GROUP Begin End Number Date Date Remarks ===== ======== ======== ================================================== 82 18740417 18740418 SINGLE SPOT, WHICH BREAKS UP INTO TWO ON APRIL 18. 83 18740427 18740507 SINGLE SPOT. 84 18740430 18740502 SMALL SCATTERED GROUP. 85 18740501 18740511 A LARGE SPOT, WITH SEVERAL SMALL ONES NEAR IT. 86 18740506 18740511 TWO LARGE SPOTS. 87 18740507 18740518 A LARGE GROUP OF MANY SPOTS. 88 18740509 18740511 A GROUP OF THREE SMALL SPOTS, WIDELY SEPERATED. 89 18740516 18740522 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 89*18740520 18740526 TWO LARGE SPOTS OF IRREGULAR SHAPE. 90 18740526 18740605 ONE LARGE SPOT OF VERY IRREGULAR SHAPE. 91 18740601 18740605 ONE WELL-DEFINED SPOT OF REGULAR SHAPE. 92 18740611 18740615 TWO FAINT SPOTS. 92*18740615 18740619 TWO SPOTS. 93 18740613 18740613 ONE SMALL SPOT. 94 18740615 18740625 ONE SPOT, WHICH GREATLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON JUNE 19,AND BREAKS UP INTO SEVERAL FRAGMENTS. 95 18740624 18740706 A VERY SCATTERED GROUP, COMPOSED PRINCIPALLY OF FIVE SPOTS. IT UNDERGOES A VERY RAPID CHANGE IN FORM AND IN SIZE DURING ITS COURSE. 96 18740627 18740704 SINGLE SPOT. ONE JUNE 29 IT HAS EXPANDED INTO A LONG STRAGGLING GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP UNDERGOES VERY RAPID CHANGE IN FORM AND SIZE DURING THE WHOLE OF ITS COURSE. 97 18740630 18740704 ONE SMALL FAINT SPOT. IT BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 2. 98 18740702 18740713 TWO SPOTS. THEY ARE SMALL ON JULY 2, BUT MUCH LARGER ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS, AND FORM TWO STREAMS. ONLY ONE SPOT OF THE GROUP 98A, IS STILL ON THE DISC ON JULY 13. 99 18740702 18740713 AT FIRST A SINGLE WELL DEFINED SPOT. ON JULY 3 AND 4 A ROW OF SMALL SPOTS FORMS IMMEDIATELY BEHIND IT. GROUP 100 JULY 4-16 100 18740704 18740716 ONE LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 101 18740706 18740709 TWO SPOTS, THE FIRST BEING VERY SMALL. THEY GREATLY DECREASE IN SIZE ON JULY 7, AND ON JULY 8 ONE DISAPPEARS ALTOGETHER. THE SPOTS 98 TO 101 SEEM TO SUFFER CONTINUAL CHANGES. 102 18740710 18740718 ON JULY 10 ONE SMALL SPOT. ON JULY 13 IT HAS BECOME TWO OF MUCH LARGER SIZE. THESE TWO SPOTS BECOME MORE AND MORE WIDELY SEPERATED, INCREASE IN SIZE, AND BREAK UP INTO SEVERAL PORTIONS AS THE GROUP CROSSES THE SUN. 103 18740714 18740724 ONE LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 104 18740715 18740716 AT FIRST ONE FAINT SPOT, WHICH BREAKS UP INTO TWO OR THREE ON JULY 16. 104*18740716 18740725 A VERY FAINT CLOSE CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP HAS PARTLY PASSED ROUND THE LIMB ON JULY 25. 105 18740723 18740803 ONE REGULAR SPOT. 106 18740730 18740808 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A FINE STREAM. B, THE LEADER, ON AUGUST 3 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 107 18740731 18740811 ONE LARGE SPOT, AND TWO OR THREE SMALL FRAGMENTS NEAR IT. IT GRADUALLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 108 18740803 18740810 A LONG LINE OF SMALL SPOTS. IT IS SEEN MUCH FORESHORTENED ON AUGUST 10, BEING VERY CLOSE TO THE LIMB, AND IS THEREFORE DIFFICULT TO MEASURE. 109 18740803 18740811 ONE SMALL SPOT. 110 18740808 18740820 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 111 18740810 18740822 THREE SPOTS, ONE VERY LARGE. 112 18740815 18740815 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A CLOSE CLUSTER. 114 18740819 18740825 A SCATTERED GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. 115 18740819 18740829 TWO SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER. 116 18740819 18740822 ONE SMALL SPOT. 117 18740824 18740831 ONE SMALL SPOT. 118 18740829 18740905 A SCATTERED GROUP OF FAINT SPOTS. 119 18740904 18740909 ONE SPOT. 119*18740912 18740914 A LONG ROW OF SMALL SPOTS. 120 18740909 18740910 ONE SMALL SPOT. 121 18740909 18740912 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING A CIRCLE. 122 18740915 18740922 ONE SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 123 18740922 18740928 A SMALL SPOT AND A VERY SMALL MARKING AT A LITTLE DISTANCE. 124 18740922 18741001 ONE LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 125 18740925 18740930 ONE SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 126 18740929 18741003 ONE SMALL SPOT, AND TWO VERY SMALL SPECKS NEAR. 127 18740928 18741010 A CLOSE CLUSTER COMPOSED OF MANY SPOTS. 128 18741008 18741010 AT FIRST ONE VERY SMALL SPOT; BUT ON OCTOBER 10 IT HAS EXTENDED INTO A ROW OF SEVERAL SMALL FRAGMENTS. 129 18741010 18741015 THREE SPOTS ARRANGED IN A LINE. 130 18741015 18741022 TWO SMALL SPOTS. THE SMALLER OF THESE GROWS GRADUALLY FAINTER, AND DISAPPEARS ON OCTOBER 20. 131 18741015 18741023 SINGLE SPOT. 132 18741019 18741023 SINGLE SPOT. 133 18741022 18741022 SINGLE SPOT. 134 18741103 18741112 TWO RATHER LARGE SPOTS. THE FIRST AND LARGER SPOT THROWS OFF SEVERAL FRAGMENTS ON NOVEMBER 7. 135 18741112 18741123 ONE SPOT. A SECOND SMALL SPOT APPEARS ON THE SECOND PHOTOGRAPH ON NOVEMBER 12. THE GROUP ENTIRELY CHANGES ITS CHARACTER ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS, AND ON NOVEMBER 16 HAS CHANGED INTO A VERY LONG IRREGULAR LINE OF SMALL SPOTS. ON NOVEMBER 23 THE GREATER PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED ROUND THE LIMB. THE AREA ONLY OF THE GROUP, NOT ITS POSTION, WAS MEASURED ON NOVEMBER 20. 136 18741120 18741127 ONE SPOT. ON NOVEMBER 23 SEVERAL VERY SMALL MARKINGS APPEAR CLOSE BEHIND IT. THESE DISAPPEAR AGAIN ON NOVEMBER 27. 137 18741120 18741127 THE SPOT IS SEEN AS A NOTCH IN THE LIMB ON NOVEMBER 20. 138 18741207 18741211 A LINE OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 138*18741209 18741209 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 139 18741211 A GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 140 18741209 18741218 A VERY SCATTERED GROUP, COMPOSED AT FIRST OF FOUR SPOTS, A,B, C, AND D. SPOT A BREAKS UP ON DECEMBER 14 INTO SEVERAL LITTLE SPOTS, AND TWO FRESH SPOTS APPEAR, E AND F. SPOT D DISAPPEARS IN DECEMBER 14, AND SPOT B ON DECEMBER 18. 141 18750102 18750105 SINGLE SPOT. 142 18750116 18750116 A GROUP OF TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 142*18750122 18750125 TWO LARGE SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER, AND A FEW SMALL MARKINGS ROUND THEM. 143 18750122 18750125 A SMALL SPOT, SURROUNDED BY A FEW VERY SMALL AND SCATTERED MARKINGS. IT BECOMES SLIGHTLY MORE CONDENSED ON JANUARY 25. 143*18750126 18750126 A SMALL SPOT. 144 18750201 18750209 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 144*18750209 18750211 A REGULAR SPOT. 144#18750214 18750214 A SMALL SPOT. 145 18750218 18750302 A VERY LARGE SPOT, WITH TWO OR THREE SMALL ONES NEAR IT. 146 18750220 18750302 ONE LARGE SPOT, SURROUNDED BY MANY SMALL ONES. 146*18750220 18750220 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 145. 147 18750222 18750305 TWO SMALL SPOTS. THE PRECEDING SPOT ALONE HAS APPEARED BY FEBRUARY 22. THE FOLLOWING AND SMALLER SPOT DECREASES IN SIZE AS THE GROUP CROSSES THE DISK, UNTIL ON MARCH 5 ONLY THE PRECEDING SPOT IS LEFT. 147*18750227 18750228 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 146. 147#18750301 18750303 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 148 18750305 18750310 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS RANGED IN A STRAIGHT LINE. 149 18750307 18750309 ONE SPOT. 149*18750310 18750316 ONE SPOT, REGULAR IN SHAPE. IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY MARCH 12, AND IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 15. 149#18750312 18750312 A SMALL SPOT. 150 18750311 18750321 SINGLE SPOT. 150*18750317 18750321 SOME SMALL SPOTS, FORMING S P GROUP 150. 150#18750317 18750320 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 18; PROBABLY HIDDEN BY THE WIRE. 151 18750317 18750329 ONE LARGE SPOT. 151*18750320 18750326 TWO LARGE SPOTS. 152 18750328 18750402 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS. 152*18750329 18750404 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT LINE. 153 18750404 18750404 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 153*18750405 18750409 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 153#18750410 18750414 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 154 18750410 18750420 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 10. ONE SPOT, REGULAR IN SHAPE, ON APRIL 13. HAS TWO COMPANIONS ON APRIL 15; BUT ON APRIL 18 ONLY THE CHIEF SPOT REMAINS. 155 18750410 18750421 TWO LARGE SPOTS VERY CLOSE TOGETHER. 156 18750420 18750422 ONE SMALL SPOT. 156*18750425 18750505 TWO SMALL SPOTS VERY CLOSE TOGETHER. 157 18750426 18750507 ONE LARGE SPOT, WITH SEVERAL SMALL ONES FOLLOWING IT. 157*18750501 18750501 A PAIR OF SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 157. 157#18750522 18750522 A SMALL SPOT. 158 18750524 18750524 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 159 18750524 18750528 ONE SMALL SPOT. 160 18750601 18750611 TWO SPOTS. THIS GROUP GREATLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON JUNE 3 AND FOLLOWING DAYS. 161 18750616 18750624 THREE OR FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER. 162 18750621 18750627 SINGLE SPOT. GREATLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND BREAKS UP INTO SEVERAL SPOTS ON JUNE 23. 162*18750621 18750621 A SMALL SPOT. 163 18750627 18750706 ONE SPOT AT FIRST, WHICH BREAKS UP INTO TWO ON JULY 3. 163*18750630 18750630 A SMALL SPOT. 164 18750628 18750630 ONE SMALL SPOT, REGULAR IN SHAPE. IT HAS BROKEN UP INTO SEVERAL SPOTS ON JULY 3. 164*18750708 18750714 TWO SPOTS. 164#18750717 18750717 A SHORT STREAM. 165 18750724 18750725 ONE SMALL SPOT. 166 18750726 18750805 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER. THE GROUP BECOMESMORE AND MORE SCATTERED UP TO AUGUST 2, WHEN IT HASCOMPLETELY DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS. 167 18750820 18750828 ONE SPOT. 168 18750821 18750831 ONE SPOT. 169 18750830 18750830 ONE SMALL SPOT. 170 18750909 18750911 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 171 18750914 18750916 THREE OR FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS. 172 18750915 18750915 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 173 18750927 18751002 ONE SPOT SURROUNDED BY SEVERAL VERY MUCH SMALLER ONES. 174 18750929 18751002 ONE SMALL SPOT. THE PHOTOGRAPH ON OCTOBER 1 IS TOO DENSE FOR THE GROUP TO BE SEEN. 175 18751002 18751007 TWO SPOTS. 176 18751005 18751006 TWO SMALL SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER. 177 18751005 18751009 A SCATTERED CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 178 18751009 18751010 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. ON OCTOBER 10 ONE OF THE TWO SPOTS HAS DISAPPEARED. 178*18751018 18751018 A SHORT STREAM. 179 18751021 18751021 A SMALL SPOT. 180 18751025 18751103 ONE LARGE SPOT. 180*18751027 18751029 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 28. 181 18751115 18751115 ONE SMALL SPOT. 182 18751118 18751127 A STREAM OF SPOTS. 183 18751119 18751123 CLUSTER OF TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 183*18751125 18751126 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS. 184 18751120 18751130 TWO LARGE SPOTS, WITH SEVERAL VERY SMALL ONES BETWEEN THEM. A SOMEWHAT SCATTERED GROUP. THE GROUP BREAKS UP INTO TWO ON NOVEMBER 23. 185 18751120 18751127 SINGLE SPOT. 186 18751214 18751214 ONE SMALL SPOT. 187 18751214 18751214 ONE SMALL SPOT. 188 18751217 18751223 GROUP OF THREE OR FOUR SPOTS RANGED IN A LINE. 189 18751215 18751224 ONE LARGE SPOT. 189*18751230 18751230 A SMALL SPOT. 190 18760105 18760105 SCATTERED GROUP OF VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS. 190*18760111 18760112 A SHORT STREAM. 191 18760118 18760122 SCATTERED GROUP,BUT WITH TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS. 192 18760118 18760129 SINGLE LARGE SPOT, BUT SEVERAL SMALLER SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JANUARY 19. 193 18760120 18760123 SCATTERED GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. 194 18760121 18760127 SCATTERED GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. A CHANGE OF SHAPE IS SEEN ON JANUARY 24. 195 18760129 18760204 SINGLE SPOT. 196 18760210 18760222 SINGLE LARGE SPOT. 197 18760226 18760301 SOMEWHAT SCATTERED GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 198 18760301 18760302 SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 198*18760306 18760307 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT FAR APART, SOME OF WHICH DISAPPEAR ON MARCH 7. 199 18760309 18760318 SINGLE SPOT. 200 18760313 18760321 SCATTERED GROUP. A GREAT CHANGE IS SEEN ON MARCH 17. 201 18760315 18760324 SMALL GROUP, PRINCIPALLY CONSISTING OF ONE SPOT, THE SMALLER SPOTS DISAPPEARING ON MARCH 20. 202 18760317 18760318 SINGLE SPOT. 203 18760318 18760323 SCATTERED GROUP. 204 18760320 18760330 SCATTERED GROUP, CONSISTING PRINCIPALLY OF TWO LARGE SPOTS. 205 18760322 18760325 SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 205*18760329 18760330 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 204. 206 18760404 18760404 VERY SMALL SINGLE SPOT. 206*18760406 18760406 A GROUP ONLY SEEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 207 18760408 18760409 VERY SMALL SINGLE SPOT. 208 18760409 18760413 GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. 208*18760414 18760416 GROUP CONSISTING MAINLY OF ONE SMALL SPOT. 208#18760413 18760413 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 208@18760417 18760418 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 209 18760507 18760515 FAIRLY LARGE SPOT, WITH A SMALL ONE AT A LITTLE DISTANCE, THE LATTER ALMOST DISAPPEARING ON MAY 10. 209*18760525 18760527 A SMALL GROUP. 210 18760621 18760624 SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 210*18760626 18760626 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 210#18760627 18760629 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. 211 18760703 18760704 GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. 212 18760703 18760710 GROUP CONSISTING MAINLY OF THREE FAIRLY LARGE SPOTS, OF WHICH TWO DISAPPEAR ON JULY 7. 213 18760707 18760711 GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. 214 18760706 18760708 SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 215 18760719 18760722 SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 216 18760720 18760721 SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 217 18760721 18760731 SINGLE SPOT. IT IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 29, BUT A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM MARK ITS PLACE ON JULY 31. 218 18760807 18760807 SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 219 18760816 18760819 TWO SPOTS. 220 18760822 18760829 ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN AT FIRST, BUT A SECOND OF EQUAL SIZE APPEARS ON AUGUST 25. 221 18760830 18760905 TWO SMALL SPOTS,ONE OF WHICH BREAKS INTO SMALL FRAGMENTS ON SEPTEMBER 1, AND FINALLY DISAPPEARS ON SEPTEMBER 5. 222 18760918 18760918 SINGLE SPOT. 223 18760914 18760918 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 224 18760927 18761006 TWO SPOTS OF NEARLY EQUAL SIZE, OF WHICH THE PRECEDING SPOT GROWS LARGER AND THE FOLLOWING SPOT SMALLER ON OCTOBER 4 AND 5. 225 18761011 18761018 SCATTERED GROUP. 226 18761019 18761027 ONE LARGE SPOT AND TWO OR THREE SMALL ONES. 226*18761102 18761104 A STREAM OF SPOTS. 227 18761109 18761109 SINGLE SPOT. 227*18761113 18761113 A GROUP SEEN ONLY NEAR THE EAST LIMB. 228 18761113 18761116 SINGLE SPOT. 229 18761115 18761121 TWO SPOTS OF NEARLY EQUAL SIZE. 230 18761119 18761119 SINGLE SPOT. 231 18761218 18761229 SINGLE SPOT. 231*18770106 18770106 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 231#18770108 18770111 ONE OR TWO SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL. 232 18770110 18770122 ONE REGULAR SPOT,A, USUALLY WITH A SMALL COMPANION. 232*18770110 18770111 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. 233 18770115 18770125 ONE REGULAR SPOT,A,USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. A PRESERVES ITS FORM, BUT DECREASES IN SIZE AS IT CROSSES THE SUN. 234 18770126 18770127 ONE SMALL FAINT SPOT. 234*18770130 18770207 VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, THAT BREAKS UP INTO SEVERAL FRAGMENTS ON FEBRUARY 3. 235 18770207 18770217 A WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT, WHICH GRADUALLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE, BUT DOES NOT OTHERWISE CHANGE ITS FORM. 236 18770226 18770305 A GROUP OF THREE OR FOUR SMALL SPOTS. 236*18770301 18770305 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. 237 18770308 18770310 FAINT ILL-DEFINED SPOT, WHICH BREAKS UP INTO SEVERAL SPOTS ON MARCH 10. 238 18770317 18770322 A SCATTERED GROUP OF ILL-DEFINED SPOTS, WHICH GRADUALLY CONDENSES INTO TWO WELL-DEFINED SPOTS. ON MARCH 22 ONE OF THE SPOTS HAS GONE OFF THE LIMB, AND THE OTHER IS ONLY PARTLY VISIBLE. 239 18770406 18770407 ONE SMALL WELL-DEFINED SPOT. 240 18770416 18770420 A GROUP COMPOSED OF THREE SPOTS, OF WHICH THE SMALLEST GRADUALLY DISAPPEARS. 241 18770420 18770427 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH CHANGE GREATLY ON APRIL 23. 242 18770423 18770501 A GROUP CONSISTING PRINCIPALLY OF TWO SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONE DISAPPEARS ON APRIL 27. 243 18770430 18770504 A SCATTERED GROUP OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 244 18770504 18770508 A SCATTERED GROUP OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS, CONDENSING ON MAY 5 INTO A SINGLE SPOT. 245 18770507 18770511 A SINGLE WELL-DEFINED SPOT. 246 18770509 18770518 ONE SMALL WELL-DEFINED SPOT. A SECOND APPEARS ON MAY 10, BUT SOON DISAPPEARS AGAIN. ANOTHER DISTANT COMPANION IS SEEN ON MAY 17. 247 18770517 18770526 ONE SMALL SPOT. A SECOND APPEARS ON MAY 24, AND A THIRD ON MAY 26. 248 18770526 18770526 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 249 18770603 18770611 TWO SPOTS, ONE OF THEM VERY SMALL. 250 18770625 18770625 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 251 18770628 18770629 A VERY CLOSE PAIR OF WELL-DEFINED SMALL SPOTS. 252 18770703 18770705 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT WHICH BREAKS UP INTO TWO OR THREE ON JULY 4. 252*18770714 18770714 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A SEMICIRCLE. 253 18770718 18770718 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 254 18770802 18770803 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, ONE OF WHICH DISAPPEARS ON AUGUST 3. 255 18770822 18770831 A LARGE SPOT DIVIDED INTO THREE PORTIONS BY BRIDGES. ON AUGUST 28 IT HAS SEPARATED INTO TWO SMALL SPOTS, ONE OF WHICH DISAPPEARS ON AUGUST 29. 256 18770904 18770912 TWO SPOTS, THE FOLLOWING SPOT, WHICH IS SMALL AND FAINT, DISAPPEARS ON SEPTEMBER 9, AND THE LARGER SPOT HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY SEPTEMBER 5. 257 18770912 18770918 ONE SMALL SPOT. 258 18770918 18770921 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 258*18770925 18770925 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 259 18770925 18770929 ONE SMALL SPOT. 260 18771001 18771001 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 261 18771026 18771107 A LARGE WELL-DEFINED SPOT SURROUNDED BY SEVERAL SMALL FRAGMENTS. 262 18771030 18771105 A SOMEWHAT SCATTERED GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. 263 18771114 18771117 TWO SMALL SPOTS, THE SECOND OF WHICH MOVES MORE QUICKLY THAN THE FIRST, AND GROWS GRADUALLY SMALLER. 264 18771122 18771203 A WELL-DEFINED SPOT, CLOSELY SURROUNDED BY SEVERAL SMALLER ONES. 264*18771221 18771221 A SMALL SPOT. 265 18771231 18771231 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 1819 18851225 18860102 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON DEC.25 ; TWO SMALL SPOTS ON DEC 26. THE GROUP HAS EXPANDED BY DEC.27 INTO A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM COMPOSED OF MANY SMALL SPOTS. THE STREAM TENDS TO FORM TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS OF SPOTS AND BY JAN 2, THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER HAS DISAPPEARED AND THE PRECEDING CLUSTER HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE SMALL COMPANION. 1820 18851231 18860107 JAN 7. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JAN 1. 1821 18860102 18860115 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO NUCLEI. THE NORTHERN PORTION OF THE SPOT, CONTAINING THE SMALLER NUCLEUS HAS BECOME DETACHED FROM THE PRINCIPAL PORTION OF THE SPOT BY JAN 5. AND HAS BROKEN UP INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS. A IS FOLLOWED ON JAN. 4 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY A FAIRLY LARGE SPOT B. AND A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS. SMALL SPOTS ARE ALSO SEEN PRECEDING A ON JAN. 5, 6, AND 7. B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, C AND D, BY JAN. 7. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 10. 1822 18860104 18860104 THREE SMALL SPOTS. 1823 18860107 18860110 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 7 AND 8. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON JAN 9, BUT TWO ON JAN. 10. 1824 18860107 18860110 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A , AND B, ON JAN. 7. THE PRECEDING SPOT, A, HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 8, AND THE FOLLOWING, B, BY JAN. 9, BUT ANOTHER VERY SMALL SPOT, C, HAS APPEARED IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD. 1825 18860108 18860108 A SMALL SPOT. 1826 18860108 18860117 THREE REGULAR SPOTS, A , B, AND C. A HAS BROKEN UP INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS BY JAN. 13, AND C HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 14. A FEW SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS ON JAN. 11, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 1827 18860111 18860113 A SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON JAN. 11 BY TWO SMALL SPOTS. OF THE LATTER ONE HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 12, AND THE OTHER BY JAN. 13. ANOTHER SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR A ON JAN. 12. 1827A18860111 PHOTOGRAPH FAINT. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1828 18860112 18860121 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 12, ARRANGED IN FOUR CLUSTERS. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE VERY RAPIDLY. ON JAN. 13, IT CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT A, FOLLOWED BY A SCATTERED STREAM COMPOSED OF MANY SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL. A HAS VERY GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JAN 14, AND MOST OF THE SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING IT HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A LARGE SPOT, B. B HAS BROKEN UP BY JAN. 16, BUT THE SMALL SPOTS HAVE COALESED AGAIN IN A DIFFERENT MANNER, TO FORM ONE LARGE SPOT, C, BY JAN. 17. C HAS BROKEN UP BY JAN. 19. 1828A18860112 THE IMAGE OF THE SUN ON THIS PHOTOGRAPH IS DECIDEDLY ELLIPTICAL. THE POSITIONS OF SOME OF THE SPOTS APPEAR TO BE AFFECTED TO A SMALL EXTENT BY DISTORTION OF THE PHOTOGRAPHIC FILM. 1829 18860113 18860122 THREE SPOTS ON JAN 13; FIVE SPOTS ARRANGED IN TWO CLUSTERS ON JAN.14. THE TWO SPOTS, A AND B, WHICH FORM THE PRECEEDING CLUSTER, HAVE SEPARATED A LITTLE BY JAN.15 AND ARE MEASURED SEPERATLY. THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER HAS BROKEN UP INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP EXTENDS IN A LONGITUDE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BUT DIMINISHES IN THE AREA. B HAS BROKEN UP INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS BY JAN.19. ONLY A IS SEEN ON JAN.22. 1829A18860114 PHOTOGRAPH FAINT. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1830 18860116 18860117 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 16. THE FOLLOWING SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN.17. 1830A18860116 PHOTOGRAPH FAINT. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1831 18860117 18860117 A SMALL SPOT. 1831A18860119 18860120 PHOTOGRAPHS ON JAN 19 AND 20 VERY FAINT. SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1832 18860123 18860123 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 1832A18860124 PHOTOGRAPH FAINT. 1833 18860130 18860211 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, CLOSE TOGETHER AND MEASURED AS ONE, ACCOMPANY IT ON JAN.31. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON FEB.2 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, FORMING A FAIRLY STRAIGHT STREAM TO THE SOUTH OF A, AND FOR THE MOST PART PRECEDING IT. THE GROUP SLOWLY DECREASES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY, UNTIL FEB.10 ONLY A, NOW QUITE A SMALL SPOT, REMAINS. 1833A18860125 LIMB ILL-DEFINED. 1834 18860204 18860204 A SMALL SPOT. 1834A18860126 18860128 PHOTOGRAPHS ON JAN 26 AND 28 FAINT. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1835 18860204 18860216 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH SLOWLY DECREASES IN SIZE AFTER FEB.8. ON FEB.8 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS UNTIL FEB.14 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN CLOSE TO A. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY FEB.14, BUT THESE ARE MEASURED AS ONE AS THEY ARE VERY CLOSE TO EACH OTHER. 1835A18860203 PHOTOGRAPH VERY FAINT. SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1836 18860207 18860211 A SINGLE SPOT. 1837 18860208 18860210 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON FEB. 8. BOTH HAVE INCREASED IN SIZE BY FEB. 9. THE GROUP OF THREE SPOTS ON FEB. 10, OF WHICH ONE APPEARS TO BE IDENTICAL WITH B, BUT THE OTHER TWO APPEAR TO BE FRESH OUTBURSTS. 1838 18860208 18860210 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON FEB. 8 AND 9. THEY TEND TO SEPARATE FROM EACH OTHER ON FEB. 9. BY FEB. 10 THEY HAVE BROKEN UP INTO A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, HARDLY DISTINGUISHABLE FROM THE GENERAL MOTTLING OF THE SUN'S SURFACE. 1839 18860211 18860211 A SMALL SPOT. 1840 18860211 18860217 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 11. ON FEB. 12 THE GROUP APPEARS AS A STRAGGLING STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE PRECEDING SPOT OF THE GROUP ON FEB. 13 IS A REGULAR SPOT WHICH HAS DIMINISHED IN SIZE BY FEB. 14. THE REST OF THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGES, BUT REMAINS ON THE WHOLE AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM OF SPOTS. 1840A18860215 18860216 SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED ON FEB 15 AND 16. 1841 18860211 18860213 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON FEB. 11 AND 12. A THIRD IS SEEN CLOSE TO THE FIRST TWO ON FEB. 12. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON FEB. 13. 1841A18860219 LIMB VERY FAINT. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1842 18860217 18860223 A SMALL SPOT. 1842A18860221 18860227 PHOTOGRAPH FAINT ON FEB 21. LIMB ILL-DEFINED. FACULAE VERY FAINT ON FEB 23. PHOTOGRAPH FAINT ON FEB 25. PHOTOGRAPH VERY FAINT ON FEB 27. SPOTS ILL-DEFINED. 1843 18860220 18860225 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS FIRST SEEN NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE SUN'S DISK. WHEN FIRST SEEN ON FEB. 20, MOST OF THE SPOTS ARE ARRANGED IN A CIRCLE, ENCLOSING A CONSIDERABLE AREA. BY FEB. 21 MANY OF THE SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED, AND THE GROUP FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE ON SUCCEEDING DAYS AND NO TRACE OF IT IS SEEN ON FEB. 24. ON FEB. 25 A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN VERY NEAR THE PLACE OF THE GROUP. 1844 18860225 18860304 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 25. ON FEB. 26 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP CONSISTS OF AN IRREGULARLY SHAPED SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. ALL BUT A HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 2. 1845 18860226 A SMALL SPOT. 1846 18860228 18860303 A SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 28. A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 1, OF WHICH ONLY ONE MEMBER REMAINS BY MARCH 2. 1847 18860228 18860311 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, ON FEB. 28, WITH TWO SMALLER SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. BOTH A AND B HAVE INCREASED VERY GREATLY IN SIZE BY MARCH 1 AND AT THE SAME TIME HAVE ENTIRELY CHANGED IN APPEARANCE. TWO SMALLER SPOTS LIE TO THE NORTH OF A AND B, BUT BETWEEN THEM IN LONGITUDE. BY MARCH 2 THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE ANOTHER CHANGE, A HAS PARTLY BROKEN UP, THE PRINCIPAL PORTION, C, BEING A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. B HAS UNDERGONE LITTLE CHANGE, BUT BETWEEN C AND B THERE IS A BROAD COMPLICATED STREAM OF SPOTS FORMING A WIDE CURVE CONVEX TO THE EQUATOR. B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS, D AND E, BY MARCH 4. THE GROUP GRADUALLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, THE SPOTS INTERMEDIATE BETWEEN C AND E DYING OUT. D HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 7, AND BY MARCH 8 ONLY C AND E REMAIN. C VARIES SOMEWHAT IN ITS SHAPE ON THE FOLLOWING SIDE AS A NUMBER OF THE SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING IT APPEAR TO COALESCE MORE OR LESS PERFECTLY WITH IT ON MARCH 5 AND 6. 1848 18860228 18860307 A REGULAR SPOT ON FEB. 28 AND MARCH 1. A BRIDGE DIVIDES IT INTO TWO NEARLY EQUAL PORTIONS ON MARCH 2, AND THE SEPARATION BETWEEN THE TWO PARTS TENDS TO INCREASE UPON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE SPOT IS ALWAYS MEASURED AS ONE. IT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER MARCH 1. 1849 18860302 18860308 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 2. OF THESE THE FOLLOWING SPOT, A, INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT REMAINS FAIRLY STABLE IN POSITION AND APPEARANCE. IT UNDERGOES A GREAT INCREASE IN SIZE BETWEEN MARCH 7 AND 8. THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS BECOME A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS BY MARCH 3. THESE SPOTS HAVE COALESCED TO FORM TWO SPOTS BY MARCH 4, AND HAVE AGAIN DIVIDED AND COALESCED IN A DIFFERENT MANNER, PRINCIPALLY TO FORM TWO SPOTS, B AND C, BY MARCH 5. C HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS BY MARCH 7, BUT THESE HAVE COMBINED AGAIN BY MARCH 8. 1850 18860303 18860306 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 6. 1850A18860304 18860309 PHOTOGRAPH VERY FAINT ON MAR 4. SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. FACULAE VERY FAINT ON MAR 9. 1851 18860303 18860314 A REGULAR SPOT, A; ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON MARCH 5,6, AND 8. 1852 18860303 18860315 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. THE GROUP HAS BECOME SUDDENLY LARGER BY MARCH 11, PRINCIPALLY BY THE APPEARANCE OF A STREAM OF SPOTS IMMEDIATELY TO THE SOUTH OF A. THESE LATER FORMED SPOTS DIMINISH IN NUMBER AND AREA ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 1853 18860304 18860316 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE SMALL SPOTS UNDERGO VERY FREQUENT CHANGES IN AREA, APPEARANCE, AND ARRANGEMENT; A HAS THROWN OFF A PORTION BY MARCH 9, BUT INCREASES IN SIZE DURING THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE SMALL SPOTS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 14. 1854 18860316 18860320 A STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 16. THE MEMBERS OF THE GROUP HAVE COALESCED BY MARCH TO FORM THREE SPOTS, OF WHICH FIRST AND LAST, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. ONLY A AND B REMAIN BY MARCH 18. A HAS BROKEN UP INTO SEVERAL PORTIONS BY MARCH 20, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE SPOT. 1855 18860318 18860322 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON MARCH 18. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON MARCH 19, 20, AND 22, BUT ON MARCH 21 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF SIX VERY SMALL SPOTS ARRANGED IN TWO CLUSTERS. THE SPOTS SEEN ON MARCH 19 AND 20 DO NOT SEEM TO BE THE SAME. 1856 18860318 18860330 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON MARCH 20 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A SECOND REGULAR SPOT, B, HAS APPEARED CLOSE TO A BY MARCH 22; B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY MARCH 26, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE SPOT. IT HAS ENTIRELY BROKEN UP BY MARCH 28, AND ONLY A REMAINS BY MARCH 29; A DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER MARCH 20, BUT SLIGHTLY RECOVERS ITSELF ON MARCH 24, DIMINISHING AGAIN ON SUCCEEDING DAYS. 1857 18860319 18860320 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 1858 18860320 18860325 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF VERY SPOTS ON MARCH 20. THE GROUP DEVELOPS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND HAS BECOME A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS BY MARCH 22, THE FIRST SPOT, A BEING THE LARGEST; ONLY A REMAINS BY MARCH 24. 1859 18860323 18860404 TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B,WITH SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. ONLY A AND B ARE SEEN AFTER MARCH 30. 1859A18860323 LIMB OF SUN FAINT. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1860 18860326 18860405 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 26. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE FORMED BY MARCH 28. THESE, BUT ESPECIALLY A, INCREASE IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS; B HAS BROKEN UP INTO A GREAT NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH ARE STILL MEASURED AS ONE, ON MARCH 31 AND APRIL 1, BUT HAS CLOSED UP AGAIN TO FORM ONE LARGE SPOT BY APRIL 2. A LARGE PORTION OF B HAS BECOME PARTLY SEPERATED FROM IT BY APRIL 4, AND HAS WHOLLY DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 5, THUS CAUSING AN APPARENT CHANGE IN THE POSITION OF THE SPOT. 1861 18860329 18860409 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 29. OTHER SPOTS APPEAR FOLLOWING IT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS ON APRIL 1 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS OF A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, FOLLOWING ONE ANOTHER IN A FAIRLY STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP CHANGES ITS APPEARANCE FROM DAY TO DAY. 1862 18860330 18860401 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 30. ONE SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 31 AND APRIL 1. 1863 18860331 18860407 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ON APRIL 2, 3, AND 4. THE GROUP HAS CHANGED ITS APPEARANCE BY APRIL 5, WHEN IT CONSISTS OF SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY APRIL 6. 1863A18860331 FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1864 18860331 18860412 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS FROM APRIL 3 TO APRIL 7. 1865 18860402 18860407 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 2. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED IN SIZE BY APRIL 4, AND THEN FORMS A SHORT REGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH A, THE PRECEDING SPOT, IS THE LARGEST. A ALONE REMAINS ON APRIL 6. 1866 18860407 18860408 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 7. THREE VERY SMALL SPOT, TWO OF WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON APRIL 8. 1867 18860410 18860411 A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 1867A18860414 18860418 PHOTOGRAPH FAINT ON APR 14. NO SPOTS OR FACULAE VISIBLE. LIMB OF SUN FAINT ON APR 17 AND 18. 1868 18860415 18860416 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 15; ONE OF WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 16. 1869 18860415 18860426 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH GRADUALLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN AT SOME DISTANCE ON APRIL 24. 1870 18860416 18860417 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 16. THREE ON APRIL 17. 1871 18860419 18860423 A SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 20. A CHANGE IN THE SHAPE OF THE SPOT, ON APRIL 22, CAUSES AN APPARENT SHIFT IN THE LATITUDE. 1872 18860419 18860501 A LARGE SPOT, A, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A FAINT SPOT OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE ON APRIL 20. THE LATTER HAS BECOME A CLOSELY CONNECTED CHAIN OF VERY SMALL SPOTS BY APRIL 21. THESE HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 23, BUT A PORTION OF A HAS BECOME DETACHED, AND FORMS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, B. SEVERAL VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, SOME OF WHICH ARE MEASURED WITH B, ARE SEEN NEAR ON APRIL 26. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED BY APRIL 27, BUT HAS UNDERGONE AN ENTIRE TRANSFORMATION BY APRIL 28, ON WHICH DAY IT CONSISTS OF A NUMBER OF IRREGULAR PENUMBRAL SPOTS, COVRING A CONSIDERABLE AREA. THESE HAVE UNDERGONE A GREAT CHANGE BY APRIL 29, AND AGAIN BY APRIL 30, AND THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS PASSED OUT OF SIGHT AT THE LIMB BY MAY 1. 1873 18860420 18860424 A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 20. TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE IDENTITY OF THE INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS OF THE GROUP ON THE DIFFERENT DAYS CANNOT BE SATISFACTORILY ESTABLISHED. 1874 18860420 18860503 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN IN ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD ON SEVERAL DAYS. THE PHOTOGRAPH HAS BEEN CAREFULLY EXAMINED, AND THE CHANGE IN THE UMBRA ON APRIL 21 APPEARS TO BE REAL. 1875 18860423 18860423 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 1876 18860427 18860509 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 1877 18860428 18860430 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 1878 18860429 18860506 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 29. OTHER SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY APRIL 30, ON WHICH DAY THE GROUP CONSISTS OF AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS. THE GROUP DEVELOPS RAPIDLY ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND ON MAY 2 CONSISTS ALMOST ENTIRELY OF TWO VERY LARGE SPOTS,A AND B. THESE SPOTS UNDERGO FREQUENT CHANGES OF AREA AND SHAPE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 1878A18860501 FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1879 18860501 18860501 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 1880 18860502 18860513 A VERY LARGE, BEAUTIFUL, AND COMPLICATED GROUP CONSISTING OF A GREAT NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE, FOLLOWING EACH OTHER IN A LONG STREAM SO CLOSELY AS ALMOST TO FORM ONE LARGE SPOT. IT WAS NOT FOUND PRACTICABLE SO TO DIVIDE THE GROUP FOR PURPOSE OF MEASUREMENT, AS TO MEASURE PRECISELY CORRESPONDING PORTIONS ON DIFFERENT DAYS. 1880A18860509 18860524 SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED ON MAR 9 AND 10. PHOTOGRAPH FAINT ON MAY 11, 12 AND 20. LIMB OF SUN VERY FAINT. PHOTOGRAPH FAINT ON MAY 18. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. PHOTOGRAPH VERY FAINT ON MAY 24. SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1881 18860512 18860513 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 1882 18860513 18860514 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A, MEASURED AS ONE. ANOTHER SPOT IS SEEN IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD OF A ON MAY 13, AND ANOTHER, BUT NOT THE SAME, ON MAY 14. 1883 18860520 18860520 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 1884 18860521 18860602 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 1885 18860522 18860524 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON MAY 22. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 23, BUT A THIRD SPOT, C, HAS FORMED BY THAT DATE AND A HAS INCREASED IN SIZE. 1887 18860529 18860530 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 29. ONE OF THESE HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 30, AND A NEW SPOT HAS APPEARED. 1888 18860530 18860601 TWO SPOTS, A AND B. BOTH HAVE INCREASED IN SIZE BY MAY 31, AND HAVE RECEDED FROM EACH OTHER. 1889 18860531 18860602 A SMALL SPOT. 1890 18860602 18860608 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. MOST OF THESE HAVE COALESCED BY JUNE 6 TO FORM TWO SPOTS, A AND B. ONLY A AND B ARE SEEN ON JUNE 7 AND 8. 1890A18860603 PHOTOGRAPH FAINT. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1891 18860603 18860612 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 3. THE GROUP HAS VERY GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JUNE 4, AND FORMS A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS; THE PRECEDING SPOT, A, BEING A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE GROUP CONTINUES TO INCREASE IN SIZE UNTIL JUNE 8, AFTER WHICH IT DIMINISHES AGAIN, AND THE SPOTS NEAREST TO A DISAPPEAR. A ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 11. 1892 18860604 18860606 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON JUNE 4; A SECOND, B, HAS APPEARED BY JUNE 5; A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 6. 1893 18860606 18860608 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, A AND B. 1894 18860606 18860606 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 1895 18860609 18860610 A SMALL SPOT. 1896 18860616 18860626 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON JUNE 23. 1897 18860617 18860628 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 1897A18860627 FACULAE VERY FAINT. 1898 18860622 18860624 TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 22. THREE SPOTS ON JUNE 23; ONLY THE LARGEST TWO REMAIN ON JUNE 24. 1899 18860622 18860623 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 22. A SECOND IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JUNE 23. 1900 18860627 18860628 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 1901 18860627 18860709 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A; SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS HAVE FORMED NEAR A BY JUNE 29, AND THESE INCREASE IN NUMBER AND SIZE ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS. AFTER JULY 1 THESE COMPANION SPOTS BEGIN TO DIMINISH AGAIN, AND BY JULY 8 A ALONE IS SEEN. 1902 18860628 18860704 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JULY 3 AND A SECOND ON JULY 4. 1903 18860629 18860709 A LARGE BUT RATHER FAINT SPOT, A, ON JUNE 29. IT DIMINISHES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A SMALL SPOT APPEARS NEAR A ON JULY 2, AND OTHERS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAY, WHEN THE GROUP HAS BECOME AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A AND THE OTHER SPOTS IN THE PRECEDING PART OF THE GROUP HAVE DISAPPEARED BY JULY 5. 1904 18860713 18860714 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 1905 18860714 18860714 A SMALL SPOT. 1906 18860715 18860726 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 15. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, THE PRECEDING SPOT, A, BECOMING A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. A IS FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A LONG STREAM. SOME OF THESE SPOTS COALESCE TO FORM LARGER SPOTS, B, C, AND D; AND ON JULY 22, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, THE GROUP CONSISTS OF THE LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY THREE SMALLER SPOTS, B, C, D, WITH A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS SCATTERED AROUND THEM. A HAS UNDERGONE A REMARKABLE CHANGE OF SHAPE BY JULY 24, AND A CONSIDERABLE PORTION HAS BECOME DETACHED FROM IT BY JULY 25. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 25, C AND D BY JULY 26. 1906A18860715 18860728 PHOTOGRAPH VERY FAINT ON JUL 15, 24 AND 28. SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1907 18860716 18860717 A SMALL SPOT. 1908 18860721 18860731 A REGULAR SPOT. 1909 18860724 18860725 SIX SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JULY 24, MEASURED IN TWO CLUSTERS. ONLY THE PRECEDING CLUSTER IS SEEN ON JULY 25. 1910 18860725 18860805 A REGULAR SPOT, A. TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON JULY 31. 1911 18860726 18860730 FOUR SMALL SPOTS IN A SCATTERED STREAM ON JULY 26. TWO SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, ON JULY 27 AND 28. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 29. 1912 18860726 18860805 FOUR SMALL SPOTS, THREE OF WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON JULY 26. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY JULY 27, AND BY JULY 29, HAS BECOME A LONG STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST, A AND B-BOTH REGULAR SPOTS-ARE BY FAR THE LARGEST. THE SMALLER SPOTS DISAPPEAR OR COALESCE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS; AND ON AUG. 1 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF FIVE SPOTS, A, C, D, E, AND B, OF WHICH E AND B HAVE DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 2. A REMAINS ALONE BY AUG. 4. 1913 18860802 18860812 THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON AUG. 2; SIX, MEASURED IN THREE CLUSTERS, AUG. 3. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED IN SIZE BY AUG. 4, AND BY AUG. 5 HAS BECOME A STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE PRECEDING SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 8, LEAVING A ALONE; A HAS CHANGED ITS SHAPE BY AUG. 8 AND BY AUG. 9 A CONSIDERABLE PORTION HAS BECOME DETACHED AND FORMS A SEPARATE SPOT, B. B HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED IN SIZE. 1914 18860803 18860805 ON AUG. 4 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR IT. ON AUG. 5 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR IT. 1914A18860803 PHOTOGRAPH FAINT. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1915 18860811 18860820 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION, B, ON AUG. 12 AND 13. 1916 18860816 18860816 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED TOGETHER. 1917 18860820 18860820 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 1918 18860823 18860825 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON AUG.25 BY A SECOND. 1919 18860826 18860829 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A VERY SMALL SPOT BETWEEN THEM ON AUG.26. B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS WHICH ARE STILL MEASURED TOGETHER BY AUG. 28, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 29. 1919A18860824 18860828 PHOTOGRAPH FAINT ON AUG 24. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED ON AUG 27. SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. ALSO, SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED ON AUG 28. 1920 18860830 18860910 TWO SPOTS, A AND B. THEY TEND TO SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE AND SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR BETWEEN THEM. B DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER SEPT. 3 AND HAS DISAPPERED BY SEPT. 7. A SUFFERS DAILY CHANGES OF SHAPE AND SIZE FROM SEPT.4-SEPT.8. ON SEPT. 8 IT IS A REGULAR SPOT. SEVERAL PORTIONS WHICH HAVE BECOME DETACHED FROM IT FORM DISTINCT SPOTS IN ITS IMMEDIATE NEIGHBOURHOOD ON SEPT. 5 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT ALL HAVE DISAPPEARED BY SEPT. 10. 1921 18860903 18860904 A SMALL SPOT. 1922 18860907 18860909 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. ONLY B IS SEEN ON SEPT. 9. 1923 18860909 18860921 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS,B AND C, BY SEPT. 18. SEVERAL VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN FROM TIME TO TIME FOLLOWING THE PRINCIPAL SPOT. 1924 18860910 18860915 THIS GROUP EXTENDS OVER A LARGE AREA, IN WHICH SMALL SPOTS APPEAR AND DISAPPEAR IN A VERY IRREGULAR MANNER. ON SEPT. 10 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF TWO WIDELY SEPARATED CLUSTERS, A AND B. B IS NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 11, AND IS REPRESENTED ONLY BY A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT. 12. BUT BY SEPT. 13 THE WHOLE OF THE PRECEDING CLUSTER, A, HAS DISAPPEARED, AND A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED OVER THE GREATER PART OF THE AREA, WHICH ON SEPT.10 AND 12 LAY VACANT, BETWEEN A AND B. ON SEPT. 14 AND 15 THE GROUP FORMS THREE COMPACT CLUSTERS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS; BUT THE CLUSTERS ON SEPT. 15 DO NOT CORRESPOND PRECISELY TO THOSE SEEN ON SEPT. 14. 1925 18860910 18860915 A SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 10 AND 11. NO SPOT IS SEEN ON SEPT. 13 THE GROUP IS SEEN AGAIN AS A NEMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ARRANGED IN TWO CLUSTERS. THE GROUP FORMS AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 15. 1926 18860913 18860920 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING ONE ANOTHER IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE FIRST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST AND BEST DEFINED, BUT IT SUFFERS CONTINUAL CHANGE OF SHAPE AND AREA, ALTERNATELY COALESCING WITH SMALL SPOTS NEAR IT, AND HAVING PORTIONS SEPARATED FROM IT. 1927 18860914 18860914 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 1928 18860922 18860927 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 22 AND 23. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 24. ON SEPT. 25 A SINGLE SPOT IS SEEN. ON SEPT. 26 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN, THE LAST TWO BEING MEASURED TOGETHER. BY SEPT. 27 ONLY TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS REMAIN. 1928A18860921 18860929 PHOTOGRAPH VERY FAINT SEP 21 AND 22. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. PHOTOGRAPH VERY FAINT ON SEP 24. LIMB HARDLY VISIBLE. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED ON SEP 28. PHOTOGRAPH SLIGHTLY OVER-EXPOSED ON SEP 29. FACULAE HARD TO SEE. 1929 18860926 18860926 A SMALL SPOT. 1930 18860930 18861010 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPT. 30. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 2. A MOVES RAPIDLY FORWARD IN LONGITUDE UNTIL OCT. 5. IT IS FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON EACH DAY FROM OCT. 2 TO OCT. 6. 1931 18861006 18861006 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 1931A18861001 18861011 PHOTOGRAPH FAINT OCT 1, 2, AND 4. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED ON OCT 5, 10 AND 11. 1932 18861006 18861009 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS CLOSE TO IT ON OCT. 6. A IS SEEN ALONE ON OCT. 7 AND 9, BUT HAS ONE VERY SMALL COMPANION ON OCT. 8. A HAS INCREASED IN SIZE BY OCT. 7, BUT DIMINISHES AGAIN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 1933 18861011 18861011 THREE SMALL SPOTS, TWO OF WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. 1934 18861012 18861012 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 1935 18861015 18861022 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING EACH OTHER IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS OF THE GROUP DIFFER FROM DAY TO DAY. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCT. 21, AND ONLY ONE SPOT APPEARS ON OCT. 22. 1936 18861023 18861029 TWO SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS BROKEN UP BY OCT. 25 INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH ARE, HOWEVER, STILL MEASURED AS ONE. ONLY ONE OF THESE SMALL SPOTS REMAINS BY OCT. 26. ONLY A REMAINS ON OCT. 29. B IS NOT SEEN ON OCT. 27, BUT A IS FOLLOWED ON THAT DAY BY A VERY SMALL SPOT. 1937 18861029 18861030 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON OCT. 29. ONLY B IS SEEN ON OCT. 30. 1938 18861112 18861114 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A. A SECOND, B, IS SEEN NEAR IT ON NOV. 14. 1938A18861102 18861103 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED ON NOV 2 AND 3. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1939 18861115 18861117 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 15. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 16 AND 17. 1940 18861126 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 1941 18861210 18861221 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON DEC. 10, OTHER SPOTS APPEAR BETWEEN THEM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE GROUP HAS BECOME BY DEC. 15 A STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST, ARE THE LARGEST. BOTH A AND B UNDERGO FREQUENT CHANGES IN SHAPE AND SIZE. 1941A18861117 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED. SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1942 18861212 18861213 A SMALL SPOT. 1942A18861212 18861231 FACULAE ILL-DEFINED ON DEC 12. PHOTOGRAPH FAINT ON DEC 18 AND 23. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. PHOTOGRAPH FAINT ON DEC 25. SPOTS AND FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. PHOTOGRAPH FAINT ON DEC 29 AND 31. FACULAE ILL-DEFINED. 1943 18861222 18861229 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 22. FOUR SPOTS FOLLOWING EACH OTHER IN A STRAIGHT LINE ON DEC. 23. THE GROUP HAS FURTHER INCREASED IN SIZE BY DEC. 24, WHEN IT IS MEASURED IN THREE CLUSTERS. ONLY TWO OF THESE CLUSTERS REMAIN BY DEC. 25, AND ONLY ONE BY DEC. 28. 1944 18871223 18880103 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. A HAS SUFFERED A GREAT CHANGE IN SHAPE BY DEC. 28, AND HAS BECOME AN ELONGATED SPOT WITH SEVERAL DISTINCT NUCLEI. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 29, AND A HAS BROKEN UP BY DEC. 30, PRINCIPALLY INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C. ONLY B REMAINS BY JAN. 2. 1944A18870107 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED. 1945 18861224 18861226 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED. 1946 18861228 18870108 A REGULAR SPOT. 1946A18870109 DEFINITION POOR ON PHOTOGRAPH. 1947 18870119 18870120 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 1947A18870111 FILM OF THE PHOTOGRAPH BROKEN. 1948 18870120 18870123 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JAN. 20 AND 21. THE FOLLOWING SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 22. 1948A18870121 PHOTOGRAPH UNDER-EXPOSED. 1949 18870124 18870204 A REGULAR SPOT A. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWS A ON JAN.27. A HAS BEGUN TO EXTEND A LITTLE ON THE FOLLOWING SIDE BY JAN.27;BY JAN.28, THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE SPOT HAS BECOME ALMOST DETACHED; BY JAN.29, A CONSIDERABLE PORTION IS ENTIRELY DETACHED, AND SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEAED NEAR A, THE APPEARANCE OF THE GROUP HAVING GREATLY CHANGED DURING THE THREE DAYS. THESE, WITH ONE EXCEPTION, ARE MEASURED WITH A ON JAN. 29, BUT SEPARATELY ON TEH FOLLOWING DAYS WHEN THEY ARE MORE DISTANT FROM IT. ONLY A REMAINS BY FEB. 3. 1949A18870123 18870124 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED ON JAN 23 AND 24. 1950 18870125 18870127 A SMALL FAINT SPOT 1950A18870125 18870128 DEFINITION POOR ON PHOTOGRAPHS FRO JAN 25 AND 28. 1951 18870125 18870131 TWO SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER ON JAN. 25. THE SMALLER HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN.26, BUT ANOTHER HAS APPEARED FOLLOWING IT IN THE SAME LATITUDE. THIS HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN.28. THE LARGER SPOT,A HAS BECOME ELONGATED BY JAN.28, AND ONLY HALF OF IT REMAINS BY JAN.29, ON WHICH DAY SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR IT. A HAS FURTHER BROKEN UP INTO THREE SPOTS BY JAN.30, TWO OF WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. ONLY TWO SPOTS REMAIN BY JAN.31. 1951A18870129 SUN'S IMAGE DISTORTED AND LIMB DEFECTIVE, THE PHOTOGRAPHIC FILM BEING TORN. 1952 18870201 18870201 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 1953 18870202 18870204 A SMALL SPOT. 1954 18870203 18870206 TWO SMALL SPOTS,A AND B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 6. 1954A18870211 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED. 1955 18870217 18870220 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 17. TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 18. AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS MEASURED IN FOUR PARTS ON FEB. 19, AND IN THREE ON FEB. 20. 1956 18870218 18870222 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 1957 18870219 18870219 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 1958 18870219 18870302 A REGULAR SPOT, A. TWO OTHER SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON FEB. 27. OF THESE THE FOLLOWING ONE, B, HAS BECOME A LARGE SPOT BY FEB.28. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, MOSTLY MEASURED IN ONE CLUSTER, ARE ALSO SEEN ON THIS AND SUCCEEDING DAYS. B HAS BROKEN UP BY MARCH 1, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE SPOT. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 2. 