45 45 n 45 5i H 9 58 57 5i 29 39 46 23 28 45 37 47 10 46 42 i3 18 60 59 29 6< 3 28 30 2 48 15 28 47 29 49 1 47 49 12 11 62 O 26 50 1 28 49 15 50 48 48 58 11 2 1864 2 26 30 49 5i 40 18 28 50 54 52 26 50 7 9 53 66 3 46 3i 9 53 12 28 52 26 53 59 5i 5 8 55 68 5 4 25 54 42 27 53 55 55 29 5i 48 8 12 70 6 24 38 56 15 27 55 28 57 2 52 20 7 40 72 7 5o 3i 5i 57 55 26 57 8 58. c o42 5 29 52 49 7 11 1874 9 22 32 5 59 42 18 26 58 r o 55 0* 53 24 6 36 76 10 59 23 1 z? o° 34 25 O 47 2 21 54 11 5 49 78 12 36 32 45 3 26 25 2 39 4 H 55 12 4 48 80 H 10 33 10 5 15 25 4 27 6 2 56 23 3 37 82 15 38 34 6 56 25 6 8 7 43 57 34 2 26 1884 16 59 33 55 8 30 18 25 7 42 9 17 58 36 1 24 86 18 18 34 12 IO 25 9 12 10 47 59 2 ,o 24 36 88 19 36 26 TI 3i 24 10 43 12 J 9 59' 90 21 39 13 9 24 12 21 13 57 29 3i 1892 22 3i 34 52 H 54 24 H 6 15 42 1 1 5« 59 94 24 6 35 9 16 45 18 24 15 57 17 33 1 44 58 16 96 25 44 35 3 1 18 37 23 17 4919 25 2 42 57 18 98 27 r 9 35 55 20 27 23 '9 39 21 15 3 5i 56 9 1900 28 49 36 19 22 11 23 21 22 22 59 5 3 54 57 04 3i 3i 37 25 17 23 24 29 26 5 7 3 52 57 08 34 10 37 28 28 22 18 22 27 34 29 11 8 12 5i 48 12 37 13 37 57 31 55 22 31 6 32 44 9 22 50 38 16 40 28 38 4i 35 40 21 34 5i 36 29 11 23 48 37 1920 43 25 39 29 39 3 21 38 14 39 53 13 45 46 15 24 40 2 40 5 42 5 20 4i 15 42 54 15 27 44 33 28 48 48 40 32 45 18 18 20 44 29 46 8 16 29 43 3i 32 5i 58 41 6 48 59 J 9 48 9 49 48 17 55 42 5 1936 54 51 41 43 52 18 l 9 5i 28 53 8 l 9 38 40 22 40 57 297 < j 43 42 21 55 37 18 54 47 56 28 21 21 38 39 44 36 42 59 58 i° 5 l 18 58 6 o 7 59. 6 c48 23 7 36 53 48 3 29 43 38 2 1 18 18 17 1 27 3* 8 24 54 35 6 18 a Orionis, 12. Date R. A sc. Decl. Long. Lat. * * Par. decl. n. Jan.l 86 ( 3 7° n. D 26 i6°s. cp 27 cQ2 4 C SP 1 8° W ii° / '/ / // 1 it / M / 11 / 11 / /f 1 n 1824 24 58 22 18 5 3 3 39 9 57 47 8 12 52 26 26 35 21 56 19 45 1 40 49 58 c ° 3 4 1 3 12 57 28 28 5 53 21 • 18 c 42 22 14 13 30 29 32 54 22 48 3 43 52 I 44 47 4 12 56 32 30 5« 21 59 24 17 I 2 59 45 20 3 13 16 44 1834 32 32 22 7 25 53 56 46 56 4 50 34 26 36 34 12 16 27 36 55 48 39 6 34 47 54 12 6 38 35 5« 22 29 26 54 50 29 8 24 48 7 11 53 40 37 46 25 3i 18 53 52 21 10 15 16 44 42 39 32 23 33 7 2 52 54 10 12 5 15 45 1844 4i 12 22 20 34 50 51 55 53 13 48 12 48 46 42 44 16 36 26 5i 57 28115 24 48 7 11 53 48 44 1 1 16 37 56 50 58 28 58 i^ 54 10 50 50 45 38 J 9 39 25 49 8 2 7 |l8 23 17 43 52 47 9 26 40 59 2 48 2 19 57 20 40 1854 48 46 22 35 42 40 47 3 41)21 38 48 51 11 9 56 50 3i 42 44 28 46 5 29 23 27 49 7 10 53 58 52 J 9 46 46 J 9 45 7 20 25 18 17 43 60 54 6 45 48 10 44 9 II 27 9 18 42 62 55 48 42 49 55 2 43 10 56 28 54 14 46 1864 57 23 22 38 5i 33 42 12 34 30 32 49 9 10 5i 66 i *r 5i 37 53 4 40 H 5 32 4 11 49 68 17 38 54 33 40 15 33 33 33 14 46 70 I 46 44 56 5 39 17 5 35 5 28 32 72 3 22 22 52 57 44 2 38 18 44 36 44 49 46 10 14 1874 5 5 23 59 9 ^o 30 37 20 30 38 30 5o 3 9 57 76 6 52 5 / 1 21 36 22 20J40 21 14 46 78 8 40 5 3 12 35 24 12 42 13 17 43 80 10 24 23 2 4 59 34 25 59 44 14 46 82 12 1 22 58 6 39 2 33 27 38 45 40 8 52 1884 13 3i 55 8 12 33 29 11 47 13 50 5 9 55 86 H 58 22 56 9 4 1 32 30 40 48 43 9 5i 88 16 25 23 1 n 12 3i 32 10 50 13 20 40 90 17 58 8 12 48 30 13 47 5i 50 36 24 1892 19 39 16 H 32 2 28 35 3i 53 34 SO 53 9 7 94 21 2b 22 16 22 28 37 20 55 24 5i 6 8 54 96 23 14 24 18 14 26 39 12 57 16 12 48 98 24 59 23 21 20 3 25 4i 1 59 26 o 5 9 51 1900 26 39 17 21 45 25 42 43 48 5i 3 8 57 04 29 37 12 24 50 2 23 45 47 3 52 50 59 9 1 08 32 35 23 27 53 21 48 5o 6 56 5i 22 8 38 12 35 59 2 3 37 3i 23| 19 52 20 10 27 5i 53 7 16 39 34 38 35 6 17 56 2 H 10 52 1920 42 50 30 38 28 16 59 . ,„o 23 17 32 Si 47 13 24 45 45 30 4i 28 2 14 2 *? 24 20 32 Si 5i 8 9 28 48 50 23 43 44 39l 12 5 35 23 44 S2 20 7 40 32 52 22 54 48 18 10 9 13I27 23 44 16 1936 55 33 57 5i 35 8 12 3030 40 S2 53 7 7 40 5 8 88° 44 23 59 54 52 2 6 15 4733 58 S3 1 6 59 44 1 °° 5<> 24 1 58 28 C 10 4 19 437 16 7 53 48 5 8 2 1 ° 29 2 22 22 40 35 13 47 19 a Crucis, 13. Date. R. Asc. Decl. Lon g- Lat. * * Jan.l. ] 84 62° s. m 9 52°S. ^5° / 13° 1 II / // 1 u 1 11 1 II / 11 1824 13 24 7 27 26 21 5i 36 20 48 3i 54 26 15 14 8 6 28 37 22 30 33 30 28 16 53 8 43 29 32 37 24 3 35 1 30 18 22 9 18 31 38 25 33 36 28 32 l 9 44 9 55 32 30 39 27 4 37 56 Has no 1834 21 7 10 33 34 3 5i 40 28 40 39 27 36 22 36 11 15 35 45 41 30 24 4i 7 38 24 16 11 59 37 38 45 32 24 42 53 40 26 5 12 44 39 25 45 34 8 44 43 42 27 59 13 27 41 14 44 35 58 46 3i 1844 29 5i H 8 42 57 51 44 37 4i 48 12 46 3i 35 H 45 44 30 44 39 15 49 45 48 33 7 15 21 46 46 40 48 5i 13 50 34 3i '5 56 47 28 46 42 17 52 40 Parallels 52 35 53 16 34 49 1 47 43 5i 54 11 1854 37 20 17 15 50 41 5i 48 45 33 55 49 56 38 56 17 58 52 28 49 47 22 57 34 58 40 43 18 43 54 J 9 50 49 15 59 , 23 4° 12 60 42 37 19 27 50 9 5i 5i 6 1 on the 62 44 3i 20 8 57 54 5i 52 5i 2 56 1864 46 18 20 47 59 IQ o 30 5i 52 54 30 4 3i 66 47 54 21 23 I 53 56 2 5 59 68 49 21 21 58 2 28 54 57 31 7 25 70 50 43 22 35 3 59 54 59 6° 4 8 55 ecliptic. 72 5» 8 23 15 5 37 5i 55 43 10 3i 1874 53 41 23 57 7 22 56 2 30 12 14 76 55 25 24 42 9 11 57 4 21 H 1 78 57 18 25 26 11 3 58 6 15 15 5i 80 59, 8s o1 ? 3 26 9 12 50 5i 59 8 3 17 36 +~m~ 82 1 26 48 H 29 52 9 43 l 9 15 1884 2 44 27 24 16 1 11 16 20 45 86 88 90 4 5 6 13 36 59 28 28 29 36 15 17 18 20 29 58 34 1 2 3 12 14 15 46 17 54 22 23 25 12 40 13 Rubbishy stuff in 'strology books : — " part of fortune," " hyleg," " poles " & 1892 94 8 10 30 12 29 30 56 4i 22 24 16 6 52 3 4 17 l 9 38 29 26 28 55 42 96 12 2 3i 25 25 56 5 21 22 30 3i " orbs " of planets etc., 98 1900 13 15 58 5i 32 32 8 49 27 29 45 27 6 7 23 24 12 56 32 33 17 58 " platic & partile," " dragon's head & 04 08 l 9 21 7 54 34 35 1 15 32 35 29 3i 52 8 10 28 3i 1 5 39 57 56 tail," " cazimi " — 12 [25 1 36 39 38 59 12 34 37 43 21 all the various 16 28 46 38 8 42 40 13 38 21 46 59 jargon, blunders 1920 32 2839 27 46 15 41 44 50 16 and flimsy figments, old or new. 24 35 3*4° 38 48 57 52 16 44 44 53 10 28 | 3 8 20I41 55 52 7 18 47 57 5^ 17 32 41 4M3 22 55 43 20 5i 37 59 t5 o5 ° •j 2 1936 44 58 44 4i 5 8 n o 59 21 54 55 3 40 48 15 45 59 2 H 52 23 58 7 o 14 ' 33 6 H 44 5i 33 47 18 5 30 24 1 9 27 48 54 53 48 36 8 47 26 4 52 12 4i 20 Aldebaran, 14. Date. R. Asc. Decl. Lon g- Lat. * * Par. decl. n. Jan.l. 66 c 16 n. EM rC 5° S. TV m ^ 8 14° SI 15° / 11 / // / II / II / II 1 n / 11 1 11 1824 27 45 8 56 20 4 28 47 29 II 10 57 iS 37 41 23 26 29 29 9 6 21 43 46 30 50 12 36 19 28 40 32 28 3i 4 16 23 . ib 46 32 23 H 9 20 15 39 45 30 32 36 28 24 46 46 33 53 15 39 21 39 32 34 7 9 45 26 16 45 35 23 17 9 21 53 38 7 1834 35 45 10 4 27 53 28 44 37 i8 46 22 49 37 1 1 36 37 3i 26 29 36 43 38 43 20 29 23 53 36 7 38 39 23 10 46 3i 26 43 40 33 22 !9 24 54 35 6 40 41 17 11 4 33 17 42 42 24 24 10 25 57 34 3 42 43 10 17 35 7 42 44 H 26 26 52 33 8 1844 44 