30 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 76 



c = i.i During totality, to the n. e. the lunar disk appeared of a dark red 



color, and the principal details could be perceived. 



Goudey, Besangon, France, (262) ; good conditions during totality, 

 c = I.I During totality, to n. e., the moon assumed a dark red color on which 



the seas stood out in black. 



Laiitte, Roanne, France, (263) ; completely clear. 

 c = i.i During totality the principal spots were visible to the n. e., and 



especially, the contours of Mare Imbrium and Mare Serenitatis were 



very distinct. 



Nijland, Utrecht, Holland, (264) ; very clear breaks in snow clouds. 

 c=^i.2 3 inch; the chief formations of the eclipsed moon remained easily 



visible. 



Other observers agree in describing the brightness of the eclipse. 



1912 IV i; 0.187; Grade i 



c Near Formosa, China, Siberia, Greenland. 



Rey, Ajaccio, Corsica, (271) ; sky not stated. 

 a = i.y The eclipsed part is very dark and almost invisible in an opera-glass. 



Libert, Paris, (269) ; superb sky. 

 c^ 1.9 10.9 cm.; no detail visible; eclipsed part invisible to n. e., or nearly so. 



Leroy, Paris, (268) ; clear weather. 

 a ^ 1.9 7.5 cm. ; in the shadow of the earth, Tycho was visible like a bright 



spot standing out in the dark slate gray shadow. Only Tycho seen. 



Peneaii, Nantes, France, (270) ; sky and aperture not stated, 

 a 1.9c To the n. e., the eclipsed part is almost invisible; in telescope greenish 



gray. 

 c= 1.9 Hauet, Paris, (267) ; means not stated; no detail of the lunar surface 



was visible in the eclipsed part. 



Van der Bilt, Utrecht, Holland, (272) ; weather partly unfavorable, 



partly very favorable. 

 c = 2.o 4^^ inch; describes the shadow as remarkably dark, with only a ray 



of Tycho visible in it. 



Dennett, Hackney, Engl., (266) ; eclipse well seen. 

 c=:2.i 3 inch. The limb within the shadow was easily seen, and some of 



the objects upon the disk; two rays of Tycho. 



Barlow, (265) ; place not stated; night extremely clear. 

 Binocular and 414 inch; by putting the bright portion of the lunar 



disk out of the field of view, the two bright streaks which converge 



to the east of Tycho from the south, the irregularities of the lunar 



limb and many of the various markings were plainly visible. 



1913 III 21; 1.575; Grade 



c Close to both poles ; through Bay of Bengal and Yucatan. 



Ball, Echuca, Australia, (273) ; sky not stated. 

 c^i.6 4^ inch; I should say it was a composite sort of an eclipse, for a 



part was blue, a part copper color, but the greater part of it was 



decidedly black. 



Jackson, Mannum, S. Australia, (277) ; ideal weather. 



