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Macrobius | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Macrobius
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:...
published: 30 Nov 2018
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Apollo 17 Revolution 2 (partial)
Sequence of mapping camera images from Apollo 17 in 1972. The view is facing down from the Command/Service Module "America" as it orbited the moon from altitudes ranging from 113 to 267 km, shortly after orbital insertion around the moon and prior to landing. This part of the sequence is rather unique because of the high altitude of the mapping camera at the end and the fact the landing site itself in the Taurus-Littrow Valley is still in shadow.
The sequence begins part way through the photo sequence of this revolution, above the crater King on the far side. Firsov and part of Lobachevskiy are visible, then Al-Khwarizmi and Moiseev. Dryer is crossed, and then the spacecraft passes over the center of Mare Marginis with its swirling bright patterns and the large crater Goddard. The cra...
published: 23 Sep 2014
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MARE CRISIUM
Mare Crisium , Crater Proclus and Crater Macrobius., April 03 , 2015 . Sokobanja
published: 15 Jan 2016
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Apollo 17 Revolution 27
Sequence of oblique mapping camera images from Apollo 17 in 1972. The view is facing north from the Command/Service Module "America" as it orbited the moon from altitudes ranging from 103 to 127 km.
The sequence begins at the sunset terminator at the crater Racah on the far side of the moon, and then Aitken comes into view, then Heaviside, then Keeler. The nearly hexagonal Chaplygin appears. Pannekoek and Dellinger appear, with the huge walled plain Mendeleev on the horizon. The crater Gregory with the row of secondary impact craters called Catena Gregory can then be seen. The incredible crater King then comes into view in the distance although it is difficult to discern due to the high sun angle and lack of shadows. Abul Wafa appears, then Firsov, Al-Khwarizmi, and Moiseev. The dar...
published: 09 Aug 2014
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The moon tonight - age17 days! Learn craters names
At the age of 17 days the moon is certainly no longer full,. The waning gibbous shows many details and even Mare Crisium is about to disappear in the shade. See the following craters in this video:
DE LA RUE
HERCULES
ATLAS
PLATO
CEPHEUS
FRANKLIN
NEWCOMB
MACROBIUS
Mare Crisium
Mare Fecunditatis
COLOMBO
MONGE
SANTBECH
REICHENBACH
RHEITA
METIUS
FABRICIUS
JANSSEN
STEINHEIL
WATT
BIELA
VLACQ
ROSENBERGER
HAGECIUS
BOUSSINGAULT
BOGUSLAWSKY
RABBI LEVI
published: 16 Mar 2017
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2021 Moon's Glass Domes/Anomaly's?! Mare CRISIUM/TISSERAND G/DELMOTTE!, life on the Luna!
2021 Moon's Glass Domes/Anomaly's?! Mare CRISIUM/TISSERAND G/DELMOTTE!, life on the Luna!
2021 Moon's Glass Domes/Anomaly's life on the Luna! interesting i thought!, Anomaly's West & North of Mare CRISIUM, South CLEOMEDES/About where = DELMOTTE is! , West of TISSERAND Just about where MACROBIUS is! ,.....Glass Domes on the Moon?! all comments welcome!
working on getting a new camera the Nikon P1000, Please help,.?! every little helps... anything you can afford :) all the best to you all!! link below! thanks! liemeewatcher,.......
my paypal/tipjar address is... [email protected]
published: 03 Dec 2021
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Mare Crisium through C5 telescope
This video has been recorded through a 5 inch telescope. It shows Mare Crisium, a big dark area in the Moon, also visible to naked eye as a dark spot.
Formation with crater shape lengthened West East. Very flat floor with ring of wrinkle ridge to the periphery and ghost craters to the South. Craterlets. 176000 km2. 3,85 billion years old.
