For Personal Use Only for Personal Use Only Use Personal For

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

For Personal Use Only for Personal Use Only Use Personal For For personal use only For personal use only 2 For personal use only 3 For personal use only 4 For personal use only 5 For personal use only 6 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • For personal use only • • 7 For personal use only 8 • • • • • • • For personal use only 9 • • • • • • • • • • • For personal use only • • • 10 For personal use only 11 . o o . o o . For personal use only . 12 • • • • For personal use only 13 For personal use only 14 For personal use only 15 . For personal use only . 16 . For personal use only 17 Gross Unrisked Contingent Resources 1C 2C 3C Oil and condensate (“liquids”) 86 162 285 (million barrels) Free and associated gas (“gas”) 367 748 1,358 (billion standard cubic feet) Liquids and gas combined 176 344 614 (million barrels of oil equivalent) Refer to ASX announcement of 15 July 2019 . Carnarvon’s previous volume estimate following Dorado-1 result 128 283 566 (million barrels of oil equivalent) Refer to ASX announcement of 20 August 2018 . Legend Oil Field Gas Cond. Field Phoenix South LNG plant Existing Pipeline Roc Proposed pipeline Dorado NWS Fields Reindeer Corvus For personal use only Pluto LNG NWS LNG Varanus Island Gorgon LNG gas plant Devil Creek gas plant Mining gas Dampier to Bunbury natural gas pipeline (“DBNGP”) customers 18 • • • For personal use only For personal use only 20 WA-435-P WA-436-P Ara Ara, Bandy, Wallace, Bandy Grommit & Wallace East Indus & Lupi Lupi Indus Permian 2 Wallace East Permian 1 Grommit Mensa Cluster Wallace Mensa (ex P-1), Bottler, Peng & Bewdy Lund Bottler Tucana Mensa (ex P-1) Roc NE Bewdy Roc East Banks Peng ROC Pavo, Roc Sth & Apus Mensa, Bewdy, Ara, Pavo Roc East & Roc NE DORADO Apus Volta For personal use only Vela Tribolet WA-437-P WA-438-P Mensa, Lund, Permian 1, Banks, Permian 2 21 1 . 2 . 3 . 4 . 5 . For personal use only . 22 Gross Resources (100% basis) Oil & Condensate Natural Gas Barrels of Oil Equivalent MMbbl BCF MMboe 1C 2C 3C 1C 2C 3C 1C 2C 3C Dorado1 86 162 285 367 748 1,358 176 344 614 Roc2 12 20 35 205 332 580 48 78 137 Phoenix Project Sub-Total 98 182 320 572 1,080 1,938 224 422 751 Buffalo3 15 31 48 - - - 15 31 48 Net Resources (CVN’s share) Oil & Condensate Natural Gas Barrels of Oil Equivalent MMbbl BCF MMboe 1C 2C 3C 1C 2C 3C 1C 2C 3C Dorado1 17 32 57 73 150 272 35 69 123 Roc2 2 4 7 41 66 116 10 16 27 For personal use only Phoenix Project Sub-Total 20 36 64 114 216 388 45 85 150 Buffalo3 15 31 48 - - - 15 31 48 23 Gross Resources (100% basis)1 Light Oil Natural Gas Barrels of Oil Equivalent Pg MMbbl BCF MMboe % P90 P50 Mean P10 P90 P50 Mean P10 P90 P50 Mean P10 Pavo 11 63 82 179 3 31 108 249 11 68 101 223 34% Apus Caley2 12 91 125 279 3 44 163 373 12 98 154 344 21% Apus Baxter2 6 52 105 278 2 27 139 302 6 57 129 331 21% Apus Crespin2 7 103 161 391 2 48 212 474 7 111 198 474 21% Apus Milne2 32 163 221 483 8 82 291 654 34 177 272 598 21% Phoenix Project 68 472 694 1610 18 232 913 2,052 70 511 854 1,970 Total Net Resources (CVN’s share)1 Light Oil Natural Gas Barrels of Oil Equivalent Pg MMbbl BCF MMboe % P90 P50 Mean P10 P90 P50 Mean P10 P90 P50 Mean P10 Pavo 3 19 25 54 1 9 32 75 3 20 30 67 34% Apus Caley2 2 18 25 56 1 9 33 75 2 20 31 69 21% Apus Baxter2 1 12 24 63 - 6 31 68 1 13 29 74 21% Apus Crespin2 2 25 39 96 1 12 52 116 2 27 49 116 21% For personal use only Apus Milne2 8 41 55 121 2 21 73 164 8 44 68 149 21% Phoenix Project 16 115 168 390 5 57 221 498 16 124 207 475 Total 24 For personal use only 25 . For personal use only 26 . For personal use only 27 . For personal use only 28 . For personal use only 29 . For personal use only . 30 . For personal use only . 31 . For personal use only 32 . For personal use only . 33 For personal use only 34 This document does not constitute an offer of new ordinary shares ("New Shares") of the Company in any jurisdiction in which it would be unlawful. In particular, this document may not be distributed to any person, and the New Shares may not be offered or sold, in any country outside Australia except to the extent permitted below. For personal use only 35 For personal use only 36 For personal use only 37 For personal use only 38 .