1959 18870221 18870225 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED, AND VARYING IN NUMBER AND ARRANGEMENT FROM DAY TO DAY. 1960 18870223 18870223 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED IN TWO CLUSTERS. 1961 18870310 18870311 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON MARCH 10. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 11. 1962 18870317 18870322 TWO SPOTS ON MARCH 17. OF THESE ONLY THE PRECEDING SPOT, A, IS SEEN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A IS ACCOMPANIED BY SOME SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 20 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 1963 18870319 18870322 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 1964 18870321 18870324 A SMALL SPOT. THE SPOT SEEN ON MARCH 24 SEEMS TO BE QUITE DIFFERENT FROM THAT SEEN ON MARCH 21-23. 1965 18870325 18870327 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 25; FOUR ON MARCH 26; ONE ON MARCH 27. 1966 18870330 18870330 FIVE VERY SMALL SPOTS MEASURED IN TWO CLUSTERS. 1967 18870331 18870404 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON MARCH 31. THEY HAVE MOVED APART FROM EACH OTHER BY APRIL 1; A HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 2. 1968 18870412 18870413 A SMALL SPOT. 1969 18870415 18870419 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 15 AND APRIL 19. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 17 AND 18. THREE SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON APRIL 16, TWO OF WHICH, APPARENTLY CORRESPONDING TO THE TWO SEEN ON APRIL 15, ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. 1970 18870418 18870427 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. BOTH HAVE INCREASED IN SIZE BY APRIL 19, ESPECIALLY A. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 22. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON APRIL 21 AND 22. 1970A18870422 18880503 PHOTOGRAPHS SOMEWHAT OVER-EXPOSED ON APR 22, 23, 27 AND MAY 3. 1971 18870427 18870502 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SMALLER SPOT, B. A DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 1. A THIRD SPOT, C, HAS APPEARED BETWEEN A AND B BY APRIL 30. 1972 18870502 18870510 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 2, THREE OF WHICH BEING CLOSE TOGETHER ARE MEASURED AS ONE. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 3. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 4. TWO SPOTS, A AND B, ARE SEEN ON MAY 5, A LITTLE LARGER THAN AND APPARENTLY NOT THE SAME TWO AS THOSE SEEN ON MAY 4. B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS BY MAY 6, A BY MAY 7, BUT BOTH ARE MEASURED AS ONE. ONE COMPONENT OF B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 8, AND THE OTHER BY MAY 9. TWO FRESH SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MAY 8, ONE OF WHICH, C, IS ALSO SEEN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 1973 18870502 18870514 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED GENERALLY BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH CHANGE AS TO NUMBER, SIZE, AND ARRANGEMENT FROM DAY TO DAY. A HAS A DOUBLE NUCLEUS, AND HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS BY MAY 13. THE SMALLER AND FOLLOWING PORTION HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 14. A IS MEASURED TOGETHER WITH THE SPOTS WHICH FOLLOW IT ON MAY 3, AS IT APPEARS TO BE CONNECTED WITH THEM ON THAT DAY, ALL TOGETHER FORMING A VERY LARGE SPOT OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE. ON MAY 4, THE DIFFERENT SPOTS OF THE GROUP ARE DISTINCTLY SEPARATED FROM EACH OTHER. 1974 18870508 18870511 A SMALL SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS, FORMING WITH A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. 1975 18870509 18870511 A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 9. A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM ON MAY 10 AND 11. 1976 18870509 18870511 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 10. 1977 18870511 18870514 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON MAY 13 BY ANOTHER SMALL SPOT, B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 14. 1978 18870514 18870521 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, A AND B, ON MAY 14. A THIRD, C, IS SEEN NEAR THEM ON MAY 15. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 17, BUT B AND C RAPIDLY INCREASE IN SIZE. ON MAY 16 AND 17 BOTH B AND C ARE COMPACT CLUSTERS OF SPOTS. BY MAY 18 THE SPOTS COMPOSING EACH CLUSTER HAVE COALESCED TO FORM ONE LARGE SPOT; AND THE GROUP CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, B AND C, WITH A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. B BREAKS UP AFTER MAY 19, AND C BREAKS UP AFTER MAY 20. 1979 18870516 18870517 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 1980 18870517 18870517 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 1981 18870526 18870526 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 1982 18870528 18870531 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A THIRD SPOT C IS SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON MAY 29, AND A CLOSE PAIR, D, MEASURED AS ONE, MAY 30. ONLY ONE COMPONENT OF D REMAINS BY MAY 31. 1983 18870528 18870530 TWO SMALL SPOTS,A AND B. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE, ON MAY 30. 1984 18870530 18870530 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 1985 18870531 18870531 TWO SMALL VERY FAINT SPOTS. 1986 18870601 18870605 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS,A, AND B, ON JUNE 1. BOTH A AND B HAVE INCREASED IN SIZE BY JUNE 2, AND OTHER SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED NEAR THEM. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 4, AND A HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH ARE STILL MEASURED TOGETHER. A HAS DIMINISHED STILL FURTHER BY JUNE 5. 1987 18870606 18870618 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, ACCOMPANIED ON JUNE 6 BY TWO SPOTS WHICH HAVE COALESCED BY JUNE 7 TO FORM ONE LARGE SPOT, B. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE ALSO OCCASIONALLY SEEN IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD OF THE GROUP. 1987A18870606 PHOTOGRAPH UNDER-EXPOSED. THE UMBRA OF SPOT 1987A NOT VISIBLE PROBABLY ON THIS ACCOUNT. 1988 18870609 18870614 TWO SPOTS, A AND B. B FORMS A CLUSTER OF THREE SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 11. ONE OF THESE SPOTS HAS MOVED FORWARD AND IS MEASURED BY ITSELF ON JUNE 12. ONLY ONE SMALL SPOT REMAINS ON JUNE 13. 1988A18870615 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED. 1989 18870617 18870621 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT, A, BY JUNE 19. 1990 18870618 18870625 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON JUNE 18. A SECOND, B, FOLLOWS IT ON JUNE 20 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND A THIRD, C, APPEARES BETWEEN ON JUNE 22. A AND C HAVE DISAPPEARED AND B HAS BROKEN UP INTO THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS BY JUNE 24. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY JUNE 25. 1990A18870621 PHOTOGRAPH MUCH OVER-EXPOSED. DEFINITION BAD. 1991 18870627 18870708 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALLER SPOT, B, NEAR IT; B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 2. OTHER SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON JULY 1, 2, AND 3. 1992 18870702 18870714 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO COMPANIONS,B, AND C, ON JULY 4 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS; C HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 6, AND B BY JULY 11, BUT SEVERAL OTHER SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON JULY 5, 8, AND 9. 1993 18870705 18870711 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 5, MEASURED IN THREE CLUSTERS. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE GREATLY INCREASED BY JULY 6, AND THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS HAVE ALMOST DISAPPEARED. 1993A18870708 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED. 1994 18870705 18870718 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. A FEW SMALL SPOTS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN BETWEEN THEM. 1994A18870710 DEFINITION OF PHOTOGRAPH SPOILED BY DUST ON MAGNIFIER OF THE PHOTOHELIOGRAPH. 1995 18870723 18870729 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM ON JULY 23 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JULY 26, AND THEN CONSISTS OF THREE PORTIONS; A A LARGE REGULAR SPOT; B A CHAIN OF SPOTS IN THE FORM OF A HORSE-SHOE, THE CONCAVITY OF WHICH IS TURNED TOWARDS A, AND A LITTLE STREAM OF SPOTS FOLLOWING B. THE COMPONENTS OF B HAVE COALESCED BY JULY 27, BUT CONSIDERABLE PORTIONS BECOME SEPERATED FROM IT AGAIN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 1996 18870724 18870728 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON JULY 28 BY A VERY SMALL COMPANION 1997 18870730 18870807 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON AUG. 1, AND ONE ON AUG. 5. 1997A18870730 18870802 DEFINITION POOR ON JUL 30 AND AUG 2. PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN THROUGH HAZE. 1998 18870730 18870809 A REGULAR SPOT. 1999 18870731 18870810 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS CHANGING ITS APPEARANCE FROM DAY TO DAY. THREE REGULAR SPOTS A, B, AND C HAVE FORMED IN THE STREAM BY AUG. 2. OF THESE A HAS PARTLY BROKEN UP BY AUG. 4, BUT RE-FORMED AGAIN BY AUG. 6; AND B HAS PARTLY BROKEN UP BY AUG. 5, BUT RE-FORMED BY AUG. 6. C HAS ENTIRELY BROKEN UP BY AUG. 6, AND B BY AUG. 8. 2000 18870731 18870805 A SOMEWHAT FAINT SPOT. IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY AUG. 4, BUT IS MEASURED AS ONE ON AUG. 4 AND 5. 2001 18870813 18870821 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FAINT COMPANION B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 17. ANOTHER COMPANION IS SEEN ON AUG. 18, AND YET ANOTHER ON AUG. 19. 2002 18870813 18870822 A REGULAR SPOT, A. ONE VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON AUG. 18, AND TWO ON AUG. 20. 2003 18870816 18870816 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2004 18870821 18870822 A SMALL SPOT. 2004A18870824 18870827 PHOTOGRAPH PARTLY FOGGED ON AUG 24 AND 27. DEFINITION BAD. 2005 18870827 18870828 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 2006 18870903 18870904 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. ONLY B REMAINS BY SEPT. 4. 2006A18870903 PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN THROUGH HAZE. 2007 18870913 18870915 A SMALL SPOT. 2007A18870913 PHOTOGRAPH MUCH OUT OF CENTRE OF PLATE. 2008 18870914 18870924 THREE SMALL SPOTS, TWO OF WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON SEPT. 14. TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPT. 15. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A IS NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 24. 2008A18870920 PHOTOGRAPH MUCH OUT OF CENTRE OF PLATE. 2009 18870924 18870924 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2009A18870929 PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN THROUGH HAZE. 2010 18871002 18871004 THREE SMALL SPOTS, A, B, AND C, ON OCTOBER 2. A FOURTH SPOT IS SEEN ON OCTOBER 3. ONLY A AND C REMAIN BY OCTOBER 4. 2011 18871004 18871006 TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON OCT. 4. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS OF EACH CLUSTER ON OCT. 5.DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 6, BUT TWO OTHER SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON THAT DAY. 2012 18871018 18871027 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 18. THE GROUP UNDERGOES THE MOST STRIKING CHANGES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. ON OCT. 19 IT IS A LARGE SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION. THE LARGE SPOT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY OCT. 20, AND COALESCED AGAIN TO FORM ONE LARGE SPOT BY OCT. 21. IT HAS BROKEN UP AGAIN BY OCT. 23, AND FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH DIMINISH IN NUMBER AND IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. 2013 18871019 18871020 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 19. THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 20. 2014 18871020 18871029 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON OCT. 20, 21, AND 22. IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO BY OCT. 23, AND DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 24. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON OCT. 24, AND EITHER ONE, TWO, OR THREE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2014A18871023 PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN THROUGH HAZE. DEFINITION POOR. 2015 18871024 18871027 A VERY SMALL SPOT A ON OCT. 24. A SECOND, B, IS SEEN NEAR IT ON OCT. 25. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 26, AND B BY OCT. 27, BUT A THIRD SPOT, C, IS SEEN ON OCT. 26 AND 27. 2016 18871031 18871101 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 31. THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE TWO PRECEDING ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON NOV. 1. 2016A18871031 PHOTOGRAPH UNDER-EXPOSED. DEFINITION POOR. 2017 18871105 18871116 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOV. 10 AND 12. 2018 18871107 18871108 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE TWO FOLLOWING ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON NOV. 7. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 8. 2019 18871111 18871120 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 11. A SECOND IS SEEN CLOSE TO IT, AND IS MEASURED WITH IT ON NOV. 12 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS UNTIL NOV. 17, WHEN THE GROUP CONSISTS OF THREE SPOTS, WHICH ARE ALL MEASURED SEPARATELY. ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON NOV. 18 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2019A18871111 PHOTOGRAPH THIN. DEFINITION POOR. 2020 18871111 18871116 A REGULAR SPOT. IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO NEARLY EQUAL PORTIONS, WHICH ARE, HOWEVER, STILL MEASURED TOGETHER, BY NOV. 15. BOTH PORTIONS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 17. 2020A18871117 PHOTOGRAPH THIN. DEFINITION POOR. 2021 18871203 18871215 A VERY FINE GROUP OF SPOTS IN A LONG STREAM. FOUR CONSIDERABLE SPOTS, A, B, C, AND D, ARE SEEN ON DEC. 4. OF THESE A AND B HAVE PARTIALLY COALESCED BY DEC. 5 AND ARE HENCEFORWARD LETTERED AS E. D AND E ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON DEC. 7 AND 9. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN CLOSE TO THE LARGER SPOTS ON EACH DAY UP TO DEC. 14, ON WHICH DAY D ALONE REMAINS. 2021A18871123 18871124 DEFINITION POOR ON NOV 23-24. 2022 18871209 18871213 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST. A IS ALWAYS MEASURED BY ITSELF; THE SMALLER SPOTS ARE USUALLY MEASURED TOGETHER. ONLY A REMAINS BY DEC. 13. 2022A18871125 DOUBLE IMAGE OF SUN. PHTOGRAPH TAKEN FOR ZERO OF POSITION. 2023 18871212 18871212 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2023A18871207 18871214 DEFINITION POOR ON DEC 7, 9 AND 14. PHOTOGRAPH UNDER-EXPOSED. 2024 18871214 18871226 A VERY FINE GROUP, CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, ACCOMPANIED BY A LONG STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. THE SPOTS AND CLUSTERS WHICH MAKE UP THE GROUP UNDERGO VERY FREQUENT AND CONSIDERABLE CHANGES. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE BEEN GROUPED FOR MEASUREMENT AS FAR AS POSSIBLE IN THE SAME MANNER ON DIFFERENT DAYS, BUT THE CHANGES WHICH HAVE TAKEN PLACE PREVENT THE CORRESPONDENCE FROM BEING PERFECT. C AND D HAVE COMBINED TO FORM K BY DEC. 18, AND A AND F TO FORM L BY DEC. 23. ONLY L AND A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS REMAIN BY DEC. 23. 2025 18871221 18871227 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER A IS THE LARGEST. THE REST OF THE GROUP ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. 2025a18880101 18880105 PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN THROUGH MIST. DEFINITION POOR. 2026 18871231 18880110 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A FAINT COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JAN 7. 2027 18880104 18880105 THREE SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FIRST TWO ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON JAN. 4. ONE SMALL SPOT ON JAN. 5. 2028 18880110 18880112 THREE SMALL SPOTS, A, B, AND C, ON JAN. 10. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 11. THE GROUP CONSISTS ON JAN. 12 OF FOUR SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 2029 18880110 18880121 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JAN. 14 AND 17, AND TWO OR THREE ON JAN. 15, 16, AND 18. 2030 18880112 18880116 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH ONE SMALL COMPANION ON JAN. 13 AND 14, AND TWO ON JAN. 15 AND 16. 2030a18880123 18880123 PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN THROUGH MIST. DEFINITION POOR. 2031 18880118 18880124 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 18. A REGULAR SPOT, A, ON JAN. 19, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, GENERALLY ACCOMPANIED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 2032 18880124 18880125 A SMALL SPOT. 2033 18880130 18880202 A VERY SMALL SPOT,A, ON JAN. 30, FOLLOWED BY A SECOND, B, ON JAN. 31, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A THIRD SPOT IS SEEN BETWEEN A AND B ON FEB. 1. 2034 18880203 18880203 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2035 18880218 18880229 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM. THE GROUP IS MEASURED AS ONE SPOT ON FEB. 18. AS THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS ARE CONFUSED TOGETHER THROUGH FORESHORTENING. THE FIRST SPOT, A, AND THE LAST TWO B AND C, ARE REGULAR SPOTS ON FEB. 20, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS; BUT B AND C HAVE BROKEN UP BY FEB. 22, THOUGH C IS RECOGNISABLE UP TO FEB. 26. A WIDE GAP IS SEEN BETWEEN A AND THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP ON FEB. 23 AND FEB. 24, BUT FRESH SPOTS HAVE FORMED ROUND A BY FEB. 25, AND OTHER SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY FEB. 26. THESE UNDERGO REPEATED CHANGES, AND BY FEB. 29 ONLY A AND ONE SMALL COMPANION REMAIN IN THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE GROUP, AND THREE SMALL SPOTS IN THE FOLLOWING PORTION. 2036 18880301 18880301 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2037 18880309 18880320 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON MARCH 10 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THESE CHANGE CONTINUALLY FROM DAY TO DAY, BUT ONE OF THE MOST STABLE, B, CAN BE IDENTIFIED ON THREE SUCCESSIVE DAYS, AND TWO OTHERS, C AND D, ON TWO DAYS. 2038 18880310 18880313 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A FAINT COMPANION ON MARCH 10. TWO SMALL COMPANIONS, MEASURED TOGETHER ARE SEEN ON MARCH 11. TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, MEASURED TOGETHER ARE SEEN ON MARCH 13, A HAVING DISAPPEARED. 2039 18880316 18880319 THREE SMALL SPOTS, A, B, AND C. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 19, AND B CANNOT BE CERTAINLY IDENTIFIED WITH THE SMALL SPOT SEEN ON THAT DAY. 2040 18880319 18880319 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, CONNECTED WITH GROUP 2039 BY FACULOUS MARKINGS. 2041 18880321 18880323 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED FOR THE MOST PART IN TWO CLUSTERS, A AND B. 2042 18880325 18880325 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2043 18880331 18880331 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2044 18880401 18880402 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, A AND B. 2045 18880403 18880405 TWO SMALL SPOTS,A AND B, ON APRIL 3. ONLY THE MORE NORTHERN PART REMAINS BY APRIL 5. 2046 18880416 18880417 A SMALL SPOT. 2047 18880418 18880418 A SMALL SPOT. 2048 18880421 18880427 A REGULAR SPOT. 2049 18880424 18880429 THREE SPOTS, A, B, AND C. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 25, AND B BY APRIL 27. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN CLOSE TO A ON APRIL 26 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2050 18880425 18880429 A SMALL SPOT, A ON APRIL 25. A SECOND SMALL SPOT, B, HAS APPEARED BY APRIL 26. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 27. 2051 18880428 18880428 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2051a18880505 18880510 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED ON MAY 5, 8, 9, AND 10. DEFINITION BAD. 2052 18880511 18880523 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE NUMBER OF SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LARGEST OF THESE, B, AT THE END OF THE STREAM IS A LARGE SPOT AT FIRST, BUT IT UNDERGOES SEVERAL CHANGES OF SHAPE, AND HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 18. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, C AND D, BY MAY 21. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 20, BUT SOME SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED PRECEDING A BY THAT DATE. 2052A18880518 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED. DEFINITION BAD. 2053A18880531 18880613 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED ON MAY 31 AND JUNE 10, 11, 12, AND 13. DEFINITION BAD. 2053 18880609 18880616 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM; A,THE FIRST SPOT, IS THE LARGEST. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSTANT CHANGE FROM DAY TO DAY. 2054 18880615 18880619 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JUNE 15 AND 16, WITH TWO OR THREE SMALLER SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. ONLY B IS SEEN ON JUNE 17. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 18, BUT TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR THE PLACE WHICH ON JUNE 16 HAD BEEN OCCUPIED BY A. THREE SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN IN THIS LOCALITY ON JUNE 19. 2055 18880619 18880619 A SMALL SPOT. 2056 18880624 18880629 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALLER SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A APPEARS ON JUNE 29 TO HAVE COALESCED, OR TO BE CONFUSED THROUGH THE EFFECT OF FORESHORTENING, WITH THE SPOT IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING IT. 2057 18880706 18880707 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 6; TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 7. 2058 18880706 18880707 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2059 18880710 18880717 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JULY 10. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON JULY 11, AND NOTHING IS VISIBLE ON JULY 12. THE GROUP HAS BROKEN OUT AFRESH BY JULY 13, AND CONSISTS OF A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS NEAR. A INCREASES IN SIZE VERY RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2059A18880714 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED. DEFINITION POOR. 2060 18880715 18880719 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON JULY 18. 2060A18880722 PHOTOGRAPH FOGGED. DEFINITION POOR. 2061 18880729 18880730 A SMALL SPOT. 2061A18880730 PHOTOGRAPH OVER-EXPOSED. DEFINITION POOR. 2062 18880801 18880802 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 1; ONE ON AUG 2 2063 18880808 18880810 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS MOVED FORWARD IN LONGITUDE BY AUG. 9, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 10. 2064 18880812 18880822 SEVERAL VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS. ONLY ONE SPOT,A, REMAINS BY AUG. 14. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON AUG. 16. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUG. 17, BUT A VERY FAINT MARKING OCCUPIES ITS PLACE ON AUG. 18. NO SIGN OF THE GROUP CAN BE DETECTED ON AUG. 19 AND 20; BUT TWO WELL-MARKED SPOTS, B AND C, ARE SEEN ON AUG. 21. B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS BY AUG 22, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE. 2065 18880825 18880828 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. BOTH SPOTS SHOW AN EXTENSION TOWARDS EACH OTHER ON AUG. 26, WHICH IS NOT SEEN ON OTHER DAYS. 2066 18880828 18880909 A FINE LARGE SPOT,A, WITH A CLOSE COMPANION,B, AND A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. A CHANGES IN SHAPE AND INCREASES IN SIZE DAY BY DAY UNTIL AUG. 31, AFTER WHICH IT BEGINS TO BREAK UP. ONLY THE SOUTHERN AND PRECEDING PORTION OF THE SPOT, NOW OF REGULAR FORM, REMAINS BY SEPT. 6, BUT IT SUFFERS NO GREAT FURTHER CHANGE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. ONLY A REMAINS BY SEPT. 7. 2067 18880830 18880831 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 30. TWO SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 31. 2068 18880831 18880831 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2069 18880906 18880910 TWO SMALL SPOTS. A THIRD IS SEEN BETWEEN THE TWO OTHERS ON SEPT. 7. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 9. ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON SEPT. 10. 2070 18880906 18880916 A REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A CLOSE PAIR WHICH ARE MEASURED AS ONE SPOT ON SEPT. 6 AND 7, BUT SEPARATELY ON SEPT. 8 AS B AND C. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPT. 9, B BY SEPT. 11, BUT A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON SEPT. 12,AND AGAIN, AS D, ON SEPT. 14 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A HAS BROKEN UP BY SEPT. 11 INTO AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH CHANGE VERY RAPIDLY IN ARRANGEMENT, SHAPE AND SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY SEPT. 15. 2071 18880921 18880929 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING IT. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY SEPT. 24, BUT SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON SEPT. 28. 2071A18881001 PHOTOGRAPH UNDER-EXPOSED. DEFINITION POOR. 2072 18881003 18881003 A SMALL SPOT. 2072A18881014 18881023 PHOTOGRAPH UNDER-EXPOSED ON OCT 14 AND 23. DEFINITION POOR. 2073 18881025 18881027 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A VERY SMALL SPOT BETWEEN THEM. 2074 18881106 18881116 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. THE SMALLER SPOTS COALESCE OR FADE AWAY, SO THAT ON NOV. 8 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP CONSISTS ALMOST WHOLLY OF THREE SPOTS, A AND B BEING THE FIRST AND LAST, AND C A SMALLER SPOT BETWEEN THEM; C HAS DISAPPEARED AND B HAS BROKEN UP BY NOV. 11, AND BY NOV. 15 A REMAINS ALONE. 2074A18881106 18881208 FOR NOV 6 AND SUBSEQUENT DAYS UNTIL DEC 8, M AND I ARE ATTACHED (M DESIGNATED ON DIGITAL FILE) AND TWO PHOTOGRAPHS WERE MEASURED. THE ONE, A MAURITIUS PHOTOGRAPH, FROM WHICH THE POSITIONS OF THE SPOTS ARE TAKEN; THE OTHER, AN INDIAN PHTOGRAPH, FROM WHICH THE AREAS ARE TAKEN. THE MAURITIUS PHOTOGRAPHS AT THAT TIME DO NOT GIVE SUFFICIENTLY GOOD DEFINITION FOR THE AREAS TO BE MEASURED UPON THEM WITH ACCURACY; WHILST THE POSITION-ANGLES OF THE WIRES ON THE INDIAN PHOTOGRAPHS ARE AFFECTED BY A CONSIDERABLE AND UNDETERMINED ERROR. THE INDIAN PHOTOGRAPHS SHOW VERY GOOD DEFINITION. 2075 18881111 18881122 A REGULAR SPOT, A. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN FROM TIME TO TIME IN ITS NEIGHBORHOOD, THE PRINCIPAL ONE, B, FROM NOV. 12 TO NOV. 16. 2076 18881127 18881209 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON NOV. 27. BOTH HAVE GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY NOV. 28, AND SOME SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR THEM; A IS RATHER A CLOSE CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS THAN A SINGLE SPOT, UNTIL NOV. 30, BY WHICH DAY ITS COMPONENTS HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A LARGE REGULAR SPOT; B DECREASES IN SIZE AFTER NOV. 29, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 9, BUT A NEW SPOT IS SEEN ON THAT DAY. 2077 18881209 18881209 A SMALL SPOT. 2078 18881215 18881222 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS UNDERGO MANY CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY ; THE MOST STABLE SPOT IS A, THE LEADER ON DEC. 17. THE GROUP CONSIST MAINLY ON DEC. 19 AND 20 OF THREE SPOTS A, B, AND C. BOTH A AND B HAVE DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY DEC. 21. ONLY B REMAINS BY DEC. 22. 2079 18881230 18881230 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2079A18881230 18881231 PHOTOGRAPHS ON DEC 30 AND 31 ARE UNDER-EXPOSED. DEFINITION POOR. 2080 18890116 18890117 FOUR SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED IN TWO PAIRS ON JAN. 16. THREE SMALL SPOTS ON JAN 17. 2081 18890201 18890206 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON FEB 1. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS MEASURED IN THREE CLUSTERS ON FEB. 2. THE GROUP UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER,A,REMAINS HOWEVER FAIRLY PERSISTENT, ON FEB. 3,4,5, AND 6. ON FEB. 6 ITS COMPONENT SPOTS ARE MEASURED SEPARATELY. 2082 18890222 18890302 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 22. TWO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 23, WHICH HAVE BROKEN UP BY FEB. 25. THE GROUP UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. IT HAS GREATLY INCREASED BOTH IN TOTAL AREA AND NUMBER OF SEPARATE SPOTS BY FEB. 27, BUT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER THAT DAY. 2083 18890305 18890315 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 5 AND 6. A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 7. ON MARCH 8 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A IS SEEN ALONE ON MARCH 9, 10, 14, AND 15, BUT ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON THE INTERVENING DAYS. 2084 18890312 18890312 A SMALL SPOT. 2085 18890313 18890317 FOUR SPOTS ON MARCH 13, OF WHICH ONLY TWO REMAIN BY MARCH 14. OF THESE THE PRECEDING SPOT, A, INCREASES IN SIZE RAPIDLY, AND MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN BETWEEN A AND B ON MARCH 16. ONLY B IS SEEN ON MARCH 17. 2086 18890401 18890411 A REGULAR SPOT. 2087 18890411 18890412 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS MEASURED IN TWO PAIRS ON APRIL 11. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON APRIL 12. 2088 18890505 18890510 A REGULAR SPOT ON MAY 5, 6, AND 7. IT HAS BROKEN UP INTO A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY MAY 8. 2089 18890527 18890527 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH TWO ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. 2090 18890616 18890628 A LARGE SPOT A, FOLLOWED ON JUNE 17 BY A CLUSTER OF SMALLER SPOTS, B, AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE. B BREAKS UP, AND DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER JUNE 20, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 23. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON JUNE 21 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT A IS SEEN ALONE ON JUNE 25, 27, AND 28. 2091 18890629 18890630 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2092 18890712 18890724 A REGULAR SPOT A. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON JULY 15 AND 16. ON JULY 18 A FRESH SERIES OF SPOTS IS SEEN NEAR A. THESE INCREASE IN NUMBER AND SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND ON JULY 20 AND 21 FORM A SEMICIRCLE WITH THE NUCLEUS OF A FOR ITS CENTRE. A REMAINS ALONE ON JULY 22 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2093 18890714 18890720 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 14 OF WHICH TWO ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JULY 15, AND UNDERGOES RAPID CHANGES OF FORM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY JULY 19. 2094 18890726 18890727 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. ONLY A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE SEEN ON JULY 27. 2095 18890729 18890731 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY JULY 31. 2096 18890729 18890804 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP, WHICH CHANGES ITS FORM FROM DAY TO DAY. 2097 18890802 18890811 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 2. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY AUG. 3, AND BY AUG. 4 IT HAS BECOME A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. THE SMALLER SPOTS TEND EITHER TO COALESCE WITH A AND B, OR TO DIE OUT, ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. B HAS BROKEN UP BY AUG. 6; BUT THE SEPARATE COMPONENTS ARE USUALLY MEASURED TOGETHER. ONLY A REMAINS BY AUG. 11. 2098 18890809 18890817 FOUR VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, MEASURED IN TWO PAIRS ON AUG 9. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY AUG. 10, AND CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY ANUMBER OF SMALLER SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED OVER A CONSIDERABLE AREA. THE GROUP HAS BECOME MORE CONDENSED BY AUG. 13, AND BY AUG. 14, CONSISTS OF THREE LARGE SPOTS, A, B AND C. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 17. 2099 18890809 18890820 A REGULAR SPOT. THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON AUG. 13. 2100 18890827 18890907 A REGULAR SPOT. 2101 18890903 18890904 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2102 18890907 18890908 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 7. TWO SPOTS ON SEPT. 8, OF WHICH THE PRECEDING APPEARS TO BE A NEW FORMATION. 2103 18890924 18891004 A REGULAR SPOT, A ACCOMPANIED BY A NUMBER OF SMALLER SPOTS. THE LATTER DIMINISH IN SIZE AFTER SEPT. 26 AND HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 4. THE APPARENT CHANGE IN THE POSITION OF THE GROUP ON SEPT. 24, 25, 26 APPEARS TO BE DUE TO THE ACTION OF THE SURROUNDING FACULAE, WHICH CONCEAL MUCH OF THE PRECEDING PORTION ON SEPT. 25. 2104 18891008 18891008 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2105 18891009 18891011 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON OCT. 9. A SECOND SPOT IS SEEN NEAR IT ON OCT. 10. THE FIRST SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 11. 2106 18891016 18891018 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, OF WHICH TWO ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON OCT. 16. TWO SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER ON OCT. 17. ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON OCT. 18. 2107 18891023 18891023 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2108 18891212 18891213 A REGULAR SPOT. 2109 18891218 18891222 TWO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS. 2110 18891218 18891230 A SMALL SPOT WHICH DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 23. A FRESH SPOT IS SEEN ON THAT DAY, AND OTHERS APPEAR ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, UNTIL BY DEC. 26 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER A, A REGULAR SPOT IS THE LARGEST. 2111 18891227 18900107 A REGULAR SPOT. 2112 18900106 18900106 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2113 18900109 18900109 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2114 18900117 18900122 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 17, THE TWO FOLLOWING OF WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. ONE SMALL SPOT ON JAN. 18. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY ENLARGED BY JAN. 19, AND YET FURTHER BY JAN. 20, ON WHICH DATE IT CONSISTS OF A LARGE SPOT A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. A HAS CHANGED ITS SHAPE BETWEEN JAN. 19 AND JAN. 20. 2115 18900130 18900201 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS A AND B. 2116 18900228 18900228 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2117 18900304 18900314 A LARGE SPOT A, WITH TWO WELL-DEFINED NUCLEI. IT IS FOLLOWED BY A SMALLER SPOT B ON MARCH 5, 6, AND 7. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 8, AND A HAS BROKEN UP INTO THREE PARTS, C, D, AND E BY MARCH 9, OF WHICH C HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 11. 2118 18900312 18900312 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2119 18900322 18900323 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS A AND B ON MARCH 22. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 23, AND A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS, WHICH ARE, HOWEVER, STILL MEASURED TOGETHER. 2120 18900410 18900410 A SMALL SPOT. 2121 18900411 18900417 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 11 AND 12. THE PRECEDING SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 13, AND THE FOLLOWING BY APRIL 14. THE GROUP HAS REAPPEARED BY APRIL 15, AS TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, ONE OF WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 16. 2122 18900412 18900413 A SMALL BUT DARK SPOT WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS FOLLOWING IT ON APRIL 12. THE GROUP HAS ENTIRELY CHANGED ITS APPEARANCE BY APRIL 13, AND CONSISTS ONLY OF A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2123 18900428 18900501 A VERY SMALL SPOT A ON APRIL 28. TWO SMALL SPOTS B AND C ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON APRIL 29. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 30. 2124 18900508 18900517 A SMALL FAINT SPOT A ON MAY 8. A SECOND B IS SEEN PRECEDING A ON MAY 9. THE TWO SPOTS TEND TO SEPARATE, AND SOME SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM THE WHOLE GROUP FORMING A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM ON MAY 10 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 14, 15, AND 16; BUT ON MAY 17 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN IN ITS PLACE. 2125 18900511 18900511 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2126 18900517 18900524 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT A, WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 23. A FAINT DIFFUSED SPOT IS SEEN NEAR A ON MAY 22. ON MAY 23 AND 24 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT IS SEEN FOLLOWING THE POSITION OF A. 2127 18900517 18900522 SEVERAL VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LAST SPOT A IS THE LARGEST. THE PRECEDING SPOTS DIE OUT, AND A IS LEFT ALONE BY MAY 20. 2128 18900520 18900521 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON MAY 21. 2129 18900530 18900530 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2130 18900605 18900609 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JUNE 5. THESE HAVE COLLECTED INTO TWO CLUSTERS BY JUNE 6, AND HAVE COALESCED TO FORM TWO SPOTS BY JUNE 7. A THIRD SPOT IS SEEN NEAR THE FOLLOWING SPOT ON JUNE 8, BUT HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 9. 2131 18900610 18900610 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2132 18900704 18900711 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT A ON JULY 4. A SECOND B IS SEEN ON JULY 5, TOGETHER WITH A NUMBER OF SMALLER SPOTS. THE GROUP CONSISTS, ON JULY 5 AND THE THREE SUCCEEDING DAYS, OF TWO CLUSTERS, EACH FORMED BY A REGULAR SPOT, A OR B, WITH A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS STRETCHING S P. THESE CLUSTERS HAVE BROKEN UP BY JULY 10, AND ONLY A FEW SPOTS REMAIN. 2133 18900707 18900714 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JULY 7. ON JULY 8 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. A HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JULY 10. TH PENUMBRA ON THE SOUTH SIDE OF A APPEARS CONTRACTED ON JULY 12, CAUSING AN APPARANT SHIFT IN LATITUDE OF THE CENTRE OF THE SPOT. 2134 18900722 18900723 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON JULY 22. A SECOND IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JULY 23. 2135 18900722 18900801 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 2136 18900728 18900806 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON AUG. 1. A HAS BECOME ELONGATED IN A DIRECTION PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR BY AUG. 2, DIMINISHES IN SIZE ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS, AND HAS BROKEN UP INTO SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS BY AUG. 5. 2137 18900729 18900802 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 29. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 31. BUT ON AUG. 1 AND 2 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ARRANGED IN TWO CLUSTERS ARE SEEN NEARLY IN THE SAME PLACE. 2138 18900805 18900807 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN CLOSE TO B ON AUG. 6, AND ARE MEASURED WITH IT. 2139 18900811 18900811 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2140 18900824 18900828 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUG. 26. ON AUG. 27 ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN; ON AUG. 28 THERE ARE TWO. 2141 18900825 18900906 TWO SPOTS OF NO GREAT SIZE ON AUG. 25. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND HAS BECOME A LARGE BEAUTIFUL AND COMPLICATED GROUP BY AUG. 27 AND 28; TWO OF THE SPOTS A AND B BEING MUCH LARGER THAN THE REST. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE COALESCING WITH THE SPOTS IT OVERTAKES, SO THAT BY SEPT. 1 IT LEADS THE GROUP B IS USUALLY THE LAST SPOT IN THE GROUP, AND INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO AUG. 31, THE SMALLER SPOTS IN THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP COALESCING WITH IT. THE SMALL SPOTS IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP GRADUALLY DIE OUT AND A AND B ALONE REMAIN BY SEPT. 6. 2142 18900901 18900909 TWO SMALL SPOTS A AND B. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN A AND B, ON SEPT. 4 AND 5, AND ARE MEASURED WITH A ON SEPT. 5. THEY HAVE COALESCED WITH A BY SEPT. 6. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY SEPT. 7. 2143 18900906 18900906 A SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 2142, ON THE SAME PARALLEL. 2144 18900906 18900906 TWO SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 2142, ON THE SAME PARALLEL. 2145 18900906 18900914 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 6, 7, AND 8. BY SEPT. 9 THE GROUP HAS BECOME A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM OF SPOTS; BUT BY SEPT. 11 ONLY A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS REMAIN. A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN BETWEEN A AND B ON SEPT. 12; ONLY B REMAINS BY SEPT. 13. 2146 18900908 18900909 A SMALL SPOT. 2147 18900909 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2148 18900911 18900912 A SMALL SPOT. 2149 18900915 18900919 ONE SPOT ON SEPT. 15 AND 16. A SECOND IS SEEN CLOSELY FOLLOWING IT ON SEPT. 17, AND IS MEASURED WITH IT. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND CONSISTS OF THREE SMALL SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING EACH OTHER, AND MEASURED AS ONE, ON SEPT. 18 AND 19. 2150 18900917 18900920 TWO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPT. 17. BOTH A AND B HAVE COALESCED TO FORM IRREGULAR SPOTS BY SEPT. 18. SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON SEPT. 19 AND 20. 2151 18900924 18901001 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 24. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY SEPT. 25, AND FORMS A VERY IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. BY SEPT. 28 IT CONSISTS OF TWO FAIRLY COMPACT CLUSTERS, A AND B. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR THESE ON SEPT. 29 AND 30. ONLY A REMAINS BY OCT. 1. 2152 18900929 18901002 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. THEY HAVE GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY SEPT. 30. 2153 18901001 18901001 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2154 18901005 18901008 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON OCT. 5. 2155 18901006 18901006 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2156 18901019 18901101 A VERY LARGE SPOT OF IRREGULAR SHAPE. IT IS MEASURED IN SEVERAL DIVISIONS, THOUGH BUT A SINGLE SPOT ON OCT. 21 AND 22. IT HAS BROKEN UP BY OCT. 23, INTO A NUMBER OF SPOTS, THE LAST OF WHICH, A, IS THE LARGEST, AND IS A WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT. THE PRECEDING SPOTS DIE OUT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY OCTOBER 31. 2157 18901021 18901025 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2158 18901107 18901114 A REGULAR SPOT A FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALLER SPOTS. A CONSIDERABLE PORTION OF A HAS BEEN DETACHED FROM THE MAIN BODY OF THE SPOT BY NOV. 10. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 13, LEAVING A ALONE. 2159 18901122 18901204 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, ON NOV. 22. A THIRD C IS SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON NOV. 23. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND ON NOV. 25 CONSISTS PRINCIPALLY OF FIVE LARGE REGULAR SPOTS A, B, D, E, AND F; C NOT BEING SEEN ON THAT DAY; B HAS BROKEN INTO TWO SPOTS G AND H BY NOV. 30. ONLY D REMAINS BY DEC. 3. 2160 18901207 18901209 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 7. TWO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON DEC. 8, AND THREE ON DEC.9. 2161 18901211 18901211 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2162 18901213 18901220 A STRAGGLING GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED. THE GROUP CHANGES MUCH IN ITS APPEARENCE FROM DAY TO DAY. 2163 18901214 18901215 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON DEC 14. ONE ON DEC 15. 2164 18901218 18901222 TWO SMALL SPOTS A AND B. OTHER SPOTS HAVE FORMED BETWEEN THEM BY DEC.19, BUT HAVE DISAPPEARED AGAIN BY DEC.21. ONLY B REMAINS BY DEC.22. 2165 18901220 18901228 A SMALL SPOT,A, ON DEC. 20 AND 21. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DEC. 22. A SMALL SPOT, B, IS SEEN ON DEC.24 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH C, THE LAST, IS THE LARGEST, ARE SEEN FOLLOWING B ON DEC.26. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 27. ONLY C REMAINS BY DEC. 28. 2166 18901229 18910101 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, A. A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IS SEEN FOLLOWING (OR PRECEDING) IT ON DEC. 31. 2167 18910102 18910102 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2168 18910106 18910106 FIVE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2169 18910115 18910128 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN NEAR IT. 2170 18910116 18910120 A CHAIN OF SMALL SPOTS S.P. GROUP 2169. THE GROUP IS ARRANGED IN TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS ON JAN. 16 AND 17, AND IN FOUR ON JAN. 18, ONE OF WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 19. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON JAN. 20. 2171 18910117 18910121 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 17, MEASURED AS TWO. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JAN. 18. TWO CLOSE CLUSTERS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 19 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2172 18910119 18910122 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. A SECOND SPOT IS SEEN ON JAN. 20, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS OF THREE SPOTS ON JAN. 22, BUT IS NOT SEEN ON JAN. 21. 2173 18910120 18910125 A SMALL BUT DARK AND SHARPLY DEFINED SPOT. A, JUST PRECEDING GROUP 2172 ON JAN. 20. A HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED IN SIZE BY JAN. 21, ON WHICH DAY TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN FOLLOWING IT. ONLY ONE SMALL FAINT SPOT IS SEEN ON JAN. 22 AND 23. A SECOND VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR THE FIRST ON JAN. 25. 2174 18910125 18910129 A FRESH OUTBREAK NEARLY IN THE POSITION OF GROUP 2172. AN IRREGULAR GROUP OF MANY SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 25. ONLY TWO SMALL SPOTS REMAIN ON JAN. 26, AND THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JAN. 28. IT HAS REAPPEARED AGAIN, HOWEVER, BY JAN. 29. 2175 18910125 18910202 A CLOSE CLUSTER OF SPOTS OF VERY IRREGULAR SHAPE. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY JAN. 31, AND THIS HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 1. ANOTHER SPOT HAS, HOWEVER, APPEARED BY THIS DAY, BUT HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 3. 2176 18910128 18910203 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON JAN. 28 AND JAN. 30. 2177 18910206 18910206 A SMALL SPOT. 2178 18910209 18910212 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. ANOTHER SMALL SPOT IS SEEN IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD ON FEB. 11, AND A FOURTH ON FEB. 12. 2179 18910210 18910217 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, ON FEB. 10 AND 11. THE SPOTS HAVE COALESCED TO FORM THREE SPOTS BY FEB. 12. OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. A ALONE REMAINS BY FEB 15. 2180 18910211 18910217 TWO SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. ONLY B REMAINS BY FEB. 14. TWO SMALL SPOTS, C AND D ARE SEEN PRECEEDING B ON FEB. 15. ONLY C REMAINS BY FEB. 16, AND C HAS ALSO DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 17, BUT A SMALL SPOT REPRESENTING THE GROUP IS SEEN ON THAT DAY. 2181 18910213 18910216 FOUR OR FIVE VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 2182 18910215 18910224 A FEW SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING' STREAM. THE GROUP VARIES MUCH IN SIZE AND APPEARANCE FROM DAY TO DAY. IT IS NOT SEEN ON FEB. 18, OWING POSSIBLY TO A DEFECT IN THE PHOTOGRAPH. 2183 18910216 18910225 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 16. ON FEB. 17 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM BETWEEN THEM. B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS, C AND D, BY FEB. 22. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 23, AND D BY FEB. 25. 2184 18910218 18910220 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWING GROUP 2183. A SECOND SPOT IS SEEN NEAR A ON FEB. 19. 2185 18910219 18910221 A SMALL SPOT. 2186 18910220 18910302 SEVERAL SMALL FAINT SPOTS. A VERY IRREGULAR GROUP, WHICH CHANGES IN SIZE AND APPEARANCE AND NUMBER OF SPOTS FROM DAY TO DAY. 2187 18910304 189103 7 A SMALL SPOT, A; ANOTHER SPOT, B, IS SEEN PRECEDING A ON MARCH 5. B ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 6. 2188 18910305 18910305 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2189 18910305 18910305 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2190 18910305 18910313 A REGULAR SPOT, A. TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON MARCH 7. TWO WELL DEFINED SPOTS ARE SEEN N OF A ON MARCH 9, BUT A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY MARCH 10, AND THE TWO NORTHERN SPOTS INTO A CIRCULAR CLUSTER OF ABOUT TEN VERY SMALL SPOTS, WHICH ARE MEASURED IN THREE SECTIONS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2191 18910307 18910308 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON MARCH 7. A SIMILAR SPOT ON MARCH 8, BUT APPARENTLY NOT THE SAME. 2192 18910312 18910312 A SMALL SPOT. 2193 18910313 18910325 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 2194 18910316 18910320 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON MARCH 16. SEVERAL ADDITIONAL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MARCH 17. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, HAS FORMED BY MARCH 19. 2195 18910329 18910410 A REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES ACCOMPANIED BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 2196 18910330 18910404 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 30 AND 31. ANOTHER, APPARENTLY NOT THE SAME, ON APRIL 1, AND A THIRD ON APRIL 2. ON APRIL 3 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP IS A COMPACT CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2197 18910331 18910404 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 31. A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 1. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY APRIL 3. 2198 18910410 18910414 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. 2199 18910414 18910419 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 14. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED IN SIZE BY APRIL 15, AND CONTAINS, BESIDES SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS, FOUR PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B, C, AND D. THE FORMER PAIR SHOWS A DISTINCT TENDENCY TO MOVE AWAY FROM THE LATTER. ONLY C REMAINS BY APRIL 18. 2200 18910414 18910419 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL AND FAINT SPOTS ON APRIL 14, AND ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 18. TWO SMALL AND VERY FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN ON APRIL 19. 2201 18910416 18910417 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON APRIL 16. A SECOND IS SEEN NEAR IT ON APRIL 17. 2202 18910416 18910422 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON APRIL 16. A SECOND SPOT, B, IS SEEN ON APRIL 17. A HAS BROKEN UP INTO A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS BY APRIL 18, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 19. BY APRIL 20 THE GROUP HAS BECOME A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER C IS THE LARGEST. 2203 18910419 18910425 A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 19. A SECOND IS SEEN ON APRIL 20. A STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 22, WHICH HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY APRIL 23. TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 25. 2204 18910421 18910502 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON APRIL 22 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY A FINE TRAIN OF SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE LARGEST. B HAS COMPLETELY BROKEN UP BY APRIL 30, AND THE OTHER SPOTS OF THE TRAIN DIMINISH UNTIL BY MAY 2 A ALONE REMAINS. 2205 18910422 18910426 A GREAT NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 22. A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 23. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE LEADING SPOT A IS A FINE REGULAR SPOT ON APRIL 25. 2206 18910427 18910501 A REGULAR SPOT,A, FOLLOWED ON APRIL 27 BY TWO SHORT TRAINS OF SMALL SPOTS. THE TWO TRAINS FORM ONE LONG SLIGHTLY CURVED STREAM ON APRIL 28, AND THE SPOT B, NEXT FOLLOWING A, HAS BECOME OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE. B, AND THE OTHER SPOTS OF THE TRAIN DIMINISH AFTER APRIL 29, AND HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MAY 1. 2207 18910427 18910503 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 27. THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED TOGETHER, ON APRIL 28. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 29. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 30, MAY 1 AND MAY 2. TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 3. 2208 18910428 18910429 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON APRIL 28, FOLLOWED BY A CLOSE PAIR, B. B IS A SINGLE SPOT ON APRIL 29, AND A AND B ARE ABOUT EQUAL IN SIZE. 2209 18910501 18910503 TWO CLOSE CLUSTERS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 3. 2210 18910504 18910515 AN IRREGULAR GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, A, FOLLOWS THE REST OF THE GROUP, BUT HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 10, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS ON THAT DAY OF A GREAT NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA. THE GROUP HAS DIMINISHED IN AREA, NARROWED, AND LENGTHENED OUT BY MAY 11, CONSISTS OF TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS ON MAY 12, HAS SCATTERED AGAIN BY MAY 13, IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 14, AND CONSISTS OF TWO SPOTS ON MAY 15. 2211 18910504 18910516 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO OR THREE SMALL COMPANIONS DURING THE GREATER PART OF THIS COURSE. 2212 18910504 18910504 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2213 18910505 18910505 A SMALL CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, PRECEDING GROUP 2210. 2214 18910508 18910514 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 13. 2215 18910511 18910512 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, WHICH HAVE SEPARTED BY MAY 12. 2215A18910510 THE PHOTOGRAPH ON 1891, MAY 10, WAS TAKEN DURING A TRANSIT OF MERCURY, AND SHOWS THE PLANET ON THE SUN'S DISK. 2216 18910512 18910522 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 16. 2217 18910512 18910523 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH, FROM TIME TO TIME, A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 2218 18910516 18910516 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2219 18910517 18910528 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON MAY 18 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. THE GROUP, AS A WHOLE, RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND A IN PARTICULAR, THE EXTENSION IN THE CASE OF A TAKING PLACE PRINCIPALLY ON THE FOLLOWING SIDE. A IS MEASURED IN THREE PORTIONS ON MAY 22, THOUGH IT HAS NOT COMPLETELY DIVIDED UP UNTIL MAY 23. OF THESE PORTIONS,B,C,AND D, THE LEADER B, IS A REGULAR SPOT,AND IS THE ONLY REMAINING SPOT ON MAY 27 AND 28. 