56 27 36 50 28 4i 45 57 27 43 27 4i 32 *9 46 46 34 36 38 26 4i 47 3329 *9 28 26 3i 34 48 48 7 11 47 39 56 4i 49 3 30 49 2 9 11 30 49 50 49 3« 12 2 41 25 41 50 32 32 18 3o 30 52 5i 13 21 42 59 40 52 5 33 5i 30 55 29 5 1854 52 56 12 42 44 40 2ii 40 53 47 35 33 3i 55 28 5 56 154 46 13 3 46 28 39 55 35 37 21 32 57 27 3 58 5*> 40 22 48 20 3« 57 26 39 i.1 34 1 25 59 60 58 67 ' 34 36 50 10 3« 59 H o i7 4i 3 34 57 25 3 62 23 46 5i 55 38 1 ° 2 42 49 35 46 24 14 1864 2 3 13 56 53 33 28 37 2 40 44 27 36 3623 24 66 3 37 14 6 55 4 37 4 1 1 45 58 37 21 22 39 68 5 8 20 56 33 36 5 4c 47 27 38 9 21 5i 70 6 42 37 58 5 35 7 12 48 59 39 21 72 8 23 14 57 59 S o 44 35 8 5i 50 38 39 5620 4 1874 10 11 i5 19 1 ° 30 28 34 10 37 52 24 41 019 76 12 4 3S 3 21 34 12 2854 15 42 2 17 58 78 13 59 15 53 5 13 33 H J 9 50 6 43 17 80 15 49 16 5 7 33 16 7 57 54 43 52 16 8 82 17 33 14 8 40 33 17 47 59 QQ 34 44 39 15 21 1884 *9 8 23 10 11 28 32 r 9 18 1 ° 5 45 25 H 35 86 20 40 3^> 1 1 42 32 20 49 2 36 46 11 |i3 49 88 22 12 16 52 13 13 3' 22 J 9 4 6 47 2 12 58 90 23 50 17 12 14 50 30 23 56 5 43 47 5812 2 1892 25 37 33 16 33 30 25 40 7 27 48 59" 1 94 27 29 17 53 18 23 28 29 27 3o 9 T 7 49 59! !» 1 96 29 23 18 9 20 15 28 29 21 11 9 50 59 9 1 98 3i 16 21 22 4 28 3i 10 12 58 5i 53 8 7 1900 33 2 3i 23 47 28 32 53 H 4i 52 41 7 19 01 36 8 18 5i 2b 5i 25 35 57 17 45 54 10 5 50 08 39 19 r 9 25 29 54 28 26 39 020 48 55 53 4 7 12 42 53 20 6 33 25 25 42 3i|24 19 S7 52 2 8 16 46 42 36 37 8 24 46 1428 2 59, 1 ,0 47 •J 22 . 40 13 1920 50 10 20 55 40 30 23 49 35 3i 24 58 J ■* 38 24 53 15 21 19 43 29 28 22 52 35 34 23 2 53 57 7 28 32 S 6 68° 30 21 56 46 4i 21 55 46 37 35 4 41 55 J 9 2 2 35 50 19 20 59 9 o 2 y 25 4i H 6 41 53 x 9 1936 3 3623 4 53 37 J 9 42 44 3i 8 23 Si 37 40 6 59 19 56 y 52 28 18 5 5847 47 9 21 50 39 44 10 22 23 59 12 17 9 18,51 7 11 4648 H 48ji 3 46 24 26 3 3i 16 12 36 ( 54 25 13 2746 33 21 Spica, 15. Date. R . Asc. Decl. L< 3tlg. Lat. * * j 3 ar. deci. s. Jan.l. 1 98° IO° s. _A_ 21° 2° S. 32 10 27 38 58 24 40 59 22 40 57 • 8 8 23 51 37 68 33 33 28 12 59 2 ->° 53 40 I 9 58 22 o 37 9 58 50 2 70 34 59 28 48 1 24 4i 2 40 9 11 34 48 2b 72 3* 3i 29 27 3 3 42 4 19 1 47 13 16 46 44 1874 3« io'3o 9 4 49 2 42 6 5 3 33 15 7 44 53 76 39 54 30 5 1 6 40 43 7 56 5 24 17 4 42 56 78 41 39 31 33 8 3i 44 9 47 7 15 l 9 3 40 57 80 43 21 32 12 10 18 44 11 34 9 2 20 57 39 3 82 44 56 32 47 1 1 58 45 13 14 10 42 22 44 37 16 1884 46 24 33 20 13 3i 2 45 H 47 12 15 24 23 35 37 86 47 48 33 53 15 46 16 16 13 44 25 58 34 2 88 49 12 34 28 16 30 46 i7 46 15 14 27 33 32 27 90 50 42 35 7 18 6 47 !9 23 16 50 29 13 30 47 1892 52 J9 35 48 19 50 47 21 7 18 34 3i 2 28 58 94 54 2 36 30 21 40 2 48 22 56 20 24 32 57 27 3 96 55 47 37 12 ^3 32 49 24 48 22 16 34 57 25 3 98 57 30 37 52 25 21 49 26 37 24 5 36 53 23 7 1900 59 200° ^ 38 28 27 3 50 28 19 25 47 38 42 21 18 04 2 3 39 35 30 7 5o 3i 23 28 5i 4i 59 18 1 08 4 54 40 46 33 10 2 52 34 26 3i 54 45 11 H 49 12 8 10 42 9 36 40 53 37 , 56 35 24 48 51 11 9 16 11 40 43 32 40 23 54 4i 39 39 7 52 48 7 12 1920 H 52 44 43 43 44 2 56 45 42 28 56 24 3 36 24 17 42 45 49 46 43 57 48 45 27 59- s° 36 24 28 20 4047 5 49 54 58 51 11 48 38 2' 5fc 57 J 4 32 24 5 48 29 53 33 2 59 54 49 52 16 6 45 53 15 1936 27 10 49 43 56 a ,0 50 3 7 3 58 27 o 1 a 6 55 33 10 15 49 45 40 30 17 50 57 1 23 58 ,0 50 ^3 44 46 16 44 33 23 52 1 1 3 24 3 4 4i 2 23 8 17 M 42 46 48 36 3i 53 24 6 43 4 7 59 5 26 20 45 39 15 22 An tares, 16. TZT~ Date. P .. Asc. Decl. Long. Lat. * * Jan.l. 244° 26 s. / 7° 4° s. =^=5 rO A*V tjO / // / f/ 1 , 11 / n 1 II / 11 1824 39 46 2 1 18 37 32 46 24 54 12 21 Has no 26 4i 37 13 20 18 47 26 34 H 2 28 43 20 24 21 5i 48 28 7 15 35 30 44 57 38 23 20 49 29 36 17 3 32 46 35 2 56 24 50 50 31 6 18 33 Parallels 1834 48 19 3 18 26 26 32 52 32 42 20 9 36 50 10 ■> 4i 28 9 53 34 26 21 53 38 52 10 4 3 29 59 55 36 15 23 42 40 54 12 22 31 50 56 38 7 25 34 on the 42 56 12 37 33 40 32 56 39 56 27 23 1844 5« 6 4 49 35 23 57 4i 39 29 6 46 59 245 5I 5 36 58 58 43 15 30 41 48 1 13 38 28 32 59 44 44 32 11 ecliptic. 50 52 3 4 7 49 5 29 50 39 4i 57 3i 33 1 46 47 H 47 33 35 40 14 1854 6 38 6 13 43 12 2 49 28 36 55 56 8 35 35 45 3 5i 16I38 43 The D and 58 10 37 6 55 46 51 4 53 840 34 60 12 39 7 11 48 42 33 5 54 5942 25 some of 62 H 35 23 50 27 6 56 44 44 10 the planets 1864 16 23 34 52 4 7 58 2i|45 47 66 18 4 7 46 53 36 8 59 8 o 53 47 l 9 68 19 4i 8 1 55 4 9 21 48 47 may at times 70 21 21 20 56 36 33 10 2 53 50 19 reach its 72 23 7 8 43 58 go 15 11 4 32 5i 58 Par. decl. 1874 25 2 9 5 12 6 185; 44 76 27 3 26 1 52 14 8 9 55 35 78 29 6 43 3 43 15 10 1 57 26 80 3i 4 9 5^ 5 30 33 15 TI 48 59 8° I3 ^** 82 32 55 10 7 7 10 16 13 28 8 53 1884 34 38 18 8 43 17 15 1 2 26 86 88 36 37 15 54 10 32 50 10 11 12 42 18 19 16 18 3o 3 5 55 25 Very many large errors 90 1892 39 4i 38 3i 11 11 34 13 15 19 3 33 20 21 l 9 21 3<> 20 7 8 1 45 each year fudged 94 43 30 11 55 16 53 22 23 IO TO 35 96 45 33 12 13 18 44 24 25 2 12 27 into the base 98 47 33 27 20 33 25 26 51 H 15 Raskael 1900 49 27 12 38 22 16 33 26 28 34 15 58 ephemeris, 04 52 50 13 1 25 20 27 3i 38 J 9 2 550 in 189S! 08 56 9 13 38 28 • 23 29 34 4i 22 5 12 59 246° 58 14 22 3i 53 3i 38 11 25 35 Badkiel's 16 4 H 5<* 35 30 33 4i 54 29 18 1920 7 46 15 18 38 57 33 35 45 16 32 39 24 11 3 15 44 4*. <~ 57 37 48 4 15 35 38 28 H 3i 16 25 45 8 39 5i 263! 49 32 18 29 17 7 48 46 4i 55 5 42 27 some choice 1936 22 5 i7 39 52 3 33 43 5« 9 o 22 45 44 in 40 25 42 18 10 55 20 45 39 49 2 rotten eggs. 44 29 r 9 18 40 58 9° 3 * y 56 47 4 57 52 19 48 32 57 l 9 11 1 48 8 15 55 37 23 s < As an after-thought this page is inserted to facilitate the use of the preceding tables Here is the approximate place of each star's aspects, etc., at the middle date of the tables, 1886, thus showing at a glance about where they are all around the circle at any time in the whole period. Thereby the houses they come in for any figure may be determined before getting their more exact places. The only points here not on the ecliptic are the 6 and 8 given of the three stars having but little latitude. See the gaunt poverty of the current system that omits all these ! Such a table made with ex- actness for a figure of birth, and completed by putting in the aspects of the planets, will manifestly be of great use in several ways. O / A 6 13 a Crucis * A 621 /3 Centaur. 8 17 Antares 821 Aldebaran A A 10 48 a Centaur. 12 31 □ Sirius 13 23 Q Canopus 13 43 □ Ve S a 13 58 Par. Procy. 