Recommended publications
  • Instruction Manual
    1 Contents 1. Constellation Watch Cosmo Sign.................................................. 4 2. Constellation Display of Entire Sky at 35° North Latitude ........ 5 3. Features ........................................................................................... 6 4. Setting the Time and Constellation Dial....................................... 8 5. Concerning the Constellation Dial Display ................................ 11 6. Abbreviations of Constellations and their Full Spellings.......... 12 7. Nebulae and Star Clusters on the Constellation Dial in Light Green.... 15 8. Diagram of the Constellation Dial............................................... 16 9. Precautions .................................................................................... 18 10. Specifications................................................................................. 24 3 1. Constellation Watch Cosmo Sign 2. Constellation Display of Entire Sky at 35° The Constellation Watch Cosmo Sign is a precisely designed analog quartz watch that North Latitude displays not only the current time but also the correct positions of the constellations as Right ascension scale Ecliptic Celestial equator they move across the celestial sphere. The Cosmo Sign Constellation Watch gives the Date scale -18° horizontal D azimuth and altitude of the major fixed stars, nebulae and star clusters, displays local i c r e o Constellation dial setting c n t s ( sidereal time, stellar spectral type, pole star hour angle, the hours for astronomical i o N t e n o l l r f
    [Show full text]
  • Naming the Extrasolar Planets
    Naming the extrasolar planets W. Lyra Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, K¨onigstuhl 17, 69177, Heidelberg, Germany [email protected] Abstract and OGLE-TR-182 b, which does not help educators convey the message that these planets are quite similar to Jupiter. Extrasolar planets are not named and are referred to only In stark contrast, the sentence“planet Apollo is a gas giant by their assigned scientific designation. The reason given like Jupiter” is heavily - yet invisibly - coated with Coper- by the IAU to not name the planets is that it is consid- nicanism. ered impractical as planets are expected to be common. I One reason given by the IAU for not considering naming advance some reasons as to why this logic is flawed, and sug- the extrasolar planets is that it is a task deemed impractical. gest names for the 403 extrasolar planet candidates known One source is quoted as having said “if planets are found to as of Oct 2009. The names follow a scheme of association occur very frequently in the Universe, a system of individual with the constellation that the host star pertains to, and names for planets might well rapidly be found equally im- therefore are mostly drawn from Roman-Greek mythology. practicable as it is for stars, as planet discoveries progress.” Other mythologies may also be used given that a suitable 1. This leads to a second argument. It is indeed impractical association is established. to name all stars. But some stars are named nonetheless. In fact, all other classes of astronomical bodies are named.
