THE CONTENTS.

The Introduction: Containing a brief Account of the Solar System, and of the Fixed Stars.

 
Sect. I.

Of the Order and Periods of the Primary
Planets revolving about the Sun; and of
the Secondary Planets round their respective
Primaries.

——— Of the Primary Planets  1
——— Of the Secondary Planets  5
——— Of the Annual and Diurnal Motion of the Planets  7
——— That the Planets are Opaque and Globular  9
——— That the Earth is placed betwixt the Orbits of Mars and Venus ibid.
——— That the Planets turn round the Sun ibid.
——— That the Earth also turns round the Sun 15
——— How the Annual and Diurnal Motion of the Planets are computed ibid.
——— How the relative Distance of the Planets from the Sun are determined 18
——— How their absolute Distances from the Sun are computed 23
——— How the Magnitudes of the Planets are determined 26
——— Why the Moon appears bigger than any of the Planets 27
——— A Table of the Distances, Magnitudes, Periodical, and Diurnal Revolutions of the Planets 28
——— Of Comets 29
Sect. II. Of the Fixed Stars 32
——— That the fixed Stars are luminous Bodies, at immense Distances from us ibid.
——— Of Telescopical Stars 35
——— The Stars digested into Constellations 36
——— Of the Galaxy, or Milky Way 38

The Description and Use of the Celestial and Terrestrial Globes.

The Geometrical Definition of a Globe, and of the principal Use of the Artificial Globes

42

That there will be the same prospect of the Fixed Stars, whether the Spectator be placed in the Sun, or on the Earth

45
Sect. I.

An Explanation of the Circles of the Sphere, and of some Astronomical Terms arising therefrom