Some features around the area shown are: Alhazen, Cannon, Dorsa Harker, Dorsa Tetyaev, Eimmart, Goddard, Hubble, Lyapunov, Mare Anguis, Mare Crisium, Plutarch, Rayleigh, Seneca, Urey, Cleomedes, Curtis, Debes, Delmotte, Dorsum Oppel, Eckert, Fredholm, Macrobius, Peirce, Picard, Proclus, Rima Cleomedes, Swift, Tisserand, Tralles, Yerkes, Abbot, Anville, Asada, Cameron, Catena Taruntius, Crile, da Vinci, Dorsa Cato, Dorsum Cayeux, Dorsum Cushman, Glai...
published: 04 Mar 2011
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Ev Cochrane: Mars in Ancient Myths and Religion | EU2017
Ev Cochrane will show that the name for the red planet Mars comes from the cult of the Latin god Mars as well as document that the characteristics of the Latin god are closely paralleled in the earliest Babylonian descriptions of the red planet. Far from being confined to the ancient Near East alone, the very same Mars-motifs are depicted in the New World, ancient China, and aboriginal Australia yet few make any sense by reference to Mars today. Ev will go on to discuss Mars’ role in the polar configuration and show how and why it was always intimately associated with the Queen of Heaven as paramour and husband.
Ev Cochrane is the author of numerous articles and books arguing the case for recent planetary catastrophes. He will give two complimentary talks at the conference. A graduate o...
published: 28 Oct 2018
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Eyes on the Sky: Sept 9 thru Sept 15
www.eyesonthesky.com The Moon is a fantastic object to view in most any telescope. This week as the Moon moves from waxing crescent, past First Quarter and into waxing gibbous phase, check out all of the features you can see along the terminator (line between lit/shadowed). Find observe craters like Hercules, Atlas, Copernicus, Clavius and Gassendi; Mare such as Crisium, Serenitatis, Humorum, and thanks to libration this week, the not-often-seen Mare Australie. And you can locate two Apollo landing sites, although the equipment is too small to be seen with any Earth-based telescope (even large ones). See what's up in the night sky every week with "Eyes on the Sky" videos, astronomy made easy.
published: 08 Sep 2013
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Mysterious Moon. 23 May 5 42pm alpha Atlas to Kant
Atlas Crater to Kant Crater. Moon phase 5 days
published: 24 May 2015
13:04
Macrobius | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Macrobius
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only be...
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Macrobius
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuKfABj2eGyjH3ntPxp4YeQ
You can upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
https://github.com/nodef/wikipedia-tts
"The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing."
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Macrobius, fully Macrobius Ambrosius Theodosius, also known as Theodosius, was a Roman provincial who lived during the early fifth century, at the transition of the Roman to the Byzantine Empire, and when Latin was as widespread as Greek among the elite. He is primarily known for his writings, which include the widely copied and read Commentarii in Somnium Scipionis ("Commentary on the Dream of Scipio"), which was one of the most important sources for Platonism in the Latin West during the Middle Ages, the Saturnalia, a compendium of ancient Roman religious and antiquarian lore, and De differentiis et societatibus graeci latinique verbi ("On the Differences and Similarities of the Greek and Latin Verb"), which is now lost.
https://wn.com/Macrobius_|_Wikipedia_Audio_Article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Macrobius
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuKfABj2eGyjH3ntPxp4YeQ
You can upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
https://github.com/nodef/wikipedia-tts
"The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing."
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Macrobius, fully Macrobius Ambrosius Theodosius, also known as Theodosius, was a Roman provincial who lived during the early fifth century, at the transition of the Roman to the Byzantine Empire, and when Latin was as widespread as Greek among the elite. He is primarily known for his writings, which include the widely copied and read Commentarii in Somnium Scipionis ("Commentary on the Dream of Scipio"), which was one of the most important sources for Platonism in the Latin West during the Middle Ages, the Saturnalia, a compendium of ancient Roman religious and antiquarian lore, and De differentiis et societatibus graeci latinique verbi ("On the Differences and Similarities of the Greek and Latin Verb"), which is now lost.
- published: 30 Nov 2018
- views: 280
1:25
Apollo 17 Revolution 2 (partial)
Sequence of mapping camera images from Apollo 17 in 1972. The view is facing down from the Command/Service Module "America" as it orbited the moon from altitud...
Sequence of mapping camera images from Apollo 17 in 1972. The view is facing down from the Command/Service Module "America" as it orbited the moon from altitudes ranging from 113 to 267 km, shortly after orbital insertion around the moon and prior to landing. This part of the sequence is rather unique because of the high altitude of the mapping camera at the end and the fact the landing site itself in the Taurus-Littrow Valley is still in shadow.
