Genres
Health Travel & Travel Guides Popular Science Sport Art, Cinema, Music Biography/Memoir Essays/Journalism Money/Personal Finance History Politics/Issues Ginger 'How To' Series Food & Wine 100 Essential NZ Series
earth magnet bundle:
Click here to buy yours!
South Pacific Press has collaborated with Awa Press to offer a special low-price package of 'The Great Earth Magnet' - print and interactive e-book editions - with 'North Pole, South Pole' for schools and families across New Zealand.
Sign up to receive our newsletters and special offers

Email us for help


How to Gaze at the Southern Stars

1006-IM-L: How to Gaze at the Southern Stars by Richard Hall

Astronomer Richard Hall's engrossing account of the stars as seen from 'Down Under'. This personal tour of the night sky follows his popular series on New Zealand's National Radio.

Price: NZ $26

Quantity
> view shopping cart > go to checkout

Reviews, interviews, author events

Fifty thousand years ago, a small family of our ancestors huddled around a campfire. Robbed of vision, they were vulnerable in the darkness; the night is the time of the predator. As they listened to the crackle of the fire and the sounds of the night, they looked upwards. What, they wondered, were those mysterious lights in the sky?

So begins astronomer Richard Hall's engrossing account of the stars as seen from Down Under! Today scientists know a great deal about the universe we live in. Photos have even been taken of the planet Mars, 35 million miles away. But for most people it's all still a mystery.

Richard Hall's personal tour of the night sky follows his popular series on New Zealand's National Radio. Hall is a founding member of Phoenix Astronomical Society and senior public programmes officer at Wellington's Carter Observatory. His latest project is Stonehenge Aotearoa, a reconstruction of the original on the Salisbury Plains, specially designed for its location in rural Wairarapa.

Product details

ISBN: 978095825093
Imprint:
Pages: 156
Format: Paperback
Size/Weight: 198 x 129 mm
Illustrations:
Published: September 2004
Author(s): Richard Hall