2220 18910518 18910529 A REGULAR SPOT. 2221 18910519 18910529 A REGULAR SPOT, A, ON MAY 19, 20, AND 21. A HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED IN SIZE BY MAY 22, AND TWO NEW SPOTS ARE SEEN FOLLOWING IT AT SOME LITTLE DISTANCE. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 23, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS ON MAY 23 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS OF SEVERAL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER MAY 24. 2222 18910522 18910525 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON MAY 22. NOT SEEN ON MAY 23 AND 24. TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 25. 2223 18910524 18910524 A SMALL SPOT. 2224 18910524 18910604 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING IT. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER MAY 28. 2225 18910525 18910527 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS, A AND B. 2226 18910527 18910528 THREE SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MAY 28. 2227 18910527 18910527 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER. 2228 18910528 18910531 A SINGLE SPOT WHICH RAPIDLY DECREASES. 2229 18910530 18910605 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS, WHICH FORM JUST IN ADVANCE OF GROUP 2228. THE GROUP TENDS TO LENGTHEN OUT, AND IS COMPOSED OF FOUR SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT LINE ON JUNE 3. THESE HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 4, EXCEPT TWO SMALL SPOTS AT THE FOLLOWING END OF THE GROUP. 2230 18910601 18910603 A SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 1; TWO SMALL SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER ON JUNE 2; ONLY THE FOLLOWING MEMBER OF THE PAIR REMAINS BY JUNE 3. 2231 18910601 18910611 A REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED ON JUNE 3 AND 4 BY A VERY SMALL SPOT, AND FOLLOWED BY TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN PRECEDING A ON JUNE 6 AND 7. THIS PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY JUNE 8, AND THE LEADING SPOT, B, HAS BECOME A CONSIDERABLE REGULAR SPOT BY JUNE 9. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 11. 2232 18910602 18910602 A SMALL SPOT. 2233 18910602 18910602 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2234 18910610 18910616 TWO SPOTS OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE ON JUNE 10. THE PRECEDING SPOT OF THE PAIR HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT, A, BY JUNE 11. THE FOLLOWING SPOT TENDS TO BREAK UP AND DIMINISH IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY JUNE 14. 2235 18910610 18910620 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, ON JUNE 10 AND 11. BY JUNE 12 A FRESH OUTBREAK HAS TAKEN PLACE N P OF THE SPOT FIRST SEEN, AND A REGULAR SPOT, A, IS SEEN FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALLER SPOTS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER JUNE 16, AND ONLY A REMAINS ON JUNE 18. A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ARE ALL THAT REMAIN ON JUNE 19 AND 20. 2236 18910613 18910623 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JUNE 13. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE AND COMPLEXITY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND BECOMES AN EXTENSIVE GROUP COMPOSED OF A GREAT NUMBER OF SPOTS IRREGULARLY DISPOSED, BUT NOT WIDELY SCATTERED. THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER JUNE 17, BUT HAS REVIVED AGAIN BY JUNE 22. IT CONSISTS ON JUNE 22 AND 23, PRINCIPALLY OF TWO WELL-DEFINED SPOTS. 2237 18910614 18910626 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 23. 2238 18910615 18910616 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 15. THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE AN ENORMOUS EXTENSION BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 2239 18910616 18910621 TWO SPOTS OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE, A AND B. ONLY B REMAINS BY JUNE 18. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY JUNE 19, AND ARE MEASURED WITH B. THESE HAVE SEPARATED MORE WIDELY BY JUNE 20, AND ARE MEASURED INDIVIDUALLY. 2240 18910617 18910620 A SMALL GROUP FORMING JUST IN ADVANCE OF GROUP 2235. TWO SPOTS ON JUNE 17, AND 19, THREE ON JUNE 18, ONE ON JUNE 20. 2241 18910620 18910622 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, A AND B. BOTH ARE DARK DISTINCT SPOTS ON JUNE 21. ONLY A REMAINS BY JUNE 22. 2242 18910620 18910701 ONE LARGE SPOT, A, OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE ON JUNE 21. THREE NUCLEI ARE SEEN IN THE SPOT ON JUNE 22, WHICH HAS BECOME REGULAR IN OUTLINE BY JUNE 23. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON THIS DAY, AND ANOTHER ON JUNE 27. A REMAINS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT UNTIL IT REACHES THE WEST LIMB ON JULY 1. 2243 18910621 18910629 ONE SPOT OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE ON JUNE 21. TWO SHORT STREAMS OF SMALL SPOTS AT RIGHT ANGLES TO EACH OTHER, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, ON JUNE 22. ON JUNE 23 THE GROUP CONSISTS ALMOST ENTIRELY OF ONE STREAM, OF WHICH A IS THE LAST MEMBER. ONE SMALL SPOT ALONE LYING TO THE NORTH. ON JUNE 24 THE GROUP CONSIST OF TWO CONVERGING STREAMS, THE SOUTHERN OF WHICH IS MUCH LARGER. ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A SINGLE STREAM WHICH DECREASES FROM DAY TO DAY. 2244 18910621 18910703 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A FEW SMALL FAINT COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON JUNE 25, 26, AND 30, AND JULY 1 AND 2. 2245 18910622 18910625 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 22, OF WHICH ONLY THE PRECEEDING, A, IS SEEN ON JUNE 23. A SECOND, B, IS SEEN ON JUNE 24 WITH A , BUT A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 25. 2246 18910622 18910625 A SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 22. TWO SMALL SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER ON JUNE 23. ONE SMALL SPOT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2247 18910624 18910703 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON JUNE 24. TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN FOLLOWING A ON JUNE 25. THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE A VERY REMARKABLE EXPANSION BY JUNE 26, AND CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, CONNECTED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS DECREASE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND A AND B ALONE REMAIN BY JULY 2. 2248 18910625 18910701 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 25, WHICH HAVE FORMED N OF GROUP 2247. THE GROUP VARIES MUCH IN FORM AND SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. ITS GENERAL APPEARANCE IS THAT OF A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS PARALLEL TO GROUP 2247. 2249 18910625 18910627 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON JUNE 25. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JUNE 26 AND 27. 2250 18910627 18910628 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2251 18910628 18910705 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JUNE 29. A HAS DECREASED BY JUNE 30, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 2. BUT SOME NEW SPOTS HAVE FORMED NEAR IT BY JULY 1, AND THESE FORM A STRAIGHT STREAM, CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. ONE OF THESE SPOTS, B, ON JULY 4 AND 5, IS SMALL BUT DARK AND REGULAR SPOT. 2252 18910701 18910712 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A COMPANION ON JULY 1. A SECOND REGULAR SPOT, B, FOLLOWS A ON JULY 2 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR THEM ON JULY 6 AND 7. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN IN ADVANCE OF A ON JULY 8. THESE INCREASE IN NUMBER AND SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND HAVE FORMED A CONSIDERABLE STREAM BY JULY 10, THE LEADER OF WHICH, C, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. B DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER JULY 3. 2253 18910706 18910706 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. N F OF GROUP 2252. 2254 18910706 18910717 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE LARGE REGULAR SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP DECREASES RAPIDLY AFTER PASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY JULY 15. 2255 18910708 18910720 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS PARALLEL TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR.THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE SMALLERSPOTS WHICH FOLLOW IT DECREASE AS THE GROUP CROSSES THEDISK. 2256 18910709 18910721 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS NORTH OF GROUP 2255, AND PARALLEL TO IT AND TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT; THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP, B, IS ALSO A LARGE SPOT, BUT HAS BROKEN UP INTO A COMPACT CLUSTER OFSMALL SPOTS BY JULY 14. THESE ARE STILL MEASURED AS ONE UNTIL JULY 14. ON JULY 15 AND 16 THE CLUSTER B IS MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS. 2257 18910711 18910714 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON JULY 11. THE GROUP IS NOTSEEN ON JULY 12. TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, A AND B, ON JULY 13, WHICH ARE JOINED BY A THIRD ON JULY 14. 2258 18910712 18910724 A VERY FINE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A MUCH SMALLER REGULAR SPOT, B, CLOSE TO IT, AND OCCASIONALLY TWO OR THREEVERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A BECOMES MUCH ELONGATED AFTERPASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON JULY 18, AND B HAS COME INTO ACTUAL CONTACT WITH A BY JULY 19, THOUGH IT IS STILL MEASURED SEPARATELY. A NUMBER OF SPOTS BEGIN TO FORM ON ALL SIDES OF A, ABOUT JULY 18, AND OF THESE TWO, C AND D, HAVE BECOME LARGE REGULAR SPOTS BY JULY 22, WHILST THE SMALLER SPOTS DECREASE AND HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY JULY 23. 2259 18910713 18910725 A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 2258 AT A LITTLE DISTANCE. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST, AND IS ALARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE RELATION OF THE GROUP TO GROUP2258 SUGGESTS THAT BOTH FORMED PART OF ONE GREAT STREAMWHEN IN THE FURTHER HEMISPHERE, BUT THAT THE SMALL MIDDLE SPOTS HAD ALREADY DIED OUT BEFORE THE GROUP CAME INTO VIEW AT THE EAST LIMB. A IS MUCH ELONGATED ON JULY 19, AND HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS BY JULY 20. THE GROUP CONSISTS PRINCIPALLY OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C, ON JULY 21 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 2260 18910714 18910715 A SMALL SPOT, A, FORMING SOUTH OF GROUP 2257. A SECOND SPOT IS SEEN NEAR A ON JULY 15. 2261 18910717 18910718 A VERY SMALL SPOT FORMING NORTH OF GROUP 2255. 2262 18910719 18910719 A SMALL FAINT SPOT PRECEEDING GROUP 2258. 2263 18910719 18910723 A SMALL GROUP CONSISTING PRINCIPALLY OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 22, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE SPOT. IT HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 23. 2264 18910719 18910720 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2265 18910719 18910729 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 22. THE GROUP IS REDUCED TO A SINGLE SMALL SPOT BY JULY 25, BUT HAS INCREASED IN SIZE AGAIN BY JULY 26, FORMING AN ELLIPTICAL RING OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP FORMS A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS ON JULY 27, OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, B AND C, ARE THE LARGEST. 2266 18910720 18910725 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL DISTANT COMPANION IS SEEN N.P., ON JULY 21, A CLOSE COMPANION ON JULY 22. A DECREASES IN SIZE AFTER JULY 22. 2267 18910721 18910725 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED UNTIL JULY 24 AND 25, WHEN THE GROUP IS SEEN AS A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2268 18910725 18910725 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2269 18910727 18910801 A SPOT OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE WHICH DECREASES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON AUG. 1. 2270 18910727 18910802 A COMPACT CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A, ON JULY 27. A SECOND SIMILAR BUT SMALLER CLUSTER, B, PRECEDES IT ON JULY 28 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. BOTH CLUSTERS HAVE BROKEN UP BY JULY 31. 2271 18910801 18910809 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON AUG. 1. THE GROUP UNDERGOES A RAPID EXTENSION ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, FORMING A CLOSE CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS VERY IRREGULARLY ARRANGED BY AUG. 3 AND 4. THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE GROUP TENDS TO COALESCE, AND A VERY LARGE ELONGATED SPOT, A, HAS BEEN FORMED BY AUG. 6, THE MAJOR AXIS OF WHICH IS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 2272 18910801 18910810 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH HAS BROKEN UP INTO A SCATTERED GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS BY AUG. 5. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUG. 9. 2273 18910803 18910805 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON AUG. 3. A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 4. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS AUG. 5. 2274 18910803 18910803 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2275 18910803 18910815 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION, B, IS SEEN NEAR A ON AUG. 4 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. B HAS BROKEN UP BY AUG 7, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY AUG. 8. 2276 18910804 18910804 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2277 18910804 18910816 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON AUG 11. THE NUCLEUS OF A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY AUG. 7, AND THE ENTIRE SPOT IS DIVIDED INTO TWO INDEPENDENT SPOTS BY AUG. 7, BUT THEY ARE STILL MEASURED AS ONE SPOT. 2278 18910804 18910816 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, CLOSLEY FOLLOWED BY A FAINT IRREGULAR SPOT, B, APPARENTLY PART OF THE PENUMBRA OF A, RECENTLY SEPARATED FROM IT. B DECREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUG 7. OTHER SMALL FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD OF A ON AUG. 10 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2279 18910808 18910808 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2280 18910808 18910808 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2281 18910808 18910808 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2282 18910810 18910810 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2283 18910810 18910815 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, NONE OF WHICH PERSIST MORE THAN THREE DAYS. 2284 18910815 18910819 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS ON AUG. 15, PRECEDED BY A FEW FAINT COMPANIONS. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND HAS BECOME A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS BY AUG. 17, OF WHICH B AND C, THE FIRST AND LAST, ARE TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS. 2285 18910816 18910820 A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED ON MOST OCCASIONS AS ONE SPOT. 2286 18910816 18910827 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUG. 17, 19, 20 OR 24. THE GROUP ATTAINS A VERY CONSIDERABLE AREA AFTER ITS THIRD REVIVAL ON AUG. 25. 2287 18910822 18910822 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2288 18910822 18910822 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2289 18910822 18910830 A COMPACT GROUP OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. THE GROUP IS IRREGULAR IN OUTLINE AND ARRANGEMENT. 2290 18910824 18910825 A SMALL SPOT. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON AUG. 25. 2291 18910825 18910828 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. THIS HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 28, BUT ANOTHER SPOT IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON THAT DAY. 2292 18910826 18910829 A SUCCESSION OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NONE OF WHICH ARE SEEN ON A SECOND DAY. NO SPOT IS SEEN ON AUG. 27. 2293 18910829 18910910 A STREAM OF SPOTS ON AUG. 29, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST, ARE MUCH THE LARGEST. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, A AND B EXPANDING INTO VERY LARGE SPOTS, SHOWING A GREAT ABUNDANCE OF DETAIL. CONTRARY TO THE USUAL COURSE OF EVENTS IN STREAM GROUPS, THE SPOTS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE GROUP TEND TO INCREASE, AND A LARGE SPOT, C HAS FORMED BY SEPT. 4. B ALSO, AND NOT THE LEADER A, INCREASES IN SIZE UP TILL SEPT. 5. BOTH B AND C HAVE BROKEN UP BY SEPT. 8, AND THE ENTIRE GROUP, EXCEPT A, IS ONE CLOSE CLUSTER OF LARGE SPOTS. THESE ARE ALL MEASURED TOGETHER ON SEPT. 8, BUT IN FOUR SECTIONS ON SEPT. 9, AND IN TWO ON SEPT. 10. 2294 18910831 18910913 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LATTER HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY SEPT. 8. ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON SEPT. 10 AND 11. 2295 18910902 18910911 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 2293 AND 2294, BUT SOMEWHAT FURTHER TO THE SOUTH. IT CHANGES MUCH FROM DAY TO DAY AS TO THE NUMBER AND SIZE OF ITS COMPONENT SPOTS, BUT IT ALWAYS PRESENTS THE APPEARANCE OF A NUMBER OF SOMEWHAT SMALL SPOTS CLOSELY CROWDED TOGETHER. 2296 18910902 18910902 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2297 18910902 18910915 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SOMETIMES SEEN NEAR IT. 2298 18910903 18910914 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LATTER HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY SEPT. 9; BUT A HAS AGAIN TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON SEPT. 10. 2299 18910910 18910922 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SOMETIMES SEEN NEAR IT. 2300 18910913 18910913 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2301 18910913 18910921 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SINUOUS STREAM. THE GROUP ON SEPT. 16 CONSISTS OF A, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, AND B, A LARGE SPOT OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE FORMED BY THE COALESCENCE OF THE SMALL SPOTS IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP. B HAS BROKEN UP BY SEPT. 17 INTO A STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH C AND D, THE FIRST AND LAST, ARE THE LARGEST; D IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 2302 18910916 18910926 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE LEADING SPOT, A, HAS BECOME A LARGE WELL-DEFINED SPOT WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS BY SEPT. 19, AND BY SEPT. 21 IT HAS BECOME QUITE REGULAR IN FORM. TWO OF THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE BECOME LARGE AND WELL-DEFINED. B BY SEPT. 21, C BY SEPT. 22; AND THE GROUP CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF THESE THREE SPOTS UNTIL IT REACHES THE WEST LIMB. 2303 18910920 18910921 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2304 18910922 18910922 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2305 18910922 18910923 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2306 18910924 18911005 A LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM. A HAS BROKEN UP BY SEPT. 28 INTO AN IRREGULAR GROUP, MOSTLY OF SMALL SPOTS. IT TENDS TO DISINTEGRATE FURTHER, AND THE ENTIRE GROUP TO DIMINISH ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2307 18910925 18910927 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SCATTERED SPOTS. 2308 18910927 18911007 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SCATTERED SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCT. 1 AND OCT. 3. 2309 18910928 18910929 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2310 18910928 18911010 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH GRADUALLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. IT HAS DIVIDED BY OCT. 4 INTO TWO PORTIONS, WHICH ARE, HOWEVER, STILL MEASURED TOGETHER, AND BY OCT. 7 IT HAS COMPLETELY BROKEN UP AND FORMS A COMPACT CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN PRECEDING A ON OCT. 8. 2311 18910928 18911010 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON OCT. 3 AND 9. 2312 18911001 18911001 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2313 18911001 18911012 A COMPACT CLUSTER COMPRISING MANY SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL. THE NUMBER AND SIZE OF THE COMPONENT SPOTS UNDERGO MANY CHANGES, BUT THE GENERAL CHARACTER OF THE GROUP REMAINS THE SAME. 2314 18911002 18911002 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2315 18911002 18911014 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS. ON OCT. 4 IT CONSISTS OF FOUR SPOTS, A, B, C AND D, OF WHICH TWO, A AND C, ARE LARGE AND REGULAR, B INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT D HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 7. ON OCT. 8 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP CONSISTS ALMOST ENTIRELY OF THE THREE SPOTS, A, B, AND C; ALL OF WHICH ARE LARGE, WITH WELL-DEFINED NUCLEI, AND SHOWING MUCH DETAIL. 2316 18911004 18911006 A SMALL BUT WELL-DEFINED SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON OCT. 4. 2317 18911006 18911014 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS, FOLLOWING GROUP 2313 AT A LITTLE DISTANCE. THE COMPONENT PARTS ARE IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED AND UNDERGO FREQUENT CHANGES IN NUMBER AND SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCT. 12 EXCEPT AS AN EXCEEDINGLY FAINT AND ILL-DEFINED PATCH, TOO FAINT AND ILL-DEFINED TO BE REGARDED AS A SPOT. 2318 18911007 18911019 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON OCT. 9 AND 11. 2319 18911008 18911011 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 2320 18911012 18911014 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 12, THREE ON OCT. 13, TWO ON OCT. 14. 2321 18911012 18911017 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND ON OCT. 15 IS SEEN ALONE. 2322 18911012 18911014 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2323 18911014 18911020 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION CLOSE TO IT. THE TWO ARE USUALLY MEASURED TOGETHER. A DIMINISHES RAPIDLY FROM DAY TO DAY. 2324 18911016 18911017 A PAIR OF SMALL WELL-DEFINED SPOTS, A AND B, BETWEEN GROUPS 2321 AND 2318. 2325 18911016 18911025 TWO SMALL WELL-DEFINED SPOTS ON OCT. 16. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND CONSISTS ON OCT. 18 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS OF TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. B DIMINISHES AFTER OCT. 21, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT.25. 2326 18911019 18911019 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2327 18911019 18911021 A SMALL SPOT. 2328 18911022 18911102 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A NUMBER OF SPOTS APPEAR SUDDENLY NORTH OF A ON OCT 26. THIS NORTHERN PART OF THE GROUP FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, B AND C, ARE THE LARGEST. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT 29, AND C HAS BROKEN UP BY OCT 30, AND THE LAST OF THE NORTHERN SPOTS HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT 31. TWO SPOTS ARE SEEN SOUTH OF A ON OCT. 31. 2329 18911023 18911030 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON OCT 24 AND 30. 2330 18911024 18911027 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON OCT 26. 2331 18911025 18911025 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2332 18911025 18911025 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER AND MEASURED AS ONE. 2333 18911025 18911026 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2334 18911027 18911029 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2335 18911028 18911102 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, MEASURED AS ONE ON OCT 28, BUT SEPARATELY ON OCT 29. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCT 30 AND 31, BUT HAS REAPPEARED, VERY GREATLY ENLARGED, BY NOV. 1. THE LEADER, A, IS A FAIRLY LARGE SPOT, WITH A DARK NUCLEUS. 2336 18911029 18911102 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER ON OCT 29. THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND BECOMES A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM OF SPOTS. 2337 18911030 18911101 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOV 1, BUT A THIRD SPOT, C, HAS APPEARED. 2338 18911030 18911106 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON OCT 30 AND 31. ANOTHER SPOT, A, IS SEEN SOUTH OF THESE ON NOV. 1, AND THE MORE NORTHERN SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 3, LEAVING ONLY A, WHICH IS SOMETIMES FOLLOWED BY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 2339 18911102 18911110 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER ON NOV. 2. THE GROUP EXPANDS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS INTO A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. 2340 18911103 18911108 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM FORMING NORTH OF GROUP 2339. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOV 6 AND 7. 2341 18911104 18911113 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM, THE LEADER OF WHICH, A, IS A SMALL BUT WELL-DEFINED SPOT. 2342 18911106 18911106 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2343 18911107 18911112 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON NOV. 7 AND 8. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOV 9, BUT TWO WELL-DEFINED SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE APPEARED BY NOV 10. 2344 18911108 18911108 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2345 18911111 18911120 A REGULAR SPOT, A, ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT FROM NOV. 16-18. 2346 18911114 18911114 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2347 18911114 18911115 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2348 18911114 18911124 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON NOV. 14. IT HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED IN SIZE BY NOV. 15, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 16. THE GROUP IS SEEN AGAIN ON NOV. 17, AND CONSISTS OF A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, WHICH UNDERGO CONSIDERABLE CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. 2349 18911115 18911127 A VERY FINE GROUP CONSISTING OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE UNTIL IT HAS PASSED THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON NOV. 21. THE LEADER, A, UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES FROM NOV. 20 TO NOV. 25, AND HAS PARTIALLY BROKEN UP ON NOV. 23, BUT HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT BY NOV. 25. A IS SEEN AS A NOTCH ON THE LIMB ON NOV. 26. 2350 18911118 18911129 A LARGE SPOT, A, NEARLY REGULAR IN OUTLINE, WITH A TENDENCY TO THROW OFF SMALL SPOTS ON THE S.F. SIDE. SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN PRECEDING A ON NOV. 20 AND 21. TWO SMALL SPOTS, B AND C, ARE SEEN N.F. A NOV. 18-21. C MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE PASSING B. 2351 18911120 18911125 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED ON NOV 20. THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS ON NOVEMBER 24, BUT A FRESH SPOT IS SEEN FOLLOWING IT ON NOV. 25. 2352 18911120 18911127 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS, FORMING NORTH OF GROUP 2349, AND SOUTH OF GROUP 2352. IT HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED IN SIZE BY NOV. 21, BUT HAS INCREASED AGAIN BY NOV. 23, AND FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM ON NOV. 24, THE LEADER, A, BEING A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE SMALLER FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 26. A IS SEEN AS A NOTCH ON THE LIMB ON NOV. 26. 2353 18911121 18911121 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2354 18911128 18911204 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. ONLY TWO SPOTS, A AND B, REMAIN ON NOV. 30. SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SOMETIMES SEEN FOLLOWING A AND B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 3, BUT IS REPRESENTED ON DEC. 4 BY SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2355 18911128 18911204 A SMALL SPOT WITH A DARK NUCLEUS. 2356 18911204 18911205 A SMALL VERY DARK SPOT A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DEC. 4, WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 5. 2357 18911205 18911207 TWO SMALL VERY DARK SPOTS, A AND B, WITH ONE VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DEC. 5 AND ANOTHER ON DEC. 6. ONLY B AND A SMALL COMPANION ARE SEEN ON DEC. 7. 2358 18911206 18911210 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 2359 18911206 189112 6 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2360 18911206 18911213 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DEC. 7, AND WITH TWO ON DEC. 8. 2361 18911208 189112 8 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2362 18911208 18911209 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2363 18911211 18911211 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER. 2364 18911212 18911224 A REGULAR SPOT. 2365 18911213 18911223 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS PRECEDING GROUP 2364 ON DEC. 13. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS ON DEC. 14. THE GROUP HAS BEGUN TO REVIVE BY DEC. 15, AND ON DEC. 17 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS IT CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. THESE HAVE DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 22. 2366 18911215 18911215 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2367 18911215 18911216 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 2364 AND 2365, BUT A LITTLE FURTHER SOUTH. 2368 18911216 18911218 TWO SPOTS WITH WELL-DEFINED NUCLEI ON DEC. 16. THE SPOTS HAVE BECOME VERY FAINT AND HAVE BROKEN UP BY DEC. 17. ONLY ONE SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY DEC. 18. 2369 18911219 18911230 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST AND BEST DEFINED. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AFTER DEC. 21, A BECOMING A VERY LARGE SPOT OF NEARLY CIRCULAR SHAPE. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C, BY DEC. 27, BUT THESE ARE MEASURED AS ONE ON DEC. 29. A IS SEEN AS A NOTCH ON THE LIMB ON DEC. 30. 2370 18911221 18911230 A SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 21. OTHER SPOTS APPEAR ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER DEC. 23, AND ONLY A AND B REMAIN AFTER DEC. 26. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DEC. 29, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD ON DEC. 30. 2371 18911226 18911228 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON DEC. 26. TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON DEC. 27 AND 28. 2372 18911227 18920102 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS UNDERGO MANY CHANGES. 2373 18911228 18911230 TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE W LIMB. 2374 18911229 18911229 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2375 18911229 18911230 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2376 18911229 18920110 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, SHOWING GREAT DETAIL, AND FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS. 2377 18911230 18920103 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON DEC. 30, WHICH INCREASE IN SIZE UP TO JAN. 1, AFTER WHICH THEY DIMINISH AGAIN. THEY ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON JAN. 3. 2378 18911230 18911230 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2379 18911230 18920105 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON DEC. 30. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY DEC. 31, AND CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALLER SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 2380 18911230 18920107 A DISTURBED REGION PRECEDING GROUP 2376 IN WHICH SHORT-LIVED SMALL SPOTS APPEAR. 2381 18911231 18911231 TWO SMALL SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER. 2382 18911231 18920105 A SMALL SPOT APPEARING NEAR GROUP 2376, TO THE NORTH. 2383 18911231 18920109 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 2376, ON DEC. 31. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND ON JAN. 3 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS, AND BY JAN. 4 A SECOND SPOT, B, HAS FORMED IN THE NORTH OF A. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER THIS, AND ON JAN. 8 B ALONE REMAINS. 2384 18911231 18920112 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JAN. 8. 2385 18920101 18920105 A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER ON JAN. 1. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY EXTENDED BY JAN. 3, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, BEING THE LARGEST. THE SMALLER SPOTS TEND TO DIE OUT. 2386 18920101 18920102 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2387 18920102 18920105 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 2. ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2388 18920105 18920105 A SMALL SPOT SURROUNDED BY BRIGHT FACULAE. 2388*18920106 18920106 A SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 2384. 2389 18920108 18920109 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM SOUTH OF GROUP 2384. THE FIRST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST. 2390 18920108 18920121 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, ACCOMPANIED BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. A GREAT EXTENSION OF THE GROUP HAS TAKEN PLACE BY JAN. 18, A SECOND REGULAR SPOT, B, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS HAVING FORMED CLOSE TO A AND FOLLOWING IT. THIS SECOND OUTBURST IS OF CONSIDERABLY GREATER AREA THAN THE ORIGINAL GROUP. IT INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND ON JAN. 19 AND LATER, CONSISTS PRINCIPALLY OF TWO VERY LARGE SPOTS, B AND C, BOTH OF WHICH SHOW A RAPID PROPER MOTION. THIS GROUP BECAME, AT ITS NEXT RETURN (GROUP 2421), THE LARGEST YET OBSERVED AT GREENWICH. 2391 18920109 18920109 A SMALL SPOT TO THE NORTH OF GROUP 2390. 2392 18920111 18920111 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2393 18920112 18920112 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2394 18920113 18920117 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED. 2395 18920113 18920123 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER PASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND A ALONE REMAINS ON JAN. 20 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2396 18920114 18920119 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 2397 18920114 18920126 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A. IT DECREASES IN SIZE AND FINALLY BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VERY FAINT COMPANIONS; A REMAINS ALONE AFTER JAN. 23. 2398 18920115 18920116 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON JAN. 15. A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, APPARENTLY NOT THE SAME, IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON JAN. 16. 2399 18920115 18920127 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A. IT THROWS OFF SMALL PORTIONS DAY BY DAY, AND HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT BY JAN. 24. 2400 18920115 18920127 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A LONG STREAM. THE SPOTS UNDERGO CONSIDERABLE CHANGES, BOTH IN NUMBER AND SIZE, THE GROUP TENDING TO INCREASE IN AREA. A GREAT OUTBURST HAS OCCURRED BY JAN. 22 IN THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE GROUP. 2401 18920118 18920118 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2402 18920118 18920123 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, IN A SHORT STREAM. 2403 18920118 18920124 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JAN. 18, N P GROUP 2400. THE GROUP SLIGHTLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2404 18920118 18920121 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, A. TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON JAN. 19. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JAN. 20. 2405 18920118 18920129 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 2406 18920120 18920122 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS ON JAN. 20. ONLY THE LAST SPOT OF THE STREAM REMAINS BY JAN. 22. 2407 18920121 18920121 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS FIRST SEEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 2408 18920122 18920203 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A REMAINS ALONE BY FEB. 2. 2409 18920123 18920123 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2410 18920123 18920123 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER. 2411 18920126 18920201 A SOMEWHAT SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JAN. 29 AND FEB. 1. 2412 18920128 18920208 A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 2413 18920130 18920202 A SINGLE SPOT. 2414 18920131 18920131 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2415 18920131 18920203 A STRAGGLING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, NORTH OF GROUP 2412. 2416 18920131 18920210 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SMALLER SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. A HAS BROKEN UP BY FEB. 8. 2417 18920201 18920208 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 5. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON FEB. 6. 2418 18920203 18920206 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS FORMING SOUTH OF THE REGION OCCUPIED BY GROUP 2413. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS NEVER LAST MORE THAN TWO DAYS. THE FOUR GROUPS 2413, 2416, 2417, AND 2418, LIE VERY CLOSE TOGETHER, AND ALMOST TOUCH EACH OTHER. 2419 18920205 18920211 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND ON FEB. 8 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS CONSISTS PRINCIPALLY OF THREE SPOTS, A, B, ANDC, OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST, A AND C, SOON BECOME LARGE. 2420 18920205 18920208 TWO SPOTS ON FEB. 5. ONE HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 7 AND THE OTHER DIMINISHES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2421 18920205 18920218 THE LARGEST GROUP AS YET PHOTOGRAPHED AT GREENWICH. IT CONSISTS OF AN EXCEEDINGLY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, SURROUNDED ON ALL SIDES BY MANY SMALLER SPOTS. THE GROUP UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES. FOR AN ACCOUNT OF THE MAGNETIC DISTURBANCES TAKING PLACE DURING THE APPEARANCE OF THIS GROUP, SEE "MONTHLY NOTICES," VOL. LII, P. 354. 2422 18920206 18920206 A SMALL SPOT. 2423 18920206 18920206 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 2424 18920206 18920206 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2425 18920210 18920219 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM ON FEB. 10. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND CONSISTS ON FEB. 13 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS OF TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A AND B, AND A FEW SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THESE, BUT SONEWHAT FURTHER NORTH. A AND B BOTH DIVIDE INTO TWO SPOTS LATER, BUT ARE STILL MEASURED AS ONE. THE GROUP LIES CLOSE TO GROUP 2421, NF. 2426 18920211 18920216 A FEW SCATTERED SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS MUCH LARGER ON FEB. 13 THAN ON THE PRECEDING OR SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2427 18920213 18920222 A REGULAR SPOT. THIS GROUP IS THE FIRST IN A SUCCESSION OF FIVE GROUPS FOLLOWING EACH OTHER IN A STRAIGHT LINE SLIGHTLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. THE OTHER FOUR ARE GROUPS 2428, 2431, AND 2432. 2428 18920213 18920223 A LARGE SPOT, A, ON FEB. 13 AND 15. THE SPOT LENGTHENS OUT AND HAS BROKEN UP INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS BY FEB. 16, THE LEADER BEING THE LARGEST. 2429 18920213 18920225 A GREAT NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. THESE HAVE MOSTLY COALESCED TO FORM ONE VERY LARGE SPOT, A, BY FEB. 19. 2430 18920215 18920221 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. ON FEB. 18 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP CONSISTS OF TWO SPOTS, A AND B. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON FEB. 19. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 21. 2431 18920215 18920226 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON FEB. 16. 2432 18920216 18920219 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 2433 18920218 18920221 AN ISOLATED SPOT. 2434 18920219 18920228 THREE SPOTS, A, B, AND C, ON FEB. 20 AND 21. B HAS BROKEN UP BY FEB. 22, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT. ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP CONSISTS ALMOST ENTIRELY OF THE TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND C, WHICH APPROACH EACH OTHER AND ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON FEB. 26 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2435 18920223 18920225 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON FEB. 23. TWO OTHER SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN PRECEDING A ON FEB. 24; ONLY ONE OF THESE REMAINS ON FEB. 25. 2436 18920228 18920302 A REGULAR SPOT. 2437 18920229 18920229 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2438 18920304 18920305 A PAIR OF LARGE SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS DISAPPEARED AT THE WEST LIMB BY MARCH 5. 2439 18920304 18920306 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. 2440 18920304 18920317 RETURN OF THE GREAT GROUP, NO. 2421. A STRAGGLING IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL. ON MARCH 7 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A FINE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 2441 18920306 18920307 A FEW VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS. 2442 18920309 18920315 A REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 2442*18920314 18920314 A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY ON ONE PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN ON THIS DAY. 2443 18920310 18920312 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, N P GROUP 2439. THE FIRST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST. 2444 18920310 18920315 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 2442 AT A LITTLE DISTANCE. IT IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 14. 2445 18920312 18920317 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON MARCH 12. OTHER SMALLER SPOTS HAVE APPEARED, S AND F, BY MARCH 14. 2445*18920312 18920312 A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY ON ONE PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN ON THIS DAY. 2446 18920315 18920317 A SMALL SPOT, N F GROUP 2439. A SECOND SPOT IS SEEN ON MARCH 16; THE FIRST SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 17. 2447 18920316 18920324 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LAST SPOT, A, HAS BECOME MUCH LARGER THAN THE REST BY MARCH 20. THE PRECEDING SPOTS DIMINISH AND HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 24. 2448 18920316 18920327 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 21 AND 22. 2449 18920317 18920318 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY-APPARENTLY NOT THE SAME ON THE TWO DAYS. 2450 18920317 18920318 SOME SMALL FAINT SPOTS, S OF GROUP 2447. 2451 18920317 18920329 A FINE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, SHOWING MUCH DETAIL ON MARECH 17 AND 18. IT TENDS TO THROW OFF SMALL SPOTS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND HAS BROKEN UP, PRINCIPALLY INTO A PAIR OF LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C, BY MARCH 22; C DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 27. 2452 18920318 18920318 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2453 18920319 18920323 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 21 AND 23. 2454 18920320 18920402 A VERY LARGE AND FINE STREAM OF SPOTS COVERING A GREAT AREA. THE COMPONENT SPOTS ARE VERY VARIOUS SHAPES, AND RATHER WIDELY SCATTERED. THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS ARE A, B, C, D, AND E, AND OF THESE E IS MUCH THE LARGEST. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 28. E UNDERGOES YET FURTHER CHANGES AND HAS COMPLETELY BROKEN UP BY MARCH 31 AND BY APRIL 1 ONLY ITS LARGEST FRAGMENT, H, REMAINS OF THE ENTIRE GROUP. 2455 18920321 18920321 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2456 18920321 18920323 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2457 18920323 18920326 SEVERAL VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM ON MARCH 23. ONE FAINT SPOT ON MARCH 24, 25, AND 26. 2458 18920324 18920327 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 24: TWO ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2459 18920324 18920331 A LARGE SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 26 AND 27; AND TWO ON MARCH 28. ON MARCH 29 THE GROUP CONSIST OF THREE SMALL SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER IN A STRAIGHT LINE. 2460 18920326 18920326 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2461 18920328 18920331 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 2462 18920328 18920401 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST. 2463 18920327 18920331 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 27. NO SPOT IS SEEN ON MARCH 30. A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 31. 2464 18920329 18920329 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2465 18920330 18920403 A STRAGGLING GROUP COMPOSED OF A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL. 2466 18920331 18920411 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 2467 18920331 18920404 A SPOT MUCH SMALLER THAN GROUP 2466A, FOLLOWING IT AT A DISTANCE OF ABOUT 10 DEGREES. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS FOLLOW IT ON APRIL 4. 2468 18920401 18920406 A SPOT, A, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C, BY APRIL 2. ONLY B IS SEEN ON APRIL 3. 2469 18920402 18920402 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2470 18920402 18920402 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2471 18920402 18920402 A SMALL SPOT. 2472 18920402 18920402 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2472*18920402 18920402 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, SF GROUP 2472. 2473 18920403 18920405 A SMALL CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2474 18920404 18920404 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2475 18920404 18920404 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2476 18920406 18920408 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 2477 18920406 18920413 A REGULAR SPOT, A. ONE VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON APRIL 9, AND A PAIR ON APRIL 11. 2478 18920406 18920415 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE APART; B HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 10, BUT A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IS SEEN FOLLOWING A ON APRIL 11 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THIS STREAM EXTENDS AS FAR FROM A AS THE FORMER POSITION OF B; A ALONE REMAINS ON APRIL 14 AND 15. THE GROUP FOLLOWS GROUP 2477. 2479 18920410 18920418 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST, AND REMAINS ALONE ON APRIL 15, AND AFTER APRIL 16. 2480 18920410 18920414 A GROUP SIMILAR TO BUT SLIGHTLY SMALLER THAN GROUP 2479, FOLLOWING IT N. 2481 18920411 18920423 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A COMPANION N P ON APRIL 12 AND 13. A SECOND COMPANION IS ALSO SEEN F ON APRIL 14, AND BOTH COMPANIONS HAVE BROKEN UP IN A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS BY APRIL 15; A REMAINS ALONE BY APRIL 17. 2482 18920413 18920415 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 2483 18920415 18920420 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT ON APRIL 15. TWO SPOTS ON APRIL 16. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER ON APRIL 17 AND 18. THE CLUSTER HAS BECOME A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM BY APRIL 19. 2484 18920416 18920425 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE LAST SPOT, B, HAS ALSO BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY APRIL 18. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS HAVE NEARLY ALL DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 21. A FRESH STREAM PROCEEDING FROM B AND AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE FIRST HAS APPEARED BY APRIL 22. THE ENTIRE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP INTO A LONG IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM BY APRIL 24. ONE LARGE SPOT ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 25. 2485 18920417 18920426 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 17 AND 18. A FINE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 19. THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BY APRIL 21, AND BY APRIL 22 THE GROUP CONSISTS PRINCIPALLY OF A PAIR OF LARGE SPOTS, A AND B. THE ENTIRE GROUP SEEMS TO HAVE COALESCED TO FORM ONE VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT UPON APRIL 24, BUT A AND B ARE AGAIN SEEN SEPARATELY ON APRIL 25. 2486 18920418 18920429 A VERY LARGE AND COMPLICATED STREAM OF SPOTS. 2487 18920421 18920426 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARRANGED IN A HORSE-SHOE FORM, AND FOLLOWING GROUP 2484. THE MORE NORTHERN BRANCH IS THE SMALLER AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 25; THE MORE SOUTHERN BRANCH TENDS TO INCREASE IN SIZE, AND CONSISTS, ON APRIL 22 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, OF A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. B HAS BROKEN UP BY APRIL 26. 2488 18920421 18920421 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2489 18920422 18920422 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2490 18920422 18920430 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A SPOT, A, IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM HAS BECOME A LARGE SPOT BY APRIL 25. A ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 29. 2491 18920423 18920430 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, FOLLOWING GROUP 2486. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY IN SIZE, AND ON APRIL 28, THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE, REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS GRADUALLY DIE OUT, AND BY APRIL 30 A REMAINS ALONE. 2492 18920423 18920505 A LARGE, REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION CLOSE TO IT ON APRIL 29, 30, AND MAY 2 AND 3. 2493 18920423 18920424 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2494 18920423 18920501 AN IRREGULAR GROUP WHICH HAS BECOME A STREAM BY APRIL 25. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS GRADUALLY DIMINISH, AND HAVE DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 28. ON APRIL 29, SEVERAL NEW SPOTS ARE SEEN ROUND THE LEADING SPOT, A. ON MAY 1, A ALONE IS SEEN. 2495 18920424 18920427 AN EXTREMELY FAINT IRREGULAR SPOT. 2496 18920427 18920510 A LARGE SPOT, A, IS SEEN ON APRIL 27. A SMALLER SPOT, B, APPEARS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAY. SEVERAL VERY FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM. ON MAY 3 THE NUCLEUS OF A SHOWS SIGNS OF DIVIDING, AND ON MAY 4 A HAS BECOME TWO DISTINCT SPOTS. THESE DIMINISH IN SIZE AND ARE BOTH SMALLER THAN B. ON MAY 10 B ALONE IS SEEN ON THE WEST LIMB. 2496*18920505 18920505 A VERY SMALL SPOT, S F GROUP 2496. 2497 18920430 18920509 AN IRREGULAR GROUP OF SPOTS ON APRIL 30, WHICH APPEARS AS A STREAM ON MAY 1. THE SPOTS SHOW A TENDENCY TO COALESCE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND FORM AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS LINE ON MAY 4. BY MAY 6 THEY HAVE FORMED TWO STREAMS AT RIGHT ANGLES TO EACH OTHER, BOTH BEING INCLINED TO THE SUNS EQUATOR. THE GROUP AGAIN BECOMES IRREGULAR IN FORM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND ONLY TWO FAINT SPOTS ARE VISIBLE ON THE WEST LIMB ON MAY 9. 2498 18920501 18920512 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MAY 11. 2499 18920502 18920503 A PAIR OF SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MAY 2. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON MAY 3. 2500 18920502 18920506 A DISTURBED REGION. THREE SPOTS ARE SEEN FOLLOWING EACH OTHER ON MAY 4, BUT HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MAY 5. A FRESH SPOT IS SEEN ON THAT DATE, AND A NEW STREAM HAS FORMED BY MAY 6. 2501 18920503 18920503 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2502 18920504 18920508 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, WHICH HAVE BECOME REGULAR BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON MAY 5. 2503 18920504 18920507 A PAIR OF FAINT SPOTS WHICH GRADUALLY SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON MAY 7. 2504 18920504 18920505 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2505 18920505 18920505 A PAIR OF FAINT SPOTS. 2506 18920505 18920505 A FAINT SPOT. 2507 18920505 18920516 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN CLOSE TO IT ON MAY 10-11. THE TWO ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON MAY 11. 2508 18920506 18920506 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2509 18920507 18920507 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2509*18920508 18920508 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2510 18920509 18920509 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2511 18920509 18920509 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2512 18920509 18920515 A FAINT IRREGULAR SPOT. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN FOLLOWING IT ON MAY 12. 2513 18920510 18920511 TWO FAINT SPOTS ON MAY 10 ONE HAS DISAPPEARED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 2514 18920510 18920510 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. 2515 18920510 18920522 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FROM WHICH A CONSIDERABLE PORTION HAS SEPARATED BY MAY 12. THIS GRADUALLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER MAY 13. A REGULAR SPOT, B, FOLLOWS AT A DISTANCE OF ABOUT 10. THE NUCLEUS OF A BY MAY 14 HAS THROWN OUT TWO PROCESSES IN A SOUTH-EASTERLY DIRECTION, WHICH ENLARGE AND SEPARATE FROM THE PARENT SPOT. A HAS BECOME THREE DISTINCT SPOTS BY MAY 18. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A DURING ITS PROGRESS. 2516 18920512 18920515 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING GROUP. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 15. THIS SPOT SHOWS A LARGE PROPER MOTION IN BOTH LONGITUDE AND LATITUDE. 2517 18920512 18920512 A SMALL SPOT. 2518 18920514 18920514 A SMALL SPOT. 2519 18920514 18920525 A STREAM COMPOSED OF THREE LARGE SPOTS, A, B, C, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS UNDERGONE CONSIDERABLE CHANGE, AND B HAS DIVIDED BY MAY 16. BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY A HAS ALSO BROKEN UP INTO SMALLER SPOTS. TWO SPOTS ALONE REMAIN ON MAY 20, BUT BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY A FRESH OUTBURST HAS TAKEN PLACE. TWO LARGE SPOTS LEAD, AND ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON MAY 22 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2520 18920515 18920515 A FAINT SPOT. 2521 18920516 18920517 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2522 18920517 18920518 A STREAM OF FAINT SPOTS SOUTH OF GROUP 2519. 2523 18920518 18920518 A VERY SMALL SPOT SURROUNDED BY EXTENSIVE FACULAE. 2524 18920518 18920530 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A. SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON MAY 20. A HAS BECOME GREATLY ELONGATED IN THE DIRECTION OF MOTION BY MAY 23, AND ITS NUCLEUS HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO BY MAY 24. A HAS BECOME TWO DISTINCT SPOTS BY MAY 25. BOTH THE PRINCIPAL AND THE ATTENDANT SPOTS DECREASE IN SIZE AFTER THIS DATE. 2525 18920519 18920521 A GROUP OF FAINT SPOTS THAT INCREASE IN SIZE AS THEY APPROACH THE WEST LIMB. 2526 18920520 18920525 ONE SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON MAY 20. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, FRESH SPOTS HAVING FORMED, AND ON MAY 23 IT CONSISTS OF TWO STREAMS IN THE SHAPE OF A V WITH THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, A, AT THE VERTEX. ON THIS DAY A SHOWS SIGNS OF DIVIDING INTO TWO. THE GROUP HAS BECOME SMALL AND IRREGULAR IN OUTLINE BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 2527 18920520 18920520 TWO FAINT SPOTS. 2528 18920520 18920528 A REGULAR SPOT. 2529 18920521 18920523 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING GROUP. 2530 18920521 18920528 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON MAY 21. THE TWO LARGEST OF THESE, A AND B, HAVE GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND HAVE BECOME VERY LARGE SPOTS CONNECTED BY THREE SHORT STREAMS OF SMALL SPOTS. B HAS DIVIDED BY MAY 24 INTO TWO SPOTS, AND UNDERGOES STILL FURTHER DIMINUTION ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 27. 2531 18920521 18920521 A SMALL SPOT. 2532 18920522 18920523 A SMALL GROUP PRECEDING AND CLOSELY CONNECTED WITH GROUP 2530. 2533 18920523 18920525 A REGULAR SPOT. 2534 18920523 18920605 A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR GROUP, COMPOSED CHIEFLY OF THREE LARGE SPOTS, ON MAY 24. THE PRECEDING SPOT, A, IS SEEN ON THE EAST LIMB ON MAY 23,AND B AND C ON THE SUCCEEDING DAY. B AND C HAVE BEGUN TO BREAK UP INTO SMALLER SPOTS BY MAY 25, AND C IS NO LONGER RECOGNISABLE BY JUNE 1. A ALSO HAS SHOWN SIGNS OF DIVISION BY MAY 28, AND UNDERGOES GREAT CHANGES OF FORM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2535 18920525 18920525 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER. 2536 18920525 18920525 A FEW FAINT VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP, FOLLOWING GROUP 2524. 2537 18920525 18920525 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, FOLLOWING GROUP 2528. 2538 18920525 18920528 A FEW FAINT VERY SMALL SPOTS IN TWO CLUSTERS ON MAY 25. THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 26. 2539 18920526 18920603 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 26, A, AND B. A THIRD SMALL SPOT IS SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON MAY 27. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY CHANGED IN APPERANCE BY MAY 28, AND BY MAY 29 HAS BECOME A STREAM CONSISTING OF THREE WELL-DEFINED GROUPS, EACH CONSISTING OF SEVERAL SPOTS. THIS ARRANGEMENT IS RETAINED UNTIL THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE GROUP AT THE WEST LIMB. 2540 18920526 18920529 A FAINT GROUP MEASURED AS ONE SPOT ON MAY 27. 2541 18920527 18920604 A FAINT IRREGULAR GROUP OF SPOTS. 2542 18920527 18920604 A VERY IRREGULAR GROUP WHICH HAS FORMED INTO A STREAM BY JUNE 3. 2543 18920529 18920610 A REGULAR SPOT A. A COMPANION, B, IS SEEN ON MAY 30 AND THE THREE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A SECOND SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON MAY 31. 2544 18920531 18950605 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. A COMPANION IS SEEN ON JUNE 1 AND 2. 2545 18920601 18920608 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. A COMPANION IS SEEN ON JUNE 6. 2546 18920605 18920606 A SMALL GROUP OF THREE SPOTS, TWO OF WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON JUNE 6. 2547 18920605 18920607 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION. 2548 18920605 18920614 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES ATTENDED BY A COMPANION. 2549 18920606 18920609 A SMALL SPOT. 2550 18920607 18920618 A REGULAR SPOT, A, ON JUNE 7 AND 8. IT HAS LARGELY BROKEN UP BY JUNE 9 AND 10, AND SEVERAL FRESH SPOTS HAVE APPEARED. BY JUNE 11, THE GROUP CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE SPOTS,A AND B, UNITED AND SURROUNDED BY SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS. THIS ARRANGEMENT OF THE GROUP IS MAINTAINED UNTIL ITS DISAPPEARANCE AT THE WEST LIMB. 2551 18920608 18920609 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY LITTLE COMPANION ON JUNE 8. 2552 18920609 18920609 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2553 18920609 18920609 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2554 18920609 18920617 A REGULAR SPOT, A. IT HAS BROKEN UP BY JUNE 13, AND FORMS A STREAM ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISHED, AND ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON JUNE 17. 2555 18920610 18920611 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2556 18920610 18920612 A SMALL IRREGULAR SPOT. 2557 18920611 18920611 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2558 18920611 18920611 A SMALL SPOT. 2559 18920612 18920623 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION FROM JUNE 12-16. A GREAT CHANGE HAS OCCURRED BY JUNE 17, AND THE GROUP ON THAT DAY PRESENTS THE APPEARANCE OF A FINE STREAM, CONSISTING OF THREE LARGE SPOTS. A, B, AND C, AND A FOURTH, AN IRREGULAR SPOT, SOUTH OF THE LEADER,A. THE SPOTS OF THE STREAM HAVE ALMOST COALESEED BY JUNE 20, AND FORM A S-SHAPED FIGURE, AND THE GROUP IS MEASURED AS ONE SPOT ON THAT DATE. 2560 18920613 18920622 A SMALL SCATTERED GROUP FROM JUNE 13 TO JUNE 15. THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM ON JUNE 16, THREE OF WHICH, THOUGH SMALL, ARE WELL DEFINED. THERE HAS BEEN A VERY GREAT INCREASE IN THE SIZE OF THE SPOTS BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. THEY STILL FORM A STREAM, OF WHICH THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST. 2561 18920613 18920623 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. THE FORM OF THE GROUP CHANGES CONSIDERABLY FROM DAY TO DAY. 2562 18920613 18920625 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B. A THE PRECEDING SPOT APPEARS DISTINCTLY DOUBLE BY JUNE 15, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE. B IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE GROUP APPEARS AS A STREAM OF SPOTS UNTIL JUNE 20. THE PRECEDING SPOTS GRADUALLY DIMINISH, AND ARE NOT SEEN AFTER THAT DATE. B REMAINS ALONE ON JUNE 22 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2563 18920614 18920614 A SMALL SPOT. 2564 18920616 18920626 A VERY FINE WELL-DEFINED GROUP. THE LEADING SPOT, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT ON JUNE 16, 17 AND 18; THE FOLLOWING SPOT, B, IS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY A BRIDGE. A HAS BECOME DIFFUSED AND IS MUCH ELONGATED IN THE DIRECTION OF MOTION BY JUNE 19, AND IS FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE LAST. THE GROUP CONSISTS OF THREE LARGE SPOTS WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON JUNE 21. DURING THE SUCCEEDING DAYS A DIVIDES INTO TWO SPOTS C AND D, AND D LIKEWISE BREAKS UP INTO TWO SPOTS, E AND F. 2565 18920618 18920629 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FROM WHOSE NORTH SIDE SMALL SPOTS CONTINUALLY BREAK OFF. TWO FRESH SPOTS, B, AND C, ARE SEEN CONSIDERABLY IN ADVANCE OF A ON JUNE 21. B MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITITUDE UNTIL JUNE 28, WHEN IS HAS DISAPPEARED. A AND C CONTINUALLY APPROACH UNTIL JUNE 2} AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, WHEN THEY ARE MEASURED TOGETHER AS ONE SPOT, D. 2566 18920610 18920610 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2567 18920619 18920629 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM. A BREAKS UP ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND ITS SOUTH DIVISION HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT, B, BY JUNE 21. THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER JUNE 26. 2568 18920620 18920620 A SMALL SPOT. 2569 18920622 18920625 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 2570 18920623 18920623 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2571 18920623 18920626 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2572 18920624 18920627 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON JUNE 24 AND 25. A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 26 AND 27. 2573 18920624 18920629 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON JUNE 27 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2574 18920625 18920630 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JUNE 25. ONLY A REMAINS BY JUNE 26. 2575 18920627 18920629 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 27, TWO ON JUNE 28, ONE ON JUNE 29. 2576 18920628 18920704 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH ON JUNE 28 FORM AN ELLIPTICAL RING. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS BY JUNE 30. FRESH SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY JULY 1, BUT HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BUT ONE A, BY JULY 3. 2577 18920628 18920701 AN IRREGULAR GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 30. 2578 18920630 18920711 A STRAGGLING GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 2577. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JULY 7, AND FORMS A CONSIDERABLE STREAM, OF WHICH THE LARGEST SPOT, A, IS THE LEADER. 2578*18920708 18920708 TWO SMALL SPOTS S P GROUP 2578. 2579 18920701 18920701 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2580 18920703 18920714 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT,A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A HAS BECOME A COMPOSITE SPOT BY JULY 6, ITS NUCLEUS BEING BROKEN UP BY BRIDGES. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS GRADUALLY DIMINISH ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A REMAINS ALONE AND IS A REGULAR SPOT ON JULY 12 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. IT IS VISIBLE AS A DEEP INDENTATION ON THE WEST LIMB ON JULY 15. 2581 18920704 18920716 THREE LARGE SPOTS A, B, C. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ROUND THESE SPOTS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. B AND C SHOW SIGNS OF DIVIDING ON JUNE 6, AND HAVE EACH SEPARATED INTO TWO DISTINCT SPOTS BY JUNE 9, AND BREAK UP FURTHER ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A REMAINS AS A REGULAR SPOT THROUGHOUT ITS COURSE. 2582 18920707 18920713 A SMALL IRREGULAR GROUP. THE SPOTS FORM A SHORT CURVED STREAM ON JULY 12 AND 13. IT IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 10. 2583 18920707 18920719 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED. THE NUCLEUS OF A IS OFTEN CROSSED BY BRIDGES. 2584 18920708 18920720 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JULY 9. 2585 18920712 18920712 A SMALL SPOT. 2586 18920715 18920726 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL SPOT, B, FOLLOWS IT ON JULY 16, BUT IS NOT SEEN AFTER JULY 23. A SECOND SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON JULY 22. 2587 18920717 18920720 TWO SPOTS, A AND B. BOTH ARE DOUBLE ON JULY 18, BUT THE COMPONENTS ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON JULY 17, 18 AND 19. 2588 18920717 18920722 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON JULY 17 AND 18. THE STREAM IS CURVED LIKE A SICKLE ON JULY 19. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DECREASE IN SIZE, AND ONLY THE LEADING SPOT, A, REMAINS BY JULY 21. 2589 18920717 18920723 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP ON JULY 17. IT CONSISTS OF TWO STREAMS AT RIGHT ANGLES TO EACH OTHER ON JULY 21. OF THESE, ONLY THE STREAM PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR IS SEEN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2590 18920718 18920718 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2591 18920721 18920721 A SMALL SPOT. 2592 18920721 18920721 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER. 2593 18920721 18920721 A SMALL SPOT. 2594 18920721 18920727 A SMALL IRREGULAR GROUP FORMING A STRAIGHT STREAM ON JULY 24 OF WHICH A IS THE LEADER. 2595 18920722 18920726 A SMALL SPOT A, FOLLOWED ON JULY 23 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 2596 18920723 18920727 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING GROUP. IT CONSISTS OF TWO SMALL CLUSTERS, EACH OF WHICH IS MEASURED AS ONE SPOT ON JULY 25. THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 26. 2597 18920725 18920805 A SMALL FAINT SPOT NOT SEEN ON JULY 28. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON JULY 29. THE GROUP HASGREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY AUGUST 2. 2598 18920725 18920805 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS WHICH GRADUALY DIMINISH. 2599 18920725 18920806 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH ELONGATED NUCLEUS. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON JULY 29 AND 31. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS, B AND C, ON THE DAY BEFORE ITS DISAPPEARANCE AT THE WEST LIMB. 2600 18920726 18920806 A REGULAR SPOT, A ACCOMPANIED OCCASIONALLY BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 2601 18920726 18920805 A REGULAR SPOT, A ACCOMPANIED OCCASIONALLY BY SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. THERE IS A BRIDGE ACROSS THE NUCLEUS ON JULY 29, WHICH DURING THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS SHOWS SIGNS OF DIVIDING INTO TWO SPOTS. THE DIVISIONS IN THE NUCLEUS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 2. 2602 18920726 18920807 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THESE HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 5. 2603 18920727 18920727 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2604 18920727 18920730 A SMALL IRREGULAR SPOT ON JULY 27 AND 28. TWO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JULY 29 AND 30. 2605 18920727 18920731 AN IRREGULAR GROUP OF A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING A STREAM WHICH CHANGES IN SHAPE FROM DAY TO DAY. 2606 18920727 18920730 AN IRREGULAR GROUP OF A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS S OF GROUP 2601. 2607 18920728 18920728 A VERY SMALL SPOT AND THE FIRST IS LEFT ALONE BY AUGUST 4. 2608 18920728 18920804 A STRAGGLING GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS N OF GROUPS 2598 AND 2599. ONLY THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS REMAIN BY AUGUST 3. 2609 18920729 18920801 AN IRREGULAR GROUP OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2610 18920729 18920729 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2611 18920730 18920811 TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, ARE SEEN ON JULY 30. BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, C, AND A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, D, HAVE ALSO COME INTO VIEW FORMING WITH A AND B A FINE COMPLEX STREAM. ALL THE SPOTS EXCEPT D GRADUALLY DIMINISH AND DISAPPEAR, B BEING NO LONGER RECOGNISABLE BY AUG. 7, AND A AND C BY AUG. 8. D ALONE REMAINS ON AUG. 10 AND 11. 2612 18920731 18920811 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 2613 18920801 18920801 A SMALL SPOT. 2614 18920805 18920810 A SMALL SPOT. 2615 18920805 18920816 A LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOUND SPOT, A, ACCOMPANIED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS FROM AUG. 9 TO AUG. 12. A UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGES OF SHAPE. 2616 18920806 18920806 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2617 18920806 18920816 AN ILL-DEFINED SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON AUG. 7 AND 8. 2618 18920807 18920813 TWO ILL DEFINED SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS BROKEN UP, AND THE WHOLE GROUP FORMS A SHORT STREAM ON AUG.10. A HAS ALSO BROKEN UP BY AUG. 13. 2619 18920808 18920809 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON AUG. 8. ONLY A IS SEEN ON AUG. 9. 2620 18920808 18920817 A SMALL IRREGULAR GROUP ON AUG. 8. TWO SPOTS A AND B, ARE SEEN ON AUG. 9, AND THE GROUP FORMS A STRAGGLING STREAM BY AUG. 10. THE PRECEEDING SPOT B, DIMINISHES AND DISAPPEARS, AND A, ALONE IS SEEN ON AUG. 13 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2621 18920810 18920817 AN IRREGULAR GROUP. ON AUG. 12 IT FORMS A STREAM OF TWO SPOTS, A AND B, CONNECTED BY CURVING LINES OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THESE CONNECTIONS ARE VERY APPARENT ON AUG. 13, WHEN THE WHOLE FORMS AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM. A ALONE IS SEEN ON AUG. 17. 2622 18920810 18920822 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON AUG. 15 AND THE THREE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2623 18920811 18920822 A REGULAR SPOT. 2624 18920813 18920813 A SMALL IRREGULAR GROUP. 2625 18920813 18920815 A SMALL SPOT. 2626 18920813 18920824 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THIS STREAM CURVES TOWARDS GROUP 2628, BUT GRADUALLY DIMINISHES AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 23, LEAVING A ALONE. A THROWS OFF SMALL SPOTS FROM TIME TO TIME AND GRADUALLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE UNTIL ITS DISAPPEARANCE AT THE WEST LIMB. 2627 18920813 18920826 A FINE STREAM CONSISTING OF FOUR LARGE SPOTS, A, B, C, AND D, AND SEVERAL SMALLER SPOTS. B, C, AND D, HAVE BEGUN TO BREAK UP BY AUG. 17. THERE ARE NOW THREE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, C, AND E, AND THE GROUP FORMS TWO STREAMS INCLINED AT AN OBTUSE ANGLE. 2628 18920815 18920823 AN IRREGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP LIES CLOSE TO GROUP 2626. IT UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY AUG. 21. 2629 18920816 18920816 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2630 18920817 18920818 A SMALL SPOT. 2631 18920818 18920818 A SMALL SPOT. 2632 18920818 18920818 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2633 18920820 18920820 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2634 18920820 18920823 A SMALL SPOT ON AUG. 20. A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2635 18920820 18920826 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. IT HAS EXTENDED INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM BY AUG. 24 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2636 18920820 18920901 A REGULAR SPOT, A. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN N OF A, ON AUG. 24, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND ONE IS SEEN, P, ON AUG. 31. 2637 18920821 18920822 ONE SMALL SPOT ON AUG. 21, TWO ON AUG. 22. 2638 18920822 18920829 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, THE LEADER, A, BEING THE LARGEST. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH, AND BY AUG. 25 A ALONE IS LEFT. A SMALL FOLLOWER IS SEEN ON AUG. 27. 2639 18920825 18920903 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUG.25. A STREAM ON AUG. 26 AND 27. THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL DOTS ON AUG. 28. BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY THE GROUP HAS BECOME MUCH ENLARGED AND FORMS A STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADING AND FINAL SPOTS ARE A AND B. A STILL FURTHER INCREASE HAS TAKEN PLACE ON AUG. 30. B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO LARGE SPOTS. C AND D, BY AUG 31. 2640 18920825 18920828 TWO SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED TOGETHER ON AUG. 25. 2641 18920826 18920827 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2642 18920826 18920827 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2643 18920826 18920908 A REGULAR SPOT, A. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON AUG. 30, 31, AND SEPT. 1 AND 4, AND THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2644 18920827 18920908 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON AUG. 28 AND 29. 2645 18920831 18920831 A SMALL SPOT. 2646 18920831 18920831 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2647 18920901 18920901 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2648 18920901 18920911 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING. A ALONE IS SEEN ON SEPT. 10 AND 11. 2649 18920902 18920908 A SINGLE SPOT. A, ON SEPT. 2 AND 3. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN FOLLOWING IT ON SEPT. 4 AND 5. 2650 18920904 18920904 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2651 18920905 18920905 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2652 18920907 18920908 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2653 18920907 18920918 AN IRREGULAR GROUP. ON SEPT. 8 THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, UNDERGOING CONTINUAL CHANGES OF SHAPE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE OTHER SPOTS OF THE GROUP FORM A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING A, AND DIMINISH UNTIL SEPT. 17 AND 18, WHEN ONLY ONE FOLLOWER IS LEFT. 2654 18920908 18920908 A SMALL SPOT. 2655 18920909 18920915 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE A GREAT INCREASE IN AREA BY SEPT. 11, ESPECIALLY AS REGARDS THE LEADER, A. 2656 18920909 18920911 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. 2657 18920910 18920910 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2658 18920910 18920910 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2659 18920910 18920912 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 2660 18920911 18920911 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2661 18920911 18920920 A FEW VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS. WHICH DIMINISH UNTIL SEPT. 14, WHEN THE GROUP IS BARELY VISIBLE. SEVERAL FRESH SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND THE GROUP FORMS A STREAM OF WHICH A IS THE LEADER. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH, AND A ALONE IS SEEN ON SEPT. 19 AND 20. 2662 18920911 18920920 AN IRREGULAR GROUP, OF WHICH A, ON SEPT. 14, IS THE LARGEST SPOT. THE SHAPE OF THE GROUP CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. 2663 18920912 18920912 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2664 18920912 18920912 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2665 18920912 18920912 A SMALL SPOT. 2666 18920914 18920915 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, FOLLOWING GROUP 2653. 2667 18920914 18920915 A VERY SMALL SPOT N OF GROUP 2661. 2668 18920915 18920915 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2669 18920915 18920916 A FAINT IRREGULAR GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING A SPIRAL ON SEPT. 16. 2670 18920915 18920915 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2671 18920917 18920924 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A CURVED STREAM. THE STREAM HAS BECOME STRAIGHT AND HAS DIVIDED INTO THREE DISTINCT CLUSTERS BY SEPT. 22. THESE COME TOGETHER AND BECOME ILL-DEFINED IN APPEARANCE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2672 18920917 18920929 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON SEPT. 20, 22, 25 AND 28. 2673 18920918 18920929 A LARGE IRREGULAR GROUP. THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, A, HAS BROKEN UP BY SEPT. 21, AND ITS FOREMOST DIVISION, B, FORMS THE LEADER OF A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH IN SIZE, AND ONLY B, WITH ONE SMALL COMPANION, REMAINS BY SEPT. 29. 2674 18920923 18920923 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS MEASURED AS ONE. 2675 18920923 18921005 A REGULAR SPOT, A, SEEN ALONE UNTIL SEPT. 29. ON THAT DATE SEVERAL FRESH SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, ARE SEEN TO THE N OF A, AND PERSIST UNTIL OCT. 4. 2676 18920924 18920929 SEVERAL VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP ON SEPT. 24. THE GROUP HAS MUCH INCREASED IN SIZE BY SEPT. 25, AND FORMS A STREAM, A, THE LARGEST SPOT, BEING THE LEADER. THE GROUP HAS DIMINISHED AGAIN BY SEPT. 26, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY SEPT. 28. 2677 18920926 18920926 A SMALL SPOT. 2678 18920926 A SMALL SPOT. 2679 18920926 18921006 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPT. 26, OF WHICH A LEADS. BOTH SPOTS HAVE GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY SEPT. 27 AND 28, AND HAVE BECOME LARGE COMPOUND SPOTS, A BEING THE LARGER. A HAS CONDENSED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY INTO A LARGE SIMPLE SPOT, ALMOST REGULAR IN CHARACTER WITH A WELL-DEFINED CRESCENT-SHAPED NUCLEUS. NUMEROUS ATTENDANT SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A AND B, PRINCIPALLY BETWEEN THEM. 2680 18920926 18921007 A VERY LARGE BUT IRREGULAR GROUP. THERE IS ONE WELL-DEFINED NUCLEUS, A, FROM WHICH ISSUE PENUMBRAL PROCESSES WHICH CONTINUALLY CHANGE FROM DAY TO DAY. THE PROCESSES HAVE MUCH DIMINISHED BY OCT. 3, AND A REMAINS AS A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 2681 18920927 18921009 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, B, PRECEDED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS INCLINED IN A S.W. DIRECTION, WHOSE LEADER IS A. THE PRECEDING SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 3, BUT TWO LARGE IRREGULAR SPOTS ARE SEEN FOLLOWING B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 4, AND B ALONE REMAINS ON OCT. 8 AND 9. 2682 18920929 18921002 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, OF WHICH A IS THE LEADER, PRECEDING GROUP 2679. 2683 18920929 18921004 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH A IS THE LEADER, IN A SHORT STREAM. 2684 18921002 18921009 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON OCT. 2. THE GROUP IS NOT VISIBLE ON OCT. 3. IT HAS BECOME A LONG SCATTERED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY OCT. 5, OF WHICH THE LEADING SPOT, A, HAS BECOME MUCH LARGER BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH AND DISAPPEAR, AND ON OCT. 9 A ALONE IS SEEN. 2685 18921002 18921012 ONE SMALL SPOT, A, ON OCT. 2. THERE HAS BEEN A GREAT OUTBURST, AND THERE ARE THREE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B, AND C, ON THE SUCCEEDING DAY A IS THE LARGEST OF THE THREE AND LIES BETWEEN THE OTHER TWO; B LEADS. A PROCESS IS SEEN ON THE FOLLOWING SIDE OF A ON OCT. 4, WHICH BY OCT. 5 HAS BECOME A DISTINCT SPOT D. A AND B APPROACH EACH OTHER RAPIDLY, AND ULTIMATELY MERGE. THEY ARE MEASURED AS ONE SPOT, E, AFTER OCT. 6. A SPOT, F, HAS BROKEN OFF FROM E BY OCT. 7, BUT E AND F ARE SUBSEQUENTLY MEASURED AS ONE SPOT G. D ALONE REMAINS BY OCT. 12. 2686 18921002 18921002 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2687 18921004 18921010 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 4 AND 5. ONLY ONE VERY FAINT SPOT IS SEEN ON OCT. 6. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED IN SIZE BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. IT FORMS A SHORT STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B ARE THE PRINCIPAL COMPONENTS, UNTIL OCT. 10. 2688 18921004 18921004 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2689 18921004 18921004 TWO SMALL SPOTS SURROUNDED BY DENSE FACULAE. 2690 18921006 18921006 A SMALL SPOT. 2691 18921007 18921007 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2692 18921007 18921007 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2693 18921007 18921007 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2694 18921007 18921018 A SINGLE SPOT, A, ON OCT. 7, 8 AND 9. THERE HAS BEEN A GREAT OUTBURST BY OCT. 10, AND A IS THE LEADER OF A LONG STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE LARGEST. THE STREAM UNDERGOES GREAT CHANGES OF SHAPE. SOMETIMES TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS MERGE, BUT THE RESULTING SPOT RAPIDLY BREAKS UP AGAIN. B HAS BROKEN UP BY OCT. 13, AND A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 16. THE WHOLE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER OCT. 15. 2695 18921008 18921008 A SMALL SPOT. 2696 18921009 18921010 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A SCATTERED GROUP, ENTANGLED IN MUCH DENSE FACULAE, ON OCT. 9. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS BY OCT. 10. 2697 18921010 18921010 A SMALL SPOT. 2698 18921010 18921015 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON BOTH OCT. 10 AND 11, BUT ONLY ONE SPOT IS COMMON TO BOTH DAYS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCT. 12 AND 13, BUT IS SEEN AGAIN ON OCT. 14 AND 15 AS A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 2699 18921011 2700 18921013 18921017 TWO SPOTS ON OCT. 13. THERE HAS BEEN AN OUTBURST BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY; THE SPOTS FORMING A STREAM, OF WHICH A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, IS THE LEADER. 2701 18921014 18921014 A SMALL SPOT. 2702 18921014 18921015 SOME SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN NEARLY THE SAME POSITION AS GROUP 2696. 2703 18921014 18921026 A REGULAR SPOT, A WHICH QUICKLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. OTHER SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, ARE SEEN FOLLOWING IN A SCATTERED STREAM ON OCT. 16 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 19. B, THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP, IS THE LARGEST AND DARKEST FROM OCT. 19 TO 22. C, THE LEADER ON OCT. 20 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, AND ALONE REMAINS BY OCT. 25. 2704 18921015 18921015 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2705 18921016 18921025 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON OCT. 16. THE GROUP DEVELOPES INTO A SCATTERED STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE LEADER, A, IS A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A CLOSE COMPANION, B, ON OCT. 20 TO 24, WHICH IS MEASURED WITH A, OCT. 22 TO 24. 2706 18921017 18921025 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, A, ON OCT. 17. A SECOND, B, IS SEEN PRECEDING IT ON OCT. 18. THE GROUP INCREASES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, A AND B BOTH BECOMING LARGER AND SMALL SPOTS FORMING NEAR THEM. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER OCT. 22, AND ONLY B REMAINS BY OCT. 25. 2707 18921017 18921025 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON OCT. 18. 2708 18921017 18921021 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON OCT. 17. AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER ON OCT. 18 AND 19. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT REMAINS BY OCT. 20. 2709 18921020 18921022 TWO SPOTS, A AND B. A IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 2710 18921021 18921022 THREE SMALL SPOTS, TWO OF WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON OCT. 21. 2711 18921023 18921026 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON OCT. 23. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCT. 24 OR 25. A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT AND A SMALL CLUSTER ON OCT. 26. 2712 18921024 18921024 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2713 18921026 18921028 A PAIR OF SMALL IRREGULAR SPOTS ON OCT. 26. THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP INTO A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED BY OCT. 27. ON OCT. 28 IT CONSISTS OF ONE SPOT, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A CLOSE CLUSTER. 2714 18921026 18921029 A SPOT OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE ON OCT. 26. IT HAS BEGUN TO BREAK UP BY OCT. 27, AND DIMINISHES IN AREA AND DISTINCTNESS DAY BY DAY. 2715 18921026 18921103 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, ON OCT. 26. IT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY, AND THROWS OFF SMALL FRAGMENTS. ON NOV. 1 IN PARTICULAR IT IS SURROUNDED BY A NUMBER OF WIDELY SCATTERED, VERY SMALL SPOTS. THESE HAVE DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 2. A HAS DIMINISHED STILL FURTHER BY NOV. 3, AND IS ACCOMPANIED BY TWO OTHER VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2716 18921026 18921106 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, ON OCT. 27; BY OCT. 28 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS, WHOSE LEADER IS B, HAVE FORMED IN FRONT. A HAS BROKEN UP BY OCT. 30, AND FORMS A LARGE STREAM FOLLOWING B, WHICH IS NOW A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE STREAM UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGES, AND BECOMES ELONGATED IN A DIRECTION PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR. 2717 18921028 18921106 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 28. BOTH HAVE CONSIDERABLY INCREASED AND SEVERAL NEW SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. THE PRECEDING SPOT, A, IS LARGE AND REGULAR. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS FORM A STREAM PARALLEL TO GROUP 2716, AND HAVE DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 2. 2718 18921029 18921101 SEVERAL SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. 2719 18921029 18921103 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON NOV. 2 AND 3. 2720 18921029 18921101 TWO SPOTS ON OCT. 29. BOTH HAVE DIVIDED INTO TWO BY OCT. 31, AND THE SPOTS FORM A CURVED STREAM ON NOV. 1. 2721 18921029 18921101 TWO SMALL SPOTS PRECEDING GROUP 2716 ON OCT. 29, AND SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON OCT. 30 AND 31. ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON NOV. 1. 2722 18921030 18921101 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON OCT. 30 AND 31. TWO SPOTS ON NOV. 1 AND 2. 2723 18921031 18921103 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. 2724 18921101 18921105 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 2725 18921101 18921109 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP, WHICH HAS DEVELOPED INTO A STREAM WITH THE LARGEST SPOT, A, PRECEDING BY NOV. 3. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 6, AND A GRADUALLY DIMINISHES AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON NOV. 8. 2726 18921102 18921113 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON NOV. 2. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND CONSISTS OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH SEVERAL INTERMEDIATE SPOTS FORMING A STREAM. A AND B REMAIN FAIRLY CONSTANT, BUT THE SMALL SPOTS VARY GREATLY IN NUMBER, SIZE, AND POSITION. 2727 18921103 18921103 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2728 18921103 18921104 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 3. A GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 4. 2729 18921103 18921103 A VERY SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 2723. 2730 18921106 18921113 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON NOV. 6; A THIRD SPOT IS SEEN ON NOV. 7. A AND B HAVE BECOME LARGE REGULAR SPOTS BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON NOV. 10. B HAS BROKEN UP BY NOV.12, AND A ALONE REMAINS ON NOV. 13. 2731 18921110 18921111 A SMALL SPOT. 2732 18921110 18921112 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 10 AND 11. ONE SMALL SPOT ON NOV.12. 2733 18921110 18921111 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2733A18921111 N.B.-- THE TIME OF THE INDIAN PHOTOGRAPH ON NOV. 11 SEEMS TO BE WRONGLY GIVEN. IT WOULD APPEAR TO BE DATED TWO HOURS TOO LATE; THE LONGITUDES SHOULD IN THAT CASE BE ALL INCREASED BY 1.1 DEGREES. 2734 18921111 18921116 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. THE SPOTS HAVE BECOME MORE DISTINCT BY NOV. 14. 2735 18921111 18921111 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS MEASURED AS ONE. 2736 18921112 18921121 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER, AND A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING THEM ON NOV. 12. THE GROUP HAS BECOME AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH A SMALL SPOT, A, IS THE LEADER, BY NOV. 13. THE STREAM UNDERGOES THE MOST CONSTANT CHANGES, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY NOV. 21. 2737 18921113 18921125 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, ON NOV. 13. BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY SEVERAL SPOTS HAVE FORMED A STREAM BETWEEN THE LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, AND THE SMALL FOLLOWING SPOT, B. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS FORM AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS CHAIN ON NOV. 17, AND B HAS BECOME LARGER THAN A. B CONTINUES TO INCREASE IN SIZE AND IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT ON NOV. 20 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAY. THE SPOTS IN THE CENTRE OF THE CHAIN DIMINISH, AND BY NOV. 23 A AND B, RESPECTIVELY, ARE THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS OF WHAT ARE NOW TWO DISTINCT GROUPS. 2738 18921114 18921114 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2739 18921116 18921116 A SMALL SPOT. 2740 18921117 18921118 A SMALL IRREGULAR GROUP OF SPOTS. 2741 18921117 18921117 A VERY SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 2736. 2742 18921119 18921122 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. B ALONE IS SEEN ON NOV. 22. 2743 18921120 18921126 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, NOT SEEN ON NOV. 21. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON NOV. 22. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 23, BUT A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR B ON NOV. 26. 2744 18921121 18921121 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2745 18921121 18921202 TWO SPOTS CLOSE TO THE EAST LIMB ON NOV. 21. FOUR LARGE SPOTS A, B, C, D, ON NOV. 22, WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. B AND C ARE COMPOSITE SPOTS ON NOV. 22, BUT C HAS BROKEN UP INTO SEVERAL SMALLER SPOTS BY NOV. 25. THE SPOTS BECOME SCATTERED AND SMALLER ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND B AND D ALONE REMAIN BY NOV. 30. D HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 2. 2746 18921123 18921124 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 23. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY NOV. 24, AND HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALLER SPOT FOLLOWING IT AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE. 2747 18921123 18921203 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP N F OF GROUP 2746. THE GROUP FORMS A STREAM ON NOV. 24, 25, AND 30, BUT CHANGES ITS FORM CONTINUALLY. IT GRADUALLY DIMINSHES, AND ONLY TWO SPOTS REMAIN BY DEC. 1, ONE OF WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 2748 18921124 18921129 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. THE GROUP FORMS A SHORT STREAM, OF WHICH A IS THE LEADER, ON NOV. 26. A ALONE IS SEEN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2749 18921124 18921205 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON NOV. 26, 28, 29, AND 30. 2750 18921125 18921125 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2751 18921125 18921125 A SMALL SPOT. 2752 18921125 18921202 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 2753 18921126 18921126 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2754 18921126 18921126 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2755 18921126 18921203 A GROUP FOLLOWING GROUP 2752. A FEW SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH A IS THE LEADER, IN A SHORT STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES, A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 1. A LARGER SPOT, B, HAS FORMED IN THE CENTRE OF THE STREAM BY NOV. 30, AND LEADS THE GROUP ON DEC. 1. 2756 18921127 18921127 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2757 18921127 18921208 A LARGE BUT IRREGULAR GROUP. A, THE NORTH PRECEDING SPOT, REMAINS DISTINCT AND REGULAR THROUGHOUT THE APPEARANCE OF THE GROUP. THE REMAINDER OF THE GROUP CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH CONTINUALLY CHANGES ITS SHAPE, AND IS MEASURED AS SEVERAL SPOTS. ON DEC. 3 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A VERY IRREGULAR STREAM, THE LAST SPOT OF WHICH IS THE LARGEST. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2758 18921129 18921129 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 2749. 2759 18921129 18921208 A REGULAR SPOT. 2760 18921129 18921210 A REGULAR SPOT, A. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON DEC. 2 AND 3. 2761 18921130 18921130 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2762 18921130 18921210 A REGULAR SPOT; A. A VERY FAINT COMPANION IS SEEN ON DEC. 4. A NUMBER OF SCATTERED FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON DEC. 9, MOST OF WHICH HAVE AGAIN DISAPPEARED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 2763 18921130 18921206 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH FAINT COMPANIONS ON DEC. 1 AND 2. THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS BY DEC. 4. 2764 18921201 18921205 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH COMPANIONS ON DEC. 2 AND 3. 2765 18921202 18921202 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2766 18921202 18921205 A SMALL SPOT. A COMPANION IS SEEN ON DEC. 3. 2767 18921202 189212 3 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 2762, ON DEC. 2. TWO SPOTS, WHICH ARE MEASURED AS ONE, ON DEC. 3. 2768 18921202 18921211 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH THREE SMALL COMPANIONS ON DEC. 3 AND ON DEC. 8. 2769 18921202 18921208 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON DEC. 3, 4, 5, AND 8. 2770 18921202 18921212 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, MEASURED AS ONE SPOT ON DEC. 2. TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN N P OF B ON DEC. 9, AND ONE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON DEC. 10. 2771 18921203 18921203 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2772 18921203 18921206 A GROUP OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON DEC. 3. THE GROUP FORMS A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2773 18921203 18921212 TWO SMALL SPOTS MEASURED AS ONE SPOT, A, ON DEC. 3. THE GROUP HAS LARGELY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND CONSISTS OF THREE SPOTS, A, B, AND C, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. B HAS BECOME A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY DEC. 4. SMALL SPOTS CONTINUALLY BREAK OFF FROM THE FOLLOWING SIDE OF A, WHICH IS NOT SO LARGE AS B. A AND B CONTINUE TO MOVE AWAY FROM EACH OTHER, AND THE CONNECTING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS DIMINISH IN SIZE ON DEC. 4 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 6. 2774 18921204 18921205 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. A COMPANION SPOT IS SEEN ON DEC. 4. 2775 18921204 18921210 A SUDDEN OUTBURST CONSISTING OF A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST, ARE THE LARGEST. B HAS COMPLETELY BROKEN UP BY DEC. 7, AND A LONG CURVED STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING A IS SEEN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAY. THE PRECEDING SPOT, A, ALONE IS LEFT BY DEC. 10. 2776 18921204 18921209 A REGULAR SPOT, A. SMALL FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE SEEN ON DEC. 5-6; 8 AND 9. A STREAM OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON DEC. 9. 2777 18921204 18921215 TWO SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, ARE SEEN FROM DEC. 4 TO DEC. 8. ANOTHER SMALL SPOT, C, IS SEEN ON DEC. 9, WHICH HAS BECOME A VERY LONG NARROW SPOT BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS BREAK OFF FROM IT, AND BY DEC. 11 IT HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. ITS COMPANIONS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 13. 2778 18921206 18921217 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOR THE FIRST THREE DAYS. ON DEC. 9 A LONG CURVED STREAM IN WHICH SPOTS A,B,C MAY BE DISTINGUISHED; A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 10, AND C BY DEC. 13. THE SPOTS ARE VERY IRREGULAR IN SHAPE ON DEC. 12, ONE SPOT, D, BEING NEARLY IN THE FORM OF A SEMICIRCLE. B HAS DISAPPEARED AT THE WEST LIMB BY DEC. 17, D ALONE REMAINS. 2779 18921207 18921210 A REGULAR SPOT, A, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 2778. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON DEC. 9 AND 10. 2780 18921208 18921214 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A VERY IRREGULAR GROUP. THE POSITION AND NUMBER OF THE SPOTS VARY CONTINUALLY. 2781 18921209 18921212 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT ON DEC. 9. THERE HAS BEEN A CONSIDERABLE OUTBURST BY DEC. 10, AND THE GROUP FORMS A STREAM OF CLOSELY AGGREGATED SMALL SPOTS, MANY OF WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON DEC. 10 AND 12. THE GROUP FORMS AN INDENTATION ON THE WEST LIMB ON DEC. 12. 2782 18921209 18921218 A REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A SMALL SPOT PRECEDES IT ON DEC. 15 AND 17. 2783 18921216 18921220 A STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ARE A AND B. B IS NOT SEEN ON DEC. 20. 2784 18921217 18921217 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2785 18921218 18921228 A VERY SMALL SPOT. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DEC.19 AND 20. A FRESH OUTBURST HAS OCCURRED BY DEC. 21, AND THE GROUP HAS BECOME AN IRREGULAR STREAM, WHOSE LEADING SPOT IS A, BY DEC. 23. THE STREAM HAS BECOME STRAIGHT AND REGULAR BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. A ALONE IS SEEN ON DEC. 28. 2786 18921220 18921223 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 20. THE NUMBER OF SPOTSVARY FROM DAY TO DAY. 2787 18921221 18930101 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, AND ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS FORMING A LINE NEARLY PERPENDICULAR TO THE EQUATOR. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE (LENGTH) BY DEC. 24. A REMAINS UNCHANGED, BUT B HAS DISAPPEARED AND FRESH SPOTS HAVE APPEARED, SO THAT THE GROUP FORMS A VERY LONG IRREGULAR STREAM INCLINED AT A LARGE ANGLE TO THE DIRECTION OF MOTION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, C, IS SF OF A, FORMED BY DEC. 27. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS DIMINSH ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A THIRD SPOT, N P OF A, IS SEEN ON JAN. 1. 2788 18921222 18921223 A SMALL FAINT SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 2787. 2789 18921223 18921224 A FEW SMALL SPOTS FORMING A STREAM. THE LARGEST SPOT, A IS THE LAST. 2790 18921224 18921226 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT, A, ON DEC. 24. A HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY DEC. 25, AND TWO COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON THAT DAY. 2791 18921224 18921229 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH A IS THE FIRST, AND B THE LAST, IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. THE GROUP HAS BECOME A STRAIGHT STREAM BY DEC. 27. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH AND A ALONE REMAINS BY DEC. 29. 2792 18921224 18930105 TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, ON DEC. 24. A THIRD REGULAR SPOT, C, FOLLOWS ON DEC. 25, WITH NUMEROUS OUTLYING SPOTS. B BECOMES IRREGULAR IN SHAPE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND MOVES UP TO A, AND BY DEC. 28 HAS BECOME A CONFUSED NEBULOUS MASS ATTACHED TO THE FOLLOWING SIDE OF A, WHICH IS VERY LARGE AND REGULAR. THE SMALL SPOTS SURROUNDING A SEEM TO BECOME ABSORBED IN IT, THOSE SURROUNDING C TO DIE OUT. A AND C ALONE REMAIN BY JAN. 2. ONE SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON JAN. 4. 2793 18921225 18921228 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SCATTERED IRREGULAR GROUP N P OF GROUP 2787. ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON DEC. 26. 2794 18921228 18930104 TWO SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. TWO COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON JAN. 1. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. B ALONE IS LEFT BY JAN. 3. 2795 18921228 18930108 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SCATTERED IRREGULAR GROUP ON DEC. 28. THE NUMBER AND POSITION OF THE MEMBERS OF THE GROUP UNDERGO CONSIDERABLE CHANGES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2796 18921229 18930105 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. A SECOND SPOT, B, IS SEEN BY JAN. 2, AND A AND B ARE MEASURED AS ONE SPOT ON JAN. 3. TWO OTHER COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON JAN. 4. 2797 18921230 18921230 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2798 18921231 18921231 A VERY FAINT GROUP. 2799 18921231 18930108 A SCATTERED GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 31. THE LEADING SPOT, A, HAS INCREASED CONSIDERABLY BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. THE OTHER SPOTS REMAIN SMALL AND IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED. A SMALL SPOT, B, HAS APPEARED N P OF A BY JAN. 5. A ALONE REMAINS BY JAN. 8. 2800 18921231 18930104 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST. B IS THE LARGEST SPOT ON JAN. 1. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 2, AND B ALONE REMAINS. 2801 18921231 18930101 A GROUP OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2802 18930101 18930101 A FAINT IRREGULAR SPOT. 2803 18930101 18930103 TWO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JAN. 1, A THIRD SPOT ON JAN. 2, ONE SPOT ONLY ON JAN. 3. 2804 18930101 18930102 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON JAN. 1. TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON JAN. 2. 2805 18930102 18930103 A SMALL SPOT. 2806 18930102 18930109 A REGULAR SPOT. 2807 18930102 18930102 A SMALL SPOT SURROUNDED BY FACULAE. 2808 18930102 18930112 A SINGLE SPOT, A, CLOSE TO THE EAST LIMB ON JAN. 2. A SECOND SPOT HAS APPEARED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. BY JAN. 5 THERE IS A STREAM CONSISTING OF FOUR SPOTS, A, B, AND TWO OTHERS, NEARLY EQUAL IN SIZE AND SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. DURING THE SUCCEEDING DAYS B GROWS LARGER THAN A AND APPROACHES IT. THEY ARE MEASURED AS ONE SPOT ON JAN. 9 AND 10. A AND B HAVE DIED OUT BY JAN. 11, BUT TWO OTHER FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN. 2809 18930104 18930107 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON JAN. 7. 2810 18930105 18930105 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2811 18930106 18930110 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 6. A STREAM BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, HAS FORMED BY JAN. 9, WHICH IS FOLLOWED BY ANOTHER REGULAR SPOT, B. A THIRD BUT SMALLER SPOT ALSO FOLLOWS ON JAN. 9. 2812 18930107 18930111 A SMALL FAINT GROUP S F OF 2811. ONLY ONE SPOT IS VISIBLE ON JAN. 8, 10, AND 11. 2813 18930110 18930118 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WHOSE NUCLEUS IS IN PROCESS OF DIVISION. SMALL SPOTS FORM NEAR ITS FOLLOWING SIDE, AND IT RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. BY JAN. 15 IT HAS BECOME TWO SPOTS, AND IT HAS BROKEN UP INTO A SCATTERED GROUP BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 2814 18930110 18930112 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2815 18930110 18930122 A REGULAR SPOT, A. TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON JAN. 18. 2816 18930111 18930111 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER. 2817 18930111 18930111 A SMALL SPOT. 2818 18930116 18930120 A FAINT GROUP. TWO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JAN. 17. 2819 18930116 18930127 A VERY LARGE GROUP OF IRREGULAR SPOTS. THE PRECEEDING SPOT, A, IS FAIRLY REGULAR AND PERSISTS FROM JAN. 16 TO JAN. 20. IT HAS COMPLETELY BROKEN UP INTO A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, BUT ANOTHER LARGE SPOT, B, LEADS. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS UNDERGO CONTINUAL CHANGES AND BREAK UP INTO SMALL SPOTS WHICH DIMINISH. 2820 18930118 18930123 A FAINT GROUP OF SCATTERED SPOTS. 2821 18930118 18930118 A VERY SMALL SPOT IN A LARGE MASS OF FACULAE. 2822 18930118 18930127 TWO SPOTS, A, AND B, WITH A SMALL INTERMEDIATE SPOT. A HAS A LARGE PROPER MOTION IN LONGITUDE. IT HAS BROKEN UP BY JAN. 23 AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 24. 2823 18930121 18930129 THREE SPOTS, A, B, C, FORMING A STREAM WITH SMALL COMPANIONS TILL JAN 23. BY JAN 24 THE SPOTS FOLLOWING A HAVE BROKEN UP TO FORM A LONG CURVED STREAM. THESE DIMINISH, AND A ALONE IS SEEN ON JAN 28 AND 29. 2824 18930122 18930126 A FAINT GROUP, NOT VISIBLE ON JAN 23. THREE SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JAN 24 AND TWO SPOTS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2825 18930124 18930202 A FAINT GROUP OF SCATTERED SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 24. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, WHEN THREE IRREGULAR SPOTS, A, B, C, WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN. A LARGE SPOT, D, IS SEEN PRECEEDING THE GROUP BY JAN. 26, AND A HAS DISAPPEARED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. THE GROUP FORMS A LENGTHENING STREAM, THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISHING. A SMALL SPOT, E, HAS APPEARED SF OF D BY JAN 31. THIS HAS BECOME VERY LARGE BY FEB. 1, AND IS SEEN ALONE NEAR THE WEST LIMB BY FEB. 2. 2826 18930124 18930206 A STREAM OF IRREGULAR SPOTS DISTRIBUTED OVER A CONSIDERABLE SPACE IN LATITUDE, AS WELL AS IN LONGITUDE. THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, A, IS THE LAST OF THE STREAM ON JAN. 25 BUT IS NOT RECOGNISED AFTER FEB. 3. THE PRECEDING SPOTS HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, B, BY JAN. 27. THE ENTIRE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED AT THE WEST LIMB BY FEB. 6 WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE LAST SPOT, C. 2827 18930124 18930127 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH DIMINISHES RAPIDLY IN SIZE. 2828 18930125 18930127 A SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 2827. 2829 18930126 18930204 A LARGE SPOT, A, ON JAN 26, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS, OF WHICH B, THE LAST BUT ONE IS THE PRINCIPAL. A SECOND STREAM PARALLEL TO THE FIRST HAS APPEARED TO THE NORTH OF IT BY JAN. 28M BUT HAS DISAPPEARED AGAIN BY FEB. 2. B HAS DIED OUT BY FEB. 3, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY FEB. 4. 2830 18930126 18900206 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. THE NUCLEUS OF A HAS COMMENCED TO DIVIDE BY FEB. 1, AND BY THE SUCEEDING DAY IT HAS BECOME TWO DISTINCT SPOTS. THE GROUP UNDERGOES STILL FURTHER DIVISION, AND HAS FORMED A STREAM INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR AT A VERY OBTUSE ANGLE BY FEB. 4. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2831 18930126 18930206 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON JAN. 30 AND 31. 2832 18930128 18930130 AN IRREGULAR GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2833 18930130 18930130 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2834 18930130 18930130 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2834*18930131 18930203 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, WITH, ON JAN 31, A VERY SMALL COMPANION. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEB 3, AND B CONSISTS OF TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS WHICH ARE MEASURED AS ONE. 2835 18930201 18930219 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. THE SPOTS ARE VERY FAINT ON FEB. 3 AND 4. 2836 18930204 18930206 SEVERAL VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP, PRECEDDING GROUP 2835. 2837 18930205 18930209 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. ITS PLACE ON FEB. 9 LIES 2 DEGREES BEHIND ITS PLACE ON FEB. 8. IT IS NOT CERTAIN WHETHER THIS IS A NEW SPOT, OR WHETHER THE OLD SPOT HAS DRIFTED RAPIDLY. 2838 18930205 18930218 A LARGE AND COMPLEX STREAM OF SPOTS. ON FEB. 6 IT CONSISTS MAINLY OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A CURVED STREAM BETWEEN THEM. THE LAST SPOT IN THE GROUP, B, IS A REGULAR SPOT, AND IS THE LARGEST UNTIL FEB. 8. THE MEMBERS OF THE GROUP UNDERGO FREQUENT CHANGES AND SUBDIVISIONS. 2839 18930206 189302 6 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2840 18930208 18930209 A SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 8. THE SPOT HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY FEB. 9, AND A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT. 2841 18930208 18930211 A SUDDEN OUTBURST OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. A THIRD SPOT, C, IS SEEN ON FEB. 9 AND 10. 2842 18930209 18930218 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON FEB. 9. THE GROUP HAS ENTIRELY CHANGED ITS APPEARANCE BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND CONSISTS OF A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A CURVED STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIE OUT, AND A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE SO AS TO APPROACH GROUP 2838. 2843 18930209 18930220 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON FEB. 12 AND 16. THE NUCLEUS OF A IS DIVIDED BY A BRIDGE ON FEB. 12 AND 13. 