18 50 Par. a Orion * 20 59 Rigel A 21 22 Par. Rigel 21 59 Par. Altair 22 15 Spica 6 23 8 Capella A 24 13 n Procjon o / '27 26 Par. Spica * 28 31 a Orionis A o 10 □ Altair 14 46 Par. Aldeb 15 45 Par. Sirius 22 57 Sirius A 25 33 Procyon A 28 14 Par. Arctu A 5 9 Altair * 8 10 Antares 6 6 8 12 Aldebaran 13 41 □ a Eridani A 14 22 a Crucis A 17 2 Arcturus * A 22 14 Spica * Vf n I A 8 3/3 Centaur. * A 15 18 a Centaur. * 22 15 □ Spica 22 39 □ Arcturus 1 46 Par. Arctu. * 8 3 Aldebaran A A 8 4 Antares * * 930 Rigel A 10 17 n a Crucis 14 15 Par. Sirius 15 14 Par. Aldeb. * 17 24 Capella A 22 12 □ ,3 Centaur. * 22 16 Spica A * 25 49 a Orionis A 28 3D«Centaur SI ° /* 28 15 Arcturus A 2 4 Sirius A 2 34 Par. Spica A 2 38 a Eridani * 8 1 Par. Altai r 8 10 □ Antares 8 12 D Aldeb. 8 38 Par. Rigel 11 ioPar.a Orion 15 H □ Rigel 16 2 Par. Procy 20 16 □ Capella 22 52 Procjon A A 24 45 a Eridani * 25 11 Altair 27 10 □ a Orion 23a URANUS AND NEPTUNE. For many years of the present century there is, for very good reasons, no accurate Ephemeris of these two planets. That of Uranus in the Nautical Almanac from 1834 to 1877 is largely wrong, so that the resulting longitude is in error sometimes nearly 4'; but beginning with 1877 its places of this planet, by use of the new American or French tables, are as exact as the lame theories of astronomy will permit. Neptune was not discovered until 1846, and there are no reliable posi- tions until the American Ephemeris in 1870, and the Nautical Almanac in 1871, began to use the new tables by Newcomb. Because of such conditions, and that those works do not give the geocentric longitudes at all, the present writer has computed an Ephem- eris in longitude of both planets covering the period mentioned. It is made to the nearest second of arc for every fifth day, and is still in MS. The places of Uranus were derived, at intervals of 15 days, from the heliocentric places in the Nautical Almanac ; then " observed corrections" were applied, obtained from those given in Newcomb's work on the planet ; and finally interpolated with fifth differences to 5-day intervals. This method gives results nearly as precise as would be if they could have been taken by observation with the great telescopes on each date. For Neptune, up to 1871 the heliocentric longitudes, etc., were com- puted at intervals of 180 days by the American tables, and interpolated to each 15th day. From these the geocentric places were derived by usual methods and interpolated with fifth differences to each 5th day. For and after 1871 the heliocentric places in the Nautical Almanac were used, and the same operations performed. The aberration of each planet was omitted, so that the results are true apparent positions. All this made an enormous job for one person, but was done with extreme care, and a complete system .of checks to insure against error. The Ephemeris herein is an abridgment of the other by taking inter- vals of ten days and reducing the figures to nearest tenth of a minute. In getting intermediates the error may be always much less than 1', with proper interpolation. The dates are for Greenwich mean noon. When the planets are stationary it is indicated by " St.," with the day of the month. 24 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. D° n. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. 1835. zz 1836. H w o°n. o / 1 1 ; / 1 / / Jan. 4 24 14.S 42.7 38.2 15.8 j May 28 4 28.5 45-6 5 33-6 10.9 14 24 44.4 42.5 I 0.5 15-7 June 7 8 St. 3 x -4 46.0 45-8 10.8 24 25 16.3 42.4 I 23.3 15.6 17 29.6 46-3 35-3 10.8 Feb 3 25 49.8 42.3 1 45.8 15-5 27 23.0 46.7 22.7 10 7 13 26 24 2 42-3 2 7.8 15-4 iJ ul 7 7 4 12.0 47.1 5 83 10.6 99 26 5 8 8 42-3 2 28.6 15-4 17 3 56-9 47-4 4 52-7 10.5 Mar. 5 27 32.8 42.4 2 47-7 15-3 27 3 38 5 476 36.6 10 4 15 28 5.6 42.6 3 4-8 15-3 Aug. 6 3 17 4 47-8 20.4 10.3 25 28 36.4 42.8 *9-5 15.2 16 2 54-5 47-9 4 4-7 10 1 Apr. 4 29 4.7 43-o 31.2 S St - 15-2 26 2 307 47-9 3 50.3 10 14 29 29.8 43-3 40.1 15.2 Sept. 5 2 6.9 47-9 37-7 9.9 24 29 51.2 43-6 45-8 151 15 1 44.2 47-8 27.2 9-7 May 4 H 8.5 44.0 3 47-8 i5-i 25 1 23.6 47.6 19-5 96 14 21.4 44-4 47.0 i5-i Oct. 5 1 5-8 47-4 14.8 USt -3 ii-2 9.4 24 2 9-5 44-8 42.8 i5-i 15 5i-7 47.1 92 June 3 5 St. ° 32.9 45-2 35-8 15.0 25 41.8 46.8 15.0 9.1 13 3i-3 45 - 6 25.9 15.0 Nov. 4 lost. .36-7 46.4 20.2 8.9 23 25.0 45-9 3 13.8 14.9 14 36.6 46.0 28.7 8.7 July 3 w 142 46.3 2 59-8 14.8 21 41.7 45-7 40.4 8.6 13 "" 2 9 59-4 46.5 44-5 14.7 Dec. 4 51.8 45-3 3 54 8 84 23 29 41.2 468 28.4 14.6 14 1 6.7 44.9 4 "-9 8-3 Aug.2 29 20.3 47 -o 2 12. 1 HS 24 1 26.2 446 4 3I-I 8.2 12 28 57-5 47.2 1 56.3 14.4 '3/, J- 3 1 497 44-3 4 5<-S 80 22 28 33-7 47.2 41.6 14.2 13 2 16.7 44 1 5 13-8 7-9 Sept.l 28 99 47.2 28.5 14.1 23 2 46 6 43-9 5 36.5 7.8 If 27 47. 1 1 47.1 17-5 13 9J Feb. 2 3 18.8 43-7 5 59 2 77 21 • 27 26.3 46.9 9.0 13-7, 12 3 52-4 43-7 6 21. 6 7.6 Oct. 1 27 8.3! 46.7 I 3-5 13 5j 22 4 26.7 43-6 6 430 7-5 11 26 53-9 46.4 12 st. T • I 13-3 Mar. 4 5 Li 43-7 7 2.9 7-4 21 43-8 46.1 2.1 I3-2| 14 5 34-9 438 21. 1 7-3 31 6 St. 38-3 45-8 6.4 130 24 6 73 43-9 37-o 7.2 Nov. 10 37-9 45-4 I 14.2 12.8 Apr. 3 6 37.6 44.1 7 50-2 7.2 20 42-5 45-0 25.0 12.6 13 7 5-3 44-3 8 0.6 7-i 30 26 52.3 44-7 38.7 12.5 23 7 29.8 446 7.8 7.0 Dec.lo 27 6.9 44-3 1 55-2 12.3 May 3 7 50.6 45 -o 11. 7 6.9 20 27 26.0 44 -o 2 13.8 12. 1 13 8 7-3 45-3 St. 12.4 69 30 27 49-3 43-7 2 34-2 120 23 19-5 45-7 9.8 68 '3SJ.9 28 16.1 43.5 2 55-9 11.9 June 2 26.9 46.1 8 4.2 6.7 19 28 45-8 43-3 3 18.4 11. 8 12 „ 8 29.6 13 st - 27.4 46-5 7 55 7 6.6 29 29 17.8I 43.2 3 412 11.7 22 46.9 44-7 6.6 Feb. 8 29 5i-4 43-i 4 3-7 11. 6 .My 2 20. s 47-3 3* ?> 6-5 18 H 25.8 43-i 4 25-4 "•5 12 8 9.2 47.6 16.S 6.4 28 1 0.3 43-i 4 45 9 11.4 22 7 53-9 47-9 7 1.1 6-3 Mar. 9 1 34.2 43-2 5 4-5 1 1-3 Aug. 1 7 35-3 48.1 6 44.8 6.1 19 2 6.7 43-3 21.0 11 -3 11 7 H-o 48-3 6 28.6 60 29 2 37-3 43-5 34-9 11. 2 | 21 6 51.0 48.4 6 13-3 5-9 Apr. 8 3 53 43-8 5 46.0 11. 1 31 6 27.1 48.4 5 59-2 5-8 18 3 301 44.1 54-0 11. 1 Sept 10 6 3-4 48.4 47.0 5-6 28 3 5i-2 44.4 5 58.8 1 1. Oil 20 5 4°-8 48.3 37-3 5-5 May 8 4 8.2 44-8 10 si. 6 °- 2 , 11.0 30 5 20.3 48.1 ! 30- 2 5-4 18 4 20.7 45-2 " 5 5S.5 10.9 Oct. 10 1 5 2.7 47-8 26.2 5-2 25 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. o°n. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. 1837. « ZSt 1839. MV o°s. o / / t / / / O / 1 Oct.10 5 2.7 47.8 K 26.2 17 St - 2 5 .6 5-2 Mar. 4 12 27.5 44.1 II l8.2 o-5 20 4 48-9 47-5 5-i 14 13 i-8 44.2 11 37-4 0.7 30 39-4 47.2 28.3 4.9 24 13 35-3 44-3 11 54-4 0.8 Nov.9 Hst. ^ I 46.8 34-4 4.8 Apr. 3 H 7-3 44.4 12 8.9 0.9 19 46.4 43-7 4.6 13 14 37-2 44.6 20.8 1.0 29 40.4 46.0 5 56-1 45 23 15 4-4 44.8 29-5 1.1 Dec. 9 4 50-9 45-7 6 11. 3 4.4 May 3 15 28.3 45-i 35-i 1.2 19 5 6.2 45-3 6 28.9 4.2 13 15 48-5 45-5 17 St. 37-4 i-3 29 5 26-0 45 -o 6 48.5 4.1 23 16 4.5 45-8 12 365 i-5 '38, J. 8 5 49-8 44-7 7 9-7 4.0 June 2 16.0 46.2 32.4 1.6 18 6 17.0 44 4 7 3i-9 39 12 12St. , 22 -9 46.6 25-3 i-7 28 6 47.1 44.2 7 54-5 3-8 22 16 24.8 47.0 T 5-5 1.8 Feb. 7 7 19-3 44.1 8 17-3 3-7 July 2 22.0 47-3 12 3 4 1.9 17 7 52.9 44.0 8 39-6 3.6 12 145 47-7 11 49.4 2.1 27 8 27.3 44.0 9 0.6 3-5 22 16 2.6 48.0 34. 