The sequence begins part way through the photo sequence of this revolution, above the crater King on the far side. Firsov and part of Lobachevskiy are visible, then Al-Khwarizmi and Moiseev. Dryer is crossed, and then the spacecraft passes over the center of Mare Marginis with its swirling bright patterns and the large crater Goddard. The craters Hansen and Alhazen come into view, and then eastern Mare Crisium as the spacecraft altitude reaches 200 km. The mare is a flat plain mostly devoid of large craters until Picard comes into view at left and then Pierce and Swift in the center. Beyond the west edge of Mare Crisium are the bright crater Proclus at left and the large crater Macrobius. A northern arm of Mare Tranquillitatis called Sinus Amoris with the craters Hill and Carmichael comes into view as well as the fresh crater Romer at right. Maraldi is then visible at center, and the Montes Taurus are illuminated at a very low sun angle, casting long shadows to the west. The craters Vitruvius and Littrow are mostly in shadow, and the Apollo 17 landing site in the Taurus-Littrow valley lies between them.
All the images used in this video are in the public domain and are freely available at the Lunar & Planetary Institute:
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/apollo/catalog/metric/revolution/?AS17R2
https://wn.com/Apollo_17_Revolution_2_(Partial)
Sequence of mapping camera images from Apollo 17 in 1972. The view is facing down from the Command/Service Module "America" as it orbited the moon from altitudes ranging from 113 to 267 km, shortly after orbital insertion around the moon and prior to landing. This part of the sequence is rather unique because of the high altitude of the mapping camera at the end and the fact the landing site itself in the Taurus-Littrow Valley is still in shadow.
The sequence begins part way through the photo sequence of this revolution, above the crater King on the far side. Firsov and part of Lobachevskiy are visible, then Al-Khwarizmi and Moiseev. Dryer is crossed, and then the spacecraft passes over the center of Mare Marginis with its swirling bright patterns and the large crater Goddard. The craters Hansen and Alhazen come into view, and then eastern Mare Crisium as the spacecraft altitude reaches 200 km. The mare is a flat plain mostly devoid of large craters until Picard comes into view at left and then Pierce and Swift in the center. Beyond the west edge of Mare Crisium are the bright crater Proclus at left and the large crater Macrobius. A northern arm of Mare Tranquillitatis called Sinus Amoris with the craters Hill and Carmichael comes into view as well as the fresh crater Romer at right. Maraldi is then visible at center, and the Montes Taurus are illuminated at a very low sun angle, casting long shadows to the west. The craters Vitruvius and Littrow are mostly in shadow, and the Apollo 17 landing site in the Taurus-Littrow valley lies between them.
All the images used in this video are in the public domain and are freely available at the Lunar & Planetary Institute:
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/apollo/catalog/metric/revolution/?AS17R2
- published: 23 Sep 2014
- views: 96
1:06
MARE CRISIUM
Mare Crisium , Crater Proclus and Crater Macrobius., April 03 , 2015 . Sokobanja
Mare Crisium , Crater Proclus and Crater Macrobius., April 03 , 2015 . Sokobanja
https://wn.com/Mare_Crisium
Mare Crisium , Crater Proclus and Crater Macrobius., April 03 , 2015 . Sokobanja
- published: 15 Jan 2016
- views: 47
2:18
Apollo 17 Revolution 27
Sequence of oblique mapping camera images from Apollo 17 in 1972. The view is facing north from the Command/Service Module "America" as it orbited the moon fro...
Sequence of oblique mapping camera images from Apollo 17 in 1972. The view is facing north from the Command/Service Module "America" as it orbited the moon from altitudes ranging from 103 to 127 km.
