NATURE MONCTON NATURE NEWS
January 5, 2024
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**With sea ice not yet forming to a
significant amount, there is lots of open water for waterfowl to be far
offshore and not clearly visible.
Aldo Dorio had a male Common Goldeneye come close enough to
be photographed at Hay Island.
Aldo also photographed one of the
striking sunrises that welcome the new day at Hay Island.
**Brian Stone
visited Mapleton Park on Thursday afternoon and sends a few photos that he
hopes will break his streak of bad photo luck that has been plaguing him since
before Christmas. He got only some images of Black-capped Chickadees
being fed by hand and a Golden-crowned Kinglet that came close with the
group of chickadees. He also noted a nest the size of a large watermelon
set high in an evergreen tree that might belong to a Deer Mouse family.
**It’s Friday and time to peruse what
Mother Nature’s night sky may have in store for us on a night she does not
cover it over with clouds, all courtesy of sky guru Curt Nason.
This
Week’s Sky at a Glance, 2024 January 6 – January 13
With Orion’s hourglass figure now above the horizon after sunset, the giant
hunter waits an hour or so for his two dogs to get up before he starts hunting.
The first to greet the night is Canis Minor the Little Dog, a small
constellation highlighted by Procyon, the eighth brightest star. To identify
this star, Orion’s head and shoulders form an arrowhead, with orange Betelgeuse
at the apex, which points toward Procyon. Like Sirius in Canis Major, this star
is bright because it is in our celestial backyard, about 11 light years away.
The name Procyon means “before the dog,” indicating it is a harbinger of Sirius
the Dog Star which rises about 40 minutes later. Ancient Egyptian farmers
watched for the first visible rising of Sirius before sunrise, as experience
had taught them the Nile would soon flood its banks with fertile soil when this
occurred. In mythology the two dogs are sometimes depicted as Laelaps (Canis
Major), an extremely fast dog, and an equally fast fox (Canis Minor). The dog
was sent to hunt the fox but, after a long chase with no apparent end, Zeus
turned them both to stone and placed them in the sky.
I like to look at the dogs and their westerly neighbours, Orion the Hunter and
Lepus the Hare, in a more modern sense. The mighty demigod Orion becomes
everyone’s favourite hunter, Elmer Fudd, with that wascawwy wabbit bugging him
below his feet. The big and little dogs become Spike and Chester, who were also
part of the Looney Tunes gang. Just as Chester would bounce around in front of
his hero, the bulldog Spike, Canis Minor bounces up before Canis Major.
This Week in the Solar System
Saturday’s sunrise in Moncton is at 8:01 and sunset will occur at 4:48, giving
8 hours, 47 minutes of daylight (8:03 and 4:56 in Saint John). Next Saturday
the Sun will rise at 7:58 and set at 4:57, giving 8 hours, 59 minutes of
daylight (8:01 and 17:04 in Saint John).
Look to the southeast after 7 am Monday to see the crescent Moon approaching
Antares, with Venus to their upper left and Mercury about 15 degrees to the
lower left. Telescope users might be able to catch the Moon occult Antares
roughly between 11:02 and 11:55. The Moon is new on Thursday. Saturn sets
around 8:40 pm midweek so observe it early. This Saturday telescope users might
catch a double shadow transit of Jupiter’s moons Ganymede and Europa between
10:20 and 10:55pm, and the Red Spot around 7 pm Sunday and 8:30 on Tuesday.
Mercury is at greatest elongation Friday, rising 100 minutes before sunrise and
leading Mars by 45 minutes.
The Saint John Astronomy Club meets in the Rockwood Park Interpretation Centre
this Saturday at 7 pm, and the Fredericton Astronomy Club meets in the UNB
Forestry-Earth Sciences building on Tuesday at 7 pm. On Sunday evening at 8 pm,
tune in to the Sunday Night Astronomy Show via the Facebook page or YouTube
channel of Astronomy by the Bay.
Questions? Contact Curt Nason at nasonc@nbnet.nb.ca.
Nelson Poirier
Nature Moncton




