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    Aquila, the Eagle
    Auriga, the Charioteer
    Big Dipper
    Boøtes, the Herdsman
    Cancer, the Crab
    Canis Major, the Greater Dog
    Capricornus, the Sea-Goat
    Cassiopeia
    Cygnus, the Swan
    Delphinus, the Dolphin
    Gemini, the Twins
    Leo, the Lion
    Libra, the Scales
    Lyra, the Harp
    Orion, the Hunter
    Orion's Belt
    Pegasus, the Flying Horse
    Perseus
    Pisces, the Fish
    Sagittarius, the Archer
    Scorpius, the Scorpion
    Taurus, the Bull
    Ursa Major, the Great Bear
    Ursa Major, the Great Bear
    Ursa Major — the great bear — is always above the horizon in the northern latitudes, but the best time to see it is in the spring when its high above the northeastern horizon. Ursa Major is best known as the home of the Big Dipper.


    Of all the star patterns in the sky, the Big Dipper is the most universally recognized. The dipper's seven bright stars form a portion of the great bear. It's hard to see the rest of the bear, especially from light-polluted cities.

    After you locate the dipper, look at the two stars that mark the outer edge of its bowl. Now connect these two stars, then extend the line above the dipper's bowl. Polaris, the north star, lies along this line, about five times the distance between the two pointers. No matter where the Big Dipper is in our sky, those two stars always point to Polaris.

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