2844 18930211 18930212 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2845 18930212 18930213 A GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2846 18930212 18930223 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STRAGGLING STREAM OF SMALL NEBULOUS SPOTS. THE NUCLEUS OF A IS DIVIDED BY A BRIDGE, AND THE SPOT HAS BECOME DOUBLE BY FEB. 17. IT HAS AGAIN SUBDIVIDED AND DECREASED IN SIZE BY FEB. 20. IT MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE. 2847 18930212 18930223 A REGULAR SPOT, A, ON FEB. 12. A SMALL COMPANION PRECEDES IT ON FEB. 13. ON FEB. 14 AND THE FOLLOWING DAYS A IS FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. THESE HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 18. A NUMBER OF SPOTS HAVE FORMED IN ADVANCE OF A BY FEB. 15, AND BY FEB. 18 A IS THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP. THE GROUP IS NORTH OF AND PARALLEL TO GROUP 2846. 2848 18930213 18930213 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2849 18930213 18930214 A SMALL SPOT. 2850 18930213 18930219 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS SF OF GROUP 2846, AND ALMOST FORMING A CONTINUATION OF THE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IN THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THAT GROUP. IT UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGE. 2851 18930216 18930223 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT, A, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 22. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS OCCASIONALLY SEEN CLOSE TO IT. SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON FEB. 22, AND OTHERS ON FEB. 23. 2852 18930218 18930223 A FEW SMALL NEBULOUS SPOTS. ONE SMALL SPOT, A, REMAINS CONSTANT FOR SIX DAYS. THE OTHERS ARE VERY UNSTABLE. 2853 18930218 18930229 A FINE STREAM CONTAINING SEVERAL LARGE IRREGULAR SPOTS, OF WHICH THE PRINCIPAL HAVE BEEN LETTERED IN ORDER OF LONGITUDE A, B, C, AND D. A, THE LEADER, MOVES STEADILY FORWARD IN LONGITUDE FROM FEB. 21 TO FEB. 27, AND THE STREAM FOLLOWING IT TENDS TO BREAK UP, AND BY FEB. 25 HAS TAKEN THE FORM OF AN IRREGULAR CURVE OF SMALL SPOTS. A ALONE REMAINS BY FEB. 28. 2854 18930220 18930221 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 2853. 2855 18930221 18930224 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT EVANESCENT SPOTS. 2856 18930221 18930303 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS UNTIL FEB. 22. THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE A GREAT CHANGE BY FEB.23, AND CONSISTS ON THAT DAY OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS. ON FEB. 24 THE LAST SPOTSTREAM, B, IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH HAS BROKEN UP BY FEB. 27 INTO SEVERAL PORTIONS, OF WHICH THE TWO PRINCIPAL ARE C AND D. 2857 18930221 18930305 A STREAM OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, INCLINEED AT AN ANGLE OF NEARLY J9 TO THE EQUATOR. A LARGE ELLIPTICAL SPOT, A, WITH ITS MAJOR AXIS IN THE GENERAL DIRECTION OF THE STREAM, IS IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP ON FEB. 22. A UNDERGOES A PARTIAL ROTATION SO THAT ITS MAJOR AXIS SI PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR BY FEB. 25. IT HAS BECOME ILL-DEFINED AND IRREGULAR IN SHAPE BY FEB. 28 AND ON MARCH 1 THE ENTIRE GROUP HAS TO BE MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT. A IS AGAIN SEEN AS A SEPERATE SPOT BY MARCH 2, AND AS A REGULAR SPOT BY MARCH 3. A ALONE REMAINS BY MARCH 4. 2858 18930222 18930223 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 2859 18930223 18930223 SIX VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A PAIR OF CLOSE CLUSTERS; MEASURED AS TWO SPOTS. 2860 18930224 18930228 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, PRECEDING GROUP 2856. THE LAST SPOT, A, SOON BECOMES THE LARGEST. A HAS COALESCED WITH ANOTHER SPOT BY FEB. 27, BUT THE TWO HAVE SEPERATED AGAIN BY FEB. 28. 2861 18930224 18930308 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WIHT OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. A BECOMES GREATLY ELONGATED IN A DIRECTION SLIGHTLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR, AND BY MARCH 2 HAS DIVIDED TRANSVERSELY INTO TWO DISTINCT SPOTS, B AND C. C DIMINISHES RAPIDLY IN SIZE AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 8. 2862 18930225 18930227 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. 2863 18930225 18930304 A SMALL FAINT DIFFUSED SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 2863. TWO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON FEB. 26, ONLY ONE ON FEB. 27, AND THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN AT ALL ON FEB. 28 AND MARCH 1. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN IN NEARLY THE SAME POSITION ON MARCH 2, 3 AND 4. 2864 18930226 18930226 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2865 18930227 18930228 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON FEB. 27. TWO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON FEB 28. 2866 18930228 18930303 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. 2867 18930228 18930310 A FEW SMALL ILL-DEFINED SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP ON FEB. 28. ON MARCH 2 THE LEADER,A, INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT, THE OTHER SPOTS FORMING A STREAM FOLLOWING IT. A ALONE REMAINS BY MARCH 8. 2868 18930301 18930304 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 2857 ON MARCH 1. THE GROUP HAS BECOME A SHORT STREAM BY MARCH 2, A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, BEING THE LARGEST. 2869 18930301 18930308 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. THE SPOTS SEEN ON MARCH 7 AND 8 ARE NOT THE SAME AS THOSE SEEN PREVIOUSLY. 2870 18930302 18930303 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2871 18930303 18930303 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2872 18930304 18930311 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 4. ON MARCH 5 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. TWO SMALL SPOTS HAVE FORMED IN ADVANCE OF THE STREAM BY MARCH 11. 2873 18930304 18930311 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER ON MARCH 7, IS THE MOST PERSISTENT. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS VARY IN NUMBER AND SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. 2874 18930305 18930305 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2875 18930308 18930310 TWO REGULAR SPOTS ON MARCH 8. TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM IN MARCH 9. ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON MARCH 10. 2876 18930308 18930314 A STREAM OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2877 18930308 18930311 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 2878 18930309 18930316 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 9. A NUMBER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP ON MARCH 10. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 12 BUT HAS REVIVED BY THE SUCEEDING DAY. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 2879 18930309 18930319 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON MARCH 11, 15 AND 16. 2880 18930310 18930317 A SINGLE SPOT, A, ON MARCH 10. A SECOND SPOT, B, HAS APPEARED BY MARCH 11. OTHER SMALLER SPOTS, FAINT AND ILL-DEFINED IN CHARACTER, SPRING UP LATER, BUT ARE SHORT LIVED. 2881 18930310 18930321 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A CONFUSED CLUSTER OF SMALL ILL-DEFINED SPOTS. THE LATTER GRADUALLY DIMINISHES, AND HAVE ALL DIED OUT BY MARCH 19. A FRESH OUTBURST OF THE FOLLOWING SPOTS IS SEEN ON MARCH 20. 2882 18930313 18930315 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON M,ARCH 13. TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2883 18930313 18930314 A SINGLE SPOT, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINSHES IN SIZE. 2884 18930316 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2885 18930316 18930318 A SMALL SPOT. 2886 18930317 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NORTH OF THE POSITION WHERE GROUP 2891 APPEARS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 2887 18930317 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS MEASURED AS ONE. 2888 18930317 18930319 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE ENTIRE GROUP IS MEASURED AS ONE ON MARCH 19. 2889 18930317 18930327 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE NUCLEUS OF A HAS BECOME ELONGATED IN THE DIRECTION OF MOTION BY MARCH 23, AND THE SPOT HAS BROKEN UP BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, THOUGH IT IS THEN STILL MEASURED AS ONE. 2890 18930317 18930322 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS N OF GROUP 2889. 2891 18930318 18930323 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING ON MARCH 19 AND 20 A CURVED STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 21 AND 22, AND BUT ONE SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON MARCH 23. 2892 18930318 18930330 A VERY FINE STREAM OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS DIVIDED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE ON MARCH 20, AND HAS BROKEN UP INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS BY MARCH 22. TWO OTHER LARGE SPOTS, B AND C, HAVE FORMED BY MARCH 20. B IS A REGULAR SPOT WITH A WELL-DEFINED NUCLEUS, BUT UNDERGOES GREAT FLUCTUATIONS IN SIZE; C IS ILL-DEFINED AND IRREGULAR. THE SPOTS FOLLOWING B DISAPPEAR, AND IT IS LEFT ALONE BY MARCH 29. 2893 18930319 18930331 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON MARCH 21 AND 23. 2894 18930320 18930320 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT. 2895 18930321 18930321 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2896 18930323 18930329 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON MARCH 23. A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 24, OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE VERY RAPIDLY UNTIL MARCH 27. 2897 18930323 18930324 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2898 18930324 18930330 A FAINT, ILL-DEFINED SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 27, AND A LARGER ONE ON MARCH 29. A RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. 2899 18930325 18930405 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, UP TO MARCH 28. THE GROUP SHOWS A GREAT EXPANSION BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND HAS DEVELOPED INTO A FINE STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B ARE THE TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS ON MARCH 30. A SPOT, C, IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING A, HAS ATTAINED A CONSIDERABLE AREA BY APRIL 1, AND BY APRIL 3 ONLY THESE THREE LARGE SPOTS REMAIN. 2900 18930325 18930401 A SMALL GROUP WHICH STEADILY DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. A, THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP ON MARCH 27, IS THE LARGEST SPOT. 2901 18930326 18930402 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 2902 18930326 18930326 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 2903 18930327 18930327 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2904 18930327 18930330 A DISTURBED REGION, IN WHICH TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MARCH 27, 29 AND 30. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MARCH 28. 2905 18930327 18930402 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 27; ONE ON MARCH 28. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MARCH 29, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON MARCH 30, AND THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, FORMING A SHORT STREAM. 2906 18930327 18930407 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT,A. IT HAS MOVED FORWARD IN LONGITUDE, AND A SMALL SPOT, B, HAS BROKEN OFF FROM IT, BY MARCH 29. B SHOWS A MARKED PROPER MOTION IN LATITUDE; B HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 2, AND A LONG CURVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWS A. THESE DIMINISH RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2907 18930330 18930404 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2908 18930330 18930406 A NEBULOUS SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 2909 18930402 18930402 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 2910 18930403 18930403 A SMALL SPOT. 2911 18930403 18930403 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2912 18930403 18930403 A GROUP OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 2907. 2913 18930403 18930412 A NEBULOUS SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON APRIL 5 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY A STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. A AND ITS COMPANIONS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 11, BUT A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS HAVE FORMED NEAR THE PLACE A FORMERLY OCCUPIED. 2914 18930405 18930418 TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW SMALLER COMPANIONS. B HAS ORIGINALLY A CONSIDERABLY HIGHER LATITUDE THAN A, BUT GRADUALLY MOVES DOWNWARDS UNTIL IT IS NEARLY ON THE SAME PARALLEL. 2915 18930406 18930412 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON APRIL 6. A NEW SPOT, A, HAS APPEARED IN ADVANCE OF THE ORIGINAL SPOT BY APRIL 7, AND THE GROUP BECOMES A SMALL STREAM, A BEING THE LEADER. THE STREAM HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 11, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON APRIL 11, AND ANOTHER ON APRIL 12. 2916 18930407 18930407 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2917 18930407 18930412 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED, FOLLOWING GROUP 2914. 2918 18930408 18930414 A VERY SMALL FAINT CLUSTER OF SPOTS ON APRIL 8. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES A STREAM. A, THE LEADING SPOT, IS THE LARGEST, AND IS REGULAR. ONLY A REMAINS BY APRIL 13. 2919 18930408 18930416 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 8. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND BECOMES AN IRREGULAR STREAM, A, THE LEADING SPOT, BEING THE LARGEST. FAINT, ILL-DEFINED STREAMERS ARE ATTACHED TO THE FOLLOWING SIDE OF A, WHICH MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE FROM DAY TO DAY. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH IN SIZE. 2920 18930412 18930414 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. ONLY ONE OF THEM IS SEEN ON APRIL 13 AND 14. 2921 18930412 18930415 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. ONE OF THEM HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 14, AND THE OTHER BY APRIL 15, BUT TWO NEW SPOTS ARE SEEN ON THAT DAY. 2922 18930412 18930415 A STREAM OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS AFTER APRIL 13. 2923 18930412 18930423 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. SOME SMALLER SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE PRINCIPAL, FOLLOW IT CLOSELY FROM APRIL 12 TO APRIL 16. 2924 18930413 18930416 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 2923. 2925 18930413 18930424 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, ON APRIL 13. OTHER SPOTS APPEAR BETWEEN THEM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, FORMING A STREAM. B AND THE OTHER SPOTS FOLLOWING A DIMINISH IN SIZE AFTER APRIL 16; B HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 22, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 24. 2926 18930414 18930414 A SMALL SPOT. 2927 18930415 18930415 A SMALL SPOT. 2928 18930415 18930421 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP ON APRIL 15. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY APRIL 18, AND ON APRIL 19 IT FORMS A STREAM CONSISTING OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, AND A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 2929 18930417 18930419 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 17 AND 19. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON APRIL 18. 2930 18930417 18930425 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH GRADUALLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 25. SEVERAL FRESH SPOTS HAVE SPRUNG UP BY APRIL 24. 2931 18930418 18930428 A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 18, FOLLOWING GROUP 2930. OTHER SPOTS ARE SEEN ON APRIL 19 FORMING A CURVED STREAM. THE STREAM UNDERGOES A GREAT DEVELOPMENT AFTER APRIL 21, AND BY APRIL 23 HAS BECOME A VERY LARGE GROUP, A AND B BEING THE TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS. A DIMINISHES AFTER APRIL 25. 2932 18930418 18930418 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2933 18930419 18930425 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON APRIL 22 AND 23. 2934 18930420 18930426 A RING OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 20; A STREAM ON APRIL 21 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. TWO SPOTS, A AND B, ARE LARGER THAN THE REST ON APRIL 22, AND DEVELOP STILL FURTHER ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2935 18930421 18930425 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON APRIL 21, 22, AND 23. A FEW FRESH SPOTS HAVE FORMED BEHIND A ON APRIL 23, BUT DIMINISH AND DIE OUT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2936 18930422 18930422 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2937 18930422 18930422 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2938 18930422 18930502 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON APRIL 22, JOINED BY A THIRD SPOT, C, ON APRIL 23. OTHER SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY APRIL 24, AND THE GROUP FORMS A LONG STREAM, THE LEADER, A, BEING NOW A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE VERY REPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH, B HAVING DIED OUT BY APRIL 27 AND C BY APRIL 30. 2939 18930422 18930503 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS, A DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 2940 18930424 18930502 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. THE COMPONENT SPOTS ARE VERY UNSTABLE, THE GROUP DIMINISHING IN SIZE UNTIL APRIL 27, RECOVERING SUDDENLY BY APRIL 28, AND THEN DIMINISHING AGAIN, ALL THE SPOTS BUT TWO, A AND B, HAVING DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 30. 2941 18930424 18930506 A LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON APRIL 26 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A DIMINISHES IN SIZE, BUT A NEW SPOT, B, HAS FORMED NEAR IT BY MAY 2, AND SOON BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AND ON MAY 5 AND 6 IS THE ONLY SPOT LEFT IN THE GROUP. 2942 18930425 18930425 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 2943 18930426 18930426 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2944 18930426 18930427 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 26. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY APRIL 27. 2945 18930426 18930501 A NUMBER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 2946 18930427 18930504 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 27. IT HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY APRIL 28, AND OTHER SPOTS HAVE APPEARED PRECEDING IT, FORMING AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADING SPOT, A, MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE, AND HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 3. 2947 18930427 18930506 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE MOST STABLE. 2948 18930427 18930508 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS UNTIL APRIL 30, WHEN THE GROUP HAS EXPANDED INTO A CONSIDERABLE STREAM. A FURTHER INCREASE HAS TAKEN PLACE BY MAY 1, AND A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, IS SEEN NORTH OF THE MAIN LINE OF THE STREAM. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS, B AND C, BY MAY 2. THE GROUP IS NOW A VERY COMPLEX STREAM, BUT DIMINISHES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. B AND C ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON MAY 6. PART OF THE GROUP LIES PARALLEL TO GROUP 2947, IN THE SAME LONGITUDE, AND ABOUT 5 DEGREES FURTHER NORTH. 2949 18930428 18930502 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2949*18930429 18930429 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 2950 18930429 18930501 TWO SMALL SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 30. 2951 18930429 18930511 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 2952 18930501 18930506 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAY 1 AND 2. SEVERAL FRESH SPOTS HAVE FORMED BEHIND IT BY MAY 3, FORMING A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIE OUT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2953 18930501 18930510 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS, FOLLOWING GROUP 2951. 2954 18930502 18930503 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAY 2; TWO ON MAY 3. 2955 18930502 18930502 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2956 18930502 18930515 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, ON MAY 5 IS THE LARGEST. A MOVES BACKWARD IN LONGITUDE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND NUMEROUS SPOTS FORM IN ADVANCE OF IT. OF THESE NEW SPOTS, B, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST ON MAY 7. THE SMALLER SPOTS TEND TO DIE OUT, AND A AND B ALONE REMAIN BY MAY 14. B IS MEASURED WITH A SPOT NEAR IT ON MAY 12. 2957 18930503 18930504 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 2958 18930503 18930513 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON MAY 4 TO MAY 6, AND ON MAY 8, BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2959 18930503 18930510 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 2960 18930505 18930509 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 5. THEY HAVE COALESCED TO FORM B BY MAY 6, AND A FRESH SPOT, A, HAS FORMED IN ADVANCE OF THEM. A AND B MOVE APART FROM EACH OTHER, AND NEW SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON MAY 8. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 9. 2961 18930505 18930506 A SMALL SPOT. 2962 18930507 18930518 A REGULAR SPOT. 2963 18930509 18930512 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON MAY 10 AND 11. 2964 18930509 18930518 A REGULAR SPOT, A. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS HAVE FORMED NORTH OF A BY MAY 13, AND REMAIN UNTIL MAY 15, AFTER WHICH A IS AGAIN ALONE. 2965 18930511 18930513 A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 11 AND 12; A SECOND IS SEEN IN ADVANCE OF IT ON MAY 13. 2966 18930512 18930515 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 2967 18930512 18930522 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM UP TO MAY 15. A GREAT INCREASE IN SIZE HAS TAKEN PLACE BY MAY 16, AND THE GROUP FORMS AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM OF SPOTS WHICH CAN ONLY BE SEPERATED FROM EACH OTHER WITH DIFFICULTY. ON MAY 21 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, ONE OF WHICH IS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS IN MEASUREMENT, AND A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 2968 18930512 18930514 A SMALL SPOT. 2969 18930513 18930521 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 2970 18930514 18930516 A SMALL SPOT. 2971 18930514 18930517 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 2972 18930515 18930521 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSTANT CHANGE. 2973 18930515 18930517 A SINGLE SPOT. 2974 18930516 18930518 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 16. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MAY 17, AND THIS HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE BY MAY 18. 2975 18930518 18930520 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM ON MAY 18. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 19. 2976 18930518 18930519 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2977 18930520 18930531 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A VERY IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. THE SMALLER SPOTS ARE VERY UNSTABLE AND UNDERGO CONSTANT CHANGE. 2978 18930521 18930525 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON MAY 21 AND 22. A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 23, WHICH RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 2979 18930522 18930522 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 2980 18930522 18930530 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 22. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND HAS BECOME A STREAM OF IRREGULAR SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST, BY MAY 24. THE LAST SPOT ON MAY 26, B, BECOMES VERY NEARLY AS LARGE AS A, BUT DIMINISHES AGAIN SOON AFTER. A VERY SMALL SPOT, C, IS SEEN NORTH OF THE STREAM ON MAY 28, AND GROWS VERY RAPIDLY. 2981 18930522 18930529 SEVERAL SCATTERED SMALL IRREGULAR SPOTS WHICH UNDERGO CONTINUED CHANGE. 2982 18930522 18930601 TWO SMALL SPOTS CLOSELY SURROUNDED BY FACULAE ON MAY 22. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND BY MAY 24 CONSISTS OF TWO IRREGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, CONNECTED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A AND B HAVE GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY MAY 25. A LARGE PORTION HAS BEEN BROKEN OFF FROM B BY MAY 26, AND A IS CUT INTO TWO HALVES BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE ON MAY 29. THE GROUP STEADILY DIMINISHES AFTER MAY 26, AND BY JUNE 1 CONSISTS ONLY OF THREE OR FOUR SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS SURROUNDED BY DENSE FACULAE. 2983 18930523 18930525 A SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 2981. 2984 18930523 18930525 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2985 18930524 18930525 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAY 24. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 25. 2986 18930525 18930530 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 25, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 2985. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND BY MAY 27 HAS BECOME A STREAM COMPOSED OF TWO LARGE IRREGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, AND A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MAY 30. B IS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE ON MAY 28. 2987 18930525 18930529 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, NP GROUP 2984. 2988 18930525 18930530 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. TWO CLOSE PAIRS, EACH MEASURED AS ONE SPOT, ON MAY 29 AND 30. 2989 18930525 18930525 A SMALL SPOT. 2990 18930526 18930527 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 26, SF GROUP 2981. 2991 18930526 18930529 A SMALL SPOT. 2992 18930526 18930608 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON MAY 27 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. SOME SMALL SPOTS HAVE ALSO FORMED IN ADVANCE OF A BY MAY 31, AND OTHERS SOUTH OF IT BY JUNE 1. THE LATTER PROVE THE MOST STABLE. 2993 18930528 18930609 A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SMALLER SPOTS OF A SIMILAR CHARACTER. ON JUNE 2 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, CURVED STREAMS OF SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN A AND THESE LATTER. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH AFTER JUNE 3, AND A AFTER JUNE 7. 2994 18930528 18930606 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH STEADILY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JUNE 5. 2995 18930531 18930609 A FEW SMALL SPOTS N F GROUP 2993. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JUNE 2, AND FORMS A LONG STREAM OF NEBULOUS UNSTABLE SPOTS, SOME OF WHICH ATTAIN A GREAT SIZE. GROUPS 2992, 2993 AND 2995 ARE PRACTICALLY PARTS OF ONE VERY LARGE GROUP. 2996 18930531 18930611 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALLER SPOTS IN A CURVED STREAM. A ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 6. 2997 18930602 18930606 A FEW SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. 2998 18930603 18930603 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 2999 18930603 18930610 A CURVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, SP GROUP 2996. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY JUNE 4; B, THE LEADER, BEING NOW LARGER THAN A. B, HOWEVER, DIMINISHES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, WHILST A BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE GROUP BECOMES INVOLVED IN A MASS OF BRIGHT FACULAE ON JUNE 9, AND A IS NOT SEEN AFTER JUNE 8. 3000 18930603 18930609 A FEW SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. ONLY TWO, A AND B, REMAIN BY JUNE 5. A INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO JUNE 5; BOTH A AND B DIMINISH AFTER THAT DATE, AND A REMAINS ALONE AFTER JUNE 6. 3001 18930604 18930605 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 4. ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JUNE 5. 3002 18930604 18930613 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. A ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 8. 3003 18930605 18930611 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE AND THE COMPONENT SPOTS ARE VERY UNSTABLE. 3004 18930605 18930617 A LARGE SPOT, A, NF GROUP 3003, OCCASIONALLY ACCOMPANIED BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. A BECOMES REGULAR AFTER JUNE 9. 3005 18930605 18930617 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL JUNE 11. 3006 18930607 18930611 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SCATTERED GROUP. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 3007 18930607 18930616 SEVERAL IRREGULAR SPOTS OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE, IN A STRAGGLING GROUP CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 3005. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 3008 18930610 18930610 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3009 18930610 18930618 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, N OF GROUP 3007. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY, AND IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 15. A FRESH OUTBURST HAS TAKEN PLACE BY JUNE 16, AND THE GROUP NOW FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE, INCLINED AT A LARGE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. 3010 18930610 18930617 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS SF OF GROUP 3007. 3011 18930611 18930619 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE A GREAT INCREASE BY JUNE 19. 3012 18930612 18930612 A SMALL SPOT. 3013 18930613 18930614 A SMALL SPOT. 3014 18930613 18930613 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3015 18930613 18930620 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE GROUP HAS VERY GREATLY INCREASED BY JUNE 15; THE LEADING SPOT, A, BEING A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A NEBULOUS SPOT, B, AND BY A CONSIDERABLE STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. A AND B HAVE COALESCED BY JUNE 18 TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, C. 3016 18930614 18930619 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 19. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON JUNE 17. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR THE PLACE OF THE GROUP ON JUNE 19. 3017 18930614 18930617 A SMALL SPOT. 3018 18930615 18930622 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, ON JUNE 15. A HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED BY JUNE 16, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 17. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS, FORMING WITH A A SHORT STREAM, HAVE APPEARED BY JUNE 16. B, THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP ON JUNE 17, IS THE LARGEST. 3019*18930616 18930616 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 3011. 3019 18930617 18930617 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3020 18930617 18930625 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A CURVED STREAM. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN AREA BY JUNE 20, AND FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM WITH THREE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B, AND C. A AND C, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, MOVE APART FROM EACH OTHER IN LONGITUDE. 3021 18930619 18930619 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3022 18930619 18930625 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 19. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY JUNE 20, AND THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN AT ALL ON JUNE 21. A FRESH OUTBURST HAS OCCURRED BY JUNE 22, AND BY JUNE 23 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS, OF WHICH B, THE LAST SPOT, IS THE LARGEST. 3023 18930619 18930619 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3024 18930620 18930622 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 20. A SECOND HAS APPEARED BY JUNE 21, AND THE FIRST HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 22. 3025 18930620 18930620 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3026 18930621 18930622 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 21, OF WHICH ONE HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 22. 3027 18930622 18930625 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 22. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 23, BUT A FRESH OUTBURST HAS OCCURRED BY JUNE 25. 3028 18930622 18930625 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 22. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 23 AND 25. 3029 18930622 18930625 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 3030 18930622 18930628 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE AND IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 27. 3031 18930623 18930701 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES RAPID CHANGES IN APPEARANCE AND AREA. 3032 18930623 18930701 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. IT HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JUNE 26, AND A, B, C, THE THREE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, ARE ALL LARGE. C HAS UNITED WITH A BY JUNE 29. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 3033 18930625 18930629 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS PARALLEL TO AND BETWEEN GROUPS 3031 AND 3032. ONLY A, THE LAST SPOT, REMAINS BY JUNE 28. 3034 18930625 18930630 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON JUNE 25. A DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. IT IS FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 29. THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP BY JUNE 30, AND ONLY TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS REMAIN. 3035 18930625 18930703 A LARGE IRREGULAR NEBULOUS SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. THE WHOLE GROUP, BUT ESPECIALLY A, DIMINISHES RAPIDLY FROM DAY TO DAY. 3036 18930627 18930706 A VERY IRREGULAR GROUP OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, WHICH VARY IN NUMBER, SIZE, AND POSITION FROM DAY TO DAY. 3037 18930628 18930628 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3038 18930628 18930705 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE, AND IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 4. A FRESH AND GREAT OUTBURST HAS TAKEN PLACE BY JULY 5. 3039 18930628 18930701 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS AFTER JUNE 29. 3040 18930628 18930628 A SMALL SPOT. 3041 18930629 18930629 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3042 18930629 18930711 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS, B AND C, BY JULY 10. 3043 18930701 18930701 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3044 18930701 18930701 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3045 18930702 18930702 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3046 18930702 18930715 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE LAST. B INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE SPACE BETWEEN A AND B IS FILLED WITH NEBULOUS MARKINGS SO THAT THE GROUP FORMS ONE BROAD, ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM. A IS DOUBLE, AND ITS TWO COMPONENTS ARE MEASURED SEPARATELY ON JULY 7 AND 10. GROUPS 3046, 3047, 3048, 3050 AND 3063 MIGHT BE CONSIDERED AS PORTIONS OF ONE GREAT GROUP COVERING A MOST EXTENSIVE AREA. 3047 18930703 18930714 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, NORTH OF GROUP 2946. IT LENGTHENS OUT IN THE DIRECTION OF MOTION AND BECOMES DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS WHICH ARE, HOWEVER, STILL MEASURED AS ONE. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON JULY 5 AND 8. GROUPS 3046, 3047, 3048, 3050 AND 3063 MIGHT BE CONSIDERED AS PORTIONS OF ONE GREAT GROUP COVERING A MOST EXTENSIVE AREA. 3048 18930703 18930712 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO BY JULY 9, BUT WHICH IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE. THE DIVISION HAS CLOSED UP AGAIN BY JULY 11. GROUPS 3046, 3047, 3048, 3050 AND 3063 MIGHT BE CONSIDERED AS PORTIONS OF ONE GREAT GROUP COVERING A MOST EXTENSIVE AREA. 3049 18930704 18930707 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, SF, GROUP 2942. IT IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 6. 3050 18930704 18930711 A SCATTERED GROUP OF SMALL NEBULOUS SPOTS. GROUPS 3046, 3047, 3048, 3050 AND 3063 MIGHT BE CONSIDERED AS PORTIONS OF ONE GREAT GROUP COVERING A MOST EXTENSIVE AREA. 3051 18930705 18930705 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3052 18930705 18930705 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3053 18930706 18930706 A SMALL SPOT. 3054 18930706 18930717 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, ACCOMPANIED BY SOME SMALLER SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON THE NF SIDE. 3055 18930707 18930707 A VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 3042. 3056 18930707 18930707 A SMALL SPOT. 3057 18930707 18930707 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3058 18930707 18930710 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JULY 7. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3059 18930707 18930715 A CONSIDERABLE STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS VARY GREATLY IN NUMBER, SIZE, AND POSITION, AND HAVE GREATLY DIMINISHED BY JULY 13. 3060 18930707 18930710 A SMALL GROUP PRECEDING GROUP 3054. 3061 18930707 18930717 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY AND IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 13, BUT HAS RE-APPEARED BY JULY 14. GROUPS 3061, 3064 AND 3067 FOLLOW EACH OTHER SO CLOSELY AS TO FORM ALMOST A SINGLE STREAM. 3062 18930708 18930709 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 3063 18930708 18930709 A VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 3048 ON JULY 8. A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 9. 3064 18930708 18930712 A SINGLE SPOT WHICH DIMINISHES RAPIDLY FROM DAY TO DAY. GROUPS 3061, 3064 AND 3067 FOLLOW EACH OTHER SO CLOSELY AS TO FORM ALMOST A SINGLE STREAM. 3065 18930708 18930715 A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. 3066 18930708 18930718 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 12 AND 13. A DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER JULY 13. 3067 18930709 18930720 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A CURVED STREAM. THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY JULY 12, AND A CONSIDERABLE SPOT, B, HAS FORMED NEAR THE END OF THE STREAM. A INCREASES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, ABSORBING THE FOLLOWING SPOTS; B DIMINISHES AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 17. GROUPS 3061, 3064 AND 3067 FOLLOW EACH OTHER SO CLOSELY AS TO FORM ALMOST A SINGLE STREAM. 3068 18930709 18930721 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 3069 18930710 18930712 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 3070 18930710 18930718 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE, AND CLOSELY APPROACHES GROUP 3066. GROUPS 3069, 3065, 3066 AND 3070 FOLLOW EACH OTHER SO CLOSELY AS ALMOST TO FORM A SINGLE IRREGULAR STREAM. 3071 18930711 18930722 A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. A DIMINISHES IN SIZE UNTIL JULY 16, BY WHICH DATE A NUMBER OF SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS HAVE APPEARED. A HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JULY 17, AND THE FOLLOWING SPOTS FORM A CONFUSED NEBULOUS CLUSTER, WHICH BREAKS UP AND DISAPPEARS AS A BECOMES REGULAR AND WELL-DEFINED. 3072 18930712 18930715 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JULY 12. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ONJULY 13. A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON JULY 14, AND TWO ON JULY 15, N.P. OF THE PLACE OF THE ORIGINAL SPOT. 3073 18930714 18930716 A SMALL SPOT,A, WITH, ON JULY 14, TWO VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. 3074 18930716 18930716 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3075 18930718 18930721 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JULY 18 AND 19. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 20. A HAS A CLOSE COMPANION ON JULY 21. 3076 18930719 18930719 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3077 18930719 18930719 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3078 18930719 18930731 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES ATTENDED BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 3079 18930720 18930725 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON JULY 24 AND 25. 3080 18930720 18930725 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3081 18930720 18930722 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 22. 3082 18930720 18930722 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 20. A SECOND IS SEEN ON JULY 21 AND 22. 3083 18930720 18930730 A LARGE SPOT,A, WITH A DOUBLE NUCLEUS. IT IS MEASURED AS TWO SEPARATE SPOTS ON JULY 22. IT HAS BROKEN UP INTO A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY JULY 25, AND RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 29, BUT A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN IN ITS PLACE ON JULY 30. 3084 18930721 18930728 A LARGE SPOT,A, WHICH UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGES OF SHAPE AND SIZE. SMALL SPOTS ARE BROKEN OFF FROM IT FROM TIME TO TIME. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER JULY 24. GROUP 3104 IS PERHAPS A REVIVAL OF IT. 3085 18930723 18930725 A SMALL SPOT. 3086 18930725 18930725 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3087 18930725 18930725 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3088 18930725 18930725 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3089 18930725 18930730 A SMALL SPOT. 3090 18930726 18930726 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3091 18930726 18930804 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS UNTIL JULY 29 AND 30, ON WHICH DATES THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JULY 31, AND THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND HAS BECOME AN IMPORTANT STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST MEMBERS, BY AUGUST 4, WHEN IT REACHES THE WEST LIMB. 3092 18930727 18930727 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3093 18930727 18930730 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SCATTERED STREAM, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 3083. 3094 18930728 18930731 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. A THIRD IS SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON JULY 31. 3095 18930728 18930802 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. IT IS THE LEADER OF A SMALL STREAM ON JULY 30 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3096 18930730 18930801 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 3097 18930730 18930810 A LARGE SPOT, A, WHICH VARIES GREATLY IN SHAPE. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS PRECEDE IT UP TO AUGUST 4. OTHERS FOLLOW IT ON AUGUST 4, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A HAS BROKEN UP BY AUGUST 8 AND DIMINISHES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3098 18930730 18930811 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON JULY 31. 3099 18930731 18930731 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3100 18930731 18930804 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 2 AND 3. 3101 18930731 18930731 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3102 18930731 18930805 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 3, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY AUGUST 4. 3103 18930731 18930811 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE, BUT ALWAYS MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT. VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON AUGUST 2,6,7 AND 8. 3104 18930801 18930802 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 1. IN THE SAME LONGITUDE, BUT A LITTLE TO THE NORTH IN LATITUDE, OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 3084. 3105 18930802 18930810 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT ON AUGUST 6. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES AFTER AUGUST 7. 3106 18930802 18930813 A FEW SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS ON AUGUST 2, FOLLOWING GROUP 3105. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND BY AUGUST 4 AND 5 CONSISTS OF TWO VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, CONNECTED AND FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH C IS THE LAST. A IS ITSELF FAIRLY REGULAR, BUT A LARGE NEBULOUS AREA FOLLOWS IT CLOSELY AND IS SOMETIMES MEASURED WITH IT. B IS MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS ON AUGUST 9 AND 13. 3107 18930802 18930813 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 2 AND 3. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND HAS BECOME A STRAIGHT STREAM BY AUGUST 4. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE LARGE AND STABLE SPOTS. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS UNDERGO GREAT CHANGES, AND BY AUGUST 9 FORM A CURVED STREAM, CONVEX TO THE EQUATOR. 3108 18930802 18930807 A SPOT WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. A COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON AUGUST 5. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 6. 3109 18930803 18930812 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 3. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A VERY UNSTABLE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 3110 18930803 18930805 A SMALL SPOT. 3111 18930804 18930805 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 4. A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 5. 3112 18930804 18930815 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 8, AND THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS. A HAS BEGUN TO DIVIDE BY AUGUST 8, AND BREAKS UP RAPIDLY AFTER AUGUST 11. 3113 18930805 18930816 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE STREAM IS CURVED LIKE A SICKLE ON AUGUST 10. A, THE LEADER, UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGES. 3114 18930806 18930808 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 6. A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IS SEEN NORTH OF THE PLACE OF THIS SPOT ON AUGUST 7. THE LEADER OF THE STREAM ALONE REMAINS ON AUGUST 8. 3115 18930806 18930810 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A COMPANION ON AUGUST 7 AND 8. 3116 18930806 18930817 A PAIR OF LARGE SPOTS, A AND B. A BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT, BUT B HAS BROKEN UP INTO A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY AUGUST 10. 3117 18930807 18930811 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. OTHERS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN FORMING WITH A AND B A SHORT STREAM. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 11 3118 18930807 18930819 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT A, WITH A NUMBER OF ATTENDANTS, MOSTLY ON THE SOUTH SIDE. A IS INVOLVED IN DENSE FACULAE NEAR THE WEST LIMB, AND IS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE ON AUGUST 17. 3119 18930808 18930809 TWO SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED TOGETHER ON AUGUST 9. 3120 18930808 18930808 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3121 18930808 18930812 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A THIRD IS SEEN ON AUGUST 9. 3122 18930809 18930811 A SMALL SPOT. 3123 18930810 18930811 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY AUGUST 11. 3124 18930811 18930815 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST ON AUGUST 11. 3125 18930811 18930814 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS NEAR GROUP 3112. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 13. A FRESH AND MORE CONSIDERABLE OUTBREAK HAS TAKEN PLACE BY AUGUST 12. 3126 18930811 18930814 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 3127 18930812 18930816 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 14. 3128 18930813 18930813 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 3129 18930814 18930815 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 14; ONE ON AUGUST 15. 3130 18930814 18930822 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 14. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND BY AUGUST 18 CONSISTS OF TWO PARALLEL STREAMS OF SMALL SPOTS, BOTH OF WHICH ARE SHARPLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. THE LEADING SPOT ON AUGUST 19, A, INCREASES IN SIZE, AND THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH AND DIE OUT. 3131 18930814 18930825 A LARGE SPOT, A, WHICH APPEARS TO CONTINUALLY THROW OFF SMALL SPOTS ON ITS NF SIDE. IT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER AUGUST 19. 3132 18930815 18930815 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 3133 18930815 18930827 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IS SEEN SOUTH OF "A" ON AUGUST 23, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3134 18930816 18930816 A SMALL SPOT. 3135 18930816 18930826 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A VERY LONG STRAGGLING STREAM OF NEBULOUS AND UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE SPOTS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM HAVE DIED OUT BY AUGUST 21, LEAVING A FEW SPOTS AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE FROM "A". THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE STREAM CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF A CONSIDERABLE SPOT, B, TO THE NORTH OF "A". 3136 18930816 18930822 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS LYING BETWEEN GROUPS 3133 AND 3137, AND IN THE SAME LATITUDE, AND ALMOST UNITING THEM. 3137 18930817 18930828 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. A PORTION OF A IS CUT OFF FROM THE MAIN BODY OF THE SPOT BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE ON AUGUST 19, AND IS MEASURED SEPARATELY. 3138 18930817 18930821 A SMALL SPOT. 3139 18930818 18930826 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE ALL DIED OUT BY AUGUST 23, LEAVING "A" AS AN ISOLATED REGULAR SPOT. 3140 18930818 18930826 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. THE GROUP DIMINISHES SUDDENLY AFTER AUGUST 23, AND AGAIN AFTER AUGUST 25, THE LEADER, A, AND A VERY SMALL COMPANION ALONE REMAINING ON AUGUST 26. 3141 18930819 18930821 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP SUDDENLY APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 3142 18930819 18930826 A FEW SMALL SPOTS NF THE DETACHED FOLLOWING PORTION OF GROUP 3135. 3143 18930819 18930831 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, MEASURED TOGETHER ON AUGUST 19. THEY MOVE APART FROM EACH OTHER ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. "A" HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT, AND "B" HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 26. 3144 18930820 18930821 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 20; TWO ON AUGUST 21. 3145 18930820 18930822 TWO SMALL SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 22. 3146 18930821 18930825 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON AUGUST 21. BOTH RAPIDLY INCREASE IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3147 18930821 18930829 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 24. 3148 18930823 18930823 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 3149 18930823 18930903 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON AUGUST 23. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS HAVE SPRUNG UP BETWEEN A AND B BY AUGUST 25, FORMING A VERY CURVED STREAM. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS OF THE STREAM DIE OUT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND A IS LEFT ALONE AS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY SEPTEMBER 1. 3150 18930824 18930825 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 3140. 3151 18930825 18930825 A SPOT CLOSELY SURROUNDED BY DENSE FACULAE. 3152 18930825 18930829 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 28. 3153 18930827 18930831 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 30. 3154 18930828 18930909 A FINE GROUP OF SPOTS, SEVERAL OF WHICH ARE LARGE, FORMING A BROAD STREAM. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE AT FIRST, BUT IT ROTATES IN THE DIRECTION CONTRARY TO THE HANDS OF A WATCH TILL IT HAS BECOME PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST, AND THEY ARE CONNECTED BY A CONTINUOUS STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 3 AND 4. 3155 18930828 18930909 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, OF WHICH THE MAJOR AXIS MOVES IN A DIRECTION CONTRARY TO THE HANDS OF A WATCH. IT HAS SOMETIMES A FRINGE OF SMALL SPOTS ON ITS N SIDE. 3156 18930828 18930909 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH THROWS OFF SMALL SPOTS ON ITS SF SIDE. 3157 18930829 18930829 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3158 18930829 18930829 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3159 18930830 18930830 A SMALL SPOT. 3160 18930831 18930831 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3161 18930831 18930831 A SCATTERED GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3162 18930831 18930908 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST. A HAS BROKEN UP BY SEPTEMBER 6. 3163 18930901 18930906 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 3 AND 4. 3164 18930902 18930902 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 3165 18930902 18930904 A SMALL SPOT. 3166 18930903 18930903 A SMALL SPOT. 3167 18930904 18930904 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 3168 18930904 18930914 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 4. THE GROUP HAS BECOME A LONG STREAM BY SEPTEMBER 5. A, THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, AND AFTER SEPTEMBER 7, THE LEADER, MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE. 3169 18930905 18930908 TWO OR THREE SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 3156. 3170 18930906 18930906 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3171 18930906 18930907 TWO OR THREE SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. 3172 18930907 18930909 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 7. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 8. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 9. 3173 18930907 18930919 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FINE STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. A HAS TWO NUCLEI AND IS MEASURED AS TWO SEPARATE SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 10, 17 AND 18. 3174 18930908 18930913 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. 3175 18930909 18930911 A SMALL SPOT. 3176 18930910 18930916 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION FROM SEPTEMBER 12-14. 3177 18930911 18930921 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOMETIMES A SMALL COMPANION. 3178 18930912 18930914 A SMALL SPOT NORTH OF GROUP 3173A. A SECOND SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 13. 3179 18930912 18930913 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3180 18930912 18930912 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3181 18930912 18930915 AN ILL-DEFINED SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 15. 3182 18930913 18930915 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A COUPLE OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON SEPTEMBER 13 AND 14. 3183 18930913 18930915 A SMALL AND RAPIDLY MOVING SPOT, NF GROUP 3182. 3184 18930913 18930915 A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 3177. 3185 18930915 18930915 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3186 18930915 18930926 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH MANY NUCLEI DISTRIBUTED THROUGH A FAINT PENUMBRA, AND WITH SMALL NEBULOUS COMPANIONS. IT HAS BROKEN UP INTO THREE SPOTS, B, C AND D, BY SEPTEMBER 25. 