A CATALOGUE OF OBSERVATIONS OF LUMINOUS METEORS. 21 





























Date. Description. Place. Observer. Reference. 



9. 
July 20...... 12 4™, = Ist mag.; yellow,|Highfield Ho.,|E. J. Lowe, Esq. MS. 
with stream; slow from) Nottingham. 
No. 3 Lacertz to y Cassio- 
peiz. 
125 12™, Small, with streamers ;|Ibid..........+.. i a re aces Ibid. 
rapid from « Cassiopeie ; in- 
clined at 45° downwards to- 
wards N. 
12" 16™, Small, with streamers ;|[bid............. Folk Media cacscecves Ibid. 
pale red ; rapid from H 6 and 
H8Camelopardalisto«Persei. 
12h 22™, Small; red, with tail ;|[bid............. MAS Woeesas aca ote ae Ibid. 
slowly downwards at about 
45°; from 2°S of h, and 
aboutthe same alt.through 3°. 
12h 32™, Small; no tail; yel- 
low ; rapid; from 3 Pegasi to 
x Andromedz. 
Blasco 10 54™. Small ; rapid ; through|[bid............. GL .adicsee octet Ibid. 
30’ to N. from a Cephei. 
115 5™, = 2nd mag.; yellow;|Ibid............. dis HRA. Ibid. 
rapidly from w!, w? and w* ' 
Cephei to « Cephei. 
115 20". Do. small; light red ;|[bid..........++. FO UR aa teee sans Ibid. 
rapidly from Delphinus, 
nearly perpendicularly down 
to 71 Antinoi. 
115 25™,= 1st mag. ; red ; train|[bid............. Te eerencccesen Ibid. 
of sparks; rapid ; nearly ho- 
rizontally towards S.W. from 
Dubbe, to 1° below Alioth. 
11h 42™, = Ist mag.; red;j|Ibid........ SS SEIEGY Medteeescckeanes Ibid. 
splendid stream of light,3° in : 
length; slow; from A An- 
dromede to  Cassiopeiz. 
11545™. Sm.; red, withstream ;|[bid........+.++ Ta RA Thid. 
rapidly from p Cassiopeiz. 
11547™, Small; yellow, with|Ibid............ hile Sseee pets Ibid. 
tail; rapid; inclined at 45° 
towards S. from 6 Pegasi to 
s Aquarii. 
115 49™, = lstmag.; dark green;|[bid............. Id. .....s0eeeeeeee[ bid. 
rapidly inclined at 45° towds. 
S. from Z Pegasi to y Aquarii. 
CEE From 9*30™to 10 p.m. 5meteors.|Jersey 
[Powell. 
Rey. J. Slatter...|Letter to Prof. 
Prof. Powell...... 

' of those stars from each 
other; disappeared without 
explosion, at a distance below 
‘a and beyond 7 Bootis, about 
; | double its distance from @, 
eli which gives (by the U.K.S. 
a star map) for the point of 
disappearanceaboutRA.200°; 
Decl. 9° N. 