47
——— Of the Division of Time 69
——— Of the Atmosphere 81
Sect. II. Geographical Definitions 84
——— Of the Situation of Places upon the Earth ibid.
——— Of Zones and Climates 90
——— Of the Poetical Rising and Setting of the Stars 96
——— Of the surface of the Earth, considered as it is composed of Land and Water ibid.
——— Of the appurtenances of the Globes 101
Sect. III. The Use of the Globes 104
Problem I. To find the Latitude and Longitude of any given place upon the Globe; and on the contrary, the Latitude and Longitude being given to find the Place ibid.
Prob. II. To find the Difference of Latitude betwixt any two given places 106
Prob. III. To find the Difference of Longitude betwixt any two given places ibid.
Prob. IV. Any Place being given; to find all those places that are in the same Latitude with the said place 107
Prob. V. The Day of the Month being given; to find the Sun’s place in the Ecliptic, and his Declination 108
Prob. VI. To rectify the Globe for the Latitude, Zenith, and Sun’s place 109
Prob. VII. To find the Distance between any two given Places upon the Globe, and to find all those places upon the Globe that are at the same Distance from a given place 110
Prob. VIII. To find the Angle of a Position of Places; or the angle formed by the Meridian of one place, and a great circle passing through both the places 111
Prob. IX. To find the Antœci, Periœci, and Antipodes, to any given place 113
Prob. X. The Hour of the Day at one Place being given; to find the correspondent Hour (or what o’Clock it is at that time) at any other place 114
Prob. XI. The Day of the Month being given; to find those places on the Globe where the Sun will be Vertical, or in the Zenith, that Day 115
Prob. XII. A place being given in the Torrid Zone; to find those two Days in which the Sun will be Vertical to the same 116
Prob. XIII. To find where the Sun is Vertical at any given time assigned; or, the Day of the Month and the Hour at any place (suppose London) being given, to find in what place the Sun is Vertical at that very time ibid.
Prob. XIV. The Day, and the Hour of the Day at one place, being given; to find all those places upon the Earth where the Sun is then Rising, Setting, Culminating (or on the Meridian); also where it is Day-light, Twilight, Dark Night, Midnight; where the Twilight then begins, and where it ends; the Height of the Sun in any part of the illuminated Hemisphere; also his Depression in the obscure Hemisphere 117
Prob. XV. The Day of the Month being given, to show, at one View, the Length of Days and Nights in all Places upon the Earth, at that time; and to explain how the Vicissitudes of Day and Night are really made by the motion of the Earth round her Axis, in 24 Hours, the Sun standing still 119
Prob. XVI. To Explain in general the Alteration of Seasons, or Length of the Days and Nights, made in all places of the World, by the Sun’s, or the Earth’s Annual motion in the Ecliptic 121
Prob. XVII. To shew by the Globe, at one View, the Length of the Days and Nights, at any particular place, at all times of the Year 128
Prob. XVIII. The Latitude of any place, not exceeding 69½ Degrees, and the Day of the Month being given; to the time of Sun-rising and Setting, and the length of the Day and Night 136
Prob. XIX. To find the length of the longest and shortest Day and Night in any given place, not exceeding 66½ Degrees of Latitude 137
Prob. XX. To find in what Latitude the longest Day is, of any given length less than 24 Hours 139
Prob. XXI. A Place being given in one of the Frigid Zones (suppose the Northern) to find what number of Days (of 24 Hours each) the Sun doth constantly shine upon the same, how long he is absent, and also the first and last day of his appearance 140
Prob. XXII. To find in what Latitude the longest Day is, of any given length, less than 182 natural Days 141
Prob. XXIII. The Day of the Month being given; to find when the Morning and Evening Twilight begins and ends, in any place upon the Globe 142
Prob. XXIV. To find the time when total Darkness ceases, or when the Twilight continues from Sun-setting to Sun-rising, in any given place 144
Prob. XXV. The Day of the Month being given; to find those places of the Frigid Zones, where the Sun begins to shine constantly without setting; and also those places where he begins to be totally absent 146
Prob. XXVI. The Latitude, the Sun’s Place, and his Altitude being given; to find the Hour of the Day, and Sun’s Azimuth from the Meridian 149
Prob. XXVII. The Latitude, Hour of the Day, and the Sun’s Place being given; to find the Sun’s Altitude 150
Prob. XXVIII. The Latitude of the Place, and the Day of the Month being given; to find the depression of the Sun below the Horizon, and his Azimuth, at any Hour of the Night 151
Prob. XXIX. The Latitude of the Sun’s Place, and his Azimuth being given; to find his Altitude, and the Hour 152
Prob. XXX. The Latitude, the Sun’s Altitude, and his Azimuth being given; to find his Place on the Ecliptic, and the Hour ibid.
Prob. XXXI. The Declination, and Meridian Altitude of the Sun, or of any Star being given; to find the Latitude of the Place 153
Prob. XXXII. The Day and Hour of a Lunar Eclipse being known; to find all those Places upon the Globe in which the same will be visible 154
Prob. XXXIII. The Day of the Month, and Hour of the Day, according to our way of reckoning in England, being given; to find thereby the Babylonish, Italic, and Jewish, or Judaical Hour 155
Prob. XXXIV. To find the Right Ascension and Declination of the Sun, or any Fixed Star 156
Prob. XXXV. To find the Longitude and Latitude of a given Star 158
Prob. XXXVI. The Latitude of the Place, the Day of the Month, and the Hour being given; to find what Stars are then rising and setting, what Stars are culminating, or on the Meridian, and the Altitude and Azimuth of any Star above the Horizon; and also how to distinguish the Stars in the Heavens one from the other, and to know them by their proper Names 159
Prob. XXXVII. The Latitude of the Place being given; to find the Amplitude, Oblique Ascension, and Descension, Ascensional Difference, Semi-diurnal Arch, and the time of Continuance above the Horizon, of any given Point in the Heavens 162
Prob. XXXVIII. The Latitude and the Day of the Month being given; to find the Hour when any known Star will be on the Meridian, and also the time of its Rising and Setting 165
Prob. XXXIX. To find at what time of the Year a given Star will be upon the Meridian, at a given Hour of the Night 166
Prob. XL. The Day of the Month and the Azimuth, of any known Star being given; to find the Hour of the Night 167
Prob. XLI. Two known Stars, having the same Azimuth, or the same Height, being given; to find the Hour of the Night 168
Prob. XLII. The Latitude, Day of the Month, and the Altitude of any known Star being given; to find the Hour of the Night 169
Prob. XLIII. Having the Latitude of the Place, to find the Degree of the Ecliptic, which rises or sets with a given Star; and from thence to determine the time of its Cosmical and Achronical Rising and Setting 171
Prob. XLIV. Having the Latitude of the Place; to find the time when a Star rises and sets Heliacally 172
Prob. XLV. To find the Place of any Planet upon the Globe, so by that Means to find its Place in the Heavens; also to find at what Hour any Planet will rise or set, or be on the Meridian, at any Day in the Year 173
Prob. XLVI. To find all that space upon the Earth where an Eclipse of one of the Satellites of Jupiter will be visible 175
 
  The Description of the ORRERY 177
 
  Of the Motions of the Planets in general 183
  Of the Stations and Retrogadations of the Planets 186
  Of the Annual and Diurnal Motion of the Earth 194
  Of the Phases of the Moon, and of her Motion in her Orbit 201
  Of the Eclipses of the Sun and Moon 208
  Of the Eclipses of Jupiter’s Satellites 212