How To Gaze At The Southern Stars: Ginger Series Volume 2, 9780958250993
Paperback
From the Southern Cross to the mysterious dark companions of the Dog Stars, the constellations in this guide will help readers see the night sky in a whole new way, allowing them to enjoy the vast beauty of the solar system.

How To Gaze At The Southern Stars: Ginger Series Volume 2

$20.89

  • Paperback

    160 pages

  • Release Date

    30 September 2004

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Summary

Fifty thousand years ago, a small family of our ancestors huddled around a campfire. Robbed of vision, they were vulnerable in the darkness; the night is the time of the predator. As they listened to the crackle of the fire and the sounds of the night, they looked upwards. What, they wondered, were those mysterious lights in the sky? So begins astronomer Richard Hall’s engrossing account of the stars as seen from Down Under! Today scientists know a great deal about the universe we live in.…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780958250993
ISBN-10:0958250995
Author:Edward Wilson
Publisher:Awa Press
Imprint:Awa Press
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:160
Edition:2nd
Release Date:30 September 2004
Weight:194g
Dimensions:200mm x 131mm x 13mm
Series:Ginger
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“This well-written guide will beguile experienced star-spotters and absolute beginners alike.” -New Scientistmagazine

This well-written guide will beguile experienced star-spotters and absolute beginners alike.” —New Scientist magazine

About The Author

Edward Wilson

Richard Hall, in his memoir A Long Road to Progress- Dispatches from a Kiwi commander in Afghanistan, offers a compelling insight into what New Zealand soldiers are doing in Afghanistan and into what it is like to work in the world’s trouble spots. Hall joined the British Army in 1976 and, after training in Sandhurst, was commissioned into the Gloucestershire Regiment. He served with his regiment in a variety of roles in England, Northern Ireland, Cyprus and Germany. He commanded his regiment between 1996 and 1998, a period that included an operational tour in South Armagh - the so-called ‘Bandit Country’ - in Northern Ireland. He was also involved in the British Army’s operations in the Balkans and the Middle East, and has participated in or led training activities in Canada, Denmark, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Kuwait, Norway and Zimbabwe. He was awarded the MBE in 1991 for his contribution to the first Gulf War, and the OBE in 2001 for leading the implementation of a strategic defence review. In 2000, he retired from the British Army to live in New Zealand. Since his arrival in New Zealand he has worked at the Auckland University of Technology. He maintained his military roots, however, by becoming a member of the Reserve Forces. He volunteered to command the New Zealand contingent in Afghanistan, which he did for the period from October 2008 to April 2009. At the

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