3187 18930917 18930927 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 17. BOTH HAVE INCREASED BY SEPTEMBER 18, AND BY SEPTEMBER 19 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 3188 18930918 18930918 FOUR SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. 3189 18930918 18930920 A FEW SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. 3190 18930919 18930919 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 3191 18930920 18930928 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ESPECIALLY IN THE DIRECTION OF GROUP 3186, FROM WHICH IT IS ONLY SEPARATED BY A SHORT INTERVAL ON SEPTEMBER 22 AND 23. THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE A FURTHER EXPANSION BY SEPTEMBER 24, BUT IS NO LONGER A STRAIGHT STREAM. 3192 18930920 18930923 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST, AND IS THE ONLY ONE THAT REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 23. 3193 18930921 18930921 A SMALL SPOT. 3194 18930921 18930923 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. 3195 18930922 18930922 A SMALL SPOT IN A VERY HIGH LATITUDE. 3196 18930922 18930928 A FEW SMALL SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER ON SEPTEMBER 22. THE GROUP HAS CONSIDERABLY INCREASED BY SEPTEMBER 24, AND THE PRECEDING SPOTS HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A LARGE ILL-DEFINED SPOT BY SEPTEMBER 25. THE GROUP DIMINISHES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3197 18930922 18930927 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 3198 18930923 18930923 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3199 18930924 18930928 A PAIR OF SMALL IRREGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, NF OF GROUP 3191. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 28. 3200 18930924 18930925 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPTEMBER 24. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 25. GROUPS 3194, 3196, 3197, AND 3200 ARE SOMEWHAT SIMILAR GROUPS OF UNSTABLE AND IRREGULAR SMALL SPOTS IN ONE FACULOUS DISTURBED AREA. 3201 18930924 18930930 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON SEPTEMBER 27 AND 28. A DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 3202 18930924 18931005 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON SEPTEMBER 29 AND 30 AND OCTOBER 2. 3203 18930924 18931006 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH FORMS A WIDE PAIR WITH GROUP 3201A. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS FORM A SHORT CURVED STREAM NEAR IT ON ITS PRECEDING SIDE ON SEPTEMBER 29. OTHER SMALL SPOTS FOLLOW IT ON SEPTEMBER 30 AND SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3204 18930925 18930926 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3205 18930926 18930929 A SMALL SPOT. 3206 18930927 18931004 FOUR SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 27, OF WHICH THE TWO LARGEST ARE A AND B. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE VERY RAPIDLY, AND ON SEPTEMBER 28 A AND B ARE CONNECTED BY TWO STREAMS OF SMALL SPOTS, THE GROUP THUS ENCLOSING AN OVAL SPACE. THE SOUTHERN STREAM DIES OUT, BUT THE NORTHERN STREAM INCREASES. A IS LARGE REGULAR SPOT. B IS AT FIRST A DOUBLE SPOT, BUT BECOMES REGULAR LATER. A HAS THROWN OFF AN ARM, C, BY SEPTEMBER 29, WHICH MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE. 3207 18930929 18931010 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SECOND LARGE SPOT, B. B DIMINISHES VERY QUICKLY AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 4, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A, AND TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A SHOWS A REMARKABLE SHIFT IN LATITUDE BETWEEN OCTOBER 5 AND 7. 3208 18930930 18931001 A SMALL SPOT. 3209 18930930 18931001 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 30. A THIRD IS SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON OCTOBER 1. 3210 18931002 18931008 A SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 2. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 3. A FEW VERY SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS ON OCTOBER 4. THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 5, BUT A FEW SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON THE NEXT THREE DAYS. 3211 18931003 18931006 A FEW VERY UNSTABLE SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM N OF GROUP 3203. 3212 18931003 18931004 A SMALL SPOT. 3213 18931003 18931010 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 3. THE GROUP HAS EXTENDED INTO A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY OCTOBER 4, AND A, THE LAST SPOT, IS WELL- DEFINED AND REGULAR BY OCTOBER 5. THE GROUP SUDDENLY DIMINISHES AFTER OCTOBER 6, A ALONE REMAINING AS A SMALL SPOT. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON OCTOBER 10. 3214 18931004 18931005 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3215 18931004 18931004 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3216 18931004 18931015 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH SLOWLY DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 3217 18931005 18931007 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, NEAR THE W. LIMB. 3218 18931005 18931009 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. A, THE LAST SPOT, IS THE LARGEST. THE GROUP DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY OCTOBER 9. 3219 18931006 18931006 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 3220 18931006 18931013 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 7 AND 8. A IS ELONGATED ON OCTOBER 9 AND DOUBLE ON OCTOBER 10 AND 11, BUT THE TWO COMPONENTS ARE MEASURED AS ONE SPOT. 3221 18931006 18931016 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B WITH SEVERAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON OCTOBER 10 AND 11. A IS A REGULAR SPOT, B COMPOSITE AND NEBULOUS. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 13, BUT HAS REVIVED AGAIN BY OCTOBER 15. 3222 18931007 18931007 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3223 18931007 18931013 AN IRREGULAR SPOT, A, ON OCTOBER 7. IT INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO OCTOBER 9 AND BECOMES REGULAR; AFTER THAT DATE IT DIMINISHES AGAIN. SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON OCTOBER 8, 9, 11 AND 12. 3224 18931007 18931017 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A DIMINISHES AFTER OCTOBER 12. 3225 18931008 18931011 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 3224. 3226 18931010 18931012 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 10. ONLY ONE SPOT, A, IS LEFT ON OCTOBER 11 AND 12. 3227 18931010 18931022 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 3228 18931011 18931014 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS MEASURED AS ONE ON OCTOBER 11. THE PRECEDING COMPONENT ALONE REMAINS ON OCTOBER 12. 3229 18931011 18931011 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3230 18931012 18931015 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3231 18931012 18931017 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3232 18931012 18931024 TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALLER SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A DIMINISHES DAY BY DAY AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 21. B IS AT FIRST VERY IRREGULAR IN SHAPE AND IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT NARROW BRIDGE. IT HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT BY OCTOBER 20, AND ALONE REMAINS ON OCTOBER 22 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3233 18931013 18931015 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 3234 18931013 18931015 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON OCTOBER 13. THE SPOT INCREASES IN SIZE RAPIDLY, AND OTHER SPOTS APPEAR NEAR IT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS GROUP 3216, 3220, 3221, 3223, 3224, 3225, 3228, AND 3234 LIE VERY CLOSE TO EACH OTHER, AND FORM ALMOST A SINGLE STREAM, EXTENDING OVER NEARLY 50 DEGREES OF LONGITUDE. 3235 18931013 18931013 THREE SMALL SPOTS. 3236 18931014 18931014 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3237 18931014 18931024 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 3232. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS MUCH THE LARGEST. THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY, BUT A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN FOLLOWING A ON OCTOBER 21 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 23, AND ONLY THREE SMALL SPOTS ARE LEFT. THESE HAVE DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 24, AND A SMALL SPOT WHICH HAS BROKEN OUT TO THE SOUTH OF THE GROUP IS ALL THAT IS SEEN. 3238 18931014 18931026 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A SMALL ILL-DEFINED SPOT ON ITS SF SIDE. THE TWO ARE MEASURED TOGETHER AND CALLED A UNTIL OCTOBER 17. THE PRINCIPAL SPOT IS THEN CALLED B, AND ITS COMPANION, C. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 23. B DIMINISHES IN AREA AFTER OCTOBER 19. ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS ON MOST DAYS. 3239 18931016 18931017 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3240 18931016 18931016 A VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 3237. 3241 18931018 18931022 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST AND IS A REGULAR SPOT. 3242 18931018 18931019 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 3227. 3243 18931018 18931028 A LARGE BUT VERY UNSTABLE GROUP. IT CONSISTS AT FIRST OF A LARGE SPOT, A, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A LARGE IRREGULAR NEBULOUS SPOT. THE LATTER HAS BROKEN UP INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A CURVED STREAM BY OCTOBER 21. THE LEADING SPOT OF THIS STREAM, B, PASSES A IN LONGITUDE. THE ENTIRE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND ON OCTOBER 27 A ALONE REMAINS, AS A VERY SMALL SPOT. GROUPS 3243, 3244, 3246, AND 3256 FORM FOUR PARALLEL STREAMS IN ALMOST THE SAME LONGITUDE. SOME 40 DEGREES FOLLOWING THESE, GROUPS 3250, 3254 AND 3255 FORM A SIMILAR SET OF PARALLEL STREAMS. 3244 18931018 18931030 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. A IS DIVIDED INTO SEVERAL PARTS BY BRIGHT BRIDGES, AND PORTIONS OF IT ARE OCCASIONALLY MEASURED AS SEPARATE SPOTS, B AND C. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 27. 3245 18931019 18931019 A VERY SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 3243. 3246 18931019 18931030 TWO SPOTS, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS THE SMALLER, ON OCTOBER 19-21. OTHER SPOTS APPEAR AND THE GROUP FORMS ON OCTOBER 23 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE STREAM DIMINISHES, AND HAS ENTIRELY DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 27, BUT THE PRECEDING PORTION HAS GREATLY EXTENDED, AND THE GROUP IS HORSE-SHOE IN FORM, THE INCLUDED AREA BEING FILLED WITH FAINT MARKINGS ON OCTOBER 28. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AGAIN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 27. 3247 18931020 18931020 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3248 18931020 18931021 A VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 3241. 3249 18931020 18931020 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3250 18931021 18931102 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ACCOMPANIES IT ON THE SP SIDE ON OCTOBER 23 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 30. 3251 18931022 18931022 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3252 18931022 18931025 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 22. A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM FROM OCTOBER 23 TO 25. 3253 18931023 18931026 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 3254 18931023 18931102 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 31, AND A BY NOVEMBER 2, LEAVING B ALONE. A IS A COMPOSITE SPOT, B IS REGULAR. 3255 18931023 18931028 A SMALLER STREAM THAN GROUP 3255, AND SOUTH OF IT. THE LEADER, A, HAS A CONSIDERABLE PROPER MOTION BOTH IN LONGITUDE AND LATITUDE. A REMAINS ALONE BY OCTOBER 26. 3256 18931024 18931030 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND ON OCTOBER 26 CONSISTS OF A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THESE SOON DISAPPEAR, AND A IS LEFT ALONE, AS A SOLITARY REGULAR SPOT BY OCTOBER 28. 3257 18931025 18931029 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. ONLY A, THE LEADER, IS SEEN ON OCTOBER 29. 3258 18931028 18931103 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE, AND VARIES MUCH IN SIZE. 3259 18931030 18931103 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 30. A SMALL SPOT, A, ON OCTOBER 31, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 31. 3260 18931030 18931031 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 30. THE PRECEDING SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 31. 3261 18931030 18931109 A NEBULOUS SPOT, A, WHICH MOVES BACKWARD IN LONGITUDE AND DIMINISHES IN AREA FROM DAY TO DAY. IT HAS A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 6. 3262 18931031 18931101 A SMALL SPOT SF, GROUP 3261. 3263 18931103 18931107 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT WHICH DIMINISHES IN AREA AND MOVES FOWARD IN LONGITUDE DAY BY DAY. ANOTHER VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWS IT ON NOVEMBER 7. 3264 18931104 18931112 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY AFTER NOVEMBER 7, AND BY NOVERMBER 9 CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGUALR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMOALL SPOTS. B, THE LAST SPOT, INCREASES IN SIZE, AND THE INTERMEDATE SPOTS DIE JOUT, AND ONLY A AND B REMAIN BY NOVEMBER 11. 3265 18931106 18931112 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON NOVEMBER 6. A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON NOVEMBER 7. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST, AND IS SEEN ALONE ON NOVEMBER 9 AND 11. 3266 18931107 18931110 A SMALL SPOT. 3267 18931109 18931110 A SMALL NEBULOUS CLUSTER. 3268 18931109 18931116 TWO NEBULOUS SPOTS, A AND B. OTHER SPOTS APPEAR BETWEEN THEM ON THE SUCCEDING DAYS, AND BY NOVEMBER 13 THE GROUP HAS LENGTHENED OUT INTO A NEBULOUS STREAM. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS DIMINISH, AND ONLY A AND B REMAIN BY NOVEMBER 15, ONLY A BY NOVEMBER 16. 3269 18931109 18931120 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FINE STREAM OF IRREGULAR SPOTS OF WHICH B IS THE LAST. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE, THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIE OUT, AND A HAS BECOME A LONG NARROW RIFT, CROSSED BY BRIGHT BRIDGES, BY NOVEMBER 13. IT HAS BROKEN UP BY NOVEMBER 16, AND THE FRAGMENTS ARE MEASURED SEPERATELY. THE GROUP IS CLOSELY SURROUNDED BY FACULAE AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 3270 18931110 18931119 A VERY UNSTABLE GROUP OF SPOTS. A, THE LAST SPOT, IS THE MOST PERSISTENT, AND REMAINS ALONE BY NOVEMBER 17. 3271 18931111 18931113 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, THAT MOVE AWAY FROM EACH OTHER RAPIDLY. 3272 18931111 18931120 A CONFUSED NEBULOUS CLUSTER ON NOVEMBER 11. SEVERAL ILL-DEFINED SPOTS, OF WHICH A, B AND C ARE THE LARGEST, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON NOVEMBER 12. B AND C DIMINISH AND HAVE DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 16, BY WHICH DATE A IS LEFT AS A SOLITARY REGULAR SPOT. 3273 18931111 18931116 A NEBULOUS SPOT. 3274 18931111 18931117 A NEBULOUS SPOT NF OF GROUP 3273. 3275 18931112 18931116 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, VERY IRREGULAR IN SHAPE AND UNSTABLE IN CHARACTER, FOLLOWING GROUP 3269 3276 18931112 18931124 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, DIVIDED BY A FACULOUS BRIDGE, AND CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT, B, WHICH HAS UNITED WITH A AND IS MEASURED WITH IT BY NOVEMBER 21. A HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT BY NOVEMBER 22. 3277 18931114 18931116 AN IRREGULAR SPOT THAT MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE AND DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. 3278 18931114 18931116 A PAIR OF IRREGULAR NEBULOUS SPOTS, A AND B, WHICH MOVE APART. 3279 18931115 18931116 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT. 3280 18931115 18931125 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. A SMALL COMPANION PRECEDES IT ON NOVEMBER 19. IT IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 24. 3281 18931116 18931128 A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT, AND THE GREAT SPOT HAS FREQUENTLY TO BE SUB-DIVIDED FOR THE PURPOSE OF MEASUREMENT. 3282 18931117 18931117 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 3276. 3283 18931117 18931125 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON NOVEMBER 17. A INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. IT IS FOLLOWED BY A SMALL SPOT, B, AND OCCASIONALLY BY A THIRD SPOT SMALLER STILL. A DIMINISHES AFTER NOVEMBER 20. 3284 18931118 18931119 A SMALL SPOT WITH, ON NOVEMBER 19, A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 3285 18931118 18931119 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3286 18931118 18931119 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 3287 18931118 18931127 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT, A, ON NOVEMBER 18, FOLLOWED ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. A INCREASES IN SIZE VERY RAPIDLY, THE SPOTS NEAREST TO IT APPEARING TO COMBINE WITH IT. THE OTHER SPOTS DIMINISH AND A ALONE REMAINS ON NOVEMBER 26. 3288 18931124 18931125 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT. 3289 18931125 18931125 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3290 18931125 18931205 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A CURVED STREAM ON NOVEMBER 25. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE BECOME LARGE AND IRREGULAR BY NOVEMBER 28. B HAS GREATLY BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 2, AND ONLY A VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS OF IT BY DECEMBER 3, BUT IT HAS AGAIN INCREASED BY DECEMBER 24. A AND B MOVE AWAY FROM EACH OTHER IN LONGITUDE. 3291 18931125 18931125 A SMALL SPOT SOUTH OF GROUP 3290. 3292 18931127 18931128 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 27. 3293 18931128 18931203 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT. 3294 18931129 18931129 A VERY SMALL SPOT ALMOST IN THE PLACE OF GROUP 3291. 3295 18931129 18931211 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, WITH AN IRREGULAR EDGE. A LARGE NEBULOUS AREA LIES ADJACENT TO A, AND IS SOMETIMES MEASURED WITH IT. GROUPS 3295, 3297, 3298 AND 3299 FOLLOW EACH OTHER CLOSELY AND ALMOST FORM A SINGLE LONG WINDING STREAM. 3296 18931130 18931130 A SMALL SPOT NP OF GROUP 3290. 3297 18931130 18931210 A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP, A, WHICH IS ALSO THE LARGEST, IS THE MOST STABLE, AND CAN BE IDENTIFIED UNTIL DECEMBER 7. GROUPS 3295, 3297, 3298 AND 3299 FOLLOW EACH OTHER CLOSELY AND ALMOST FORM A SINGLE LONG WINDING STREAM. 3298 18931201 18931212 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED ON DECEMBER 1 BY A SMALL COMPANION. GROUPS 3295, 3297, 3298, AND 3299 FOLLOW EACH OTHER CLOSELY AND ALMOST FORM A SINGLE LONG WINDING STREAM. 3299 18931202 18931207 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 5. GROUPS 3295, 3297, 3297 AND 3299 FOLLOW EACH OTHER CLOSELY AND ALMOST FORM A SINGLE LONG WINDING STREAM. 3300 18931204 18931208 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 3301 18931209 18931209 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3302 18931210 18931219 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 10. OTHER SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BY DECEMBER 11, WHEN THE GROUP IS COMPOSED OF A LARGE NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. A LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT,A, HAS FORMED BY DECEMBER 12, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO A PAIR OF LARGE SPOTS,B AND C, BY DECEMBER 15. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP DISAPPEARS AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 3303 18931211 18931211 A SPOT, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 3304 18931213 18931222 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINSHES FROM DAY TO DAY. IT HAS A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 19. 3305 18931213 18931225 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A.GROUPS 3305 AND 3310; 3307 AND 3308; 3309 AND 3311 FORM THREE SIMILAR SYSTEMS; EACH CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. 3306 18931214 18931222 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 15-16. A NUMBER OF IRREGULAR SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, HAVE APPEARED IN ADVANCE OF A BY DECEMBER 19. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 20., AND THE NEW SPOTS UNDERGO CONTINUAL CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. 3307 18931214 18931225 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASSIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. GROUPS 3305 AND 3310; 3307 AND 3308; 3309 AND 3311 FORM THREE SIMILAR SYSTEMS; EACH CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. 3308 18931214 18931220 TWO SPOTS, AND B, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 3307. A THIRD SPOT, C, HAS APPEARED BY DECEMBER 16, AND THE GROUP FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM INCLINED AT A LARGE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY DECEMBER 18, AND THE GROUP HAS BECOME AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. B AND C ARE NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 30. GROUPS 3305 AND 3310; 3307 AND 3308; 3309 AND 3311 FORM THREE SIMILAR SYSTEMS; EACH CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. 3309 18931214 18931226 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, OCCASSIONALLY WITH VEY SMALL COMAPANIONS. GROUPS 3305 AND 3310; 3307 AND 3308; 3309 AND 3311; FORM THREE SIMILAR SYSTEMS; EACH CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS. 3310 18931215 18931220 A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, FOLLOWING GROUP 3305.GROUPS 3305 AND 3310; 3307 AND 3308; 3309 AND 3311 FORM THREE SIMILAR SYSTEMS; EACH CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. 3311 18931215 18931225 A LARGE GROUP OF SPOTS, IRREGULAR IN DISTRIBUTION AND CHARACTER, FOLLOWING GROUP 3309. A MORE STABLE SPOT, A, HAS FORMED IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP BY DECEMBER 21. A ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 25. GROUPS 3305 AND 3310; 3307 AND 3308; 3309 AND 3311 FORM THREE SIMILAR SYSTEMS; EACH CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. 3312 18931217 18931220 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, WHICH TEND TO MOVE APART AND INCREASE IN SIZE. A PAIR OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR THEM ON DECEMBER 17. 3313 18931219 18931230 A LARGE SPOT A, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE LARGEST. A RIFT CONNECTS A AND B TOGETHER ON DECEMBER 22. B HAS BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 25. A REMAINS THROUGHOUT A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, WITH A LARGE PROPER MOTION IN LONGITUDE. 3314 18931219 18931224 A SPOT WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO A PAIR OF SPOTS,A AND B, BY DECEMBER 21. A THIRD SPOT IS SEEN BETWEEN A AND B ON DECEMBER 22. 3315 18931220 18931230 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A LONG CURVED STREAM. A, THE LEADER, INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO DECEMBER 24 AND MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. B, THE LAST SPOT, IS AT FIRST THE LARGEST OF THE GROUP, BUT DIMINISHES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE GROUP RESEMBLES GROUP 3313 IN APPEARANCE. 3316 18931220 18931230 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, ATTENDED OCCASIONALLY BY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 3317 18931220 18931226 AN IRREGULAR GROUP OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL. THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 25 INTO A GREAT NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. A, THE LAST SPOT, AND THE LARGEST, HAS A LARGE PROPER MOTION BOTH IN LONGITUDE AND LATITUDE. 3318 18931221 18931230 A BROAD STREAM OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, INCREASES IN SIZE AND MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE, AND BECOMES REGULAR IN CHARACTER, WHILST THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH. 3319 18931222 18931222 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3320 18931222 18931222 A SMALL SPOT. 3321 18931222 18931229 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. A, THE LEADER, ON DECEMBER 26 IS THE MOST STABLE SPOT. 3322 18931223 18931227 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND TWO LARGE SPOTS ARE SEEN AS NOTCHES IN THE LIMB ON DECEMBER 27. 3323 18931223 18940105 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL NEBULOUS AREAS, WITH MANY SMALL NUCLEI DISTRIBUTED THROUGH THEM. THESE AREAS UNDERGO MANY CHANGES. THE TWO LARGEST ARE CALLED B AND C FROM DECEMBER 29, AND HAVE BECOME DEFINED INTO TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS BY JANUARY 2. A HAS A LARGE PROPER MOTION IN LONGITUDE. 3324 18931224 18931225 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 3325 18931225 18940106 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE AFTER DECEMBER 29. 3326 18931226 18931228 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 28. 3327 18931226 18931230 AN ISOLATED SPOT, WHICH HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED BY DECEMBER 28, AND DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 29. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON DECEMBER 30. 3328 18931226 18940102 A LARGE SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 26 AND 27. IT HAS BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 28, THE PRINCIPAL PORTIONS BEING THE TWO SPOTS B AND C. B AND C, WITH SOME SMALL SPOTS NEAR THEM, MAKE UP AN IRREGULAR STREAM, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 3329 18931226 18940107 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE NUCLEUS OF A IS DIVIDED INTO TWO ON DECEMBER 29; AND THREE SEPARATE NUCLEI ARE SEEN ON JANUARY 2. THESE ARE SEEN AS THREE DISTINCT SPOTS, B, C, AND D, AFTER JANUARY 3. 3330 18931227 18931227 A SPOT ONLY SEEN AS A NOTCH ON THE WEST LIMB. THE MEASURES OF ITS POSITION AND AREA ARE THEREFORE ONLY APPROXIMATE. 3331 18931227 18931227 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NORTH OF GROUP 3313. 3332 18931227 18931228 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3333 18931227 18931230 A LARGE NEBULOUS SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 27. IT DIMINISHES VERY RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON DECEMBER 28 AND ANOTHER ON DECEMBER 29. GROUPS 3325, 3327, 3329, 3333 FORM ALMOST ONE LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. 3334 18931228 18931230 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 28. THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 29. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 30. 3335 18931229 18931230 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3336 18931230 18931230 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS NP GROUP 3318. 3337 18931230 18940103 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 30. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 2 AND 3. 3338 18931230 18931230 AN IRREGULAR GROUP OF SPOTS. 3339 18931230 18931230 A SMALL SPOT. 3340 18931230 18940104 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JANUARY 4. 3341 18931230 18940102 A SINGLE SPOT, WHICH HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED BY JANUARY 2. 3342 18940102 18940102 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3343 18940102 18940111 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON JANUARY 4, ARE THE LARGEST. B DIMINISHES AFTER JANUARY 5 AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 10. A INCREASES IN SIZE UNTIL IT REACHES THE W. LIMB. 3343*18940103 18940104 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS N OF GROUP 3337 AND F GROUP 3329. 3344 18940103 18940103 A SMALL SPOT. 3345 18940103 18940115 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED ON AND AFTER JANUARY 5 BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE ON JANUARY 4, WHICH EVENTUALLY DIVIDES IT INTO TWO DISTINCT SPOTS, WHICH ARE MEASURED SEPARATELY AS B AND C AFTER JANUARY 11. THE PRECEDING SPOTS ALSO SHOW THE SAME KIND OF GEMINATION ON JANUARY 11 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3346 18940104 18940104 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3347 18940104 18940104 A SMALL FAINT SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 3348 18940104 18940104 A SMALL SPOT. 3349 18940105 18940106 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 5. TWO ON JANUARY 6. 3350 18940105 18940112 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS ARE SEEN FROM JANUARY 7 TO JANUARY 10. 3351 18940106 18940109 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST SPOT AFTER JANUARY 6. 3352 18940109 18940120 A LARGE REGULAR STABLE SPOT, WITH A FORWARD MOVEMENT IN LONGITUDE. 3353 18940110 18940110 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3354 18940110 18940122 ONE SPOT ON JANUARY 10. A LARGE SPOT, A, ON JANUARY 11, FOLLOWED BY A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND A BECOMES A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, RATHER FAINT FOR THE MOST PART, AND WITH MANY DISTINCT NUCLEI DISTRIBUTED THROUGH IT. THE GREATER PORTION OF A IS USUALLY MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT, BUT ITS GREAT SIZE AND COMPLEXITY RENDER IT NECESSARY ON SOME OCCASIONS TO MEASURE IT IN SEVERAL INSTALMENTS. A NUMBER OF SMALL OUTLIERS ACCOMPANY THE PRINCIPAL SPOT. 3355 18940111 18940115 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS PRECEDING GROUP 3354. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST SPOT. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES AND DIES OUT. 3356 18940111 18940123 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, ACCOMPANIED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. SOME OF THESE SPOTS ARE VERY FAINT. A IS SEEN AS A NOTCH ON THE WEST LIMB ON JANUARY 23. 3357 18940112 18940112 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 3358 18940113 18940124 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. A DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER JANUARY 20, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 24. 3359 18940114 18940115 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED, N OF GROUP 3355. 3360 18940114 18940126 A LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SPOTS VERY IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS TEND TO DIE OUT, AND AS THEY DISAPPEAR A BECOMES MORE REGULAR. 3361 18940115 18940115 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3362 18940115 18940115 A GROUP OF VERY SMALL FAINT ILL-DEFINED SPOTS. 3363 18940115 18940126 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH A STREAM OF SMALL FOLLOWERS IN THE NF DIRECTION . THE LATTER HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 19, BUT OTHER SMALL COMPANIONS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN. 3364 18940115 18940126 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JANUARY 22. THE THREE LARGE SPOTS, 3360A, 3363A, AND 3364A ARE DISTRIBUTED AT VERY NEARLY EQUAL DISTANCES IN A STRAIGHT LINE SHARPLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. THE MORE NORTHERN SPOT GAINS ON THE MORE SOUTHERN IN LONGITUDE. 3365 18940116 18940118 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 3366 18940116 18940120 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 19. 3367 18940117 18940128 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON JANUARY 20, 23 AND 25. 3368 18940118 18940121 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 3369 18940119 18940120 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 19. THE FOLLOWING SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 20. 3370 18940119 18940125 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 3371 18940120 18940126 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JANUARY 20. ON JANUARY 21 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL. ONE OF THESE FOLLOWING SPOTS, B, INCREASES IN SIZE AND HAS BECOME A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT BY JANUARY 25. THE OTHER SPOTS DIE OUT. 3372 18940121 18940202 A LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SMALLER SPOT, B. BOTH DIMINISH IN SIZE, AND B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 29. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SOMETIMES SEEN. 3373 18940123 18940123 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3374 18940123 18940124 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3375 18940123 18940124 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3376 18940123 18940126 A FEW SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3377 18940124 18940203 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 30, BUT THE GROUP HAS REVIVED AGAIN BY FEBRUARY 2. 3378 18940125 18940126 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 3379 18940125 18940129 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED ON JANUARY 25. THE GROUP HAS BECOME A SMALL STREAM BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. THE MOST SOUTHERLY MEMBER OF THE GROUP, A, MOVES RAPIDLY BACK IN LONGITUDE. 3380 18940125 18940203 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 25. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, WHEN IT CONSISTS OF A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. THE LATTER HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 30. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. 3381 18940125 18940131 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM SF OF GROUP 3377. A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST, AND ALONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 30. 3382 18940129 18940129 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3383 18940129 18940129 A SMALL SPOT. 3384 18940130 18940130 A SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 3377. 3385 18940130 18940210 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 30. THE GROUP HAS CONSIDERABLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND HAS BECOME A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME A LARGE SPOT BY FEBRUARY 3 CONNECTED WITH B, ALSO A FAIRLY LARGE SPOT, BY PARALLEL STREAMS OF SMALL SPOTS. A ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 10. 3386 18940201 18940205 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP. A, THE LEADER, HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 4. 3387 18940202 18940208 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3388 18940202 18940202 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 3385. 3389 18940202 18940210 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 8. A DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER FEBRUARY 7. 3390 18940204 18940208 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH UNDERGO CONSTANT CHANGE IN NUMBER, POSITION, AND DISTINCTNESS. 3391 18940205 18940213 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A V-SHAPED STREAM. THE LEADER, A, TENDS TO DIMINISH IN SIZE. 3392 18940205 18940216 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, SEVERAL OF WHICH ARE OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE, VERY IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. MANY OF THE SPOTS ARE VERY UNSTABLE. THE LARGEST SPOT, A, ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 14, THE OTHER SPOTS HAVING SPREAD OUT FROM EACH OTHER, AND DIMINISHED AND DISAPPEARED AS THEY SPREAD. 3393 18940206 18940208 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS NF GROUP 3385. 3394 18940206 18940213 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 10. A HAS BECOME SMALL AND FAINT BY FEBRUARY 13. 3395 18940207 18940208 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3396 18940207 18940219 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON FEBRUARY 9 BY TWO SMALLER SPOTS, B AND C. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 13, BUT IS SEEN AGAIN ON FEBRUARY 14. C IS NOT SEEN AFTER FEBRUARY 13. A FEW IRREGULAR UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SOMETIMES SEEN, BUT A REMAINS ALONE BY FEBRUARY 16. 3397 18940208 18940213 A SMALL SPOT, A, S OF GROUP 3396, WITH TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 12. 3398 18940208 18940209 A SMALL SPOT. 3399 18940209 18940213 A SMALL SPOT, A, PRECEEDED ON FEBRUARY 10-12 BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 3400 18940210 18940214 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 13. 3401 18940210 18940222 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 17. 3402 18940211 18940222 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 13, 16 AND 17. 3403 18940212 18940214 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS NF GROUP 3400, INCLINED AT A LARGE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST. 3404 18940212 18940218 SEVERAL SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, FORMING A STRAIGHT STREAM ON FEBRUARY 14. THE SPOTS TEND TO COALESCE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE GROUP UNDERGOES MUCH CHANGE. 3405 18940213 18940213 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3406 18940213 18940215 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3407 18940214 18940222 A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 14. TWO SPOTS, A AND B, ARE SEEN ON FEBRUARY 15, AND THESE ARE UNITED BY A STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A IS GREATLY ELONGATED ON FEBRUARY 17, AND IT IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS. ONLY A REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 21. 3408 18940215 18940226 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 15, WHICH BREAKS UP ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS INTO A GREAT NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE AND VERY SMALL. 3409 18940216 18940217 A SMALL SPOT. 3410 18940216 18940216 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3411 18940216 18940216 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3412 18940216 18940301 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE COMPONENTS OF A ARE MEASURED SEPARATELY ON AND AFTER FEBRUARY 24. 3413 18940218 18940303 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 21, 26, 28 AND MARCH 1. 3414 18940219 18940222 A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 19; A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON FEBRUARY 20. A, THE LEADER, MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE, AND INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3415 18940219 18940221 A SMALL SPOT. 3416 18940219 18940228 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES IN AREA FROM DAY TO DAY. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN NEAR IT. 3417 18940219 18940303 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS DIVIDED LONGITUDINALLY INTO TWO SPOTS, B AND C, BY FEBRUARY 28. C ALONE IS SEEN ON MARCH 3. 3418 18940220 18940224 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED, BETWEEN GROUPS 3408 AND 3412. 3419 18940220 18940220 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3420 18940220 18940301 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON FEBRUARY 20. A NUMBER OF OTHER SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE PRINCIPAL, APPEAR ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, FORMING AN IRREGULAR CURVED STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE FROM FEBRUARY 23 TO FEBRUARY 25. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE, AND BOTH A AND B INCREASE IN SIZE AND BECOME REGULAR. B ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 1. 3421 18940220 18940220 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3422 18940224 18940225 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 24. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON FEBRUARY 25. 3423 18940224 18940224 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3424 18940224 18940303 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH, UNTIL FEBRUARY 27, A SMALL COMPANION. THE GROUP MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE. 3425 18940226 18940226 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3426 18940226 18940226 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3427 18940226 18940226 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 3428 18940227 18940304 A FEW SMALL AND VERY UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 2. 3428*18940227 18940227 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3429 18940228 18940305 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. A ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 4. 3430 18940301 18940301 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3431 18940302 18940302 A SMALL SPOT. 3432 18940304 18940312 A FEW VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 4 WHICH EXPAND INTO A WELL-DEFINED STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE LEADER, A, MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE AND INCREASES IN SIZE, BECOMING A LARGE ELONGATED SPOT. IT HAS DIVIDED LONGITUDINALLY BY MARCH 9 INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C. ONLY B REMAINS BY MARCH 11. 3433 18940305 18940310 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, FAINT AND UNSTABLE, IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. A LITTLE CLUSTER, SP THE MAIN STREAM, AND SEEN ONLY ON MARCH 6, IS INCLUDED IN THE GROUP. 3434 18940305 18940305 A SMALL SPOT. 3435 18940305 18940305 A SMALL SPOT. 3436 18940306 18940307 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, A, ON MARCH 6. SEVERAL SIMILAR SPOTS HAVE FORMED PRECEDING A BY MARCH 7. 3437 18940306 18940313 A SOMEWHAT SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL MARCH 11, WHEN A REMAINS ALONE. 3438 18940306 18940318 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME FAINT IRREGULAR EXTENSIONS. A INCREASES RAPIDLY IN SIZE, AND HAS TWO DISTINCT NUCLEI BY MARCH 10, WHICH HAVE BECOME SEPARATE SPOTS, C AND D, BY MARCH 14. A SPOT, B, IS SEEN PRECEDING A ON MARCH 10, BUT HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 16. 3439 18940307 18940316 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 7, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 8. A FRESH OUTBREAK HAS OCCURRED BY MARCH 9, AND A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LEADER ON MARCH 10, IS THE LARGEST. 3440 18940308 18940308 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3441 18940308 18940308 A SMALL SPOT. 3442 18940310 18940321 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 11, 13 AND 17. 3443 18940310 18940320 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 16. 3444 18940311 18940312 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3445 18940312 18940316 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 12. IT HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 13 AND ANOTHER SPOT HAS APPEARED NEAR ITS PLACE. OTHER SPOTS APPEAR ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND FORM A SHORT STREAM. 3446 18940313 18940313 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3447 18940313 18940316 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, HAVE BECOME THE LARGEST BY MARCH 14, AND ALONE REMAIN BY MARCH 16. 3448 18940317 18940321 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN AFTER MARCH 19. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN A LITTLE SF OF ITS PLACE ON MARCH 21. 3449 18940319 18940324 A SMALL SPOT, A, WHICH GRADUALLY DIMINISHES. TWO SMALL SPOTS PRECEDE IT ON MARCH 23. 3450 18940320 18940331 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY LARGE, IN A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM. A, THE LEADER, MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE AND NORTHWARD IN LATITUDE. IT HAS BROKEN UP INTO TWO PARTS, C AND D, BY MARCH 28, OF WHICH D HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 29. B, THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP, IS MEASURED IN TWO DIVISIONS ON MARCH 21. IT MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE BUT SOUTHWARD IN LATITUDE, THUS GIVING A RETROGRADE MOTION OF ROTATION TO THE AXIS OF THE GROUP. ONLY B REMAINS BY MARCH 31. 3451 18940321 18940321 A SMALL SPOT. 3452 18940321 18940321 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3453 18940323 18940323 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 3454 18940323 18940323 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, POSSIBLE A REVIVAL OF GROUP 3452. 3455 18940323 18940323 A SMALL SPOT. 3456 18940325 18940326 TWO WELL-DEFINED SPOTS, A AND B, ON MARCH 25. THEY HAVE BOTH GROWN FAINT BY MARCH 26. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON MARCH 25. 3457 18940326 18940327 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 26. A CLOSE PAIR MEASURED AS ONE SPOT ON MARCH 27. 3458 18940327 18940328 A FEW VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 3450. 3459 18940327 18940331 TWO WELL-DEFINED SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION BETWEEN THEM ON MARCH 27. A HAS MOVED FORWARD BY MARCH 28 AND DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 29. A FRESH OUTBURST OF VERY SMALL SPOTS PRECEDING B HAS TAKEN PLACE BY MARCH 30, AND THE GROUP HAS BECOME A SMALL STRAGGLING STREAM. 3460 18940327 18940407 A FEW SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON MARCH 27. THE LARGEST SPOT, A, INCREASES IN SIZE, AND MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE GROUP BECOMES A FINE STREAM, WITH A, ITS LEADER, A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIE OUT, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY APRIL 6, AND IS SEEN AS A NOTCH ON THE LIMB ON APRIL 7. 3461 18940327 18940401 A SINGLE SPOT, A, ON MARCH 27; TWO OTHER SPOTS, B AND C, ARE SEEN FOLLOWING A ON MARCH 28 AND 29. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 30, A BY APRIL 1. 3462 18940328 18940328 AN IRREGULAR GROUP, WHICH BREAKS OUT CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 3463 18940328 18940402 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 28. IT IS ACCOMPANIED BY A SECOND ON MARCH 29-30. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 31 AND APRIL 1. ONE SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON APRIL 2. 3464 18940328 18940408 TWO VERY LARGE IRREGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. A IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON MARCH 31, AND B HAS THROWN OFF BY MARCH 31, A SMALL SPOT, C, WHICH INCREASES RAPIDLY IN SIZE. 3465 18940328 18940409 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON APRIL 1, 2 AND 4. 3466 18940329 18940329 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3467 18940329 18940406 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS N OF GROUP 3461. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE AND IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 3 AND 5. 3468 18940330 18940331 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. THE PRECEDING SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 31. 3469 18940331 18940331 A PAIR OF FAINT SPOTS, IN THE MIDST OF BRIGHT FACULAE, N OF GROUP FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 3470 18940331 18940331 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3471 18940401 18940413 A REGULAR SPOT ON APRIL 1. IT HAS BROKEN UP BY APRIL 2, AND IS FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP DIMINISHES UNTIL APRIL 5, AFTER WHICH IT REVIVES AGAIN AS A STRAGGLING STREAM OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL. A, THE LAST SPOT ON APRIL 7, INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES WELL-DEFINED, AND ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 11. 3472 18940402 18940403 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 2. ONE ON APRIL 3. 3473 18940403 18940411 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 5 AND A APRIL 6. A FRESH SPOT, C, HAS BROKEN OUT BY APRIL 6 SF OF THE PLACE OF B. ANOTHER SPOT, D, HAS APPEARED SF OF THE PLACE OF A BY APRIL 7, AND D AND C, WITH A VERY SMALL SPOT BETWEEN THEM, FORM A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE, WHICH HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. C HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, C AND F, BY APRIL 8; THESE ARE AGAIN SEEN AS ONE SPOT, C, ON APRIL 11. 3474 18940404 18940406 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON APRIL 4. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 5. 3475 18940404 18940414 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 13. A IS OVERTAKEN BY GROUP 3478 ON APRIL 15, AND IS SEEN AS A SMALL BUD ON THE LEADER OF THAT GROUP ON THAT DAY. 3476 18940405 18940407 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A VERY SMALL FOLLOWER IS SEEN ON APRIL 6. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE VERY RAPIDLY. 3477 18940406 18940411 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 6. THE GROUP HAS BECOME A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST, BY APRIL 7. PORTIONS BREAK OFF FROM A ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, CAUSING AN APPARENT CHANGE OF PLACE OF THE PRINCIPAL PART OF THE SPOT. 3478 18940406 18940416 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED ON APRIL 6 AND 7. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY APRIL 8, AND HAS BECOME A FINE, BROAD STREAM. TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, ARE FORMED ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY THE AGGREGATION TOGETHER OF SMALL SPOTS. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE AND HAS OVERTAKEN AND COALESCED WITH 3475A BY APRIL 15. 3479 18940407 18940407 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3480 18940409 18940409 A SMALL SPOT. 3481 18940410 18940412 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP NF GROUP 3471. 3482 18940410 18940410 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3483 18940411 18940411 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3484 18940412 18940412 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3485 18940412 18940424 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH VARY MUCH FROM DAY TO DAY IN NUMBER, SIZE, AND ARRANGEMENT. A HAS BECOME WIDELY SEPARATED FROM THE REST OF THE GROUP BY APRIL 16, AND DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTERWARDS. A SECOND REGULAR SPOT, B, HAS BEEN FORMED BY THE COALESCENCE OF SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM BY APRIL 21. 3486 18940414 18940426 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 18, 20 AND 25. 3487 18940415 18940419 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 17 AND 18. 3488 18940419 18940502 A REGULAR SPOT, A, ON APRIL 19, WHICH IS FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 21 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE GROUP SOON DEVELOPS INTO A FINE STREAM CONSISTING OF MANY SPOTS. B, THE SPOT NEXT FOLLOWING A ON APRIL 22, BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT, AND IS THE LARGEST SPOT IN THE GROUP BY APRIL 23. THE LAST SPOTS IN THE STREAM HAVE COALESCED BY APRIL 24 TO FORM A COMPOSITE SPOT, C, WHICH IS OFTEN MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS. 3489 18940420 18940501 A FEW SMALL IRREGULAR SPOTS ON APRIL 20. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS ON APRIL 21 AND 22. A GREAT OUTBURST HAS TAKEN PLACE BY APRIL 23, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM, WITH, ON APRIL 25, TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, AS THE FIRST AND LAST. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AGAIN AFTER APRIL 26, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 30. 3490 18940421 18940426 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT. 3491 18940422 18940425 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3492 18940422 18940504 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS, APRIL 25- 28 AND MAY 2. 3493 18940422 18940502 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. A DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 3494 18940425 18940425 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3495 18940425 18940503 A REGULAR SPOT. 3496 18940426 18940508 TWO LARGE IRREGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A THIRD SPOT, C, SP, A, AND NEARLY CONNECTED WITH IT. OTHER SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON APRIL 29 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, THE ENTIRE GROUP THEN FORMING A FINE STREAM. B IS MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS ON APRIL 30, AND A ON MAY 7. 3497 18940428 18940501 A SMALL SPOT; NOT SEEN ON APRIL 30. 3498 18940429 18940511 A FEW IRREGULAR UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE LARGEST SPOT, A, IS IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP ON APRIL 29, BUT IS THE LAST SPOT ON MAY 4. THE ORIGINAL GROUP HAS ENTIRELY DISAPPEARED BY MAY 7, BUT A FRESH OUTBURST HAS OCCURRED BY THAT DAY, A LITTLE FOLLOWING THE PLACE OF THE FIRST STREAM. THE GROUP ON MAY 7 CONSISTS ONLY OF A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS, BUT THESE HAVE GREATLY INCREASED IN NUMBER BY MAY 9. ON MAY 10 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A WELL DEFINED STREAM, OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, B AND C, ARE THE LARGEST, AND REGULAR SHAPE. 3499 18940430 18940501 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 30. THE FOLLOWING MEMBER OF THE PAIR IS ALONE FAINTLY SEEN ON MAY 1. 3500 18940501 18940502 A SMALL SPOT. 3501 18940501 189405 1 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3502 18940501 18940501 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3503 18940501 18940506 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE AND VERY SMALL, IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. 3504 18940501 18940512 A CONSIDERABLE, BUT VERY IRREGULAR GROUP. A, THE LAST SPOT ON MAY 2, IS THE ONLY REGULAR MEMBER OF THE GROUP AND HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 9. FOR THE REST OF THE GROUP IS A WIDELY STRAGGLING STREAM OF IRREGULAR NEBULOUS SPOTS. 3505 18940502 18940503 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 2. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MAY 3. 3506 18940503 18940507 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON MAY 5. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 7, BUT A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT IS SEEN S OF ITS PLACE. 3507 18940503 18940509 A REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES DIVIDED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE. THE TWO COMPONENTS ARE MEASURED SEPARATELY ON MAY 3. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN AFTER MAY 6. 3508 18940503 18940510 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, ON MAY 3. IT DECREASES IN SIZE RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON MAY 6. 3509 18940505 18940505 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A CLOSE CLUSTER NF GROUP 3496. 3510 18940505 18940506 TWO SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 3504. THEY MOVE AWAY FROM EACH OTHER. 3511 18940506 18940506 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3512 18940506 18940512 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAY 6. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A, THE LEADER, ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 11. 3513 18940509 18940510 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 3514 18940509 18940509 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3515 18940509 18940509 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT. 3516 18940509 18940516 A NEBULOUS SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON MAY 10 AND 15. 3517 18940511 18940512 A SMALL SPOT. 3518 18940511 18940522 A VERY LARGE, COMPLEX, AND IRREGULAR GROUP. MANY NUCLEI ARE SCATTERED THROUGH THE GROUP, WHICH UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE GROUP ON MAY 17 AND 18 CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS ALMOST IN UNION WITH EACH OTHER. SOME OF THE SPOTS APPEAR AS NOTCHES ON THE LIMB ON MAY 22. 3519 18940512 18940512 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 3520 18940512 18940524 A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR GROUP, FOLLOWING GROUP 3518, AND SOMEWHAT RESEMBLING IT, BUT DRAWN OUT MORE AFTER THE CHARACTER OF A STREAM. THE FOUR PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B, C, D, CAN BE TRACED FAIRLY WELL FOR SOME DAYS, BUT AFTER MAY 19 ONLY B IS DISTINGUISHABLE. THE COMPONENTS OF THE GROUP, AS A RULE, UNDERGO CONTINUAL CHANGE COALESCING WITH EACH OTHER AND SEPARATING AGAIN. A IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON MAY 15. 