The sequence begins at the sunset terminator at the crater Racah on the far side of the moon, and then Aitken comes into view, then Heaviside, then Keeler. The nearly hexagonal Chaplygin appears. Pannekoek and Dellinger appear, with the huge walled plain Mendeleev on the horizon. The crater Gregory with the row of secondary impact craters called Catena Gregory can then be seen. The incredible crater King then comes into view in the distance although it is difficult to discern due to the high sun angle and lack of shadows. Abul Wafa appears, then Firsov, Al-Khwarizmi, and Moiseev. The dark Mare Marginis then comes into view, with the dark crater Goddard surrounded by a bright ring of ejecta. Swirling patterns on the surface of the mare are probably caused by magnetic fields. Alhazen and Hansen appear in the foreground, and then Mare Crisium comes into view. Few large craters exist in the mare but the edge of Pierce is seen in the foreground with the smaller Swift. The large crater Macrobius comes into view after crossing over the mare. Newcomb appears near the horizon, and then the young crater Romer. Along the margin of Mare Serenitatis are the craters Littrow, Le Monnier, and the huge Posidonius near the horizon. Wrinkle ridges are prominent in the mare, and a ray from the distant crater Tycho intersects the small crater Bessel in the foreground. The Montes Appeninus apear at the sunrise terminator on the west side of Mare Srenitatis.
All the images used in this video are in the public domain and are freely available at the Lunar & Planetary Institute:
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/apollo/catalog/metric/revolution/?AS17R27
https://wn.com/Apollo_17_Revolution_27
Sequence of oblique mapping camera images from Apollo 17 in 1972. The view is facing north from the Command/Service Module "America" as it orbited the moon from altitudes ranging from 103 to 127 km.
The sequence begins at the sunset terminator at the crater Racah on the far side of the moon, and then Aitken comes into view, then Heaviside, then Keeler. The nearly hexagonal Chaplygin appears. Pannekoek and Dellinger appear, with the huge walled plain Mendeleev on the horizon. The crater Gregory with the row of secondary impact craters called Catena Gregory can then be seen. The incredible crater King then comes into view in the distance although it is difficult to discern due to the high sun angle and lack of shadows. Abul Wafa appears, then Firsov, Al-Khwarizmi, and Moiseev. The dark Mare Marginis then comes into view, with the dark crater Goddard surrounded by a bright ring of ejecta. Swirling patterns on the surface of the mare are probably caused by magnetic fields. Alhazen and Hansen appear in the foreground, and then Mare Crisium comes into view. Few large craters exist in the mare but the edge of Pierce is seen in the foreground with the smaller Swift. The large crater Macrobius comes into view after crossing over the mare. Newcomb appears near the horizon, and then the young crater Romer. Along the margin of Mare Serenitatis are the craters Littrow, Le Monnier, and the huge Posidonius near the horizon. Wrinkle ridges are prominent in the mare, and a ray from the distant crater Tycho intersects the small crater Bessel in the foreground. The Montes Appeninus apear at the sunrise terminator on the west side of Mare Srenitatis.
All the images used in this video are in the public domain and are freely available at the Lunar & Planetary Institute:
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/apollo/catalog/metric/revolution/?AS17R27
- published: 09 Aug 2014
- views: 157
1:30
The moon tonight - age17 days! Learn craters names
At the age of 17 days the moon is certainly no longer full,. The waning gibbous shows many details and even Mare Crisium is about to disappear in the shade. See...
At the age of 17 days the moon is certainly no longer full,. The waning gibbous shows many details and even Mare Crisium is about to disappear in the shade. See the following craters in this video:
DE LA RUE
HERCULES
ATLAS
PLATO
CEPHEUS
FRANKLIN
NEWCOMB
MACROBIUS
Mare Crisium
Mare Fecunditatis
COLOMBO
MONGE
SANTBECH
REICHENBACH
RHEITA
METIUS
FABRICIUS
JANSSEN
STEINHEIL
WATT
BIELA
VLACQ
ROSENBERGER
HAGECIUS
BOUSSINGAULT
BOGUSLAWSKY
RABBI LEVI
https://wn.com/The_Moon_Tonight_Age17_Days_Learn_Craters_Names
At the age of 17 days the moon is certainly no longer full,. The waning gibbous shows many details and even Mare Crisium is about to disappear in the shade. See the following craters in this video:
