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- Q2629199 subject Q7213499.
- Q2629199 abstract "Solarium (Latin for sundial) was a constellation located between the constellations of Horologium, Dorado and Hydrus. It was introduced in 1822 on the Celestial Atlas of Alexander Jamieson, who substituted it for the constellation Reticulum invented by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille. A decade later it was picked up by Elijah Hinsdale Burritt to whom it is sometimes attributed. It was never popular and is no longer in use.".
- Q2629199 thumbnail Solarium_Constellation.jpg?width=300.
- Q2629199 wikiPageWikiLink Q10416.
- Q2629199 wikiPageWikiLink Q10498.
- Q2629199 wikiPageWikiLink Q10574.
- Q2629199 wikiPageWikiLink Q15994540.
- Q2629199 wikiPageWikiLink Q202703.
- Q2629199 wikiPageWikiLink Q397.
- Q2629199 wikiPageWikiLink Q7213499.
- Q2629199 wikiPageWikiLink Q80793.
- Q2629199 wikiPageWikiLink Q8837.
- Q2629199 wikiPageWikiLink Q8928.
- Q2629199 comment "Solarium (Latin for sundial) was a constellation located between the constellations of Horologium, Dorado and Hydrus. It was introduced in 1822 on the Celestial Atlas of Alexander Jamieson, who substituted it for the constellation Reticulum invented by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille. A decade later it was picked up by Elijah Hinsdale Burritt to whom it is sometimes attributed. It was never popular and is no longer in use.".
- Q2629199 label "Solarium (constellation)".
- Q2629199 depiction Solarium_Constellation.jpg.