3521 18940513 18940520 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, WHICH INCREASES RAPIDLY UP TO MAY 15 AND DECREASES AFTER MAY 16. IT IS FOLLOWED BY A SMALLER SPOT, B, FROM MAY 14 TO 16. 3522 18940514 18940520 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS UNTIL MAY 17, BY WHICH DATE A CONSIDERABLE OUTBURST HAS TAKEN PLACE. THE GROUP THEN CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, AT DIFFERENT LATITUDES, WITH A FEW SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM, THE WHOLE FORMING A STREAM INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. 3523 18940515 18940515 A SMALL SPOT S OF GROUP 3522. 3524 18940515 18940525 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED UNTIL MAY 18, WHEN IT FORMS A SHORT CURVED STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE AND LENGTHENS OUT, THE AXIS OF THE GROUP BEING INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. 3525 18940517 18940525 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY, AND HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 22. 3526 18940518 18940519 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3527 18940518 18940518 A SMALL SPOT. 3528 18940518 18940529 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A LARGE AND IRREGULAR BUT FAINT SPOT, GENERALLY IN CONTACT WITH IT. THIS LATTER SPOT GRADUALLY BREAKS UP, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 27. A BRIGHT BRIDGE HAS APPEARED IN A BY MAY 23, AND HAS DIVIDED IT COMPLETELY INTO TWO BY MAY 26. 3529 18940519 18940528 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH HAS BEGUN TO BREAK UP BY MAY 21. THE GROUP ON MAY 22 FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM STRONGLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. IT HAS COMPLETELY BROKEN UP INTO A FEW SCATTERED SMALL SPOTS BY MAY 25. THERE HAS BEEN A SMALL FRESH OUTBURST IN A HIGHER LATITUDE BY MAY 27. THE GROUP LIES NP GROUP 3530, WHICH IT ALMOST TOUCHES. 3530 18940519 18940531 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALLER SPOTS. A IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE, AND HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS, B AND C, BY MAY 22. B AND C ALONE REMAIN BY MAY 28. 3531 18940522 18940525 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM N GROUP 3524. 3532 18940522 18940601 A REGULAR SPOT. 3533 18940523 18940604 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SEEN AS A SHALLOW NOTCH ON THE LIMB ON MAY 23, THOUGH IT CANNOT BE MEASURED UNTIL MAY 24. SOME SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON MOST DAYS, AND A SMALL SPOT HAS SEPARATED OFF FROM A BY MAY 31. A ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 2. 3534 18940524 18940524 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3535 18940524 18940601 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A, F GROUP 3533. IT DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY AND HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS BY MAY 29. 3536 18940525 18940526 TWO SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 3524. THE GROUP HAS CONSIDERABLY INCREASED BY MAY 26. 3537 18940526 18940607 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL IRREGULAR COMPANIONS. A OCCASIONALLY THROWS OFF A SMALL SPOT. 3538 18940527 18940528 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 3539 18940527 18940531 A FEW SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3540 18940528 18940602 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MAY 31. 3541 18940529 18940605 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON MAY 30, JUNE 1, AND JUNE 4. A MOVES FOWARD IN LONGITUDE AFTER JUNE 2. 3542 18940529 18940530 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 3543 18940529 18940603 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT F GROUP 3541. 3544 18940530 18940601 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3545 18940530 18940605 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 3546 18940531 18940605 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST, AND MOVES FOWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE. 3547 18940601 18940601 A VERY SMALL SPOT N OF GROUP 3535. 3548 18940601 18940603 A SMALL FAINT NEBULOUS SPOT BETWEEN GROUPS 3537 AND 3544. IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS BY JUNE 3. 3549 18940601 18940610 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS MOVED FORWARD BY JUNE 5, AND HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY THE SAME DATE. A REMAINS ALONE BY JUNE 7. 3550 18940602 18940602 A SMALL SPOT. 3551 18940602 18940605 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 3. 3552 18940603 18940603 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT. 3553 18940603 18940610 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST, ARE THE LARGEST, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A INCREASES IN SIZE, AND BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WHILE THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 10. 3554 18940604 18940615 A NUMBER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED. THE GROUP TENDS TO INCREASE IN SIZE, AND THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, A, BY JUNE 7. THE PRECEDING SPOTS TEND TO DIE OUT AFTER THAT DATE, WHILE A BECOMES MORE REGULAR. 3555 18940604 18940611 A NEBULOUS SPOT WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 3556 18940605 18940605 A SMALL SPOT. 3557 18940605 18940609 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, N OF GROUP 3549, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 3558 18940605 18940616 A FAINT, ILL-DEFINED DOUBLE SPOT, A, WITH TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON JUNE 5. THE COMPANIONS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 8. A TEMPORARY OUTBURST HAS OCCURRED BY JUNE 9, AND A MORE LASTING ONE BY JUNE 11, AND THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO JUNE 13, WHEN A IS A LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT. 3559 18940605 18940617 A LARGE BUT UNSTABLE GROUP. THE TWO LEADING SPOTS, A AND B, ARE REGULAR. A DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 15. B REMAINS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT THROUGHOUT. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE VERY UNSTABLE; SOMETIMES, AS ON JUNE 15, BEING UNITED TO FORM ONE COMPACT NEBULOUS SPOT; AT OTHERS, AS ON JUNE 16, HAVING BROKEN UP TO FORM AN IRREGULAR AND WIDELY DIVIDED GROUP OF NUCLEATED SPOTS. 3560 18940606 18940612 A NEBULOUS SPOT, A, N OF GROUP 3559. A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON JUNE 11. 3561 18940607 18940607 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3562 18940608 18940616 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL IRREGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, ON JUNE 8. A FEW SMALL SPOTS CONNECT THEM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. B DIMINISHES AND HAS BROKEN UP BY JUNE 12, BUT SOME OF ITS COMPONENTS HAVE RE-UNITED AGAIN AS C BY JUNE 14. A ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 16. 3563 18940609 18940613 A SMALL GROUP OF NEBULOUS SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 3559 AND 3560. 3564 18940609 18940617 A VERY UNSTABLE GROUP. A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON JUNE 10. TWO NEBULOUS SPOTS ON JUNE 12. A LONG CURVED STREAM OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JUNE 15. 3565 18940610 18940622 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH UNDERGO GREAT VARIATION. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE, AND THE FOLLOWING SPOTS INCREASE IN SIZE UNTIL JUNE 18, WHEN THE GROUP PRACTICALLY CONSISTS OF ONE VERY LARGE NEBULOUS COMPOSITE SPOT. A IS, HOWEVER, DISTINGUISHABLE FROM THE REST OF THE GROUP, BEING SEPARATED FROM IT BY A VERY NARROW BRIGHT BRIDGE, EXCEPT JUNE 20. 3566 18940611 18940612 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, N OF GROUP 3558. THE GROUP IS MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT ON BOTH DAYS. 3567 18940611 18940614 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NP OF GROUP 3559. IT IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 13. 3568 18940611 18940611 A SMALL SPOT, S OF GROUP 3560. 3569 18940612 18940612 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3570 18940612 18940619 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JUNE 12. THESE HAVE DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 13, AND TWO SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED S OF THEIR PLACE. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND CONSISTS, ON JUNE 15, OF TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A AND B, UNITED BY A STREAM OF SPOTS MOSTLY VERY SMALL. A IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT; B IS MUCH SMALLER THAN A AND IS IRREGULAR. A AND B ALONE REMAIN BY JUNE 19. 3571 18940612 18940612 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3572 18940612 18940612 A SMALL SPOT. 3573 18940612 18940623 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH TWO NUCLEI. IT HAS BEGUN TO DIVIDE BY JUNE 14 BUT THE COMPONENTS ARE NOT MEASURED SEPARATELY, AS B AND C, UNTIL JUNE 16. B REMAINS A REGULAR SPOT. C DIMINISHES AND HAS DIED OUT BY JUNE 21. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN NEAR THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS. 3574 18940613 18940618 A VERY FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP, F GROUP 3559. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE VERY RAPIDLY, ESPECIALLY AFTER JUNE 16, AND BY JUNE 17, A LARGE SPOT, A, HAS FORMED IN THE SF PART OF THE GROUP. A FURTHER DEVELOPMENT, BUT TO THE N HAS TAKEN PLACE BY JUNE 18. 3575 18940614 18940626 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE NUCLEUS OF A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY JUNE 23. A IS SEEN AS A VERY SHALLOW NOTCH ON THE LIMB ON JUNE 26, BUT IS NOT MEASURABLE ON THAT DAY. 3576 18940615 18940616 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 15. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED ON JUNE 16. 3577 18940615 18940622 A VERY VARIABLE GROUP. A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 15, WHICH IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 17. A FRESH OUTBURST HAS TAKEN PLACE BY JUNE 18, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JUNE 19, AND ARE LARGE AND REGULAR. THEY BREAK UP AND DIMINISH AFTER JUNE 20, AND A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 22. 3578 18940617 18940618 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS ALSO SEEN ON JUNE 18. 3579 18940618 18940623 A VERY VARIABLE GROUP. ON JUNE 18 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, THE LAST OF WHICH IS A. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JUNE 19, AND A DOUBLE SPOT, B, HAS BROKEN OUT, PRECEDING A, WHICH IS NOW LARGE. THE COMPONENTS OF B HAVE UNITED BY JUNE 20. A AND B ARE UNITED BY A STREAM OF SMALLER SPOTS. 3580 18940619 18940619 A NEBULOUS GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS NF OF GROUP 3565. 3581 18940619 18940701 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 3582 18940620 18940620 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3583 18940621 18940630 A DIMINISHING NEBULOUS SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JUNE 22 AND 27. 3584 18940623 18940626 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 3585 18940623 18940704 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. SMALL SPOTS ALSO FROM TIME TO TIME BREAK OFF FROM A, WHICH DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER JUNE 25. 3586 18940623 18940630 A NEBULOUS SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS BY JUNE 28, BUT THEY ARE NOT MEASURED SEPARATELY AS B AND C UNTIL JUNE 29. 3587 18940624 18940624 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3588 18940626 18940626 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3589 18940627 18940628 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JUNE 27. ONLY B IS SEEN ON JUNE 28. 3590 18940627 18940702 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON JUNE 27. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, WHEN IT CONSISTS OF A REGULAR SPOT, A FOLLOWED BY A SHORT BROAD STREAM OF SPOTS MOSTLY SMALL. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED STILL FURTHER BY JUNE 29, AFTER WHICH IT RAPIDLY DIMINISHES AND DIES OUT WHEN STILL TWO DAYS FROM THE WEST LIMB. 3591 18940628 18940630 A SMALL FAINT SPOT N OF GROUP 3585. 3592 18940629 18940706 A FEW SMALL AND VERY UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3593 18940629 18940707 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, USUALLY FORMING A SHORT STREAM. 3594 18940630 18940630 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3595 18940701 18940701 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 3596 18940701 18940702 A VERY SMALL SPOT NF OF GROUP 3592 ON JULY 1. A SECOND SIMILAR SPOT HAS FORMED BEFORE IT BY JULY 2. 3597 18940701 18940709 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JULY 1. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THESE MOVE APART IN LONGITUDE, AND OTHER SPOTS FORM BETWEEN THEM, SO THAT THE GROUP BECOMES A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. A DIMINISHES IN LATITUDE FROM JULY 2 TO JULY 5, PRODUCING THE EFFECT OF A SLIGHT PARTIAL DIRECT ROTATION OF THE AXIS OF THE GROUP. 3598 18940701 18940710 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL JULY 5. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. 3599 18940702 18940715 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LATTER INCREASE IN NUMBER AND AREA, AND THE LAST SPOT, B, HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY JULY 7. THE SPOTS BETWEEN A AND B DIMINISH AFTER THE GROUP HAS PASSED THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY JULY 13. B IS SEEN AS A NOTCH ON THE LIMB, BUT CANNOT BE MEASURED, ON JULY 15. 3600 18940703 18940703 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3601 18940703 18940703 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3602 18940703 18940703 A VERY SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 3597. 3603 18940703 18940709 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 3604 18940703 18940716 A GROUP CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND C, WITH A MUCH SMALLER REGULAR SPOT, B, BETWEEN THEM. A FEW SMALLER SPOTS ARE ALSO SEEN FROM TIME TO TIME. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 8, A BY JULY 10, AND C REMAINS ALONE BY JULY 13. 3605 18940704 18940711 AN IRREGULAR SPOT, A, SF GROUP 3604C. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON JULY 7. AFTER THAT DATE, THE GROUP IS A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3606 18940705 18940713 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON JULY 5. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE AND COMPLEXITY. 3607 18940705 18940708 A FAINT SPOT WHICH HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED BY JULY 6. 3608 18940706 18940706 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3609 18940706 18940706 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3610 18940706 18940718 A STREAM AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE EQUATOR, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH SEVERAL SMALL FAINT COMPANIONS. A, THE MORE NORTHERN SPOT, HAS BROKEN UP INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS BY JULY 12. THESE APPEAR TO UNITE AGAIN LATER, AND HAVE MOSTLY COALESCED WITH B BY JULY 16. 3611 18940707 18940707 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3612 18940707 18940707 A SMALL SPOT. 3613 18940707 18940718 A GROUP FOLLOWING GROUP 3610, AND CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SURROUNDED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 3614 18940708 18940712 A FEW FAINT SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, S GROUP 3599. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE MOST STABLE. 3615 18940708 18940712 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 3613. 3616 18940710 18940715 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES VERY RAPIDLY. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON JULY 13. 3617 18940711 18940711 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3618 18940711 18940711 A SMALL SPOT. 3619 18940711 18940711 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3620 18940711 18940711 A SMALL SPOT. 3621 18940711 18940713 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JULY 11 AND 12. A ALONE IS SEEN ON JULY 13. 3622 18940711 18940718 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP ON JULY 11. THE GROUP HAS EXPANDED BY JULY 12 INTO A SHORT BROAD STREAM, OF WHICH A, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, IS THE LEADER. 3623 18940711 18940714 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL. SOME OF THESE HAVE COALESCED ON JULY 18 TO FORM AN IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT. 3624 18940711 18940723 A FINE GROUP, THE MAJOR AXIS OF WHICH IS NEARLY PERPENDICULAR TO THE EQUATOR ON JULY 11. THE GROUP CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, AND A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 3625 18940711 18940711 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3626 18940712 18940713 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JULY 12. A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 13. 3627 18940712 18940712 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3628 18940712 18940721 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, SF GROUP 3624. A, THE LAST SPOT ON JULY 12, IS THE LARGEST. IT HAS BECOME THE LEADER BY JULY 16, THROUGH THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE PRECEDING SPOTS, AND THE FORMATION OF FRESH SPOTS FOLLOWING IT. 3629 18940712 18940724 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, ARRANGED IN A SPIRAL FORM, PROCEED FROM THE F SIDE OF A ON JULY 15, BUT HAVE DISAPPEARED AGAIN BY JULY 21. 3630 18940712 18940724 A CONSIDERABLE IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS WHICH UNDERGO CONSTANT CHANGE. 3631 18940713 18940713 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3632 18940713 18940717 A SMALL SPOT. 3633 18940714 18940717 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 15. 3634 18940716 18940716 A LARGE SPOT, FIRST SEEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 3635 18940716 18940724 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS SF GROUP 3630, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 22. 3636 18940716 18940717 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3637 18940717 18940729 AN IRREGULAR STREAM, CONSISTING OF TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, AND A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. A MOVES BACKWARD IN LONGITUDE, APPROACHING B. 3638 18940717 18940730 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, SOMETIMES MEASURED AS ONE SPOT, A, SOMETIMES AS TWO SEPARATE SPOTS, B AND C. A SMALL COMPANION IS OCCASIONALLY SEEN. 3639 18940718 18940719 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JULY 18. A SECOND VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN PRECEDING IT ON JULY 19. 3616, 3624, 3628, 3630, 3632, 3635, AND 3639 FORM PARTS OF WHAT IS ALMOST ONE LONG IRREGULAR STREAM. 3640 18940720 18940731 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 20. A CONSIDERABLE STREAM, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, HAS FORMED BY JULY 21. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS OF THE STREAM HAVE DISAPPEARED BY JULY 27, LEAVING A ALONE. A IS SEEN AS A NOTCH ON THE LIMB ON JULY 31, BUT IS NOT MEASURABLE. 3641 18940721 18940721 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3642 18940721 18940802 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 3643 18940722 18940724 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3644 18940723 18940726 A FEW FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3645 18940723 18940803 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 3646 18940724 18940725 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 24, WHICH HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED BY JULY 25. 3647 18940726 18940726 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3648 18940726 18940728 A FEW SCATTERED SMALL SPOTS. 3649 18940727 18940728 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3650 18940729 18940729 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3651 18940729 18940801 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 31. 3652 18940729 18940811 A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR AND SCATTERED GROUP. THE LEADING SPOT, A, IS AT FIRST LARGE BUT HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 7. B, THE LARGEST SPOT IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP, IS A LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT. THE SPOTS SF B ARE AT FIRST SMALL AND SCATTERED, BUT TEND TO COALESCE, AND TWO OF THEM, C AND D, HAVE BECOME LARGE BY AUGUST 7 AND 8 RESPECTIVELY. 3653 18940730 18940804 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 31. 3654 18940731 18940806 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES IN LONGITUDE AND AREA. A FEW SMALL SPOTS FORM IN ADVANCE OF A ON AUGUST 1 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 6. 3655 18940801 18940801 A SMALL SPOT. 3656 18940802 18940811 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES IN LONGITUDE AND AREA. A FEW SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN PRECEDING A ON AUGUST 2 AND 3, AND OTHERS FOLLOWING IT ON AUGUST 8 AND 9. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 10, BUT A APPEARS TO HAVE REVIVED AGAIN BY AUGUST 11. 3657 18940802 18940814 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A CLOSELY FOLLOWED ON SOME DAYS BY A CHAIN OF SPOTS MOSTLY VERY SMALL. 3658 18940802 18940806 A SPOT, A, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN AREA. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON AUGUST 5. 3659 18940804 18940806 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, S GROUP 3652. 3660 18940807 18940809 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, NP OF THE POSITION OF GROUP 3654. 3661 18940807 18940814 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 7. ON AUGUST 8, TWO SMALL DARK SPOTS, A AND B, ARE SEEN CONNECTED BY A DOUBLE STREAM OF SPOTS. A AND B INCREASE IN SIZE, AND HAVE BECOME LARGE SPOTS WITH WELL-DEFINED UMBRAE BY AUGUST 9. THE CONNECTING SPOTS HAVE ALL DIED OUT BY AUGUST 13. 3662 18940807 18940818 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 16. 3663 18940807 18940819 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 3664 18940808 18940814 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 8. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 12 AND 13, BUT A HAS REVIVED BY AUGUST 14 3665 18940808 18940809 A SMALL SPOT. 3666 18940810 18940811 A SMALL SPOT. 3667 18940810 18940811 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 3668 18940811 18940823 A VERY LARGE FINE IRREGULAR GROUP. DURING THE GREATER PART OF ITS PASSAGE ACROSS THE DISK IT CONSISTS OF ONE VERY LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH HAS TO BE ARBITRARILY SUBDIVIDED FOR THE PURPOSES OF MEASUREMENT. IT BREAKS UP INTO SEVERAL SEPARATE AND DISTINCT SPOTS AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 3669 18940812 18940814 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 3661. ONLY A, THE LEADER, WHICH HAS INCREASED IN SIZE, REMAINS BY AUGUST 13. 3670 18940813 18940814 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3671 18940814 18940817 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE AND VARIABLE SPOTS. 3672 18940814 18940821 A SMALL VARIABLE SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 17. 3673 18940815 18940815 A SMALL SPOT. 3674 18940815 18940824 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH STEADILY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. IT IS VERY SMALL ON AUGUST 24, AND HAS A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SCATTERED COMPANIONS. 3675 18940816 18940821 TWO OR THREE SMALL UNSTABLE AND VARIABLE SPOTS. 3676 18940817 18940817 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, P GROUP 3668. 3677 18940817 18940817 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3678 18940817 18940822 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR MORE VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. 3679 18940817 18940825 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 20. A DIMINISHES STEADILY FROM DAY TO DAY. 3680 18940818 18940818 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NEAR THE POSITION OF GROUP 3670 WHEN LAST SEEN. 3681 18940820 18940820 A VERY SMALL SPOT NEAR THE WEST LIMB IN THE PLACE OCCUPIED ON AUGUST 17 BY GROUP 3676. 3682 18940820 18940822 A SMALL SPOT. 3683 18940820 18940822 A SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 20. A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON THE SUCCEDING DAYS. 3684 18940821 18940821 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3685 18940822 18940822 A SMALL SPOT. 3686 18940826 18940828 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON AUGUST 26. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON AUGUST 27. B HAS CONSIDERABLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY AUGUST 28. 3687 18940826 18940904 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO AUGUST 28, BUT DIMINISHES AFTERWARDS, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 2. 3688 18940826 18940826 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3689 18940826 18940904 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. IT DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER AUGUST 29, AND IS FOLLOWED, AFTER SEPTEMBER 1, BY A COMPACT CLUSTER OF SMALL IRREGULAR SPOTS. 3690 18940828 18940828 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3691 18940828 18940901 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR AND DISAPPEAR. 3692 18940828 18940907 A STREAM COMPOSED OF TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A AND B, UNITED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS. A IS NOT SEEN AFTER SEPTEMBER 5. 3693 18940830 18940830 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3694 18940830 18940906 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3695 18940901 18940901 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3696 18940901 18940901 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3697 18940903 18940912 A NUMBER OF ILL-DEFINED UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL. THE GROUP, ON SEPTEMBER 7, CONSISTS OF TWO STRAIGHT STREAMS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS AT RIGHT ANGLES TO EACH OTHER. ONLY TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP REMAIN BY SEPTEMBER 8. 3698 18940904 18940904 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 3699 18940904 18940911 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3700 18940905 18940914 AN IRREGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 7. A HAS BROKEN UP BY SEPTEMBER 11 INTO A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3701 18940906 18940918 A LONG INTRICATE AND IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS. THE INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS OF THE GROUP UNDERGO FREQUENT CHANGE, AND ONLY THE LAST SPOT, A, CAN BE IDENTIFIED FOR ANY LENGTH OF TIME. A IS REGULAR AT FIRST, BUT HAS BECOME IRREGULAR, AND HAS PARTLY COALESCED WITH NEIGHBOURING SPOTS BY SEPTEMBER 15. 3702 18940906 18940918 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 13. 3703 18940906 18940913 A SINGLE SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. SEVERAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 12 AND 13. 3704 18940906 18940914 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 3705 18940907 18940912 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 10. A IS NOT SEEN AFTER THIS DATE AND THE GROUP CONSISTS OF TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 3706 18940908 18940909 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP IS FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 3707 18940908 18940915 A PAIR OF VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPTEMBER 8. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY SEPTEMBER 10, AND FORMS AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF WHICH A AND B ARE THE FIRST AND LAST. THE GROUP THEN DIMINISHES AGAIN, AND ONLY B REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 13. 3708 18940908 18940910 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED, N OF GROUP 3701. 3709 18940908 18940912 A SMALL SPOT. 3710 18940910 18940912 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 3711 18940910 18940910 A SMALL SPOT. 3712 18940911 18940911 TWO SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 3713 18940911 18940911 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3714 18940911 18940911 A SMALL SPOT. 3715 18940912 18940912 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NEAR THE WEST LIMB, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 3716 18940912 18940919 A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 12 AND 13. IT HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLUSTER OF IRREGULAR NEBULOUS SPOTS BY SEPTEMBER 14. 3717 18940913 18940925 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 3718 18940915 18940917 SEVERAL SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 3719 18940915 18940917 A NEBULOUS SPOT, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 3720 18940916 18940924 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SHORT STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES INSIZE UP TO SEPTEMBER 19, AND DIMINISHES AGAIN ALMOST AS QUICKY AFTER THAT DATE. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS OF THE GROUP UNDERGO MUCH CHANGE. A IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON SEPTEMBER 18, AND B ON SEPTEMER 20 AND 21. 3721 18940919 18940929 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL FOLLOWERS. 3722 18940922 18940927 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. OTHER SMALL SPOTS ACCOMPANY THEM ON SEPTEMBER 23, 25, AND 26. 3723 18940922 18940925 A SMALL SPOT, A WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 24 AND 25. 3724 18940923 18940928 A SINGLE SPOT, WHICH STEADILY DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 3725 18940927 18941009 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 2. ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN. 3726 18940928 18941001 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, SUDDENLY APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. THE TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A AND B, ALONE REMAIN BY SEPTEMBER 30. 3727 18940929 18941004 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, N OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 3724. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 2. 3728 18940929 18941007 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER OCTOBER 3. 3729 18940930 18940930 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3730 18940930 18941007 A REGULAR SPOT, A, N OF GROUP 3728. OTHER SPOTS FORM NEAR A, WHICH DIMINISHES AFTER OCTOBER 4, AND THE GROUP HAS BECOME TWO SHORT STRAIGHT STREAMS OF SMALL SPOTS BY OCTOBER 6. 3731 18941002 18941014 A VERY FINE AND COMPLICATED GROUP. THE LEADER, A, IS LARGE AND REGULAR, AND MOVES FORWARD IN LONGTITUDE. THE LAST SPOT, B, IS VERY LARGE AND IRREGULAR, AND MOVES SOUTH IN LATITUDE. THE GROUP BETWEEN A AND B IS A VERY BROAD AND COMPLICATED STREAM MADE UP LARGELY OF CURVED AND SPIRAL FORM. 3732 18941002 18941014 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. GROUPS 3732, 3734 AND 3735 FORM PRACTICALLY A SINGLE STREAM. 3733 18941003 18941004 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3734 18941003 18941015 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. GROUPS 3732, 3734 AND 3735 FORM PRACTICALLY A SINGLE STREAM. 3735 18941004 18941007 A SMALL IRREGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 5. GROUPS 3732, 3734 AND 3735 FORM PRACTICALLY A SINGLE STREAM. 3736 18941004 18941008 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 3737 18941006 18941006 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 3738 18941006 18941017 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY, AND WHICH IS FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF IRREGULAR SPOTS IN CLOSE SUCCESSION. 3739 18941008 18941014 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 10 AND 12. 3740 18941010 18941011 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED ON OCTOBER 10. ONLY ONE SMALL FAINT SPOT REMAINS ON OCTOBER 11. 3741 18941010 18941014 SOME FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 11. 3742 18941011 18941011 A SMALL SPOT. 3743 18941012 18941012 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3744 18941012 18941016 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS ARE A, THE LEADER ON OCTOBER 13, AND B, THE LARGEST SPOT. B IS IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP. 3745 18941013 18941018 A STREAM OF SPOTS, FORMING TO THE WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND RAPIDLY INCREASING IN SIZE UNTIL OCTOBER 15, AFTER WHICH IT DIMINISHES AGAIN. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST; B HAS A LARGE RETROGRADE MOTION IN LONGITUDE. 3746 18941015 18941015 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3747 18941015 18941017 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 16, AND ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN ON OCTOBER 17. 3748 18941018 18941020 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3749 18941018 18941019 A SMALL SPOT. 3750 18941018 18941022 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP TENDS TO INCREASE WHEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 3751 18941018 18941021 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 3752 18941018 18941019 A SMALL SPOT. 3753 18941018 18941018 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3754 18941018 18941027 A NUMBER OF VERY UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR VARIABLE STREAM. 3755 18941019 18941019 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3756 18941019 18941030 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. A HAS A WELL MARKED FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE, AND A DOWNWARD MOTION IN LATITUDE. 3757 18941019 18941023 A SINGLE SPOT, WHICH DIMINISHES IN AREA. 3758 18941020 18941020 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS SP GROUP 3751. 3759 18941021 18941029 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON OCTOBER 21. A HAS INCREASED CONSIDERABLY BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND IS FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A LONG STREAM. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 26, BUT HAVE REAPPEARED BY THE FOLLOWING DAY. A IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 29. 3760 18941021 18941027 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 25. 3761 18941021 18941028 A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 3762 18941022 18941022 A SMALL SPOT. 3763 18941024 18941024 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3764 18941025 18941026 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3765 18941026 18941026 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3766 18941027 18941027 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3767 18941027 18941030 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR AND VARIABLE STREAM. A, THE LEADER ON OCTOBER 28, IS THE LARGEST. 3768 18941027 18941027 A SMALL SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 3769 18941028 18941028 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3770 18941028 18941109 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED UNTIL NOVEMBER 2 BY A STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3771 18941028 18941104 A SMALL SPOT, A; FOLLOWED FROM OCTOBER 29-31, BY SEVERAL VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 1, BUT A HAS REAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 2. 3772 18941029 18941029 A SMALL SPOT. 3773 18941029 18941029 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3774 18941029 18941102 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B. BOTH ARE VERY SMALL ON OCTOBER 29, BUT INCREASE GREATLY UNTIL OCTOBER 31, AFTER WHICH THEY DIMINISH AGAIN AND B HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 2. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. 3775 18941029 18941029 A SMALL SPOT, NF OF GROUP 3770. 3776 18941029 18941108 A REGULAR SPOT, WHICH DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. 3777 18941030 18941110 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. GROUPS 3776 AND 3777 FORM A WIDE PAIR. 3778 18941031 18941101 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT ON OCTOBER 31. IT HAS GREATLY DECREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 3779 18941102 18941102 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3780 18941102 18941103 A VERY SMALL SPOT S OF GROUP 3770. 3781 18941102 18941106 SEVERAL UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY UP TO NOVEMBER 4, AND DIMINISHES AS QUICKLY AFTERWARDS. 3782 18941103 18941103 A SMALL SPOT. 3783 18941103 18941110 SEVERAL UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL. ON NOVEMBER 6 IT FORMS A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM, BUT IT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3784 18941103 18941104 A SMALL SPOT. 3785 18941103 18941108 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON NOVEMBER 5 AND 7. 3786 18941103 18941114 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY NOVEMBER 7, WHICH ARE MEASURED SEPARATELY AS B AND C ON NOVEMBER 9. BOTH DIMINISH, B THE MORE RAPIDLY. ONLY C REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 14. 3787 18941105 18941105 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS S OF GROUP 3770. 3788 18941106 18941106 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3789 18941106 18941112 A GROUP FORMING ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. ON NOVEMBER 7 IT FORMS A LONG CURVED STREAM. A, THE LAST SPOT, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AND HAS A RETROGRADE MOTION IN LONGITUDE, AND MOVES AWAY FROM THE EQUATOR IN LATITUDE. B, THE LEADER, IS ALSO REGULAR, BUT RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 11. IT MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. 3790 18941108 18941108 A SMALL SPOT S OF GROUP 3770. 3791 18941108 18941108 A VERY SMALL SPOT NEAR THE POSITION OF GROUP OF 3784. 3792 18941108 18941113 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A IS THE LEADING SPOT. 3793 18941109 18941116 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON NOVEMBER 9. A AND B MOVE APART AND INCREASE IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND NEW SPOTS FORM BETWEEN THEM, AND THE GROUP BECOMES A STRAIGHT STREAM. A IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON NOVEMBER 13 AND 14, AND B ON NOVEMBER 11. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER NOVEMBER 14, ONLY A AND B REMAINING AFTER THAT DATE. 3794 18941110 18941110 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3795 18941110 18941118 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO NOVEMBER 14, AND THEN SUDDENLY DIMINISHES. 3796 18941112 18941112 THREE SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 3786. 3797 18941112 18941121 AN ISOLATED SPOT WHICH SLOWLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 3798 18941113 18941114 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SP GROUP 3793. 3799 18941114 18941123 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE ENTIRE GROUP DIMINISHES STEADILY IN SIZE AFTER NOVEMBER 15, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY NOVEMBER 20. 3800 18941115 18941119 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 18 AND 19. THE GROUP FOLLOWS GROUP 3799. 3801 18941117 18941125 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON NOVEMBER 17. BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED INTO A STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH A, NOW DOUBLE AND MUCH INCREASED IN SIZE, IS THE LEADER, AND ANOTHER DOUBLE SPOT, B, THE LAST. A AND B BOTH BECOME REGULAR SPOTS LATER. THE GROUP DIMINISHES STEADILY AFTER NOVEMBER 19, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY NOVEMBER 23. 3802 18941118 18941118 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3803 18941119 18941119 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 3804 18941120 18941201 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. A REMAINS ALONE BY NOVEMBER 28. 3805 18941121 18941121 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3806 18941121 18941121 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3807 18941121 18941128 A GROUP SUDDENLY FORMING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN AS A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON NOVEMBER 22 AND 23, WHEN IT CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF IRREGULAR SPOTS IN A BROAD STREAM. A NEBULOUS SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWING A IS MEASURED WITH IT ON NOVEMBER 22. 3808 18941121 18941121 A SMALL SPOT. 3809 18941123 18941124 A SMALL SPOT. 3810 18941123 18941123 A SMALL SPOT. 3811 18941124 18941126 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 26. 3812 18941126 18941206 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE A GREAT DEVELOPMENT BY DECEMBER 5, AND CONTAINS TWO LARGE IRREGULAR SPOTS WITH SEVERAL SMALLER COMPANIONS. IT HAS UNDERGONE A FURTHER INCREASE BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 3813 18941127 18941128 A SMALL SPOT WITH, ON NOVEMBER 27, A VERY SMALL COMPANION. THE LATTER IS NOT SEEN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 3814 18941127 18941201 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN A SHORT STREAM. A AND B ARE THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS. B REMAINS ALONE ON DECEMBER 1. 3815 18941127 18941206 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY AFTER PASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON NOVEMBER 29, AND BY DECEMBER 2 HAS BECOME A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM, THE LEADER OF WHICH IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT A. THE AXIS OF THE STREAM IS INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. 3816 18941129 18941211 THREE LARGE IRREGULAR SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 30. THE GROUP SOON BECOMES A STRAIGHT STREAM OF WHICH THE FIRST SPOT, A, IS LARGE AND REGULAR, AND THE LAST SPOT, B, IS ALSO REGULAR. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP DIMINISHES STEADILY, AND ON DECEMBER 9 AND 11, A ALONE IS SEEN. 3817 18941130 18941210 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 30, NP GROUP 3816. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE THREE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND BECOMES A CONSIDERABLE STREAM; A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, BEING THE LARGEST. B IS MUCH LARGER THAN A TO BEGIN WITH, BUT RAPIDLY DIMINISHES, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY DECEMBER 9. 3818 18941201 18941212 A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, F GROUP 3816. THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, A, A SOMEWHAT SMALL REGULAR SPOT, IS ON MOST DAYS THE LEADER. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS OFTEN INCLINED AT A LARGE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. 3819 18941202 18941203 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3820 18941202 18941210 SEVERAL SPOTS, MOSTLY IRREGULAR AND VARIABLE, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON DECEMBER 4, 5, AND 6. 3821 18941203 18941204 A SMALL SPOT. 3822 18941203 18941210 SEVERAL IRREGULAR SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE SPOTS TEND TO BREAK UP AND SCATTER, AND A AND B, THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, AND THE FIRST AND LAST ON DECEMBER 3, HAVE COMPLETELY BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 7. 3823 18941205 18941215 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 3824 18941206 18941208 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. A SECOND SPOT IS SEEN NEAR THE FIRST ON DECEMBER 8. 3825 18941208 18941208 THREE SMALL SPOTS. 3826 18941210 18941211 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3827 18941210 18941216 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, WHICH HAVE FORMED SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON DECEMBER 10. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND HAS BECOME A FINE COMPLEX STREAM, OF WHICH THE FIRST SPOT, A, IS LARGE AND REGULAR. THE LAST SPOT ON DECEMBER 13, B, IS A LARGE NEBULOUS IRREGULAR SPOT. 3828 18941212 18941212 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3829 18941215 18941226 A NUMBER OF SPOTS MOSTLY LARGE AND NEBULOUS IN A BROAD STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS AT FIRST LARGE AND REGULAR, BUT LATER DIMINISHES AND BECOMES IRREGULAR. IT MOVES SLOWLY FORWARD IN LONGITUDE UNTIL DECEMBER 21, BUT QUICKLY AFTER THAT DATE. 3830 18941216 18941226 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALLER SPOT, B, NF A, IS SEEN DECEMBER 17-20, AND A THIRD AND INCREASING SPOT, C, SF A, DECEMBER 18-26. A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS MAKE UP WITH A AND C AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON DECEMBER 24. 3831 18941218 18941221 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE MOST STABLE. A REMAINS ALONE ON DECEMBER 21. 3832 18941220 18941226 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH GENERALLY A SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANION. A IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON DECEMBER 24. 3833 18941221 18941230 A VERY CLOSE PAIR MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT, A, UNTIL DECEMBER 27, WHEN THE TWO COMPONENTS HAVE SEPARATED SOMEWHAT, AND ARE MEASURED SEPARATELY AS B AND C. B DIMINISHES AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 29. 3834 18941223 18941223 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3835 18941223 18941228 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SPARSE STREAM. THE SPOTS ARE UNSTABLE WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE LEADER, A, WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 27. 3836 18941225 18950102 A SOMEWHAT ILL-DEFINED SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JANUARY 1. 3837 18941226 18941226 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3838 18941226 18950101 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 26. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY UP TO DECEMBER 28, WHEN IT FORMS AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF NEBULOUS SPOTS. THE SPOTS ARE UNSTABLE, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF A, THE LEADER ON DECEMBER 27, AND TEND TO FORM IN FRONT OF THE GROUP AND DISAPPEAR AT THE REAR. 3839 18941227 18941227 A SMALL SPOT. 3840 18941228 18941229 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 28. 3841 18941228 18941231 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON DECEMBER 28. THE TWO SPOTS SEPARATE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND OTHER SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, FORM BETWEEN THEM, FORMING ON DECEMBER 29 AN OVAL RING. B ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 31. 3842 18941228 18950108 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS, SOMETIMES ATTENDED BY SMALL COMPANIONS. IT HAS BROKEN UP BY JANUARY 4, PRINCIPALLY INTO TWO SPOTS, B AND C, WHICH DIMINISH ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 3843 18941231 18950102 A FEW VERY FAINT, SMALL, AND UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 3844 18941231 18941231 THREE SMALL SPOTS. 3845 18941231 18950103 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 31 AND JANUARY 2. 3846 18941231 18950111 A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WHICH SPEEDILY BECOMES LARGE, BUT DIMINISHES AFTER JANUARY 2. IT IS FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 2, BUT THESE GREATLY INCREASE IN NUMBER, AND THE GROUP BECOMES A VERY COMPLICATED AND IRREGULAR STREAM. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 7, BUT THE SUCCEEDING DAY A VERY LARGE SPOT, B, HAS APPEARED 4 DEGREES SOUTH OF ITS PLACE, AND HAS BECOME THE LEADER OF THE GROUP, THEN A SPARSE STREAM, BY JANUARY 9. 3847 18941231 18950112 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, WITH GENERALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 3848 18950102 18950102 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3849 18950102 18950102 A SMALL SPOT. 3850 18950103 18950103 A PAIR OF VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS. 3851 18950104 18950106 A SMALL GROUP USUALLY CONSISTING OF A PAIR OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3852 18950104 18950105 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JANUARY 4. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN A AND B ON JANUARY 5. 3853 18950104 18950104 A SMALL SPOT. 3854 18950105 18950105 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLOSE PAIR MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT. 3855 18950106 18950106 THREE SMALL SPOTS, THE TWO FOLLOWING OF WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. 3856 18950108 18950117 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH B, THE LAST SPOT ON JANUARY 10, IS THE LARGEST. B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY JANUARY 11 AND STILL FURTHER BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. THE OTHER MEMBERS OF THE STREAM ARE ALSO VERY UNSTABLE, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 16. 3857 18950109 18950112 A SMALL SPOT, A. A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IS SEEN NEAR A ON JANUARY 9. 3858 18950110 18950113 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED, APPEARING SUDDENLY TO THE WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE GROUP CHANGES MUCH FROM DAY TO DAY, AND BECOMES A LONG STREAM, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER ON JANUARY 10, IS MUCH THE LARGEST. 3859 18950111 18950111 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT IN THE MIDST OF BRIGHT FACULAE. 3860 18950113 18950119 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. NO SPOT LASTS LONGER THAN TWO DAYS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 18. THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN FURTHER NORTH ON JANUARY 19. 3861 18950114 18950124 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 18 OR 22. 3862 18950115 18950115 A SMALL SPOT. 3863 18950115 18950116 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3864 18950115 18950115 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3865 18950117 18950125 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JANUARY 17. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 18, AND B BY JANUARY 23. A SMALL IRREGULAR STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS HAS BEGUN TO FORM BEHIND B BY JANUARY 21, BUT DIMINISHES AGAIN AFTER JANUARY 23. 3866 18950117 18950122 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER BETWEEN GROUPS 3865 AND 3867. 3867 18950117 18950129 AN IRREGULAR STREAM CONSISTING OF A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, AND A FEW MUCH SMALLER SPOTS FOLLOWING IT. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO LARGE SPOTS, B AND C, BY JANUARY 21. THESE HAVE BECOME REGULAR BY JANUARY 25, AND WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS COMPOSE THE ENTIRE GROUP. 3868 18950118 18950119 A SMALL SPOT. 3869 18950118 18950118 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 3870 18950118 18950121 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 19. 3871 18950119 18950119 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS N OF GROUP 3861. 3872 18950121 18950201 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A FINE STREAM. AT FIRST IT CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. THESE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS INCREASE AFTER JANUARY 25, AND THREE LARGE IRREGULAR SPOTS, C, D AND E, HAVE FORMED BY JANUARY 27. THESE FIVE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, BY FRESH DIVISIONS AND COMBINATIONS, CONTINUE TO CHANGE UNTIL THE WEST LIMB IS REACHED. 3873 18950123 18950123 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS NF GROUP 3867. 3874 18950123 18950202 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, UNTIL JANUARY 26. BOTH SPOTS HAVE BROKEN UP BY THIS DATE AND THE GROUP HAS INCREASED IN SIZE. IT HAS BECOME AN IRREGULAR STREAM BY JANUARY 27, OF WHICH C, THE LARGEST SPOT, IS THE LEADER. C APPEARS TO REPRESENT PART OF A, AND D PART OF B. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER PASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON JANUARY 28. 3875 18950124 18950205 A FAINT SPOT ON JANUARY 24. THREE SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FIRST TWO ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON JANUARY 25. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY JANUARY 26 AND CONSISTS OF A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALLER SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. OF THESE THE TWO LAST, B AND C, ARE THE LARGEST. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER JANUARY 28, A BECOMING REGULAR, AND THE SMALLER SPOTS DISAPPEARING, SO THAT AFTER FEBRUARY 1 ONLY A AND ONE SMALL COMPANION, D, REMAIN, AND D HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 4. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE ON FEBRUARY 4. 3876 18950126 18950126 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3877 18950126 18950127 THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JANUARY 26. A DIFFERENT THREE ON JANUARY 27. 3878 18950126 18950127 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3879 18950127 18950127 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 3880 18950127 18950203 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. BY JANUARY 30 THEY HAVE NEARLY COALESCED TO FORM A SINGLE LARGE SPOT, AN EQUILATERAL TRIANGLE IN SHAPE, BUT THE CONDENSATION IS NOT COMPLETED, AND THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY AND RAPIDLY DIMINISHES. 3881 18950128 18950129 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 3867. 3882 18950128 18950205 A SMALL SPOT, A, PRECEDING GROUP 3884. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON JANUARY 30. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 4, BUT A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON FEBRUARY 5. 3883 18950128 18950205 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH SLOWLY AND STEADILY DIMINISHES DAY BY DAY. SOME SMALL SPOTS HAVE FORMED NEAR IT BY JANUARY 31. THESE INCREASE IN NUMBER AND AREA UP TO FEBRUARY 2. THEY DIMINISH ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 5. 3884 18950128 18950209 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY TWO SMALLER SPOTS, B AND C. OTHER SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY JANUARY 30, THE ENTIRE GROUP NOW FORMING AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF WHICH A AND C, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ARE THE LARGEST. THE SPOTS OTHER THAN A DIMINISH RAPIDLY AFTER FEBRUARY 4, AND ONLY A AND C REMAIN BY FEBRUARY 7, WHILST C HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 9. 3885 18950129 18950129 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3886 18950129 18950129 A SMALL SPOT. 3887 18950129 18950130 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JANUARY 29. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 30. 3888 18950131 18950203 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN TWO CLUSTERS ON JANUARY 31. THE GROUP INCREASES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE PRECEDING SPOTS HAVE UNITED TO FORM A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, BY FEBRUARY 2. 