DE LA RUE
HERCULES
ATLAS
PLATO
CEPHEUS
FRANKLIN
NEWCOMB
MACROBIUS
Mare Crisium
Mare Fecunditatis
COLOMBO
MONGE
SANTBECH
REICHENBACH
RHEITA
METIUS
FABRICIUS
JANSSEN
STEINHEIL
WATT
BIELA
VLACQ
ROSENBERGER
HAGECIUS
BOUSSINGAULT
BOGUSLAWSKY
RABBI LEVI
- published: 16 Mar 2017
- views: 222
2:19
2021 Moon's Glass Domes/Anomaly's?! Mare CRISIUM/TISSERAND G/DELMOTTE!, life on the Luna!
2021 Moon's Glass Domes/Anomaly's?! Mare CRISIUM/TISSERAND G/DELMOTTE!, life on the Luna!
2021 Moon's Glass Domes/Anomaly's life on the Luna! interesting i thou...
2021 Moon's Glass Domes/Anomaly's?! Mare CRISIUM/TISSERAND G/DELMOTTE!, life on the Luna!
2021 Moon's Glass Domes/Anomaly's life on the Luna! interesting i thought!, Anomaly's West & North of Mare CRISIUM, South CLEOMEDES/About where = DELMOTTE is! , West of TISSERAND Just about where MACROBIUS is! ,.....Glass Domes on the Moon?! all comments welcome!
working on getting a new camera the Nikon P1000, Please help,.?! every little helps... anything you can afford :) all the best to you all!! link below! thanks! liemeewatcher,.......
my paypal/tipjar address is...
[email protected]
https://wn.com/2021_Moon's_Glass_Domes_Anomaly's_Mare_Crisium_Tisserand_G_Delmotte_,_Life_On_The_Luna
2021 Moon's Glass Domes/Anomaly's?! Mare CRISIUM/TISSERAND G/DELMOTTE!, life on the Luna!
2021 Moon's Glass Domes/Anomaly's life on the Luna! interesting i thought!, Anomaly's West & North of Mare CRISIUM, South CLEOMEDES/About where = DELMOTTE is! , West of TISSERAND Just about where MACROBIUS is! ,.....Glass Domes on the Moon?! all comments welcome!
working on getting a new camera the Nikon P1000, Please help,.?! every little helps... anything you can afford :) all the best to you all!! link below! thanks! liemeewatcher,.......
my paypal/tipjar address is...
[email protected]
- published: 03 Dec 2021
- views: 97
1:31
Mare Crisium through C5 telescope
This video has been recorded through a 5 inch telescope. It shows Mare Crisium, a big dark area in the Moon, also visible to naked eye as a dark spot.
Format...
This video has been recorded through a 5 inch telescope. It shows Mare Crisium, a big dark area in the Moon, also visible to naked eye as a dark spot.
Formation with crater shape lengthened West East. Very flat floor with ring of wrinkle ridge to the periphery and ghost craters to the South. Craterlets. 176000 km2. 3,85 billion years old.
Some features around the area shown are: Alhazen, Cannon, Dorsa Harker, Dorsa Tetyaev, Eimmart, Goddard, Hubble, Lyapunov, Mare Anguis, Mare Crisium, Plutarch, Rayleigh, Seneca, Urey, Cleomedes, Curtis, Debes, Delmotte, Dorsum Oppel, Eckert, Fredholm, Macrobius, Peirce, Picard, Proclus, Rima Cleomedes, Swift, Tisserand, Tralles, Yerkes, Abbot, Anville, Asada, Cameron, Catena Taruntius, Crile, da Vinci, Dorsa Cato, Dorsum Cayeux, Dorsum Cushman, Glaisher, Greaves, Lawrence, Lick, Montes Secchi, Palus Somni, Rimae Apollonius, Rimae Secchi, Rimae Taruntius, Secchi, Sinus Concordiae, Smithson, Taruntius, Tebbutt, Watts, Zähringer, Ameghino, Apollonius, Auzout, Back, Banachiewicz, Boethius, Bombelli, Cartan, Condon, Condorcet, Daly, Dorsa Dana, Dorsum Termier, Dubyago, Fahrenheit, Firmicus, Hansen, Jansky, Jenkins, Knox-Shaw, Krogh, Lacus Perseverantiae, Liouville, Mare Marginis, Mare Smythii, Mare Spumans, Mare Undarum, Mons Usov, Neper, Nobili, Peek, Petit, Pomortsev, Promontorium Agarum, Respighi, Sabatier, Schubert, Shapley, Sinus Successus, Stewart, Tacchini, Theiler, Townley, van Albada, Virchow and Wildt.