    [Show full text]
  • The Lore of the Stars, for Amateur Campfire Sages
    obscure. Various claims have been made about Babylonian innovations and the similarity between the Greek zodiac and the stories, dating from the third millennium BCE, of Gilgamesh, a legendary Sumerian hero who encountered animals and characters similar to those of the zodiac. Some of the Babylonian constellations may have been popularized in the Greek world through the conquest of The Lore of the Stars, Alexander in the fourth century BCE. Alexander himself sent captured Babylonian texts back For Amateur Campfire Sages to Greece for his tutor Aristotle to interpret. Even earlier than this, Babylonian astronomy by Anders Hove would have been familiar to the Persians, who July 2002 occupied Greece several centuries before Alexander’s day. Although we may properly credit the Greeks with completing the Babylonian work, it is clear that the Babylonians did develop some of the symbols and constellations later adopted by the Greeks for their zodiac. Contrary to the story of the star-counter in Le Petit Prince, there aren’t unnumerable stars Cuneiform tablets using symbols similar to in the night sky, at least so far as we can see those used later for constellations may have with our own eyes. Only about a thousand are some relationship to astronomy, or they may visible. Almost all have names or Greek letter not. Far more tantalizing are the various designations as part of constellations that any- cuneiform tablets outlining astronomical one can learn to recognize. observations used by the Babylonians for Modern astronomers have divided the sky tracking the moon and developing a calendar. into 88 constellations, many of them fictitious— One of these is the MUL.APIN, which describes that is, they cover sky area, but contain no vis- the stars along the paths of the moon and ible stars.
    [Show full text]
  • Saber and Scroll Journal Volume II Issue III Summer 2013 Saber And
    Saber and Scroll Journal Volume II Issue III Summer 2013 Saber and Scroll Historical Society 1 © Saber and Scroll Historical Society, 2018 Logo Design: Julian Maxwell Cover Design: DeAnna Stevens Cover Image: Sam.C/shutterstock.com Members of the Saber and Scroll Historical Society, the volunteer staff at the Saber and Scroll Journal publishes quarterly. saberandscroll.weebly.com 2 Contents From the Editorial Team 4 The Council House Fight Sounded the Death Knell to the Comancheria, by Lisa Bjorneby 5 Mining Picks and Baseball Bats: The Unique Sports Culture of Butte, MT , by Kevin Edgar 23 American Women in the 1950s: The Years Between the War and Liberation, by Corinne Fox 30 Sisterhood of Courage: African American Women and Their Efforts to Aid Union Forces in the Civil War, by Lynn Gilland 37 Manipulating Images of the North: Union Public Diplomacy in Europe, by Thomas Rynard 49 The Early Years of Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson and the Impact on His Life, by Beth White 66 The United States Army’s Use of Military Working Dogs (MWD) in Vietnam, by Frank Hoeflinger 76 Historiography of Falkirk (1298) as the Predecessor to Infantry Dominance, by Scott Manning 84 Mithridates I: History’s Forgotten Conqueror, by Cam Rea 95 Even if the World Had Paid Attention, Nothing Would Have Changed: If the Armenian Genocide Had Not Been Forgotten, by Jack Sigman 107 Book Reviews 117 3 From the Editorial Team: Welcome to the sixth issue of the American Public University Sys- tem (APUS)’s Saber and Scroll Journal. This issue resulted from an “open” call for papers and therefore contains an eclectic mix of outstanding feature articles which range from an in-depth analy- sis of Mithridates I’s rise to power in Parthia, a mighty kingdom of the ancient near east to a feature devoted to the history of mil- itary war dogs – man’s best friends in the service to our country.
    [Show full text]
  • These Sky Maps Were Made Using the Freeware UNIX Program "Starchart", from Alan Paeth and Craig Counterman, with Some Postprocessing by Stuart Levy
    These sky maps were made using the freeware UNIX program "starchart", from Alan Paeth and Craig Counterman, with some postprocessing by Stuart Levy. You’re free to use them however you wish. There are five equatorial maps: three covering the equatorial strip from declination −60 to +60 degrees, corresponding roughly to the evening sky in northern winter (eq1), spring (eq2), and summer/autumn (eq3), plus maps covering the north and south polar areas to declination about +/− 25 degrees. Grid lines are drawn at every 15 degrees of declination, and every hour (= 15 degrees at the equator) of right ascension. The equatorial−strip maps use a simple rectangular projection; this shows constellations near the equator with their true shape, but those at declination +/− 30 degrees are stretched horizontally by about 15%, and those at the extreme 60−degree edge are plotted twice as wide as you’ll see them on the sky. The sinusoidal curve spanning the equatorial strip is, of course, the Ecliptic −− the path of the Sun (and approximately that of the planets) through the sky. The polar maps are plotted with stereographic projection. This preserves shapes of small constellations, but enlarges them as they get farther from the pole; at declination 45 degrees they’re about 17% oversized, and at the extreme 25−degree edge about 40% too large. These charts plot stars down to magnitude 5, along with a few of the brighter deep−sky objects −− mostly star clusters and nebulae. Many stars are labelled with their Bayer Greek−letter names. Also here are similarly−plotted maps, based on galactic coordinates.