1 1 2.2 Mar. 9 9 1.6 44.0 20.1 3-4 Aug. 1 15 469 48.3 18.0 23 19 9 35-2 44.1 37-7 3-3 11 15 27.8 48.5 11 1.7 2.4 29 10 7.4 44.2 9 53o 3-2 21 15 6.2 48.7 10 45-8 2-5 Apr. 8 10 375 44.4 10 5-5 3-i 31 14 43.0 48.7 31.0 2.6 18 ii 5.0 44-7 15.0 3-o Sept 10 14 19 48.8 17.9 2.7 28 11 29.2 45 -o 21.5 2.9 20 13 55-4 48.7 10 6.9 2.8 May 8 11 49.7 45-3 15 St. 2 4- 6 2.8 30 13 33o 48.5 9 58-4 2.9 18 12 6.0 45-7 10 24.5 2.7 Oct.10 13 12.8 48.3 52-9 3-o 28 17.9 46.0 21. 1 2.6 20 12 55-8 48.1 21 St. 5o-6 3-i June7 25.0 46.4 14.7 25 30 4 2 -5 47-7 51.6 3.2 17 St. 27.3 46.8 10 5.6 2.4 Nov. 9 33-7 47-4 9 56.0 3-3 27 24.7 47.2 9 54-0 2-3 19 12 29.7 22 st - 30.S 47.0 10 3-7 3-4 July 7 12 17.5 47.6 40.4 2.2 29 46.6 14.7 3-5 17 12 6.0 47-9 25-4 2.1 Dec. 9 37-i 46.2 28.6 3-6 27 II 50-5 48.2 9 9-4 2.0 19 12 48.3 45-8 10 45.1 3-7 Aug.6 II 3I.6 48.4 8 53-i 1.9! 25) 13 4-4 45-4 11 3-8 3-8 16 II I02 48.6 37-i i-7 '40, J- 8 13 248 45-i 11 24.3 3-9 26 IO 47.I 48.7 22.1 1.6 18 13 49.2 44-8 11 46.0 4.0 Sept. 5 IO 23.2 48.7 8 8.4 i-5 28 14 16.9 44-5 12 S.6 4.1 15 9 59-5 486 7 56.8 Ml Feb. 7 14 47-3 44-3 12 31.4 4.2 25 9 37 -o 48.5 47-7 , i-3 17 15 19-7 44.2 12 53-8 43 Oct. 5 9 16.6 48-3 41.4 K.I 27 15 53-4 44.1 13 T 5 -6 44 15 8 59-3 48.1 19 St. 3S-2 I.O Mar. 8 16 27.8 44 1 13 360 4.6 25 45-8 47-8 7 38.4 O.9 18 17 1.9 44.1 13 54-5 4-7 Nov. 4 36 6 47.4 41.9 0.8 28 17 35-3 44.2 14 11. 4.8 14 8 32.2 18 St ' 32.9 47 -o .48-8 O.7 Apr. 7 iS 7.1 44-3 25.0 5-o 24 46.6 7 59 0.6 17 18 36.8 44-5 36.0 5-i Dec. 4 387 46.2 8 12. 1 O.4 27 19 3-8 44-8 44.0 5-2 14 8 49.6 45-8 8 280 O.3 May 7 19 27.4 45 -o 48.8 5-4 24 9 5-3 45-5 8 46.2 O 2 17 19 47-3 45-4 '**?& 5-5 '39, J. 3 9 2 5-4 45 i 9 6.2 O.I 27 20 3.0 45-7 5-7 13 9 49-5 44-8 9 27.8 O.O June <> 14.2 46.1 43-7 5-8 23 10 17.0 44.6 9 So- 1 OS. I lfi 25 St. 20.7 46 -5 35-9 60 Feb. 2 10 47 2 44.4 10 12.9 0.2 26 22.3 468 25.5 6.1 12 11 19-5 44-3 35-6 0-3| Julv 6 19. 1 47.2 14 12.9 6.2 22 11 53.2I 44.2 57-5 O.4 16 20 1 1.3 47.6 13 58.6 6-3 . 26 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. Long. Lat. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. 1840. K o°s. **v o°s. 1841. H A*V o°s. c / / O ! 1 / \ / 1 July 16 20 II. 3 47.6 13 58.6 6-3 Dec. 8 20 26.7 45-8 14 47.2 11.7 26 19 59.2 47-9 42.9 6-5 18 20 33.8 45-4 15 2.5 11.7 Aug. 5 43-2 48.1 26.7 6.6 28 20 45.9 45-i 15 20.2 11.8 15 24.0 48.3 13 IO.5 6.7 '42J. 7 21 2.7 44 7 15 39-9 11.8 25 19 2.2 4«-5 12 54.8 6.8 17 21 23. 8 44-3 16 1.1 11 9 Sept.4 18 38.9 48.6 4O.4 6.9 27 21 48.7 440 16 23.4 12.0 14 18 14.9 48.6 27.7 7.0 Feb. 6 . 22 16.9 43-8 16 46.1 12. 1 24 17 5i-3 4«-5 17-3 7-i 16 22 47.6 43-6 17 8.8 12.2 Oct. 4 17 29.0 48.3 12 9.5 7.2 26 23 20.2 43-5 27 3 1 12.4 14 17 9.0 48.1 4.8 03 gj- ~ 7-3 Mar. 8 23 54- 1 43-4 17 52.1 '2-5 5*4 16 52.2 47-8 3-3 7-3 18 24 28.4 43-3 18 11. 7 12.6 Nov. 3 39-3 47-5 5-2 7-4 28 25 2.4 43-3 2 9-3 12.8 1:5 30.8 47.1 12 10.5 7-5 Apr. 7 25 35-5 43-4 44-4 13.0 23 26St. l62 73 46.7 19.0 7-5 17 26 7.0 43 6 18 56.9 131 Dec. 3 28.7 4^-3 30.8 7.6 27 26 36.3 43-8 19 6.5 133 13 35-3 45-9 12 45.4 7-7 Mav 7 27 2.8 44.0 12.9 !3-5 23 16 47.0 45-5 13 2.5 7.8 17 27 25.9 44-3 16.1 24 8t - t6.o '3-7 %}•* 17 3-4 45-i 13 21.7 7.8 27 27 45-3 44.6 13-9 12 17 24.2 44-8 13 42-5 7-9 June 6 28 0.4 44-9 12.7 14. 1 22 17 48.9 44-5 14 4.6 8.0 16 II.O 45.2 19 6.4 H-3 Feb.l 18 16.S 44-3 H 27-3 8.1 26 16.8 4St - 17.8 45-6 18 57-3 14.4 11 18 47.4 44.1 14 50.0 8.2 July 6 46.0 45-7 14.6 21 19 19.9 43-9 15 12.4 8-3 16 14 403 32.1 14.7 Mar. 3 19 53-7 43-8 15 33-8 8-5 2(5 28 5.6 46.6 17.1 14.9 13 20 28.0 43-8 15 53-7 8.6 Aug. 5 27 52.9 46.9 18 1.1 15.0 23 21 2.1 43-8 16 11. 9 8.8 15 27 36-4 47.2 17 44.S i5-i Apr. 2 21 35-3 43-9 27.7 8.9 25 27 16.8 47-4 28.8 15.2 12 22 7.0 44.1 40.9 9.1 Sept.4 26 54.7 47-5 13-7 i.S-3 22 22 36.5 44.2 51.2 9.2 14 26 31.2 47-5 17 0.0 15-4 May 2 23 3-2 44-5 16 58.5 9.4 24 26 7.1 47-5 16 48.4 15-4 12 23 26.6 44.8 17 2.4 21S, 'i7 3-* 9-5 Oct. 4 25 43-6 47-4 39-2 15-5 22 23 46.2 45-i 9-7 14 25 21.5 47.2 32.9 15-5 June 1 24 1.6 45-4 17 O.6 9.8 24 25 i-9 47.0 29.8 28St -i6 3 o.o 15.6 11 12.4 45-8 16 55-o 10.0 Nov. 3 24 45-6 46.7 15.6 21 July 1 18.6 °9 St 46.1 46.6 10.2 13 33-3 46.3 33-6 15.6 20.0 46-5 35-6 10.3 23 2 $.61 46.0 40.6 15.6 11 16.5 46.9 22.5 10.5 Dec. 3 4 st 24 22 '7 45-6 4bt - 25.145.2 16 50.8 i.S-7 21 24 8.4 47.2 16 7.8 10.6 13 17 4.0 15-7 31 23 55-9 47-5 15 52-o 10.7 23 32.6 44.7 20.0 15-7 An. 10 23 39-7 47-8 35-7 10.8 '43, J. 2 24 45.0! 44.4 38.3 15.8 20 23 20.2 48.0 19-5 II.O 12 25 2.2 44.0 17 58.4 15.8 30 22 58.3 48.1 15 4-i II. I 22 25 23-7 43-6 18 19.9 15-9 Sept.9 22 349 48.2 14 50.1 II. 2 Feb. 1 25 48- 9 43-4 18 42.4 16.0 19 22 10.9 48.1 37-9 II. 2 11 26 17.3 43-i 19 5.2 16. 1 29 21 47-3 48.1 28.1 n-3 21 26 48.2 42.9 19 27.8 162 Oct. 9 21 25.1 47-9 21. 1 ii.3 Mar. 3 27 20.9 42.8 19 49.7 16.3 19 21 5-3 47-7 •26St.Hl7-I 11.4 13 27 54-7 42.7 20 10.5 16.5 29 20 48.7 47-4 16.4 "•5 23 28 29.0 42.6 20 29.5 16.7 Nov.8 36.1 .47.0 19.2 1 1 -5 Apr 2 29 3-o' 427 20 46.6 16.8 18 28.0 46.7 25-3 11. 6 12 29 360 42.7 21 1.2 170 28 30 St. T 4o-3 34-7 1 1.6 22 T ° 7-4 4-9 21 12.9 17.2 27 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. o°s. Date. Long. Lat. Long. Lat. o°s. 1843. qp am 1844. qp o° s. SUS o 1 1 / t l 1 / 1 Ap.22 o 7.4 42.9 21 12.9 17.2 Sept 13 4 48.6 45-5 21 33-3 23-7 May 2 36.5 43-i 21.7 17.4 23 4 24.8 45-6 20.5 23-7 12 I 2.8 43-3 27.4 17.6 Oct. 3 4 0.7 45-5 10.0 23.8 22 25-7 43-5 26 St. 2 9-7 17.8 13 3 37-2 45-4 21 2.2 238 June 1 44-7 43-8 21 28.8 18.0 23 3 i5-4 45-2 20 57-5 23.8 11 1 59.6 44.2 248 18.3 Nov. 2 2 56.2 44-9 st. 20 56.0 23.8 21 2 9.8 44-5 17.7 18.5 12 40.4 44.6 20 58.0 23.7 July 1 8St - 16. 1 44.8 21 8.0 18.7 22 287 44-3 21 3-323-7 11 45- 2 20 55-9 18.8 Dec. 2 21.7 43-9 12.023.7 21 12.0 45-5 41.9 19.0 12 St. 2 19 7 43-5 23-8123 7 31 2 3-3 45.8 26.6 19. 1 22 22.9 43-i 38-4|23.7 Au.10 1 50-3 46.1 20 10.4 19-3 '45, J. 1 31.2 42.7 21 55-6.23-7 20 1 33-5 46.3 19 54-i 19.4 11 2 44.4 42-3 22 14 923.7 30 1 13.6 46-5 38.2 19-5 21 3 2.3 42.0 22 35.823.7 Sept.9 51.4 46.6 23-4 19.6 31 3 2 4-4 41 6 22 57-9l 2 3-8 19 27.8 46.7 19 10.2 19.6 Feb. 10 3 50-21 41.3 23 20.6 23-9 29 tf ° 3 ' 7 "29 40.2 46.6 18 59.1 19.6 20 4 19.0 41. 1 23 43-3 24.0 Oct. 9 4^-5 50.6 19.7 Mar.2 4 5o-3 40.9 24 5-6 24.1 19 29 183 46-3 45o 197 12 5 23.2 40.8 24 27.0 24-3 29 28 58.8 46.1 1842.8 31 St 19.7 22 5 57-2 40.7 24 47o 245 Nov. 8 42.8 45-8 43-8 19.7 Apr. 1 6 31-5 40.6 25 5-i|24-7 18 30.8 45-4 483 19.7 11 7 5-3 40.7 20.9 24.9 28 23-4 45 -o 18 56.1 197 21 7 38.1 40.7 34- 1 25.1 Dec. 8 St. 28 2I.O 44.6 19 7.2 19.7 May 1 8 9.2 40.9 44-4 25-4 18 23.8 44.2 21. 