In Robert A. Heinlein's novel The Moon is a Harsh Mistress Mare Crisium is the site of a Lunar Colony, named Luna City.
This video shows really what you can observe looking through a not expensive amateur telescope in your backyard. Made by Computer Physics Lab. Feel free to share. Enjoy it.
Moon, Mare Crisium, Universe, Astronomy, Astrophotography, Astrophoto, Astrovideo, Backyard, Telescope, C5, Celestron, NexStar 5SE XLT, Canon EOS 450d, Rebel XSi, DSLR, Live video, Space, Science, 2011, videos, urban, sky, night, Registax
https://wn.com/Mare_Crisium_Through_C5_Telescope
This video has been recorded through a 5 inch telescope. It shows Mare Crisium, a big dark area in the Moon, also visible to naked eye as a dark spot.
Formation with crater shape lengthened West East. Very flat floor with ring of wrinkle ridge to the periphery and ghost craters to the South. Craterlets. 176000 km2. 3,85 billion years old.
Some features around the area shown are: Alhazen, Cannon, Dorsa Harker, Dorsa Tetyaev, Eimmart, Goddard, Hubble, Lyapunov, Mare Anguis, Mare Crisium, Plutarch, Rayleigh, Seneca, Urey, Cleomedes, Curtis, Debes, Delmotte, Dorsum Oppel, Eckert, Fredholm, Macrobius, Peirce, Picard, Proclus, Rima Cleomedes, Swift, Tisserand, Tralles, Yerkes, Abbot, Anville, Asada, Cameron, Catena Taruntius, Crile, da Vinci, Dorsa Cato, Dorsum Cayeux, Dorsum Cushman, Glaisher, Greaves, Lawrence, Lick, Montes Secchi, Palus Somni, Rimae Apollonius, Rimae Secchi, Rimae Taruntius, Secchi, Sinus Concordiae, Smithson, Taruntius, Tebbutt, Watts, Zähringer, Ameghino, Apollonius, Auzout, Back, Banachiewicz, Boethius, Bombelli, Cartan, Condon, Condorcet, Daly, Dorsa Dana, Dorsum Termier, Dubyago, Fahrenheit, Firmicus, Hansen, Jansky, Jenkins, Knox-Shaw, Krogh, Lacus Perseverantiae, Liouville, Mare Marginis, Mare Smythii, Mare Spumans, Mare Undarum, Mons Usov, Neper, Nobili, Peek, Petit, Pomortsev, Promontorium Agarum, Respighi, Sabatier, Schubert, Shapley, Sinus Successus, Stewart, Tacchini, Theiler, Townley, van Albada, Virchow and Wildt.
In Robert A. Heinlein's novel The Moon is a Harsh Mistress Mare Crisium is the site of a Lunar Colony, named Luna City.
This video shows really what you can observe looking through a not expensive amateur telescope in your backyard. Made by Computer Physics Lab. Feel free to share. Enjoy it.
Moon, Mare Crisium, Universe, Astronomy, Astrophotography, Astrophoto, Astrovideo, Backyard, Telescope, C5, Celestron, NexStar 5SE XLT, Canon EOS 450d, Rebel XSi, DSLR, Live video, Space, Science, 2011, videos, urban, sky, night, Registax
- published: 04 Mar 2011
- views: 4306
29:31
Ev Cochrane: Mars in Ancient Myths and Religion | EU2017
Ev Cochrane will show that the name for the red planet Mars comes from the cult of the Latin god Mars as well as document that the characteristics of the Latin ...
Ev Cochrane will show that the name for the red planet Mars comes from the cult of the Latin god Mars as well as document that the characteristics of the Latin god are closely paralleled in the earliest Babylonian descriptions of the red planet. Far from being confined to the ancient Near East alone, the very same Mars-motifs are depicted in the New World, ancient China, and aboriginal Australia yet few make any sense by reference to Mars today. Ev will go on to discuss Mars’ role in the polar configuration and show how and why it was always intimately associated with the Queen of Heaven as paramour and husband.