    [Show full text]
  • THE SKY TONIGHT Constellation Is Said to Represent Ganymede, the Handsome Prince of Capricornus Troy
    - October Oketopa HIGHLIGHTS Aquarius and Aquila In Greek mythology, the Aquarius THE SKY TONIGHT constellation is said to represent Ganymede, the handsome prince of Capricornus Troy. His good looks attracted the attention of Zeus, who sent the eagle The Greeks associated Capricornus Aquila to kidnap him and carry him with Aegipan, who was one of the to Olympus to serve as a cupbearer Panes - a group of half-goat men to the gods. Because of this story, who often had goat legs and horns. Ganymede was sometimes seen as the god of homosexual relations. He Aegipan assumed the form of a fish- also gives his name to one of the tailed goat and fled into the ocean moons of Jupiter, which are named to flee the great monster Typhon. after the lovers of Zeus. Later, he aided Zeus in defeating Typhon and was rewarded by being To locate Aquarius, first find Altair, placed in the stars. the brightest star in the Aquila constellation. Altair is one of the To find Capricornus (highlighted in closest stars to Earth that can be seen orange on the star chart), first locate with the naked eye, at a distance the Aquarius constellation, then of 17 light years. From Altair, scan look to the south-west along the east-south-east to find Aquarius ecliptic line (the dotted line on the (highlighted in yellow on the star chart). star chart). What’s On in October? October shows at Perpetual Guardian Planetarium, book at Museum Shop or online. See website for show times and - details: otagomuseum.nz October Oketopa SKY GUIDE Capturing the Cosmos Planetarium show.
    [Show full text]
  • Useful Constellation Lists and More
    USEFUL CONSTELLATION LISTS AND MORE The 12 Star Signs (Zodiac Signs) Aries, Gemini, Taurus, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius, Pieces. Constellations According to month, when they are seen at their best (9pm) meaning at their highest point January - Caelum, Dorado, Mensa, Orion, Reticulum, Taurus February - Auriga, Camelopardalis, Canis Major, Columba, Gemini, Lepus, Monoceros, Pictor March - Cancer, Canis Minor, Carina, Lynx, Puppis, Pyxis, Vela, Volans April - Antlia, Chamaeleon, Crater, Hydra, Leo, Leo Minor, Sextans, Ursa Major May - Canes Venatici, Centaurus, Coma Berenices, Corvus, Crux, Musca, Virgo June - Boötes, Circinus, Libra, Lupus, Ursa Minor July - Apus, Ara, Corona Borealis, Draco, Hercules, Norma, Ophiuchus, Scorpius, Serpens, Triangulum Australe August - Corona Austrina, Lyra, Sagittarius, Scutum, Telescopium September - Aquila, Capricornus, Cygnus, Delphinus, Equuleus, Indus, Microscopium, Pavo, Sagitta, Vulpecula October - Aquarius, Cepheus, Grus, Lacerta, Octans, Pegasus, Piscis Austrinus November - Andromeda, Cassiopeia, Phoenix, Pisces, Sculptor, Tucana December - Aries, Cetus, Eridanus, Fornax, Horologium, Hydrus, Perseus, Triangulum Months January – named in honour of the Roman god Janus the protector of doors February – named derived from the Roman verb ‘februum’ which means to cleanse. March – named in honour of Mars, the Roman God of war. April – named derived from the Latin word ‘aperiō’, to bud, to open (for buds) May – named after the Roman goddess Maia, Goddess of Spring
    [Show full text]
  • Design Radiator Catalogue