1 19.7 11 8 38.0 41.0 5i-7 25.6 28 3i-7 43-8 37-7 19.7 21 9 3-9 41.2 25 55-7 25-9 '44, J. 7 28 44.5 43-4 19 565 19.8 31 26.3 4i-5 st. 56 5 26.1 17 29 2.1 43-i 20 17.0 19.8 Jun.10 44-9 41.7 540 26.4 27 29 23 9 42.8 20 38.9 19.9 20 9 59-2 42.0 48.5 26.6 Feb. 6 29 49 4 42.5 21 I.5 20.0 30 10 8.9 423 25 40.0 26.8 16 cf> O 18.0! 42.2 21 24.2 20.1 JulylU 13.8 15 st - .39 42.7 29.1 27.1 26 49.0 42.0 21 46.7 20.2 20 43o 16.0 27.2 Mar. 7 1 21.8 41.9 22 8.4 20.3 30 10 9.2 43-3 25 i-3 27.4 17 1 55-8 41.8 22 28.7 20.5 Aug. 9 9 59-8 43 6 24 45-4 27.6 27 2 30. 41.8 22 47.4 20.7 19 46.3 43-8 24 29 1 27.7 Apr. 6 3 39 41.8 23 3-8 20.9 29 29 44.0 24 12.9 27.8 16 3 36-9 41.8 17-7 21. 1 Sept. 8 9 8.7 44.1 23 57-4 27.8 26 4 8.1 42.0 28.8 21.3 18 8 46.1 442 43-3 27.9 May 6 4 37-o 42.1 36.8 21.5 28 8 22.3 44.2 31.0 27.9 16 5 3-i 42.4 41 6 21.8 Oct. 8 7 58.1 44-2 21. 1 27.9 26 25.-8 42.6 „ 23 43. 2| 22.o! 98 St J '° 18 7 34-7 44 -o 23 14. 1 27.9 June 5 44.6 42.9 ^ bt - 41. «J 22.2 28 7 12.9 43-9 10. 1 4St - 9-5 27.8 15 5 59- 1 43-2 366 22.4 Nov. 7 6 53-9 43-6 27.8 25 6 9.1 43-5 28.9 22.6 17 384 43-3 12.2 27.7 July 5 11st I44 11 st * 14.8 43-9 186 22.8 27 27.0 42.9 23 18.4 27.7 15 44-2 23 6.0 23.0 Dec. 7 20.4 15St '6 18.8 42 6 27.9 27.6 25 10.3 44-5 22 5I.6 23.2 17 42.2 40.5 27.6 Aug. 4 6 1.3 44.8 36.O 23-4 27 22.3 41.8 23 55-8 27.6 14 5 48.0 45.1 I9.8 23 -.s P46iJ.f 3i-i 41.4 24 13.6 27.6 24 5 3i-i| 45-3 22 3.5 23.6 16 6 44.7 41.0 33-3 27.6 Sept. 3 5 " -o| 45-4 21 47.8 2 3-7 26 7 3-o 40.6 54-6 27.6 28 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. Date. Long. Lat. o° s. Long. |Lat. H ;o°s. 1846. T o°s. 1847. cp o / / » / / / ; i Jan.26 7 3-o 40.6 24 54.6 27.6 Jun.20 17 46.8 38.8 O 18.2] 34-5 Feb. 5 7 25-4 40-3 25 16.9 27.7 30 18 0.6 39- 1 O II. 2 ! 34-8 15 7 5^-5 40.0 25 39- 6 27.8 July 10 9-7 39-4 ~ O I.435. 1 25 8 20.5 39* 26 2.3 27.9 20 14. 1 24 St - 135 39,6 " 29 49-3 35-3 Mar. 7 8 5 i-9 39-& 26 24.4 28.1 30 39-9 35-3J35-5 17 9 H9 39 5 26 45.5 28.2 Aug. 9 18 8.2 40.2 20.0 35.7 27 9 58-9 39-4 27 5.0 28.4 19 17 58.2 40.4 29 3.8 35-8 Apr. 6 10 33-3 39-3 22.6 28.6 29 44.1 40.6 28 47.4 35-9 16 11 7.1 39-4 37-7 289 Sept. 8 26.3 40.8 3M 36.0 26 11 39.8 39-4 50.3 29.1 18 17 5-5 40.9 16.5 360 May 6 12 10 8 39-5 27 59-9 29.4 28 16 42.6 41.0 28 3.2 360 16 12 39.4 39-7 28 6.3 29.6 Oct. 8 16 18.5 40.9 27 5 2 -o 36.0 26 13 5-i 39-9 1 St - 9-4 29.9 18 15 54-3 40.9 43-4 35 9 June 5 27-3 40 1 30.2 28 15 30.9 40.7 37-9 35-8 15 45-6 40.4 28 62 3C-5 Nov. 7 15 9-4 40-5 Q<5f 2735.635.7 9St - 36-7I35-6 25 13 59-6 40.7 27 59-9 307 17 H 50.7 40-3 July 5 14 9.1 41.0 50.8 31.0 1 27 35-7 40.0 41.2 35-5 15 n-7 20 st. ,£* 4i 3 39-3 31.2 Dec. 7 25.0 39-6 27 49 1 35-4 25 41.6 25-7 3i-4 17 24St -i 4 i8.'3 39-2 28 0.2 35-4 Aug. 4 14 8.4 41.8 27 10.7 31.6 27 38.9 14.2 35-3 ]4 13 58.8 42.1 26 54.6 3i-7 '48, J. 6 22.7 38.5 30 9 35-3 24 44-9 42-3 38.2 31.8 16 32.2 38.i 28 49.7 35-2 Sept.3 27.4 42.5 22.1 31-9 26 14 46.6 37-7 29 10.3 35-2 13 13 6.9 42.6 26 6.9 3i-9 Feb. 5 15 5-6 37-4 29 32.1 35-3 23 12 44.1 42.7 25 53-i 32.0 15 15 28.7 37-i 29 54-7 35-3 Oct. 3 12 20.2 42 7 41.4 32.0 25 15 55-2 36.8 M i7-5 35-4 13 11 55-9 42.6 32.2 3i-9 Mar. 6 16 24.7 36-6 40.0 35-6 23 11 32-5 42.5 25-9 31-9 16 it 56.5 3M 1 1.6 35-8 Nov. 2 11 109 42-3 22.7 7 St -25 23.0 31.8 2f. 17 29.7 36.3 21.9 360 12 10 52.1 42.0 3i-7 Apr. 5 18 3-9 36.2 40-5 36.2 22 36.8 41.7 26.7 31.6 15 18 38.2 36.2 1 56-9 36-4 Dec. 2 25-7 41.4 33-7 31.6 25 19 11.9 36.2 2 10.8 36.7 12 19- 5 19St -ioi8.3 41.0 44.0 3i-5 May 5 19 44-5 36.2 21.9 37-o 22 40.6 25 57-3 3i-5 15 20 15.3 3^-3 29.9 37-3 '47, J. l 22.3 40.2 26 13.3 3i-4 25 20 43.6 36-4 34 8 3St - 2 36.4 37-6 11 31-4 39 8 26 31.6 3i-4 June 4 21 8.9 36.6 37-9 21 10 45-4 39 5 26 51.8 3i-4 14 2i 30.7 36.8 34-7|38-3 31 11 4.0 39-i 27 13-4 3i-5 24 21 48.5 37-o 29-9138-6 Feb. 10 11 26.8 38.8 27 35-8 3i-5 July 4 22 2.1 37-3 22.238.8 ^0 11 53 1 38.5 27 58.6 31.6 14 11. 2 37-5 2 11. 8 39.1 Mar. 2 12 22.4 38.3 28 21.2 31.8 24 14.9 °8 St 37-8 1 59-2 39-3 12 12 54.0 38.1 2S 43.1 3i-9 Aug. 3 14.2 38.1 44.8 39-6 22 13 27.1 38.0 29 3-8 32.1 13 22 8.5 38,3 29.2 39-7 Apr. 1 14 1.2 37-9 22.8 323 23 21 58.3 38.5 1 12.9 39-8 11 14 35-4 37-9 398 3^-5 Sept. 2 43-9 38.7 56.5 39-9 21 15 9-3 37-9 29 54-4 32 8 12 25.8 38-9 40.7 40.0 May 1 15 4i -9 37-9 X 6.2 33-i 22 21 4.7 39-o 26.1 40.0 11 16 12.7 38.0 15.0 33-4 Oct. 2 20 4I.7 39-0 13-3 40.0 21 16 41.2 38.2 20.7 33-7 12 20 I7.5 39-o ~ ° 2.7 39-9 31 17 68 38.4 23.1 2St - 22.2 33-9 22 19 53-i 38-9 ~ 2954.9 39-8 Jun.10 17 28 7 38.6 34-2 Nov. 1 19 29.8 38.7 29 50-1 39.7 29 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. o°s. Date. Long. Lat. Long. Lat. o°s. 1848. cp 2? 1850. ¥ o°s. M o 1 1 1 / / 1 / 1 Nov.l 19 29.8 387 29 5Q- 1 39-7 Mar 26 25 3-3 32.5 5 38.4 43-3 11 19 84 38,S St. 4 8 -7 39 6 Apr. 5 25 36-9 32.4 5 57-9 43-5 21 18 49.9 38.3 50.6 39-5 15 26 11. 1 32.3 6 15-4 43-8 Dec. 1 35-2 38.0 29 5 6 ° 39 4 25 26 45-5 32.2 30.6 44.1 11 24.8 37o H 4.7 39-2 May 5 27 19.2 32.2 43-i 44-4 21 27 St. r 9-3 37-3 16.6 39-i J5 27 5i-7 32.3 52.7 44-7 31 1818.9 369 31-3 39-i 25 28 22.2 32.3 6 59.2 45-i '49, J. 10 23-7 3^-5 48.6 39-o June 4 28 50.3 32.5 7 2.q 8St - 7 24 45-4 20 336 36.2 1 7.9 39-0 . 14 29 15.4 32 6 45-8 30 18 48.4 35-8 1 28 9 39-o 24 29 36.8 32.8 6 59.2 46.1 Feb. 9 19 7.2 35-5 1 50.9 39-o July 4 29 54-2 33-0 53o!46.5 19 19 31. 1 35-2 2 13.6 39-i 14 8 7.3 33-2 43.946.8 Mar. 1 19 58.0 34-9 2 364 39-2 24 15.6 33-4 32.4 47.0 11 20 27.7 34-7 2 58.6 39-4 Aug. 3 19. 1 177 33-6 18.8 47-3 21 20 59.6 34-6 3 20.0 39-5 13 33-8 6 3.7 47-5 31 21 33-0 34-4 3 39-9 39-8 23 "•5 34-o 5 47-6 47.6 Ap.10 22 7.I 34-3 3 58.0 40.0 Sept. 2 ' 29 45.6 34-2 5 3i.i 47-7 20 22 4I.5 34-3 4 13-8 40.3 12 34-3 5 14 9 47.8 30 23 I50 34-3 27.0 40.6 22 29 27.0 34.4 4 59 6 47-8 My. 10 23 47-7 34-3 37-4 40.9 Oct. 2 29 5-51 34-5 45-8 47.8 20 24 18.4 34-4 44.6 41.2 12 28 42.1 34-5 34-i 47-7 30 24 46.6 34-5 6 St - 4 49-5 4i-5 22 28 17.6 34-5 24.8 47.6 June 9 25 "•? 34-7 41.9 Nov. 1 27 53-2 34-4 18.5 47-5 19 25 33-4 34-9 47.0 42.2 11 27 30.0 34-2 4 i^ 15 St - 15.6 47-3 29 25 5i-o 35-i 4i-5 42-5 21 27 8.8 34-0 47.1 July 9 26 4.3 35-3 33-1 42.8 Dec. 1 26 50.7 33-8 19-3 47.0 19 12.9 35 -o 22.1 43-i 11 36-5 33-5 26.4 46.8 29 16.7 lst - 15.6 35-8 4 9-° 43-3 21 26.8 33-i 36.8 46.6 Aug.8 36.0 3 54-2 43-5 31 22.0 5St -26 22.4 32.8 4 50- 2 46.5 18 26 9.6 30.3 38.4 43-7 '61J.10 32.5 5 6.3 46.4 28 25 59-° 36.5 21.9 43-8 20 280 32.1 5 24.6J46.3 Sept.7 44-3 366 3 5-6 43-9 30 38.7 31.8 5 44-9 46.3 17 25-9 36.8 2 50-1 43-9 Feb . 