248 Prof. Cleaveland’s observations of the solar eclipse Sept. 1811. 
= Sea my x 
I had no micrometer for ascer! the quantity of the eclipse. 
The moon’s limb exhibited very little ‘of that rough or aconmieciny 
pearance, which was so noticeable in 1806. 
The latitude of Bowdoin College is 43° 53’. Doctor McKeen, 
from a lunar eclipse in January 1805, made the longitude 69° 50’ W 
from Greenwich. Mr. Ferrer, in the sixth volume of the Transac- 
tions of the American Philosophical Society, made it 44. 49’ 16” W 
from Paris, by the observations of the total eclipse of the sun of 
June 1806. 
