The Ways of the Planets
Transcriber’s notes :
The text of this book has been preserved as in the original, apart from a few obvious misspellings.
Corrected misspellings and redundancies include the following: comparsion → comparison dining → during clamly → calmly atronomer → astronomer oi → of the → (deleted) a → (deleted)
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A WHIRLING SPIRAL NEBULA, TYPICAL OF THAT FROM WHICH THE SUN AND PLANETS WERE PROBABLY EVOLVED
In the process of evolution the dense center becomes the controlling sun and the smaller spots of condensation form the planets. This particular nebula lies just under the end of the handle of the Big Dipper. It was photographed at Mt. Wilson Observatory.
MARTHA EVANS MARTIN, A.M.
AUTHOR OF
“THE FRIENDLY STARS”
Martha Evans Martin
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CONTENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
ON MAKING ACQUAINTANCE WITH THE PLANETS
II
OUR RELATION TO THE PLANETS
III
WHAT THE PLANETS ARE, AND WHAT THEY APPEAR TO BE
IV
THE ORIGIN OF THE PLANETS
V
THE SEVEN GREAT PLANETS
VI
THE MOVEMENTS OF THE PLANETS
VII
HOW THE INFERIOR PLANETS SEEM TO MOVE
VIII
HOW THE SUPERIOR PLANETS SEEM TO MOVE
IX
THE PATH OF THE PLANETS
ARIES
TAURUS
GEMINI
CANCER
LEO
VIRGO
LIBRA
SCORPIO
SAGITTARIUS
CAPRICORNUS AND AQUARIUS
X
MERCURY
WHEN AND WHERE TO FIND MERCURY
DISTANCE AND BRIGHTNESS
MERCURY’S SIZE AND THE CONSEQUENCES OF IT
WHAT THE SUN DOES FOR MERCURY
TRANSITS
XI
VENUS
WHEN AND WHERE TO SEE VENUS
DISTANCE AND BRILLIANCY
VENUS’S LIKENESS TO THE EARTH
ATMOSPHERE, DAY AND NIGHT, AND SEASONS
TRANSITS
XII
MARS
HOW TO IDENTIFY MARS
WHEN AND WHERE MARS MAY BE SEEN
SIZE, ATMOSPHERE, AND TEMPERATURE
DISTANCE AND BRILLIANCY
DAY AND NIGHT, AND SEASONS
SURFACE ASPECTS OF MARS
THE SATELLITES OF MARS
XIII
JUPITER
JUPITER’S PLACE IN THE SKY
DISTANCE, LIGHT, AND HEAT
DAY AND NIGHT, SEASONS, AND ATMOSPHERE
SURFACE FEATURES
JUPITER’S SYSTEM OF SATELLITES
XIV
SATURN
AROUND ONE CIRCUIT OF THE SKIES WITH SATURN
DISTANCE AND SIZE
SURFACE ASPECTS AND CONSTITUTION
DAY AND NIGHT
THE RINGS AND MOONS OF SATURN
SEASONS
XV
URANUS
XVI
NEPTUNE
XVII
THE LITTLE PLANETS, OR THE ASTEROIDS
XVIII
CONCLUSION
SYMBOLS USED IN ALMANACS
INDEX
FOOTNOTES: