1 38 COSiM 3S. 



acal light, although the night was alreiidy perfectly d irk. An 

 hour after sunset it was seen in great brilliancy between Alde- 

 baran and the Pleiades ; and on the 18th of March it attained 

 an altitude of 39^ 5'. Narrow elongated clouds are scattered 

 over the beautiful deep azure of the distant horizon, flitting 

 past the zodiacal light as before a golden curtain. Above 

 these, other clouds are from time to time reflecting the most 

 brightly variegated colors. It seems a second sunset. On 

 this side of the vault of heaven the lightness of the night ap- 

 pears to increase almost as much as at the first quarter of the 

 moon. Toward 10 o'clock the zodiacal light generally becomes 

 very faint in this part of the Southern Ocean, and at midnight 

 I have scarcely been able to trace a vestige of it. On the 16th 

 of March, when most strongly luminous, a faint reflection was 

 visible in the east." In our gloomy so-called " temperate" 

 northern zone, the zodiacal light is only distinctly visible in 

 the beginning of Spring, after the evening twilight, in the 

 western part of the sky, and at the close of Autumn, before 

 the dawn of Jay, above the eastern horizon. 



It is difficult to understand how so striking a natural phe- 

 nomenon should have failed to attract the attention of physi- 

 cists and astronomers until the middle of the seventeenth cen- 

 tury, or how it could have escaped the observation of the Ara- 

 bian natural philosophers in ancient Bactria, on the Euphra- 

 tes, and in the south of Spain. Almost equal surprise is ex- 

 3ited by the tardiness of observation of the nebulous spots in 

 Andromeda and Orion, first described by Simon Marius and 

 Huygens. The earliest explicit description of the zodiacal 

 light occurs in Childrey's Britannia Baconica* in the year 



* '* There is another thing which I recommend to the observation 

 ni mathematical men, which is, that in February, and for a little before 

 and a little after that month (as I have observed several years together), 

 about six in the evening, when the twilight hath almost deserted the 

 horizon, you shall see a plainly discernible way of the twilight striking 

 up toward the Pleiades, and seeming almost to touch them. It is su 

 observed any clear night, but it is best iliac nocte. There is no such 

 way to be observed at any other time of the year (that I can perceive), 

 nor any other way at that time to be perceived darting up elsewhere ; 

 and I believe it hath been, and will be constantly visible at that time 

 of the year; but what the cause of it in nature should be, I can not yet 

 imagine, but leave it to future inquiry." (Childrey, Britannia Eaco- 

 nica, 1661, p. 183.) This is the first view and a simple description of 

 the phenomenon. (Oassini, D^couverte de la Lumiere Celeste qui va» 

 roit dans le Zodiaque, in the M6m. de V Acad., t. viii., 1730, p. 2 '6. 

 Mairan, TraiU Phys. deVAurore Boriale, 1754, p. 16.) In this remaik- 

 able work by Childrey th(;re are to be found (p. 9 1) very clear accounts 

 of the epoc'ns ")f maxima and minima diurnal and a:mn;il temperatur3B, 