9 26 54-3 3i -5 6 6.446.3 27 25 4-7 36.8 35-9 43-9 19 27 14-3 31.2 6 28.9 46.3 Oct. 7 24 4i-5 3°-9 23-5 43-9 Mar. 1 27 38 -3 309 6 51.6)46.4 17 24 17.1 36.8 13.6 43-8 11 28 5-7 30-7 7 14.2 46.6 27 23 52.7 36.7 2 6.5 43-7 21 28 35-8 30.5 7 36.1 467 Nov. 6 23 29.4 36.6 2.6 13 bt - 2.0 43-5 31 29 8.0 30.3 7 56.8 46.9 16 23 8.2 3M 43-4 Ap. 10 29 4i-7 30.2 8 15.8 47.2 26 22 49.9 36.1 4-8 43-3 20 y 16.0 30.1 32.8 47-5 Dec. 6 35-4 35-8 2 11 .0 43-i 30 50.4 30.0 47-4 47.8 16 25-4 35-5 20.6 43 My. 10 1 24.1 30.0 8 59-2 48.1 26 20.2 1St '22 20.I 35-i 33-2 42.9 20 1 56.5 30.0 9 8.0 48. S '50, J. 5 34-8 2 48.7 42.8 30 2 27.0 30.1 13-7 48.9 15 25-4 34-4 3 6.5 42.7 June 9 2 55-o 30.2 16.2 11st. I5>4 49.2 25 35-7 34-i 3 26.3 42.7 19 3 19-4 30-3 49.6 Feb. 4 22 50.9 33-7 3 47-6 42.7 29 3 4i-2 30-.S 11. 4 50.0 14 23 10.6 33-4 4 9-8 42.7 July 9 3 58.5 30.6 9 4-4 5o-3 24 23 34-3 33-i 4 32-6 42.8 19 4 n-3 30.8 8 54-7 50.6 Mar. 6 24 i-4 32.9 4 55-2 42.9 29 4 19-3 31.0 42.6 50.9 16 24 31.3 32.7 5 17-3 43-i Aug.8 4 22.7 31.2 28.6 51.2 30 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o°s Long. Lat. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. 1851. 8 H o°s. 1852. 8 H o°s. o / / t 1 / / c 1 1 Aug.8 4 22.7 10 St. ' 20-9 14-3 31.2 8 28.6 51.2 Dec.30 4 33-i 28.0 9 10.3 53-7 18 28 3M 31.6 8 13.2 7 56.9 5i-4 5*-5 '53, J. 9 19 29.0 12 st - 30.1 27.7 27.4 25.1 42.5 53-6 53-5 Sept.7 4 3-2 3i-7 405 51.6 29 36-5 27.0 10 1.8 53-4 17 3 47-9 3i-9 24-5 51.6 Feb 8 4 48.0 26.7 10 22.8 53-3 27 3 2 9° 32.0 7 9-4 51.6 18 5 4-3 26.5 10 44 9 53-3 Oct. 7 3 7-3 32.0 6 56.1 51.6 28 5 25.0 26.2 11 7.6 53-4 17 2 43 7 32.0 44.9 5i.5 MarlO 5 49-6 26.0 11 30.3 53-5 27 2 19.2 3 1 -9 36.3 5i-3 20 6 17-5 25-7 11 52.6 53-7 Nov. 6 1 54-7 31.8 30.8 5i- 1 30 6 48.1 25-5 12 13.9 53-9 16 1 31-5 3i.7 6 28. 5 18 st - 29.6 51.0 Apr. 9 7 20.6 25-4 12 33.8 54-i 26 1 10.5 3i -5 50.8 19 7 54-5 25-3 12 51-9 54-4 Dec. 6 52.6 31.2 34-2 50.6 29 8 29.0 25.2 i3 7-7 54-7 16 38.7 309 42.2 50.4 May 9 9 3-5 25.1 21.055. 1 26 293 30.6 6 53-4 50.2 19 9 37-3 25.1 3 1 -4155 -5 '52, J- 5 24.8 9St - 025.6 30-3 7 7-5 1 50.1 29 10 9.6 25.1 38.7 55-9 15 300 7 24.2 50.0 June 8 10 40.1 25.2 15St 42 ' 8 56.3 25 3i-7 29.7 7 43-i 49-9 18 11 7.9 25.2 15St 'i3 43-7 56-7 Feb. 4 42.8 29 3 8 3-7 49-8 28 11 32.5 25-3 4 r -3 57-i 14 58.7 29 8 25.5I 49.9 July 8 11 53-5 25-4 35-8 57-5 24 1 19 1 28.8 8 48.1 49-91 18 12 10.4 25-5 27.4 57-8 Mar. 5 1 43 3 28.5 9 10.9 50.0 28 22.8 25-7 165 58.2 15 2 11. 28.3 9 33-3 50.1 Aug. 7 30.5 25.8 13 3-4 58,5 25 2 41 4 28.1 9 54-9 50.3 17 St. 332 26.0 12 48.6 58.7 Apr. 4 3 13-7 27.9 10 15-3 50.6 27 12 31.0 26.1 12 32.7 58.9 14 3 47-5 27.8 10 33.8 50.8 Sept. 6 12 23.9 26.2 12 16.3 59-o 24 4 21.9 27.7 10 50.2 5i-i 16 12 12.2 26.3 11 599 59 -o May 4 4 56.3 27.7 11 4.2 5i -5 26 11 56.3 26.4 44-3 59-o 14 5 3o-i 27.6 15-3 51.8 Oct. 6 11 37 -o 26.5 30.0 59-o 24 6 2.5 27.7 23-4 52.2 16 11 14.8 26.5 17.7 58.8 June 3 6 32.9 27.7 28.3 52.6 26 10 50.9 26.5 7-8 58.7 13 7 0.8 27.8 St. 29.9 53-0 Nov. 5 10 26.1 26.4 11 0.7 58.5 23 7 2 5-6 27.9 11 28.3 53-4 15 10 1.7 26.3 „„ 10 s6.7 22St -io56.2 58.3 July 3 7 46.7 28.0 23.6 53-8 25 938.6 26.1 58.0 13 8 3.8 28.2 15-9 54-i Dec. 5 9 i7-8 25'9 10 59.1 57-8 23 16.4 28.3 11 5-5 54 4 15 9 0.4 25-7 11 5-4 57-6 Aug.2 24.2 28.5 10 52.9 54-7 25 8 47.0 25-4 15.0 57-3 12 8 27.2 13 St. £ 28.7 38.5 55-o '54, J. 4 38.2 25.2 27.7 57-i 22 28.8 22.9 55-i 14 15 St. 34-5 24.9 11 43 2 57-o Sept.l 18.4 29.0 10 6.5 55-3 24 24.6 12 1. 1 56.9 11 8 7-0 29.1 9 So- 1 55-3 Feb. 3 42.8 24-3 12 20.9 S6.8 21 7 51.4 29.2 34-2 55-4 13 8 54-7 24.0 12 42.2 56.7 Oct. 1 7 32.3 29-3 19.6 55-3 23 9 n-4 23-7 13 4-5 56.7 11 7 10.4 29-3 9 6.7 55-2 Mar. 5 9 32-4 23-5 13 27.3 56.8 21 6 46.6 29-3 8 56.1 55-i 15 9 57-3 23-3 13 49 9 56.9 31 6 21.9 29.2 483 54-9 25 10 25.4 23.1 14 12.0 57-i Nov 10 5 57.5 29.1 19 St. «'j 54-8 Apr. 4 10 56.2 22.9 14 33 57-3 20 5 34 3 29.0 54-5 14 11 28.9 22.7 14 5 2 -5 57-6 30 5 13-4 28.8 8 44.1 54-3 24 12 2.9 22.6 15 IO.l 57-9 Dec.10 4 55.8 28.5 49-o 54-i May 4 12 37-5 22.5 25-3 58.2 20 4 42.1 28.3 58-4 53-9 14 13 i2-i 22.5 37-9 58.6 31 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat. I°S. 1854. 8 H o°s. 1855. 8 o / / / / O ! 1 / 1 My. 14 13 12. 1 22.5 15 37-9 58.6 Oct. G 20 IO.9 20. 4 !6 5-3 6.0 24 13 45-8 22.4 47-5 59-0 16 19 5I.O 20.4 15 51-9 5-9 June3 14 18.2 22.4 54-i 59-5 26 I 9 28.5 20.3 40.7 5-7 13 14 48.6 22.5 57-4 18 St. HI 59-9 Nov. 5 19 4.2 20.3 32.2 5-5 23 15 16.3 22.5 i c o.3 15 18 39-3 20 2 26.6 5-3 July 3 15 40.9 22.6 15 54-3 0.7 25 l8 I4.8 20.1 ic 24.4 27 St. 5 2 \% 50 13 16 1.8 22.7 48.1 1.1 Dec. 5 17 51.8 19.9 4-7 23 18.5 22.8 39- l i-5 15 31-4 198 30.2 4.4 Aug.2 30.8 22.9 27-5 1.8 25 H-3 19.6 382 4.2 12 38.2 23.0 15 14.0 2.1 '5b, J. 4 *7 i-5 19-3 15 49-5 39 22 st. 40.7 23.1 14 58.9 2 -3 14 16 53-3 19.1 16 3-7 3-7 Sept.l 16 38.2 23.2 42.8 2-5 24 16 CO 4 25S S6 52.6 18.9 16 20.4 3-5 11 30-9 23-3 26.3 2.6 Feb. 3 18.6 16 39 3 3-4 21 18.9 23-4 14 10.0 2.6 13 17 0.2 18.4 17 0.0 3-3 Oct. 1 16 2.8 23-5 13 54 7 2.6 23 12.7 18. 1 17 21.9 3-3 11 15 43- 2 23-5 40.8 2.5 Mar. 4 30.1 179 17 44.4 3-3 21 15 20.8 23-5 29.0 2-3 14 !7 5i-7 17.7 18 7.2 3-4 31 H 56-7 23-4 19.8 2.2 24 iS 17. 1 17-5 18 29.6 3-5 Nov. 10 H 31-9 23-4 13-5 1.9 Apr. 3 18 45-7 17-3 18 51.2 3-7 20 14 7.4 23.2 13 10.4 i-7 U 19 16.9 17.2 19 11.6 4.0 30 13 44-3 23.1 25 til. IQ7 1.4 23 19 50.0 17.0 19 30.1 4-3 Dec.10 13 23.8 22.9 I4.4 1.2 May 3 20 24.2 16.9 19 46.6 47 20 13 6.5 22.7 21.6 0.9 13 20 59.1 16.8 20 0.5 5- 1 30 12 53-4 22.4 32.1 0.7 23 2 1 33 8 16.8 11. 7 5-5 '55, J. 9 45o 22.2 13 45-5 0.5 June 2 22 7.6 16.7 198 5-9 19 41.6 20 St - 43.5 21.9 14 1.6 oj 12 22 40.1 167 24.8 6.4 29 21.7 14 20.1 0.2 22 23 10.4 16.7 n 20 26.6 6.8 Feb. 8 12 50.7 21.4 14 40-3 0.1 July 2 23 38.0 16.7 23 St. 25Q 7-3 18 13 2.9 21. 1 15 19 0.0 12 24 2.5 16.7 20.4 7-7 28 13 199 20.9 15 24.4 O.I 22 23.1 16.8 12.7 8.1 Mar. 10 13 41.2 20.6 15 47-i O.I Aug. 1 396 16.8 20 2.4 8-S 20 14 6.4 20.4 16 9.7 0.3 11 51.6 16.9 19 499 8.8 30 14 34.8 20.2 16 31.6 0-5 21 24 q8.6 16.9 35-4 9.1 Apr. 9 15 5-7 20.1 16 52.3 0.7 31 17.0 19.7 9-3 19 15 38.7 19.9 17 1 1. 3 1.0 Sep. 10 24 57-7 .17.0 19 3.8 9.4 29 16 12.8 19.8 28.3 i-3 20 49.9 17.1 18 46.9 95 May 9 16 47-5 19.7 42.9 i-7 30 37-4 17. 1 3o-9 9-5 19 17 22.1 19.7 17 54-8 2.1 Oct.10 20.8 17.1 16.2 9.4 29 17 55-9 19.6 18 3-7 2-5 20 24 0.7 17.1 18 3-3 9.2 June 8 18 28.3 19.0 9 5 30 30 23 37-9 17.1 17 52-7 9.0 18 18 58.7 19.6 12.0 21 st - 1 1. 3 3-4 Nov. 9 23 i3-6 17.0 44.9 8.8 28 19 26.4 19.7 3 8 19 22 48.6 16.9 40.1 8.5 JulyS 19 50.9 197 7-4 4-3 29 22 24.0 16.8 17 38.8 8.2 18 20 1 1.6 19.8 18 0.4 4-7 Dec. 9 22 1.1 16.7 30 st - 40.8 7-9 28 28.2 198 17 50.8 5-o 19 21 40.8 16.5 46.3 7.6 Aug.7 403 19.9 38 7 5-4 29 239 16.3 i7 55-2 7-3 17 47.6 20.0 24.7 5-6 '6/,J.« ".-3 16. 