f 23 rep. 38 II 4 : 
z6 Samrn from the fame Scar 38 10 55 
28 ^ 38 10 45 
/1/^^11 9^ 28' Betwixt their Centers 20^02^^ 
3 1 rep. 20 02 
/• '"^ itj 9 22 Betwixt their Centers dnb. 34 04 
^ ' f^olnifiereObfemtions I ftate the Diftances of the Pla- 
nets from the fixed Stars 2V&y the Seventh atp'^ 5' P. M, as 
fellov^ s. 
' -^i^r^r» from the Lyons heart 10 58 50 
y^ip/V^r from the fame 10 59 co 
^/2f«r;^ from E in the Lyons head ' ; ^ 39 40 
J^z/j^^^'r from the fam.e 8 55 35 
Hence the true Longitude of 5^?. a i4" 27^42'^ Lac. 12^ 46'! North 
0^ Jupiter Si j.x 26 37 LacVo %6 43 North 
Difference of Longitude i 04 Lat. 16 03 
The Difference of Latitueds fometbing ej^ceeds the Difta nee 
Hieauired with the Micrometer, by reafon thatthe Wind thea 
{baking the Sextant permitted us not to be fo exa£t asufually, 
biit the differencCjbeing lefs than half a minute J efteem incon- 
fiderable. 
The diurnal mcnon Jupiter ivom Saturn was now 9' 1 5", it 
holds therefore as 5' 1 5," one days motion , is : to one day 
or Twenty Four hours fo i '04'' the Diftance of Jupiter {t orn 
the rf with Satiirfi to Eight hours , the interval betwixt the ob- 
fervation and fjilowing Con junfliion, which \\ as therefore 17^ 
after noon , or according to the vulgar reckoning , the 
Eighth at Five a Clock m the Morning. 
At v hich time the irueplaceofthe Planets is a 14'' 28^^ the 
difference of their Latiiudes \'y'' ^o^/ Saturn being fo much 
more Noi iheily f nan y?//7>^r 
In all or bdX ef^^eeraed Aitron^mical Tables extant the mean 
potions of the i^lanet^^^^m ate (00 fwift* oljfupiter too fiow 
L1 coil* 