    January 2019 Offers Beauty And Functionality Design Stay Classy Radiator Be Extraordinary Catalogue MORE THAN A RADIATOR AESTHETICALLY STRONG DIFFERENT IN STYLE 2 warmhaus.co.uk Contents Chrome Radiators p. 5 White & Anthracite Radiators p. 29 Multi Column Radiators p. 55 Myth Atmosphere Moonlight - Arcadia - Andromeda - Artemis - Atlantis - Aquila - Celine - Camelot - Carina - Luna - Nysa - Draco - Mika - Dinas - Circinus - Selena - Lyonesse - Columba - Shiva - Meropis - Crux - Chandra - Brittia - Hercules - Hawaiki - Mensa Traditional Radiators p. 65 - Oasis - Orion Heritage - Phoenix Stainless Steel Radiators p. 19 - Pyxis - Aztec Impulse - Vela - Inca - Tucana - Roma - Storm - Aquarius - Maya - Hurricane - Aries - Lydia - Thunder - Lyra - Kush - Swirl - Dorado - Tuwana - Flash - Gemini - Aksum - Whirlwind - Leo - Hittite - Tornado - Hydra - Pisces - Pictor - Scorpius - Taurus - Virgo - Cepheus warmhaus.co.uk 3 CHROME RADIATORS 4 warmhaus.co.uk Myth Warmhaus Myth Series offers you the opportunity to live with legends of the past. warmhaus.co.uk 5 CHROME RADIATORS 6 warmhaus.co.uk MYTH ARCADIA Product Code C5 Profile: Square Bar: Square PRODUCT HEIGHT WIDTH C/C W/C PRODUCT BTU/DT60 WATT CODE (mm) (mm) (mm) (mm) Arcadia C5 600 300 260 55~70 675 198 Arcadia C5 600 400 360 55~70 829 243 Arcadia C5 600 500 460 55~70 982 288 Arcadia C5 600 600 560 55~70 1136 333 Arcadia C5 800 300 260 55~70 939 275 Arcadia C5 800 400 360 55~70 1162 341 Arcadia C5 800 500 460 55~70 1383 406 Arcadia C5 800 600 560 55~70 1607 471 Arcadia C5 1000 300 260 55~70
    [Show full text]
  • Drexler Associates, Inc., P.O. Box 722, Erie, PA a Week During A
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 381 735 CG 026 228 AUTHOR Drexler, Nora L. TITLE Drug and Alcohol Awareness for Grade Six. INSTITUTION Drexler Associates, Inc., Erie, PA. PUB DATE 94 NOTE 32p.; For related teaching guides, see CG 026 222-230. Produced as part of the SPARKS (Smart People Act Responsibly to Keep Safe) educational program. AVAILABLE FROMDrexler Associates, Inc., P.O. Box 722, Erie, PA 16512-0722 ($21.95 single copy; $17.95 each for 25 or more) PUB TYPE Guides Classroom Use Teaching Guides (For Teacher) (052) EDRS PRICE MFOI/PCO2 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Alcohol Education; Children; Curriculum Guides; *Drug Education; *Grade 6; Health; Instructional Materials; Intermediate Grades; Intervention; Prevention; Resource Materials; Substance Abuse ABSTRACT This educational program on drugs and alcohol provides a "No-Use" message to.students. The curriculum maintains that alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs are unhealthy and harmful, and that society's laws and values are to be respected. The lessons build students' resistance to influences that encourage drug abuse and they promote safe, healthy, and responsible attitudes while correcting mistaken beliefs and assumptions about drugs and alcohol. Lessons appear on 36 "Task Cards" which are intended to be used once a week during a traditional school year. The sequence and frequency with which these Task Cards are used, though, is at the instructor's discretion. Cards may be completed individually or in a group. Each card contains a benchmark (a one or two line goal for the lesson), a short message that the facilitator can present to the students, and an activity, all of which are age appropriate.