Ev Cochrane is the author of numerous articles and books arguing the case for recent planetary catastrophes. He will give two complimentary talks at the conference. A graduate of Iowa State University, he earned an M.S. in genetics, 1982. Ev is the author of Martian Metamorphoses (1997); The Many Faces of Venus (2001); Starf*cker (2006); and On Fossil Gods and Forgotten Worlds (2010). He is currently working on major monographs on astral religion in Ancient Egypt, the Greek myth of Phaethon, and myths of Creation.
If you see a CC with this video, it means that subtitles are available. To find out which ones, click on the Gear Icon in the lower right area of the video box and click on “subtitles” in the drop-down box. Then click on the subtitle that you would like.
Become a Producer through the PATREON Rewards program -- https://www.patreon.com/tboltsproject
Subscribe to Thunderbolts Update newsletter: http://eepurl.com/ETy41
The Thunderbolts Project Home: http://www.thunderbolts.info
Essential Guide to the Electric Universe: http://www.thunderbolts.info/wp/eg-contents/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/thunderboltsproject
Twitter: @tboltsproject
Electric Universe by Wal Thornhill: http://www.holoscience.com/wp/
Electric Universe T-shirts and Gifts: http://stickmanonstone.com/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ut0KH3h7JVs
https://wn.com/Ev_Cochrane_Mars_In_Ancient_Myths_And_Religion_|_Eu2017
Ev Cochrane will show that the name for the red planet Mars comes from the cult of the Latin god Mars as well as document that the characteristics of the Latin god are closely paralleled in the earliest Babylonian descriptions of the red planet. Far from being confined to the ancient Near East alone, the very same Mars-motifs are depicted in the New World, ancient China, and aboriginal Australia yet few make any sense by reference to Mars today. Ev will go on to discuss Mars’ role in the polar configuration and show how and why it was always intimately associated with the Queen of Heaven as paramour and husband.
Ev Cochrane is the author of numerous articles and books arguing the case for recent planetary catastrophes. He will give two complimentary talks at the conference. A graduate of Iowa State University, he earned an M.S. in genetics, 1982. Ev is the author of Martian Metamorphoses (1997); The Many Faces of Venus (2001); Starf*cker (2006); and On Fossil Gods and Forgotten Worlds (2010). He is currently working on major monographs on astral religion in Ancient Egypt, the Greek myth of Phaethon, and myths of Creation.
If you see a CC with this video, it means that subtitles are available. To find out which ones, click on the Gear Icon in the lower right area of the video box and click on “subtitles” in the drop-down box. Then click on the subtitle that you would like.
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- published: 28 Oct 2018
- views: 21779
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Eyes on the Sky: Sept 9 thru Sept 15
www.eyesonthesky.com The Moon is a fantastic object to view in most any telescope. This week as the Moon moves from waxing crescent, past First Quarter and into...
www.eyesonthesky.com The Moon is a fantastic object to view in most any telescope. This week as the Moon moves from waxing crescent, past First Quarter and into waxing gibbous phase, check out all of the features you can see along the terminator (line between lit/shadowed). Find observe craters like Hercules, Atlas, Copernicus, Clavius and Gassendi; Mare such as Crisium, Serenitatis, Humorum, and thanks to libration this week, the not-often-seen Mare Australie. And you can locate two Apollo landing sites, although the equipment is too small to be seen with any Earth-based telescope (even large ones). See what's up in the night sky every week with "Eyes on the Sky" videos, astronomy made easy.
https://wn.com/Eyes_On_The_Sky_Sept_9_Thru_Sept_15
www.eyesonthesky.com The Moon is a fantastic object to view in most any telescope. This week as the Moon moves from waxing crescent, past First Quarter and into waxing gibbous phase, check out all of the features you can see along the terminator (line between lit/shadowed). Find observe craters like Hercules, Atlas, Copernicus, Clavius and Gassendi; Mare such as Crisium, Serenitatis, Humorum, and thanks to libration this week, the not-often-seen Mare Australie. And you can locate two Apollo landing sites, although the equipment is too small to be seen with any Earth-based telescope (even large ones). See what's up in the night sky every week with "Eyes on the Sky" videos, astronomy made easy.
- published: 08 Sep 2013
- views: 1795