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The Southern Sky Guide
List Price: $20.95
Our Price: Click here for variations on size and color. This item may also be out of stock or only available as used or new through a 3rd party reseller. Click here for more details.
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Manufacturer: Cambridge University Press
Author: David Ellyard
Binding: Paperback
Publication Date: 1993-09-24
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Label: Cambridge University Press
Number Of Pages: 88
Features:
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Editorial Review:
This unique and accessible book provides a handy reference to the skies visible from the countries of the southern hemisphere. Amateur astronomers or casual observers of the night sky will have easy access to the star charts of world famous astronomical cartographer Wil Tirion, prepared especially for this volume. Television astronomer David Ellyard has contributed a detailed explanatory text to accompany the charts, together with a general introduction to the study of the night sky. Charts of the whole sky - 24 in all - show what is visible early and late in each month. These are followed by details of each section of the sky, with particular attention to the constellations seen in the southern skies. Cached date: AWS Called=true
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Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: 
Friendly and accessible 2006-06-01 This modest but useful book includes background information on stars, planets and constellations, and star charts with interesting objects pointed out. All from a southern hemisphere perspective. It's written in an informal, conversational style, and the star charts (by Wil Tirion) are clear and well-organized.
The charts aren't the largest or the deepest magnitude, but there are other references for that, like Sky Atlas 2000.0.
A particularly handy reference for us northerners who visit Down Under: I used it myself when planning a trip to Australia. Handy for people who live there, too.
OK to decent 2004-02-19 This book has well laid out and attractive star charts but is used best as a desk reference and not as a field reference. Like most of Tirion's Atlases, I think the charts are one magnitude from being truly useful. Under very dark skies in the country the charts would be more then adequate to find the deep sky objects, but in a moderately polluted urban environment there is insufficient magnitude detail to star hop adequately. I would say this book is excellent for beginners or newcomers looking for an introduction to the Southern skies. So I give this 4 stars, also partly because there is a lack of such introductory books of the Southern skies.
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