    [Show full text]
  • Space Fostering African Societies, Southern Space Studies, 250 Appendix: Mensa, the Table Mountain Star Constellation
    Appendix: Mensa, the Table Mountain Star Constellation Mensa map (Magda Streicher) The great astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille formed the figure Mensa from stars situated close to the Large Magellanic Cloud, and just south of the polar constellation Octans. The constellation is honoured by Lacaille as Table Mountain at the Cape of Good Hope. The open clusters in Mensa can be described only as faint hazy dots, seeing that it is part of our distant satellite galaxy and relatively far away to gasp through ordinary telescopes. However, NGC 2122 displays a small roundish drop of moist with fading edges. With careful observation the south-western part seems slightly more defined with a peppery impression. The cluster is situated on the southern edge of the LMC, a field of view that is filled with faint stars and nebulosity. The emission nebula NGC 2103, 1.5 degrees further south from NGC 2122, reveals a barely seen misty piece of nebulosity slightly oval in shape. Higher magnification brings to the fore a few faint stars embedded in the hazy, uneven surface. © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license 249 to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2021 A. Froehlich (ed.), Space Fostering African Societies, Southern Space Studies, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-59158-8 250 Appendix: Mensa, the Table Mountain Star Constellation STREICHER 29 is a rather faint group of stars. Most of the stars are of a similar magnitude in the midst of a busy star field. A slightly brighter open cluster NGC 1520 displays a few stars of approximately magnitude 9 in brightness that appear close together as a group.
    [Show full text]
  • THE SKY TONIGHT Second Brightest Star in the Night Sky, Canopus
    DECEMBER HAKIHEA Sailing in an Ocean of Stars HIGHLIGHTS The constellation of Carina is home to the THE SKY TONIGHT second brightest star in the night sky, Canopus. This brilliant beacon of light makes finding the TE ĀHUA O TE RAKI I TĒNEI PŌ constellation a breeze. Canopus has appeared in the mythology of many ancient cultures. Bright Stars This bright giant gets its modern name from For anyone new to the joys of star gazing, the mythological navigator of King Menelaus December heralds a beginner’s dream. Some of Sparta’s ship – some versions of the tale of the night sky’s brightest stars will illuminate suggest that Canopus was the helmsman or your experience. Orion, very much a summer pilot of the ship. constellation in Dunedin, will rise high in our northern night sky accompanied by his hunting Carina was once part of a much larger dogs – the constellations of Canis Major and constellation known as Argo Navis (the ship Argo) Canis Minor. Sirius, the ‘dog star’ impresses – three modern constellations formed this great with its luminosity; the brightest star in our ship in the sky, Carina the keel, Puppis the stern, night skies, it can be found at the head of and Vela the sails. In Greek mythology Argo was Canis Major (greater dog). the ship sailed by Jason and the Argonauts in search of the Golden Fleece. The origins of Argo For Harry Potter fans out there, you can Navis stem from ancient Greek, in the 1760s probably surmise where some of J K Rowling’s Nicolas Louis de Lacaille split the constellation inspiration came from! Orion itself boasts into its modern components.
    [Show full text]
  • Constellations
    Constellations TABLE: The Constellations The Latin names and meanings of the official 88 constellations are given below. The original 48 constellations of Ptolemy are indicated with an asterisk*. Ptolemy's constellation Argo the Boat was later divided into three parts (Carina, Puppis, and Vela, which are noted). Latin Latin Name Meaning Latin Name Meaning Meaning Name Daughter The Andromeda* of Cygnus* The Swan Pavo Peacock Cassiopeia The The Air The Antlia Delphinus* Pegasus* Winged Pump Dolphin Horse Rescuer of Bird of The Apus Dorado Perseus* Andromed Paradise Swordfish a The The The Aquarius* Water- Draco* Phoenix Dragon Phoenix Bearer The Little The Aquila* The Eagle Equuleus* Pictor Horse Painter Ara* The Altar Eridanus* The River Pisces* The Fishes The Piscis Aries* The Ram Fornax The Furnace Austrinus* Southern Fish The The Stern Auriga* Gemini* The Twins Puppis* Charioteer (of Argo) The The Crane The Boötes* Grus Pyxis Herdsman (bird) Compass The Son The Caelum The Chisel Hercules* Reticulum of Zeus Reticle Camelopardali The Horologium The Clock Sagitta* The Arrow s Giraffe The Water Sagittarius Cancer* The Crab Hydra* Snake The Archer * (female) The The Water Canes The Hunting Hydrus Snake Scorpius* Venatici Scorpion Dogs (male) The The Big Indian The Canis Major* Indus Sculptor Dog (American Sculptor ) The Little Canis Minor* Lacerta The Lizard Scutum The Shield Dog The Capricornus* The Goat Leo* The Lion Serpens* Serpent The Keel The Little The Carina* Leo Minor Sextans (of Argo) Lion Sextant The Cassiopeia* Lepus* The Hare
    [Show full text]