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These include hundreds of beautiful and instructive reproductions illustrative of the heavens, earth, minerals, plants and plant products, animal life, races and peoples, famous examples of architecture, scenes in great cities, historic shrines and ruins, mythology, science, marvels of mechanism, great works of engineering, monuments, industries, etc., as well as numerous photographic and art pictures of famous persons and episodes in the history of progress.


BOOK OF THE HEAVENS
Descriptive and Explanatory


[THE UNIVERSE: ITS MAGNITUDE AND MEANING]

[THE SOLAR SYSTEM:] [Sun], [Planets], [Moon], [Constellations], [Stars], [Comets], [Meteors], [Nebulæ], and other Wonders of the Skies

[ORIGIN OF THE WORLDS: THE NEBULAR HYPOTHESIS]

[ECLIPSES: CAUSES AND EXPLANATION]

[MYTHOLOGY OF THE CONSTELLATIONS]

[DICTIONARY OF SCIENTIFIC TERMS]

STAR CHARTS AND MAPS

NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS AND TABLES


1. Crowded group of stars seen in the constellation Hercules.
2. Beautiful circular group of stars in Aquarius. Very brilliant toward the center.
3-4. Fan-shaped groups of stars, frequently to be observed.
5. Round nebula of Ursa Major.
6. A fine star in Gemini with a great, oval atmosphere.
7. Star in Leo Major in the middle of nebula with very pointed ends.
8-9. Nebulæ with luminous trains like the tail of a comet.
10. Two stars in Canes Venatici joined by elliptical nebula.
11. Elliptical nebula in Sagittarius with a star in each of the foci.
12-13. Round nebula in Auriga with three stars in a triangle.
14. Great nebula in Andromeda.
15. Comet of 1819, of remarkable size.
16-17. Great comet of 1811.
18. Surface of the planet Mars, showing the supposed continents and seas.
19. Disk of the great planet Jupiter with its dark streaks and masses.
20. The wonderful planet Saturn with its remarkable rings.
Explanation of Figures
in Diagram
DIAGRAM SHOWING RELATIVE ORBITS OF THE PLANETS
AROUND THE SUN
Rate at which the
Planets Travel

[Central diagram enlarged] (245 kB)
[Right-hand side illustration enlarged] (181 kB)

DIAGRAM SHOWING RELATIVE ORBITS OF THE PLANETS AROUND THE SUN

Explanation of Figures in Diagram

1. Crowded group of stars seen in the constellation Hercules.
2. Beautiful circular group of stars in Aquarius. Very brilliant toward the center.
3-4. Fan-shaped groups of stars, frequently to be observed.
5. Round nebula of Ursa Major.
6. A fine star in Gemini with a great, oval atmosphere.
7. Star in Leo Major in the middle of nebula with very pointed ends.
8-9. Nebulæ with luminous trains like the tail of a comet.
10. Two stars in Canes Venatici joined by elliptical nebula.
11. Elliptical nebula in Sagittarius with a star in each of the foci.
12-13. Round nebula in Auriga with three stars in a triangle.
14. Great nebula in Andromeda.
15. Comet of 1819, of remarkable size.
16-17. Great comet of 1811.
18. Surface of the planet Mars, showing the supposed continents and seas.
19. Disk of the great planet Jupiter with its dark streaks and masses.
20. The wonderful planet Saturn with its remarkable rings.

Rate at which the Planets Travel


BOOK OF THE HEAVENS

[THE UNIVERSE]—[THE SOLAR SYSTEM]—[PLANETS]—[SUN]—[MOON]—[CONSTELLATIONS]—[STARS]—[COMETS]—[METEORS]—[NEBULÆ]—[NEBULAR HYPOTHESIS]—[ECLIPSES]—[MYTHOLOGY OF THE CONSTELLATIONS]—[DICTIONARY OF SCIENTIFIC TERMS USED IN ASTRONOMY].

HOW THE PLANETS WOULD APPEAR IF GROUPED IN SPACE

In the above picture we have represented the planets of the Solar System as we should see them from the earth if the human eye could grasp a space of such immensity. The spectator is supposed to be standing on the earth, and the moon is in the foreground, 240,000 miles away. The planets are in their order outward from the sun, and vary in distance from 40,000,000 miles, in the case of Mars, to 2,700,000,000 miles in the case of Neptune. From the bottom upward, the planets are Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and its rings, Uranus and Neptune.