1 18 7.2 7-i 27 St. 49.8 20.1 17 93 5-9 18 3-5 15 9 22.0 68 Sept.6 20 47.1 20.2 16 53 .0 6.0 28 „ 21 0.8 on at '5 7 39-4 6.6 16 39-5 20.3 36.5 6.1 Feb 7 3-4 i5 4 18 58.8 6-5 26 27.2 203 20.4 6.1 17 "•3 15.2 19 19 8 6.4 32 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. / 15.2 15.0 14.8 14.6 14.4 Long. Lat. I°S. / 6.4 6.4 6.4 6-5 6.7 Date. Long. Lat- Long. / 24 52.1 460 37-° 2 5-5 24 1 1.9 Lat. I°S. 1 J 3-9 14.4 14.8 i5-i J5-4 1857. Feb. 17 27 Mar. 9 19 29 8 o / 21 11-3 21 24.2 21 41.9 22 3.8 22 29,5 c / 19 19.8 19 41.9 20 4.6 20 27.3 20 49.5 1858. July 12 22 Aug. 1 11 21 n / 2 6.4 230-8 2 5i-3 3 7- 6 19-3 o°s. / 10.4 10.4 10.4 10.4 10.4 Apr. 8 18 28 May 8 18 22 58.3 23 29.7 24 2.9 24 37-3 25 12.3 H-3 14. 1 14.0 13-9 13.8 21 10.9 21 30.8 21 48.9 22 4.7 18.0 6.9 7.2 7-5 7-9 8-3 31 Sep. 10 20 30 Oct.10 26.0 8St - 3 27.7 24-3 15-9 3 2.9 10.4 10.4 10.4 10.4 10.3 23 56.7 40.6 24.0 23 7-7 22 52.3 15-7 15.8 15-9 15-9 15-9 28 June 7 17 27 July 7 25 47 -o 26 21.0 26 53-4 27 23.7 27 5i-4 137 i3-7 136 13.6 136 28.5 35-9 40.1 25St -22 40. 9 38.7 8.8 9.2 9-7 10.2 10.6 20 30 Nov. 9 19 29 2 45-8 2 25.3 2 2.2 1 37-5 1 12.3 103 10.3 10 2 10. 1 10 c 38.3 26.5 17.2 22 10.8 7-8 '5-7 15-5 15-3 15.0 14.6 17 27 Aug. 6 16 26 28 iI 11. 9 22 19.1 29.6 43-i H-3 13-9 13.6 13.0 Sept. 5 15 25 Oct. 5 15 4St< 13.3 10. 1 29 2.0 28 49.3 ► 28 32.4 13-7 13.8 13.8 138 13.8 21 30 2 21 i3-7 20 57-3 41.6 27.2 12.6 12.7 12.8 12.7 I2.6| 28 Feb. 7 17 27 Mar. 9 29.0 4St -2 9 26.9 30.2 38.7 29 52.2 9.1 90 8.8 8.6 8-5 22 59.2 23 i7-7 23 37-9 23 59-5 24 22.0 12.8 12.6 12.4 12.4 12.4 25 Nov.4 14 24 Dec. 4 28 12. 1 27 49.2 27 24.6 26 59-5 26 35.0 13-7 13-7 136 1 3 -5 1.3-4 14.8 20 4.9 19 57-8 1St ' 53'! 12.4 12.2 11.9 11.6 n-3 19 29 Apr. 8 18 28 n 10.5 32.9 59.1 1 28.4 2 O.I 8-3 8.2 8.0 7-9 7.8 24 44.7 25 7.2 25 29.1 25 49 8 26 8.8 12.4 12.6 12.8 13.0 13-3 13-7 14.1 14.6 15.0 i5-5 14 24 '58, J. 3 13 23 26 12. 1 25 51.9 35-3 22.9 i5-4 13-3 131 12.9 12.7 12.6 19 56-3 20 2.7 12.3 25.1 40.6 11. 10.7 10.4 10. 1 9.9 May 8 18 28 June 7 17 2 33-7 3 8.4- 3 43-5 4 18.5 4 52.5 7-7 - 7.6 7-5 7-4 7-3 25.8 405 26 52.4 27 i-4 7.2 Feb. 2 12 22 Mar. 4 14 tft. 13 25 16.0 24.2 37-4 25 55-3 12.4 12.2 12.0 11.8 11.6 20 58.5 21 1S.4 21 39-7 22 2.0 22 24.7 9-7 9-5 9-5 9.4 9-5 27 July 7 17 27 Aug. 6 5 25-1 5 55-5 6 23.1 6 47.4 7 7-9 7-3 7.2 7-2 7-i 7-i 9.8 30 St. J gi 27 5-2 26 58.3 48.7 16. 1 16.6 17.0 i7-5 17.9 24 Apr.3 13 23 May 3 26 17.6 26 43-5 27 12.5 27 44-i 28 17.5 11. 4 "•3 11. 1 11.0 109 22 47.3 23 9-4 23 3o 4 23 49-9 24 7-5 9.6 9.8 10. 10.3 10.7 16 26 Sept. 5 15 25 24.1 35-6 42.2 13St -7 43-8 40.1 7.0 7.0 7.0 7.0 6.9 36.6 22.6 26 7.I 25 5O.8 34-2 18.3 1S.6 18.8 1S.9 190 13 23 June 2 12 28 52.1 29 27.1 no 1.9 35-9 108 10.7 10.6 10.5 22.8 35-4 24 45-i 5i-7 11. 1 11 -5 12.0 12.4 Oct. 5 15 25 Nov. 4 3t-5 18.3 7 0.9 6 40.2 6.9 6.8 6.8 6.7 180 25 2.9 24 49.4 38.1 190 18.9 18.7 18.5 22 July 2 1 8.4 1 38.8 10.5 10.5 27 St. HI 12.9I 13-41 14 24 6 16.9 5 5 2 -i 6.6 6-5 29.5I18.2 24.0I17.9 33 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o°s. Long. Lat l' J S. Date. Long. Lat. Long. Lat. I°S. • / 1859. n H 1861. n / o w s. V Nov 24 5 52.1 6-5 24 24.0 17.9 Apr. 17 9 35-o 1.4 S.o 18.4 Dec. 4 5 26.8 6.4 21.7 17-5 27 10 4.6 i-3 27.9 18.7 14 5 2.2 6-3 6Sfc - 22.9 17.1 May 7 10 36.7 1.2 46.0 19.0 24 4 39-5 6.2 27.6 16.8 17 ii 10.6 1.1 1 1.9 19-5 '6UJ-3 13 4 i9-5 6.1 35-7 16.4 27 11 45-6 1.0 15.2 19 9 4 3- 2 5-9 24 47.0 16. 1 June 6 12 21.0 0.9 25-71 20.4 23 3 5i-3 5-8 25 1-3 15.8 16 12 56.1 0.8 33-i 20.9 Feb. 2 5-7 17.9 15.6 26 13 30-3 0.7 29 22.8 19. 1 23 14 5i-3 0.7 28 54.6 23 7 n 10 13.7 3-9 19.6 Dec. 3 14 26.2 08 150.7 10 St 23-3 21 10 41.3 3-8 I8.I 20.1 13 14 08 0.9 1U bt - 50.2 229 31 11 5.6 3-8 IO. 5 1 2O.5 23 13 36.2 1.0 53-i 22.5 Aug 10 26.1 3 7 29 0.2 20.9 '62, J- 2 13 13-5 1.1 28 59.5 22.1 21 i 42.2 3-6 28 47.6 21.3 12 12 53 7 1.2 29 9.2 21.7 30 11 53-6 3-6 33-i 21.6 22 37-7 13 22.0 21.3 Sept.9 19 12 0.1 17 Of 3-5 17.4 21.8 Feb. 1 26.2 i-4 37.61 21.0 12 I.4 3-4 28 0.9 21.9 11 19.7 18SU I2 l8 4 i-5 29 55 5 20.8 29 11 57-6 3-4 27 44-3 21.9 21 i-5 op 15.3 20 6 Oct. 9 48.8 3-3 28.3 21.9 Mar. 3 22.15 1.6 36.6 20.5 19 35-3 32 i3-5| 2i-8 13 31.8 i-7 58.9 20. q 29 11 17.7 3-i 27 0.5I 21.6 23 12 46.2 1.8 1 21.6 20 5 Nov.8 10 56.8 3i 26 49.9 21.3 Apr. 2 13 5-2 i-9 1 44 2 20.6 18 10 33-3 3-o 42.0 21.0 12 13 28.4 19 2 6.2 20.8 28 10 8.3 2.9 37-3 20.6 22 13 55-2 2.0 2 27.2 21.0 Dec. 8 9 43o 2.8 St. 35-9 20.3 Mav 2 14 25.1 2.1 2 46.7 21.4 18 9 18.4 2.7 38.0 19.9 12 14 57-3 2.2 3 4-3 21.7 28 8 55 6 2.6 26 43-5 19 5 22 15 3i-4 2-3 19.6J22.2 '61,1.7 35-8 2-5 26 52.4 19. 1 June 1 16 65 2.4 32.2 J22.6 17 19.6 2-3 27 4.4 18.8 11 16 42.0 24 42.0 23 I 27 7-9 2.2 i9-3 185 21 17 17-3 2 5 3 48.6 123-7 Feb. 6 8 1.2 ! 14St 7 59.6 2.1 36-7 i8.2||July 1 17 5i6 1 2.6 CJ2.I 24.2 16 2.0 27 56-1 1S.1 11 18 24.3 2.7 7St - 52.3 24.8 26 8 3.5 I.9 28 171 17.9 21 18 54-8 2.8 49-2 25-3 Mar. 8 12.5 1.8 28 39 1 i7-9 ! 31 19 22.6 1 2.9 3 43-i 25.8 18 26.6 | i-7 29 1. 8 17.9 U Aug 10 19 46.c 1 3 l 34-i |26.2 28 8 45-4 I.C 24-5 18.0 2< 20 7.3 3-2 22.6 26.6 Apr. 7 9 3-3 1 f '5 46.7 18.2 30 20 23 3 3-3 9 .c 27.O 34 r. ■ ■ . . — Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o°n. Long. Lat. Date. Long. Lat. o°n. Long. Lat. 1862. n T I°S. 1864. n T I°S. • O / / 1 1 / / / / Aug 30 20 23 3 3-3 3 9-o 27.0 Jan. 22 21 347 85 3 43 - 6 26.4 Sept. 9 34-5 34 2 53 8 27 2 Feb. 1 19.0 8.6 3 57-9 26.1 19 26St -2ot?".7 3-5 37-5 274 11 79 86 4 H-6 25.8 29 JV/ 20.9 27.4 21 i-8 28S Sl I.O . 8.6 4 33-6 25.6 Oct. 9 37-5 3-8 2 4-5 274 Mar. 2 8-7 4 54-2 25-4 19 28.3 39 1 49.0 27-3 12 5-5 87 <; 16.0 25-3 29 20 14.3 4-i 35-o 27.1 22 15-3 8.7 5 38 5 *5'3 Nov.8 19 56.3 4.2 23.1 26.9 Apr. 1 30.2 87 6 1.3 25-4 18 19 34-9 4-3 13.8 26.6 11 21 49.6 87 6 23.6 25-5 28 19 11. 1 4.4 1 7.4 20.2 21 22 13 2 1 8 8 6 45 2 25-7 Dec. 8 18 45.8 4-5 12 St. £3 25.8 May 1 22 40 4 88 7 5-5 26.0 18 18 20.3 4.6 25 4 11 23 107 8.8 24.1 26.4 28 l 7 55-7 4-7 8-5 24.9 21 23 43-3 89 40.6 268 WJ.v 17 33o 4.8 1 15.8 24-5 31 24 17.6 90 7 54-6 27.2 17 17 13-4 49 26.3 24.1 Jun. 10 M 53 9.0 S 58 27.7 27 16 57-5 4.9 39-8 23.8 20 25 28.8 9.1 14.1 2S3 Feb. fi 46.2 5-o 1 56.0 23-5 30 26 43 9.2 19.2 28.8 16 23 st - 38.9 5-i 2 14.4 23.2 July 10 26 38.8 9-3 ma 8 21. 1 **; 19.7 29.4 26 5-i 2 34-7 23.1 20 27 11. 7 9-5 30.0 Mar.8 43 - 2 5-2 2 56-3 23.0 30 27 42.4 9.6 iS-i 3o-5 18 16 52.4 5-2 3 18.7 22.9 Aug. 9 28 10.2 9-7 8 7-5 31.0 28 17 7-3 5-2 3 4i-4 23.0 19 28 34.6 9 9 7 57-2 3^-4 Apr. 7 17 26.6 5-3 4 39 23.1! 29 28 55 10. 1 44.6 31.8 17 17 50.0 5-4 4 25-7 2 3 3 Sept. 8 29 10 9 10.2 30.1 32.1 87 18 17.0 5-4 4 46.4 23 6 18 22.0 IO4 7 i4-3 32.3 May 7 18 47.0 5-5 5 5-4 23-9; 28 2S.0 6St -2 9 28.7 IO-6 6 57-7 32-4 17 19 19-5 5-5 22.5 24-3 Oct. 8 IO.8 41. 1 32.4 27 19 53-7 56 37-i 24.8 18 24.2 II. O 25.0 32-4 June6 20 28.9 5-7 49.1 25-3I 28 145 II. 2 6 10.2 32.2 16 21 4.6 5-8 5 58.1 25-81 Nov. 7 29 0.2 II. 4 5 57-i 3i-9 26 2 1 39.9 "v9 6 40 26.3 17 28 4I.8 1 1-5 46.5 31.6 July 6 22 14.4 60 6.6 26.9 27 28 20.0 11. 7 38.6 31.2 16 22 47.2 6.1 9St - 6.0 27.4 Dec. 7 27 55-9 11.8 33-9 30.8 26 23 17.8 6.2 6 2.2 28.0 17 27 30-4 11.9 st. 5 32^5 304 Aug.5 23 45-5 6.4 5 55-3 28.5 27 27 4-7 12 34-6 29.9 15 24 9.9 6-5 457 28.9' '65 J. 6 26 40.0 12. 1 40 2 29.4 25 30.3 6.6 33-6 29-3I 16 26 17.4 12. 1 5 49-i 29.0 Sept. 4 46.2 6.8 i9-5 29.6 26 25 58.0 12.2 6 1.2 28.6 14 24 57-4 69 5 40 29.8 Feb. 5 42.4 12 2 161 283 24 iq 25 3-5 1St, 25 4-3 7-i 4 47-6 30.0 15 3i-4 12.2 335 280 Oct. 4 7-3 4 30- 9 300 25 25.5 4St, 25 24.9 12.2 6 52 9 27.7 14 25 0.0 7-4 4 H-7 30.0 Mar. 7 12.2 7 13-9 27.6 24 24 50 5 7.6 3 59-5 29.8 17 29.7 12. 1 7 35 9 27-5 Nov.3 24 36-4 7-7 45-9 29.6 27 39 7 12. 1 7 5S.5 27-5 13 24 18.2 7-9 34-6 29 3 Apr. 6 25 54-7 12. 1 8 21.2 27.6 23 23 56-6 8.0 26.0 29.0 16 26 14.3 12. 1 8 43 4 27.7 Dec. 3 23 326 8.1 3 20.5 28.6 26 26 3S.2 12. 1 9 4-7 28.0 13 23 7.2 S.2 18.2 1^ St 28. f May 6 27 5-5 12. 1 24.6 28.3 23 22 41.6 I 8.3 19-5 27.7 16 27 35-9 12.2 42.7 28.7 K.M 22 16.9 8.4 24.2 27-3 26 28 8.7 T2.2 9 58.6 29.1 12 21 54 3 8-5 32.3 26.8 Ifune 5 r 28 43.2 12.3 10 12.0 29.6 35 Uranus. Date. | Long. 1805. June 5 ■ 15 25 July 5 15 n o / 28 43.2 29 18.7 29 54-7 30- 3 1 4.9 Lat o°n~. / Neptune. Long. T O I 10 12.0 22.5 3,0.1 34-4 14 St 10 35-4 Lat. i° s. 29.6 30.1 30-7 31.2 31.8 Date. 1866. Oct.28 Nov. 7 17 27 Dec. 7 Uranus. Long. o 1 8 18. 7 53 7 34 7 12, Lat. / 8.0 8.2 8-5 8.7 8.9 Neptune. Long. T o / 10 46. 32. 20. II. 10 4. Lat. 367 365 36.2 35-8 35-3 25 Aug.4 14 24 Sept.3 38.0 8.7 36.6 1.0 21.4 10 9 33-2 32.4 17 27.9 32-9 27 19.6 33-4 'B/J- 6 8.7 33-8 16 55-6 34-2 26 6 48, 6 22, 5 56. 5 32 5 9 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.2 9-3 21 st 1 2 6 10 13 23 34-9 34-4 33-9 33-4 33-o 13 23 Oct. 3 13 23 lost.. 37-4 48.4 54-3 55 -o 50.2 40.7 34-5 Feb. 5 24.6 34-6 15 9 8.0 34-7 25 8 51.4 34-7 Mar. 7 35-6 34-6 17 12 St. 4 5o 34- 24 18, 4 18 9.2 29.2 9.1 9.1 9.0 37 10 53 11 12 11 32 11 53 Nov. 2 12 22 Dec. 2 12 40.4 25-9 7-3 45-4 21. 1 22 '66, J. 1 11 21 31 1 55-5 1 29.7 1 5.0 o 42.5 o 23.1 19 St. 21. 1 34-4 27 8.6 34-i Apr. 6 58.6 33-8 16 5i-5 33-4 26 47.6 32-9 May 6 47.1 50.1 56.6 6.3 19.2 23 33 4 49' 5 9 5 33 8.9 8.7 8.7 12 16 12 39 13 1 13 23 13 43 3i-5 31.6 3i-7 31-9 32.1 32.4 16 32.0 26 3i-5 June 5 3i-i 15 3o-7 25 6 1. 6 31, 7 5 7 39 8 15 8.6 8.6 8.6 8.7 8.7 H 3-o 20.1 34-8 46.8 14 55-9 32-5 32.9 33-4 33-9 34-4 Feb.10 20 Mar.2 12 22 n 8 St o 7.6 29 56.8 5i-i 50.6 29 55-6 34-7 3o-3 52.7 30.0 12.5 29.8 33-8 29.6 56.0 29.6 July 5 15 25 Aug. 4 14 851 9 27 10 2, J o 35 11 6 8.9 9.0 9.2 9-4 15 19 St. I, 4' 4- 15 o, H 53' 35o 356 36. 368 37-3 Apr. 1 11 21 May 1 11 o 5-9 o 21. 1 o 40.9 I 4.9 I 32.4 10 18.7 29.6 10 4i-3 29.7 II 3-3 29.9 II 24-3 30.1 II 43-8 30.5 24 Sept. 3 13 23 Oct. 3 11 34 " 59 12 19, 35- 46. 9.6 9.S 20.1 20.3 20.6 43 3i 17 14 2 13 45 37-8 38.2 38.5 38.7 38.9 21 31 Jun.10 20 30 2 30 2 35-9 3 10.5 3 46-2 4 22.3 12 1.4 16.7 29.4 39-2 12 46.0 30.8 13 3i-3 23 3i.8 Nov. 2 32-3 12 32.9 22 18 St. 52. 12 52 48 37 23 20.9 2 1. 1 21.4 21.7 21.9 13 29.0 13 12.8 " 57-5 44.0 32-7 38.9 38.8 38.6 38.4 380 fuly 10 20 30 Aug.9 19 4 58-0 5 32.8 6 5-9 636.8 7 4.8 16 St 49-5 49.8 46.8 12 40.7 31.8 33-5 34-i 34-6 35-2 35-6 Dec. 2 12 22 '68, J. 1 11 12 4, 11 42. 11 17, 10 51. 10 25, 22.1 22.3 22.5 22.6 22.7 23 St 24 18 12 l6 i7' 22. 37-6 37-2 36.7 36.2 35-7 29 Sept.8 18 28 7 29.2 7 49-7 8 5-6 16.6 20.3 12 6.6 11 51.4 35-i 36.1 36.4 36.7 36.8 21 31 Feb.10 20 10 1. 9 38. 9 19 9 4 22 7 22.7 22.7 22.6 30 41, 12 56 13 12. 35-2 34-7 34-3 34o Oct. 8 18 14 St. 22.4 22.9 18.4 2.0 36.9J 368 Mar. 1 11 8 53- 8 48. 22.5 22.4 3i- 52. 33.7 33-5 36 1JJ Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. Long. Lat. Date. Long. Lat. o°n. Long. Lat. 1868. G o°n. T I°S. 1869. G T I U S. o t 1 c / 1 / / 1 ! Mar 11 c 8 48.2 22.4 13 52.4 33-5 Aug. 3 19 7.7 25.1 19 32.6 40.0 21 ibbt * 48.1 22.3 14 14.2 33-4 13 19 41.2 2 5-3 2 7-3 4O.6 31 8 53-4 22.2 14 367 3^-3 23 20 12.5 1 25-5 19.1 41. 1 Apr 10 9 4-o 22.1 14 59-4 33-4 Sept. 2 20 40.7 25-7 19 8.2 4i -5 20 9 19-5 22.0 15 21.8 33-5 12 21 5.4 26.0 18 55-i 41.9 30 9 39-7 21.9 15 43-3 33-7 22 26.0 26.3 40.2 42.2 May 10 10 3.9 21.8 16 3.7 34-0 Oct. 2 42.0 26.6 24.1 42.4 20 10 31. S 21.7 22.3 34-4 12 53-0 26.9 18 7.4 42.4 30 11 2.7 21-7 38.8 34-8 22 28St "2I 59-0 27.2 17 50.8 42.4 June 9 " 35-9 21.7 16 52.9 35-3 Nov. 1 27-5 34-9 423 19 12 10.8 21.7 17 4-2 3.S-8 11 53-9 27.9 20.4 42 29 12 46.8 21.8 12.6 36-4 21 43-6 28.2 17 7.9 41.7 July 9 13 23.1 21.9 17.8 37-° Dec. 1 28.5 28.4 16 57 9 4i-3 19 13 59-i 22.0 „-,o 17 19.7 21st. i84 37-6 11 21 9-3 28.7 50.8 40.8 29 14 34.2 22.1 38.2 21 20 46.9 28.9 9ft St 403 Aug.8 15 7-6 22.3 13 9 38.7 31 20 22.1 29.1 46.4 39-8 18 15 38.7 22.5 17 6.4 39-3 7UJ.10 19 56.2 29.2 49-5 39-3 2s 16 6.8 22.7 16 56. 1 39-7 20 19 30.3 29.2 16 55-9 38.7 Sept.7 16 31.4 22.9 43-5 40.1 30 19 5.6 29.2 17 5-7 38.2 17 16 52.0 23.2 29 40.4 Feb. 9 18 43-2 29.2 18.6 37-8 27 17 7-9 23-5 16 13. 1 40.6 19 18 24.1 29.1 34-i 37-4 Oct. 7 18.9 23.8 15 56.5 40.7 Mar. 1 18 9.1 29.0 17 52.0 37 -o 17 24.6 23 St. 2 £ 24.1 39-9 40.7 11 17 58-7 28.9 18 11. 9 36.8 27 24.4 238 40.6 21 C3-6 26S, H 7 28.7 18 33-i 36.6 Nov. 6 19.9 24.7 15 89 40.4 31 28.5 18 55-3 36.5 16 i7 9 7 25.0 14 55-8 40.1 Apr 10 17 59-3 28.3 19 17.9 36.5 26 16 54-8 25-3 45-i 39-7 20 18 10. 1 28.2 19 40 5 36.6 Dec. 6 16 35-7 25-5 37-3 39-3 30 18 25.9 28.0 20 2.5 36.8 16 16 13.4 25-7 32.6 25St 'i 4 31.2 38.8 May 10 18 46.3 27.9 20 23.5 37o 26 15 487 25.8 383 20 19 10.8 27.7 20 43.0 37-4 '69, J. 5 15 22.8 25-9 334 37-8 30 19 38.9 27.6 21 0.7 37-8 15 H 57 26.0 39-o 37-3 June 9 20 10.0 27.6 16.1 38.2 25 14 32-3 26.0 14 48.0 36.8 19 20 43-5 27 ..s 28.8 38.7 Feb. 4 14 9.9 26.0 15 O.I 36.3 29 21 18.7 27-5 388 393 14 13 50.6 26 15.0 35-9 July 9 21 54-9 27.6 21 45.6 39-9 U 35-5 2.S-9 32-4 35-6 19 22 31.5 27.6 49-2 26St - 49-5 40-5 Mar. 6 25 -3 25-7 15 5i-8 35-3 29 23 7-8 27.8 41. 1 16 J 9-8 **-i 3 i9-9 25.6 16 12.7 35-i Aug.8 23 43-2 27.9 46.6 41.7 2<; 25-5 16 34-7 35 -o 18 24 16.8 28.1 21 40.6 42.2 Apr. 5 25 -3 25-3 16 57-3 35-o 28 24 48.2 28.3 3i-7 4^ 7 15 36.0 25.2 17 20.0 35-i Sept.7 25 16.6 28.6 20.2 43-2 25 13 5i.7 25.0 17 42.1 35-2 17 25 4i-4 28.8 21 6.6 43-5 May 5 14 12. 249 18 3-5 35-4 27 26 2.0 29.1 20 51.3 43-8 15 14 36.4 24.8 23-4 35-8 Oct. 7 18. 1 29-5 35 -o 43-9 25 15 4 4 24.8 4i-5 36.1 17 29.1 29.8 18.2 44o June 4 15 35-4 24.7 18 57-5 36.6 27 34-8 1 bU 26 35-0 30.2 20 1.7 43-9 14 16 8.7 24.7 19 10.9 37-i Nov. 6 30.5 19 46.1 43-7 24 16 43.8 24.7 21.6 37-6 16 29.8 3o-9 32.1 43-5 July 4 17 19 9 24.7 29.1 38.2 26 19.4 31-2 20.1 43-i 14 i7 5 6 -4| 2 4-8 33-6 23 St. £ 7 38.8 Dec. 6 26 4.2 3i-5 10.8 42.7 24 18 32.5 24.9 39-4 16 25 45-o 31.8 4-5 42.2 37 1 Uranus. Neptune. Uranus. Neptune. Date. Long. Lat. o c n. Long. Lat. i°s.! Date. Long. Lat. Long. Lat. 1870. 12 T 1872.