3889 18950131 18950131 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3890 18950203 18950203 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3891 18950203 18950203 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3892 18950203 18950214 A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT ON FEBRUARY 3 WITH ITS MAJOR AXIS INCLINED AT A GREAT ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. THE NORTHERN PORTION OF THE SPOT IS MUCH MORE STRONGLY MARKED THAN THE SOUTHERN, AND HAS BECOME A SEPARATE REGULAR SPOT, A, BY FEBRUARY 5. THE GROUP ON THIS AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS IS AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH A IS THE LEADER, NEARLY PERPENDICULAR TO THE EQUATOR. THE MINOR SPOTS OF THE GROUP UNDERGO FREQUENT CHANGES, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY FEBRUARY 13. 3893 18950204 18950210 AN IRREGULAR GROUP FORMING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. AT FIRST IT IS AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, A, THE LEADER BEING THE LARGEST. BY FEBRUARY 8 THE LEADING SPOTS HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A LARGE TRIANGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH HAS BECOME A TRIPLE SPOT BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 3894 18950204 18950214 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON FEBRUARY 4; A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 5. THE GROUP INCREASES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND HAS BECOME A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM BY FEBRUARY 8; A, THE LEADER, BEING AT THE INTERSECTION OF THE AXIS OF THE GROUP WITH THE PROLONGATION OF THAT OF GROUP 3892, THE TWO AXES BEING INCLINED TO EACH OTHER AT AN ANGLE OF 40 DEGREES. THE SPOTS BEGIN TO COALESCE AND THE STREAM TO BECOME IRREGULAR AFTER FEBRUARY 10. 3895 18950205 18950205 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3896 18950207 18950208 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3897 18950209 18950214 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON FEBRUARY 9. A SECOND HAS APPEARED BY FEBRUARY 10. OTHER SPOTS, SMALL AND UNSTABLE, HAVE FORMED BY FEBRUARY 11, AND A IS REPRESENTED BY TWO SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER, B AND C, OF WHICH C HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 13. 3898 18950209 18950221 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 14, 16 AND 17. 3899 18950210 18950210 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3900 18950210 18950210 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3901 18950211 18950219 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 11. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED BY FEBRUARY 12, AND A IS WELL DEFINED AND REGULAR, AND AT THE HEAD OF A SHORT STREAM, ALMOST PERPENDICULAR TO THE EQUATOR. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE, BRINGING THE AXIS OF THE GROUP MORE NEARLY PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR. 3902 18950214 18950216 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 3903 18950215 18950225 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A SMALLER SPOT B, AND WITH A FEW OTHER VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A CONSIDERABLE DEVELOPMENT OF SMALL SPOTS HAS TAKEN PLACE ALL ROUND A BY FEBRUARY 19 AND 20, BUT DIMINISHES AGAIN LATER. A LENGTHENS OUT AND ITS NUCLEUS HAS BECOME DIVIDED BY FEBRUARY 21, AND BY FEBRUARY 22 A HAS COMPLETELY SEPARATED INTO TWO SPOTS, C AND D. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 20 AND D BY FEBRUARY 25. THE SMALLER SPOTS ARE VERY UNSTABLE. 3904 18950216 18950224 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM ON FEBRUARY 16. THE GROUP INCREASES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND A CONSIDERABLE REGULAR SPOT, A, HAS FORMED AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM BY FEBRUARY 19. THE GROUP ESPECIALLY THE FOLLOWING PART, DIMINISHES AFTER THAT DATE, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 22. 3905 18950218 18950228 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON FEBRUARY 18 AND 19. OTHERS APPEAR ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE GROUP IS AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF FAINT NEBULOUS SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 22. THE SPOTS HAVE BECOME BETTER DEFINED, BUT ARE SMALLER AND MORE SEPARATED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. A SUDDEN INCREASE HAS TAKEN PLACE BY FEBRUARY 24, AND THE GROUP IS NOW A WINDING STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LARGEST, A, IS A COMPOSITE SPOT,USUALLY THE LAST IN THE GROUP. A IS SEEN IN TWO PARTS ON FEBRUARY 27. 3906 18950218 18950301 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT,A, WHICH DIMINISHES STEADILY FROM DAY TO DAY. TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN CLOSELY FOLLOWING A ON FEBRUARY 24, AND A SINGLE ONE ON FEBRUARY 28. 3907 18950219 18950219 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 3905. 3908 18950220 18950222 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL, FAINT NEBULOUS SPOTS, NORTH OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 3907 AND PRECEDING GROUP 3905. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 21. 3909 18950221 18950222 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, SF GROUP 3905. 3910 18950221 18950228 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASSIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY FEBRUARY 23, AND RE-UNITED AGAIN BY FEBRUARY 25. 3911 18950223 18950306 A DOUBLE SPOT, A, WHICH HAS BECOME BY FEBRUARY 26 THE LEADER OF AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY FEBRUARY 27, AND THEN FORMS A SHORT BROAD STREAM, THE MOST CONSIDERABLE PART OF WHICH CONSISTS OF B AND C, TWO LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOTS. A THIRD, D, HAS FORMED TO THE NORTH OF THEM BY MARCH 1. D HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 4. 3912 18950223 18950226 A NEBULOUS SPOT, FOLLOWING GROUP 3911, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 3913 18950224 18950228 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A SHORT WINDING STREAM. THE GROUP APPEARS SUDDENLY JUST NORTH OF GROUP 3905, AND CLOSE TO IT. THE LEADER,A, IS A REGULAR SPOT, LARGE AFTER FEBRUARY 24. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE SMALLER AND DIMINISH AFTER FEBRUARY 25. A ALONE REAMAINS BY FEBRUARY 28. 3914 18950224 18950224 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3915 18950224 18950228 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOT IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 3916 18950224 18950307 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 3917 18950225 18950225 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. GROUPS 3905, 3907, 3908, 3909, 3913, AND 3917 ARE CLOSELY CONNECTED. 3918 18950225 18950225 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3919 18950225 18950227 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3920 18950226 18950301 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. A ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 28. 3921 18950226 18950226 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3922 18950226 18950301 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE LEADER ON FEBRUARY 27, A, IS THE MOST STABLE. 3923 18950226 18950309 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALLER SPOTS IN A SLIGHTLY WAVY STREAM. THE LAST SPOT OF THE STREAM, B, DIMINISHES RAPIDLY, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 3. A ALONE REMAINS BY MARCH 6. 3924 18950301 18950302 A PAIR OF ILL-DEFINED SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 3906. 3925 18950301 18950301 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3926 18950301 18950304 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, A, ON MARCH 1. OTHER SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON MARCH 2 AND 3. ONLY ONE REMAINS ON MARCH 4. 3927 18950301 18950301 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3928 18950301 18950308 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, CLOSE TOGETHER, EACH WITH ECCENTRICALLY PLACED UMBRA. THEY RAPIDLY DIMINISH AFTER MARCH 3. A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR THEM ON MARCH 3 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. B ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 8. 3929 18950304 18950305 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, FIRST SEEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS PASSED OUT OF VIEW BY THE SECOND DAY. THE FOLLOWING PORTION SEEMS TO HAVE INCREASED CONSIDERABLY. 3930 18950304 18950304 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, SF GROUP 3926. 3931 18950305 18950305 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER, SP GROUP 3928. 3932 18950305 18950313 A WIDELY EXTENDED GROUP, IN GENERAL WEDGE-SHAPED, THE POINT OF THE WEDGE PRECEDING. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS ARE MOSTLY SMALL, AND DO NOT LAST MORE THAN TWO OR THREE DAYS. THE MORE STABLE SPOTS ARE DISTINGUISHED BY THE LETTERS A, B, C AND D. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES AFTER MARCH 9, AND ASSUMES THE FORM OF TWO PARALLEL STRAGGLING STREAMS. 3933 18950306 18950317 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SF GROUP 3932. IT IS USUALLY ATTENDED BY SOME SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 3934 18950306 18950318 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 9. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C, BY MARCH 10. OF THESE, C IS MUCH THE LARGER. B AND C BOTH DIMINISH, BUT B THE MORE RAPIDLY, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 17. ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE OFTEN SEEN NEAR THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS. 3935 18950307 18950308 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, NF GROUP 3928. 3936 18950309 18950313 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 11. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 12, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON MARCH 13. 3937 18950310 18950310 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3938 18950310 18950316 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP APPEARS SUDDENLY ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND IS CHIEFLY GATHERED IN TWO CLOSE CLUSTERS. 3939 18950310 18950316 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP APPEARS SUDDENLY N OF GROUP 3938, CLOSE TO THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 3940 18950310 18950322 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL SPOT IS SEPARATED FROM A ON THE FOLLOWING SIDE, THE SEPARATION HAVING BECOME COMPLETE BY MARCH 14, THOUGH THE NEW SPOT IS NOT MEASURED SEPARATELY UNTIL MARCH 15. ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR A, MARCH 16-19. 3941 18950313 18950314 A VERY CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED AS ONE ON MARCH 13. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON MARCH 14. 3942 18950315 18950319 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, ON MARCH 15. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 16, BUT OTHER SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED SOUTH OF A, MAKING THE GROUP A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. A LARGE SPOT, C, HAS APPEARED NP OF A BY MARCH 17, AND INCREASES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. D, THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP, ALSO INCREASES IN SIZE. 3943 18950316 18950316 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3944 18950316 18950316 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3945 18950316 18950317 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS SHOWING A STRONG DRIFT TOWARDS THE EQUATOR. 3946 18950316 18950327 AN IRREGULAR GROUP WHICH RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND WHICH HAS BECOME BY MARCH 20 A LARGE COMPACT WEDGE-SHAPED STREAM, OF WHICH THE LARGEST SPOT, A, IS THE APEX AND LEADER. A COALESCES WITH THE SPOTS IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING IT, AND BECOMES VERY LARGE. THE REMAINDER OF THE GROUP NARROWS DOWN. 3947 18950317 18950317 THREE SMALL SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING EACH OTHER. 3948 18950318 18950318 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3949 18950319 18950329 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 19. THE GROUP HAS EXPANDED INTO A SHORT STREAM BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY UNTIL MARCH 22, AND TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE FORMED BY MARCH 21. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER MARCH 22, B DECREASING ESPECIALLY QUICKLY. A HAS DIVIDED INTO THREE UNEQUAL PORTIONS BY MARCH 26. THE LETTER IS STILL RETAINED FOR THE LARGEST PART. 3950 18950320 18950320 A SMALL SPOT. 3951 18950320 18950323 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 20. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE AND HAS BECOME A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS BY MARCH 21, BUT HAS DECREASED AGAIN AFTER MARCH 23. A, THE LARGEST SPOT, IS THE LEADER ON MARCH 21, 22 AND 23. 3952 18950320 18950320 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, F GROUP 3946. 3953 18950323 18950323 A SMALL SPOT. 3954 18950324 18950325 A SMALL SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 25. 3955 18950324 18950328 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 3956 18950325 18950327 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON MARCH 25. A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON MARCH 26. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS ON MARCH 27. 3957 18950326 18950405 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 26; THREE SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 27. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND BECOMES A FINE STREAM, ITS LEADER, A, BEING A LARGE SPOT WITH VERY DARK UMBRA. THE STREAM BECOMES STRAIGHTER AFTER MARCH 30, AN EXTENSION TO THE SOUTH BEING LAST SEEN ON THAT DAY. B, THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP ON MARCH 28, HAS DIVIDED INTO THREE PARTS, A,D AND E, BY MARCH 31, AND E INTO TWO PARTS BY APRIL 2, F AND G. ONLY A AND F REMAIN ON APRIL 5. 3958 18950326 18950402 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 26. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND ON MARCH 29 CONSISTS OF SEVERAL VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT LINE FOLLOWED BY A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS, AND A SECOND STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS AT AN ANGLE TO THE FIRST STREAM. THE FIRST STREAM HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 31, AND A HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED. 3959 18950329 18950406 TWO VERY CLOSE PAIRS OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 29. THESE PAIRS HAVE BOTH COALESCED TO FORM SINGLE SPOTS, A AND B, BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, A AND B INCREASE UP TO MARCH 31, AND AFTERWARDS SLOWLY DIMINISH. A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE FREQUENTLY SEEN NEAR THEM, AND MAKE UP WITH THEM A STRAIGHT STREAM. 3960 18950331 18950409 A SINGLE SPOT, A, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. AS IT APPROACHES EXTINCTION, A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM BEGIN TO FORM NEAR IT AND CONTINUE THE GROUP UNTIL APRIL 9. 3961 18950402 18950407 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN TWO STRAIGHT STREAMS, WHICH EVENTUALLY MERGE INTO A SINGLE STREAM. 3962 18950402 18950402 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3963 18950402 18950404 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON APRIL 2. A THIRD IS SEEN PRECEDING THEM ON APRIL 3. ONLY B REMAINS ON APRIL 4. 3964 18950402 18950411 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, N OF GROUP 3963, AND WHICH STEADILY DIMINISHES IN AREA. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON APRIL 8. 3965 18950404 18950404 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3966 18950405 18950408 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SEMICIRCLE. THE GROUP HAS BECOME A STRAIGHT STREAM BY APRIL 7. 3967 18950405 18950405 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3968 18950405 18950417 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY SEEN WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 3969 18950406 18950411 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON APRIL 6. OTHERS HAVE FORMED NEAR IT BY APRIL 7, AND THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES, FORMING, BY APRIL 9, AN IRREGULAR STREAM CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF THREE SPOTS, A, B, AND C, C BEING LARGE. 3970 18950407 18950413 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, S OF GROUP 3964, AND F GROUP 3969. THE GROUP HAS EXPANDED INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM BY APRIL 7, A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, BEING THE LARGEST. A AND B CONTINUE TO INCREASE AND HAVE BECOME LARGE WELL-DEFINED SPOTS BY APRIL 11, WHILST THE SMALLER INTERMEDIATE SPOTS HAVE DIED OUT BY APRIL 12. 3971 18950408 18950411 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM, SUDDENLY APPEARING P GROUP 3968. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS AT FIRST INCLINED AT AN ANGLE OF ABOUT 30 DEGREES TO THE EQUATOR, BUT EVENTUALLY BECOMES PARALLEL TO IT. 3972 18950409 18950410 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 3973 18950410 18950412 THREE SMALL BUT WELL-DEFINED SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT LINE, SUDDENLY APPEARING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 12. 3974 18950410 18950411 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3975 18950410 18950422 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, THE LATTER BEING A LARGE SPOT WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 13, AND B HAS BROKEN UP BY APRIL 14, AND THE GROUP NEARLY DISAPPEARS. A FRESH OUTBURST HAS TAKEN PLACE BY APRIL 16. 3976 18950411 18950411 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 3977 18950411 18950413 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 11, ANOTHER PAIR ON APRIL 13. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 12. 3978 18950411 18950414 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 11. A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A THIRD SPOT IS SEEN BETWEEN A AND B ON APRIL 14. 3979 18950411 18950422 A FINE GROUP CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE DOUBLE SPOTS, A AND B, AND A SLIGHT CONNECTING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 3980 18950412 18950417 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 3981 18950413 18950413 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 3982 18950413 18950414 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING S OF GROUP 3978. 3983 18950415 18950416 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, P GROUP 3968 ON APRIL 15. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 16. 3984 18950415 18950415 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3985 18950417 18950417 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 3986 18950418 18950419 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON APRIL 18. THE LAST ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 19. 3987 18950419 18950421 SOME SMALL SPOTS SP GROUP 3988. 3988 18950419 18950430 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN TWO STRAIGHT PARALLEL STREAMS. THE STREAMS SPEEDILY INTERMINGLE AND FORM ONE FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, WHICH TENDS TO SIMPLIFY BY THE COALESCENCE OF THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS, ESPECIALLY OF THE PRECEDING SPOTS, WITH A, THE LEADER. A HAS IN THIS WAY BECOME A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BY APRIL 23, AND CONTINUES TO DEVELOP UNTIL APRIL 26. 3989 18950420 18950502 A FINE GROUP CONSISTING PRINCIPALLY OF A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, AND A DISTANT LARGE COMPANION, B. A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, ARE SEEN ROUND B AND BETWEEN A AND B. GROUPS 3987, 3988 AND 3989 FORM TOGETHER ONE MAGNIFICENT STRAIGHT STREAM, INCLINED AT AN ANGLE OF 20 DEGREES TO THE EQUATOR. 3990 18950421 18950425 A VERY CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 3989. THE TWO SPOTS ARE ALWAYS MEASURED AS ONE. 3991 18950422 18950426 A SMALL DARK SPOT, A, GENERALLY ATTENDED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY APRIL 25. 3992 18950422 18950422 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 3991. 3993 18950424 18950424 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM SF GROUP 3991. 3994 18950424 18950427 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 3995 18950424 18950503 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL REGULAR COMPANION, B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 28. A STEADILY DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. IT IS ACCOMPANIED BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS FROM APRIL 29 TO MAY 3. 3996 18950425 18950502 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM ON APRIL 25. A SECOND STREAM PARALLEL TO THE FIRST IS SEEN WITH IT ON APRIL 26. THE SECOND STREAM HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 28, BUT THE FIRST STREAM HAS CONSIDERABLY INCREASED IN SIZE, AND CONSISTS ON APRIL 29 MAINLY OF FOUR SPOTS, A, B, C AND D. 3997 18950425 18950501 A SPOT, A, PRECEDED ON APRIL 25 AND 26 BY A SMALL COMPANION. THE GROUP FOLLOWS GROUP 3995. 3998 18950426 18950430 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON APRIL 26. THE COMPANIONS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 27; A AND B HAVE BROKEN UP BY APRIL 28; THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 29, AND A VERY SMALL SPOT IS ALL THAT IS VISIBLE ON APRIL 30. 3999 18950426 18950505 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, ON APRIL 26, 27 AND 28. THE GROUP ON APRIL 29 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS FORMS A TOLERABLY STRAIGHT STREAM, WITH FOUR PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B, C AND D; A AND B BEING THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY, AND B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 1. 4000 18950430 18950502 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, NOT SEEN ON MAY 1. 4001 18950430 18950430 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4002 18950501 18950504 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 1. THE GROUP HAS BECOME A SHORT STREAM, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST BY MAY 2. ONLY A REMAINS ON MAY 4. 4003 18950501 18950503 A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 1; A SMALL WEDGE-SHAPED STREAM OF SPOTS ON MAY 2, WHICH HAS BECOME SLIGHTLY ELONGATED BY MAY 3. 4004 18950502 18950502 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4005 18950502 18950514 A PAIR OF LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM, FORMING ALTOGETHER A FINE STREAM. B HAS BROKEN UP AFTER MAY 8. 4006 18950503 18950503 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4007 18950505 18950505 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4008 18950507 18950507 A SMALL SPOT. 4009 18950507 18950508 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. 4010 18950507 18950507 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4011 18950508 18950509 THREE SMALL WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT LINE. THE FIRST HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 9. 4012 18950508 18950512 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON MAY 11. 4013 18950509 18950510 A SMALL SPOT WITH, ON MAY 10, A VERY SMALL DISTANT COMPANION. 4014 18950510 18950512 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LEADER, IS THE MOST STABLE, AND HAS A RAPID FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE. 4015 18950511 18950511 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4016 18950512 18950513 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4017 18950512 18950514 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 4018 18950512 18950513 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 4019 18950512 18950519 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A VERY IRREGULAR GROUP. THE SPOTS ARE GENERALLY UNSTABLE, AND THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. A SHORT-LIVED REVIVAL IS SEEN ON MAY 16, AND A SECOND, PRINCIPALLY IN THE PRECEDING PART OF THE GROUP, ON MAY 19. 4020 18950513 18950513 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS S OF GROUP 4017. 4021 18950513 18950516 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON MAY 13-14. IT IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 15, BUT A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON MAY 16. 4022 18950514 18950524 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE BY A LARGE SPOT, B, BOTH APPARENTLY REGULAR, ON MAY 14. A RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE UP TILL MAY 16. A NUMBER OF SPOTS APPEAR ROUND B ON MAY 15 AND 16, AND FORM WITH IT A SHORT STREAM INCLINED AT AN ANGLE OF ABOUT 45 DEGREES TO THE EQUATOR. THIS STREAM STEADILY DIMINISHES IN SIZE AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 23. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, C, AND D, BY MAY 22. 4023 18950518 18950526 TWO CLOSE PAIRS OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 18, SF GROUP 4022. THE GROUP EXPANDS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS INTO TWO IRREGULAR CLUSTERS, BOTH OF WHICH LENGTHEN OUT, UNTIL ON MAY 23 THEY FORM A SINGLE IRREGULAR STREAM. 4024 18950518 18950530 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON MAY 21. MANY OTHERS HAVE FORMED BY THE NEXT DAY. A HAS MUCH DIMINISHED BY MAY 24, BUT ITS COMPANIONS HAVE GREATLY INCREASED IN AREA. THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED YET FURTHER BY MAY 25, COVERING A VERY LARGE AREA, AND BEING OF VERY COMPLEX AND IRREGULAR FORM. 4025 18950518 18950527 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON MAY 27. 4026 18950519 18950519 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4027 18950519 18950530 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 4028 18950520 18950531 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON MAY 20, WHICH HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY MAY 21. IT IS FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THESE LATTER HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY MAY 28. A FEW SMALL SPOTS ARE SOMETIMES SEEN PRECEDING A. 4029 18950521 18950521 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4030 18950521 18950521 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4031 18950521 18950521 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4032 18950522 18950528 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON MAY 22. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY MAY 24, AND HAS BECOME AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF MEDIUM LENGTH. IT DIMINISHES AGAIN AS QUICKLY AFTER MAY 25. THE COMPONENT SPOTS ARE MOSTLY UNSTABLE; A, THE LARGEST SPOT ON MAY 24, IS THE DARKEST. 4033 18950523 18950523 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4034 18950523 18950527 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON MAY 23, 8 OF GROUP 4024. THE GROUP HAS EXPANDED INTO A SMALL STREAM BY MAY 24, AFTER WHICH IT GRADUALLY DIMINISHES. 4035 18950523 18950531 A REGULAR SPOT, A, DIMINISHING STEADILY IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. ON MAY 28 AND THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A. 4036 18950524 18950524 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT NF GROUP 4024. 4037 18950524 18950601 TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS ON MAY 24. THESE INCREASE IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND FORM ONE IRREGULAR AND COMPLEX STREAM WHICH UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER MAY 28, AND BREAKS UP AGAIN INTO TWO DISTINCT CLUSTERS. 4038 18950526 18950527 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4039 18950527 18950527 A SMALL FAINT SPOT NF GROUP 4024. 4040 18950527 18950527 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4041 18950527 18950527 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4042 18950527 18950603 A SPOT, A, WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS ON MAY 27, WHICH IS FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 28. A DIMINISHES VERY QUICKLY, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 31. 4043 18950527 18950528 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4044 18950530 18950610 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN FROM MAY 30 TO JUNE 4. A GREAT OUTBURST HAS TAKEN PLACE BY JUNE 5, AND AN IRREGULAR STREAM CHIEFLY IN TWO CLUSTERS, IS SEEN. THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER IS THE MORE IMPORTANT, AND CONSISTS ON JUNE 6 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS CHIEFLY OF A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER JUNE 6. IT IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 1 OR 3. 4045 18950531 18950604 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE, IN A SHORT STREAM. 4046 18950531 18950609 A LARGE NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. THE GROUP DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 4047 18950602 18950606 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS NF GROUP 4046. 4048 18950602 18950610 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, WITH FIVE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B, C, D AND E, OF WHICH D IS THE ONLY LARGE SPOT; B AND C ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON JUNE 3. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 8. TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON JUNE 8 AND 10. 4049 18950603 18950615 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 4050 18950605 18950606 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 4051 18950605 18950605 A SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 4047. 4052 18950605 18950617 A FINE COMPACT STREAM OF SPOTS, WHICH INCREASE IN NUMBER AND SIZE, AND FINALLY COALESCE TO FORM ONE VERY LARGE COMPLEX SPOT, LONG AND COMPARATIVELY NARROW, AND INCLINED AT AN ANGLE OF ABOUT 40 DEGREES TO THE EQUATOR. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER JUNE 10. THE TWO PRINCIPAL PARTS OF THE GROUP, A AND B, ARE DISTINGUISHABLE THROUGH ALL ITS CHANGES, AND ARE MEASURED SO FAR AS POSSIBLE AS IF SEPARATE SPOTS. 4053 18950606 18950616 A FINE COMPACT STREAM OF SPOTS, F AND NEARLY AT RIGHT ANGLES TO GROUP 4052. LIKE GROUP 4052 IT DIMINISHES AFTER JUNE 10, AND GRADUALLY COMES INTO THE SAME STRAIGHT LINE WITH IT. THE LAST SPOT ON JUNE 6, A, IS THEN THE LARGEST, BUT A LARGE SPOT, B, HAS FORMED IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP BY JUNE 8. A IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON JUNE 9, AND SHORTLY AFTER BREAKS UP AND DISAPPEARS. A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN SF THE MAIN GROUP ON JUNE 13, AND ARE INCLUDED IN IT. 4054 18950609 18950613 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 13, BUT A VERY SMALL PAIR IS SEEN NF ITS PLACE. 4055 18950610 18950622 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. A DIMINISHES STEADILY FROM DAY TO DAY; B UNDERGOES A WONDERFUL DEVELOPMENT, AND HAS BECOME VERY LARGE BY JUNE 13. IT IS MEASURED IN TWO PRINCIPAL PORTIONS, C AND D, ON JUNE 14, AND C HAS DEFINITELY SEPARATED FROM D BY JUNE 15. FRESH SPOTS FORM ROUND D DAY BY DAY AND OFTEN COALESCE WITH IT UNTIL JUNE 17, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP BEGINS TO DIMINISH. 4056 18950613 18950616 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION BETWEEN THEM ON JUNE 13. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 15, A BY JUNE 16, BUT TWO OR THREE VERY UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR. 4057 18950613 18950625 A SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW IRREGULAR COMPANIONS, FORMING A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. A HAS BECOME LARGE AND REGULAR BY JUNE 21, AND ITS COMPANIONS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED. 4058 18950613 18950619 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A, ON JUNE 13, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 4057. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE LARGEST, HAVE FORMED P A BY JUNE 14. ON JUNE 15 THE GROUP CONSISTS ONLY OF A AND B, OF WHICH B IS NOW THE LARGER. THE GROUP IS A CLOSE BUT IRREGULAR CLUSTER UNTIL JUNE 18, WHEN ONLY B REMAINS. 4059 18950614 18950617 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 4058. 4060 18950615 18950622 AN IRREGULAR STREAM, FORMING JUST N OF GROUP 4055. IT RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, FORMING TWO LARGE CLUSTERS. A, THE PRINCIPAL SPOT IN THE PRECEDING CLUSTER, ABSORBS THE OTHER MEMBERS OF THE CLUSTER, AND BECOMES A VERY LARGE SPOT. THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER ALSO FOR A TIME CONSISTS OF A LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, B, BUT HAS BROKEN UP BY JUNE 18 INTO A STREAM OF DISCRETE SPOTS, FOLLOWING EACH OTHER CLOSELY, OF WHICH C, D, E AND F ARE THE PRINCIPAL. THESE ARE HOWEVER ALL UNSTABLE. 4061 18950616 18950625 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES STEADILY FROM DAY TO DAY AFTER JUNE 19. IT IS ATTENDED BY ONE VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JUNE 19, AND BY TWO ON JUNE 23. 4062 18950618 18950618 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4063 18950618 18950629 A LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS ON JUNE 18. IT HAS BECOME THE LEADER OF A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM BY JUNE 21. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSTANT CHANGE, THE FOLLOWING SPOTS RAPIDLY DIMINISHING, AND A BREAKING UP AFTER JUNE 26. A IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS, B AND C, AFTER JUNE 26. 4064 18950619 18950619 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, SEEN ON A SINGLE DAY, NF GROUP 4060. 4065 18950620 18950620 A SMALL SPOT. 4066 18950621 18950621 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NEARLY IN THE SAME PLACE AS GROUP 4059. 4067 18950622 18950622 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4068 18950623 18950626 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 4069 18950623 18950626 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED S OF GROUP 4063. 4070 18950623 18950623 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED SF GROUP 4063. 4071 18950623 18950623 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED NF GROUP 4063. 4072 18950623 18950630 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A PAIR OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON JUNE 29. 4073 18950624 18950702 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE AND SMALL, IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LEADER ON JUNE 24, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 4074 18950626 18950701 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 26 NF GROUP 4063, AND NEARLY IN THE PLACE OF GROUP 4071. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND BECOMES A CONSIDERABLE STREAM. THE LAST SPOT ON JUNE 28, A, IS THE MOST STABLE AND BECOMES EVENTUALLY A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE GROUP ON JUNE 29 AND 30 CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF A AND TWO SMALLER SPOTS, B AND C. 4075 18950626 18950703 SEVERAL UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, AND UNDERGOING CONSTANT CHANGE. THE GROUP PRECEDES GROUP 4073. 4076 18950628 18950705 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON JUNE 28. SEVERAL OTHER SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, ARE SEEN PRECEDING A ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND FORMING WITH IT A SHORT STREAM. A BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO JUNE 30, AFTER WHICH IT DIMINISHES AGAIN. 4077 18950630 18950711 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON JULY 6 AND 7. 4078 18950701 18950701 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 4073 AND 4076. 4079 18950702 18950709 A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH ITS MAJOR AXIS INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. IT HAS BEGUN TO BREAK UP BY JULY 5 INTO A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE LEADER. 4080 18950702 18950709 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 7 INTO A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 4081 18950703 18950703 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4082 18950703 18950706 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 4079; NOT SEEN ON JULY 4 AND 5. 4083 18950707 18950709 TWO SPOTS A AND B. A HAS DISAPPEARED AT THE WEST LIMB BY JULY 9. A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN BETWEEN A AND B ON JULY 7. 4084 18950707 18950718 TWO VERY CLOSE PAIRS OF SPOTS ON JULY 7. THESE HAVE BECOME TWO SPOTS, A AND B, BY JULY 8, AND A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN WITH THEM. A INCREASES IN SIZE, AND HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY JULY 9; B HAS BROKEN UP BY THAT DAY, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE SMALL SPOTS RAPIDLY DISAPPEAR AND A REMAINS ALONE, SAVE OCCASIONALLY FOR TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL COMPANIONS AFTER JULY 10. 4085 18950707 18950714 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS SUDDENLY BROKEN UP INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS BY JULY 11. IT HAS REVIVED AGAIN BY JULY 12, BUT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTERWARDS. 4086 18950707 18950716 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS NF GROUP 4085. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 12. 4087 18950708 18950715 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS VERY IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, SUDDENLY APPEARING ON JULY 8. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY DEVELOPED BY JULY 9, AND FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF FOUR SPOTS, A, B, C AND D, OF WHICH A AND D ARE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS. THE GROUP CONTINUES TO INCREASE AND SHOWS AN EXTENSION ON JULY 11, A SHORT COMPACT STREAM FOLLOWING THE MAIN STREAM, BUT INCLINED TO IT AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE. THIS EXTENSION IS REDUCED BY JULY 12 TO LITTLE MORE THAN ONE COMPOSITE SPOT, E. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER JULY 12, AND D IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON THAT DAY. 4088 18950708 18950708 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT P GROUP 4085. 4089 18950709 18950709 A SMALL FAINT SPOT SP GROUP 4085. 4090 18950709 18950709 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS P GROUP 4085. 4091 18950709 18950711 TWO SPOTS A AND B. THEY ARE FOLLOWED BY A THIRD, C, ON JULY 10, BUT ALL ARE THEN SMALL. ONLY A REMAINS BY JULY 11. 4092 18950710 18950711 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JULY 10. ONLY B REMAINS ON JULY 11. 4093 18950711 18950718 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS P GROUP 4086. ON JULY 15 THE TWO LARGEST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE DARK AND DISTINCT. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 17. 4094 18950711 18950716 TWO SPOTS, A AND B. ONLY A REMAINS AFTER JULY 13. 4095 18950713 18950723 A SHORT STREAM CONSISTING MAINLY OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, AND A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS BETWEEN THEM. A IS THE LARGEST MEMBER OF THE GROUP, AND REMAINS ALONE AFTER JULY 20. 4096 18950713 18950720 A REGULAR SPOT, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 19. 4097 18950717 18950717 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4098 18950717 18950717 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4099 18950717 18950717 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4100 18950720 18950723 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB, AND SCATTERED IRREGULARLY OVER A CONSIDERABLE AREA. 4101 18950720 18950720 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4102 18950723 18950723 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4103 18950723 18950724 SEVERAL VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4104 18950724 18950803 AN IRREGULAR GROUP, UNDERGOING CONSTANT CHANGE, COMPOSED OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, AND FORMING A STREAM SHARPLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE MOST STABLE. 4105 18950726 18950731 TWO CLOSE PAIRS OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 26. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE ON THE SUCEEDING DAYS, BUT ALWAYS CONSISTS OF A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 30. 4106 18950729 18950809 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 31 AND AUGUST 2. 4107 18950730 18950809 A SMALL SPOT P GROUP 4106. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE VERY RAPIDLY DURING THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND BECOMES A FINE STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, AND A FEW SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. 4108 18950801 18950801 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4109 18950801 18950804 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON AUGUST 1. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 2. A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR THE PLACE OF THE GROUP ON AUGUST 3, AND IS JOINED BY A SECOND ON AUGUST 4. 4110 18950801 18950813 A GREAT NUMBER OF SPOTS FORMING A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM OF GREAT COMPLEXITY. THE LEADER, A, BECOMES A VERY LARGE SPOT. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO AUGUST 8, AFTER WHICH IT DIMINISHES, FIRST BY THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE SMALLER SPOTS, RENDERING THE GROUP MUCH MORE SIMPLE IN APPEARANCE. THE PRINCIPAL FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE LETTERED ON AUGUST 6 B, C, D AND E; E HAS DIVIDED INTO THREE PARTS,F, G, AND H, BY THE SUCEEDING DAY. 4111 18950802 18950810 A SHORT COMPACT WEDGE-SHAPED STREAM OF SPOTS, THE POINT COMING LAST, FOLLOWING GROUPS 4107 AND 4106, AND FORMING WITH THEM ONE SUPERB STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE; IN PARTICULAR IT HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY AUGUST 6, BUT ALONG A LINE INCLINED AT A WIDE ANGLE TO THE GENERAL AXIS OF THE THREE GROUPS. A,B AND C ARE THE THREE PRINCIPAL SPOTS. 4112 18950802 18950814 A REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 4113 18950804 18950809 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. A, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SEEN ON AUGUST 4 AND 5, AND B, A SIMILAR SPOT SEEN AFTER AUGUST 5, ARE THE MOST STABLE MEMBERS OF THE GROUP. 4114 18950804 18950816 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY VARIABLE ACCOMPANIMENT OF SMALL SPOTS. UP TO AUGUST 6 THE COMPANIONS LIE MOSTLY TO THE N OF A. FROM AUGUST 7 TO 11 THEY PRINCIPALLY CONSTITUTE A STRAIGHT STREAM S OF A. ON AUGUST 12 THEY FORM A RING P A, AFTER WHICH THEY RAPIDLY DIMINISH. 4115 18950805 18950808 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS P GROUP 4112. 4116 18950807 18950807 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4117 18950808 18950808 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4118 18950809 18950814 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 9. A SHORT STREAM HAS FORMED BY AUGUST 10. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY AUGUST 11, AND CONSISTS OF AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. A IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. B IS A PEAR-SHAPED SPOT, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY AUGUST 12. 4119 18950809 18950809 A VERY SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 4114. 4120 18950811 18950814 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 4121 18950812 18950813 A SMALL SPOT. 4122 18950814 18950824 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 14 AND 15. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND BECOMES A FINE COMPLEX STREAM, WHICH CHANGES ITS SHAPE CONTINUALLY. TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE CHIEF FEATURES OF THE GROUP ON AUGUST 17, BUT THESE BREAK UP AT ONCE. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER AUGUST 19, ESPECIALLY IN THE FOLLOWING PORTION; TWO SPOTS, C AND D, FRAGMENTS OF A, ALONE SHOWING MUCH STABILITY. 4123 18950814 18950827 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A FINE STREAM. THE TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS ARE A, THE LEADER, A VERY LARGE SPOT, AND B, THE LAST, A LARGE SPOT. BOTH HAVE BECOME REGULAR BY AUGUST 22, BY THROWING OFF THE EXTENSIONS LYING TOWARDS THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP. A HAS DIVIDED, BY AUGUST 25, INTO TWO PARTS, THOUGH IT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE. A COMPANION OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE HAS FORMED CLOSE TO B BY AUGUST 24, AND IS MEASURED WITH IT ON AUGUST 25. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER AUGUST 17, THE SMALLER SPOTS DISAPPEARING. 4124 18950816 18950817 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 16. TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS PRECEDE IT ON AUGUST 17. 4125 18950817 18950817 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 4126 18950817 18950818 A SMALL SPOT. 4127 18950818 18950818 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4128 18950819 18950819 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4129 18950823 18950825 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 23. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY AUGUST 24, AND HAS BECOME A LARGE NUMBER OF SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 4130 18950823 18950825 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON AUGUST 23. A HAS INCREASED BY AUGUST 24, BUT DIMINISHED AGAIN BY AUGUST 25. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 25. 4131 18950823 18950823 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 4132 18950823 18950823 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4133 18950824 18950904 A REGULAR SPOT, A. IT THROWS OFF A SMALL FRAGMENT ON AUGUST 28. TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON AUGUST 30, AND A NUMBER ON SEPTEMBER 1. AFTER THIS DATE THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 4134 18950825 18950826 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST. 4135 18950825 18950829 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON AUGUST 25 AND 28. 4136 18950826 18950828 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH A IS THE LEADER, IN A SHORT STREAM. 4137 18950827 18950828 A SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 4135. 4138 18950827 18950906 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON AUGUST 27. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND HAS BECOME A SHORT BROAD IRREGULAR STREAM. THE TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A AND B, ARE STABLE, BUT SHOW LARGE PROPER MOTION. THE OTHER MEMBERS OF THE GROUP ARE MOSTLY UNSTABLE, AND THE GROUP CHANGES IN ITS GENERAL APPERANCE, BUT ALWAYS REMAINS WITH ITS PRINCIPAL AXIS INCLINED AT A WIDE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. A ALONE REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 5. 4139 18950827 18950909 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS ARE USUALLY SEEN NEAR IT. 4140 18950828 18950828 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4141 18950829 18950830 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4142 18950829 18950829 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4143 18950829 18950829 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4144 18950830 18950830 A SMALL SPOT. 4145 18950830 18950831 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON AUGUST 30. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT IS SEEN F THE PLACE OF THE PAIR ON AUGUST 31. 4146 18950830 18950830 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 4133. 4147 18950830 18950830 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4148 18950830 18950830 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS F GROUP 4138. 4149 18950831 18950831 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 4150 18950831 18950831 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 4138. 4151 18950901 18950903 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, A, ON SEPTEMBER 1. A IS FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SIMILAR SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 2. A AND ONE COMPANION ALONE REMAIN ON SEPTEMBER 3. 4152 18950902 18950909 A SEGMENTED SPOT. A, AND A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. THE SEGMENTS OF A ARE SOMETIMES ALL MEASURED TOGETHER, SOMETIMES IN TWO OR MORE PARTS. THE GROUP IS JUST PERCEPTIBLE AS A VERY SLIGHT NOTCH ON THE LIMB ON SEPTEMBER 1, BUT IT IS NOT MEASURABLE. 4153 18950903 18950903 A SMALL FAINT SPOT SP GROUP 4151. 4154 18950904 18950911 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON SEPTEMBER 4, PRECEDED BY TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO SEPTEMBER 7, WHEN A IS A LARGE SPOT AT THE HEAD OF A CONSIDERABLE STREAM. 4155 18950906 18950906 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT SF GROUP 4154. 4156 18950906 18950910 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A, THE LEADER, IS USUALLY THE LARGEST. 4157 18950906 18950909 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT P GROUP 4158. 4158 18950906 18950918 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON SEPTEMBER 6. SEVERAL SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT SPARSE STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE GROUP IS QUITE SMALL FROM SEPTEMBER 11 TO SEPTEMBER 14. THERE IS A SHORT-LIVED REVIVAL AFTER THIS, AND A SHORT NEARLY CONTINUOUS STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS HAS FORMED BY SEPTEMBER 16. 4159 18950907 18950907 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4160 18950910 18950910 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4161 18950910 18950914 A REGULAR SPOT, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 4162 18950912 18950915 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 4163 18950913 18950916 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT COMPACT STREAM, SUDDENLY APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB, AND RAPIDLY INCREASING IN SIZE. 4164 18950913 18950919 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED ON SEPTEMBER 13. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY SEPTEMBER 14, AND HAS BECOME AN IRREGULAR STREAM. IT UNDERGOES CONSTANT CHANGE. IT CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPTEMBER 18 AND 19. 4165 18950915 18950915 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 4158. 4166 18950916 18950916 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 4167 18950916 18950916 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4168 18950916 18950917 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 4169 18950916 18950916 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4170 18950916 18950917 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4171 18950916 18950927 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS. USUALLY SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ROUND AND NEAR A. 4172 18950917 18950917 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4173 18950917 18950924 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 18, BUT HAS REVIVED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND INCREASED VERY RAPIDLY, DEVELOPING INTO A COMPACT STREAM, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS OF WHICH, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. 4174 18950920 18950922 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. 4175 18950920 18950920 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 4176 18950922 18950925 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 22 AND 23. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 24, BUT A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON SEPTEMBER 25. 4177 18950923 18950925 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4178 18950923 18950927 A PAIR OF SMALL DOUBLE SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPTEMBER 23. A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM ON SEPTEMBER 25. A ALONE REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 26. 4179 18950924 18950924 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4180 18950924 18951006 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 4181 18950925 18950925 THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4182 18950925 18951004 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 25. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE AND HAS BECOME A SHORT STREAM, THE LEADER OF WHICH, A, IS A REGULAR SPOT BY SEPTEMBER 26. A REMAINS ALONE ON SEPTEMBER 28, BUT ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN NEAR IT LATER. 4183 18950925 18951008 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM F GROUP 4180. A, THE LEADER, ON SEPTEMBER 26, QUICKLY DIMINISHES, AND TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, B AND C, CONNECTED BY A CHAIN OF SMALL SPOTS, FORM THE CHIEF FEATURE OF THE GROUP UP TO OCTOBER 1, BUT IT UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE, AND C HAS BROKEN UP CHIEFLY INTO TWO SPOTS, D AND E, BY OCTOBER 3, WHILST B HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 4. 4184 18950925 18951003 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 4185 18950926 18951006 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 4184, ON SEPTEMBER 26. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES AND BECOMES A VERY FINE COMPLICATED STREAM, PRINCIPALLY CONSISTING, ON SEPTEMBER 28, OF THREE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A, B AND C, RADIATING FROM A COMMON CENTRE. BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY THE GROUP IS PRACTICALLY ONE VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, THE P PORTION TENDING TO BE REGULAR. THE F PORTION TO BE EXCEEDINGLY COMPLEX. A, B AND C ARE STILL RECOGNISABLE, AND NEW LARGE SPOTS, D AND E, BECOME DEFINED LATER. THE GROUP CONTINUES TO CHANGE, AND DISINTEGRATION SETS IN AFTER OCTOBER 2. 4186 18950927 18950927 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4187 18950928 18951008 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, F GROUP 4183, ON SEPTEMBER 29. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES UP TO OCTOBER 2, AFTER WHICH IT DECLINES AGAIN. ITS GENERAL ASPECT IS THAT OF A VERY IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS, WITHOUT ANY DOMINANT OR STABLE MEMBERS. IT EXTENDS ALMOST TO TOUCH GROUP 4183. 4188 18950930 18950930 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4189 18950930 18951012 A NUMBER OF DISTINCT IRREGULAR SPOTS IN A STREAM, SHORT, BROAD AND NEARLY CONTINOUS. A, THE LEADER, IS A LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT. B, THE LAST SPOT ON OCTOBER 4, IS SIMILAR BUT SMALLER. THE GROUP UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES, A HAVING DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS, C AND D, BY OCTOBER 7. C AND D HAVE BECOME LARGE AND NEARLY REGULAR BY OCTOBER 10, AND MAKE UP THE CHIEF PART OF THE GROUP. 4190 18951004 18951004 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4191 18951005 18951005 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4192 18951006 18951011 A FEW SMALL SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON OCTOBER 6. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND BECOME TWO PARALLEL STRAIGHT STREAMS OF SPOTS. THE GROUP THEN DIMINISHES, THE TWO STREAMS BECOME IRREGULAR AND CONFUSED WITH EACH OTHER, ALL THE SPOTS BECOME VERY SMALL, EXCEPT A, THE LEADER ON OCTOBER 9, AND FINALLY, ON OCTOBER 11, A REMAINS ALONE. 4193 18951012 18951012 A SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 4189. 4194 18951012 18951012 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4195 18951012 18951014 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ON OCTOBER 12 AND 13. 4196 18951012 18951015 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4197 18951012 18951022 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED. OCTOBER 14-19, BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 4198 18951013 18951013 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 4199 18951014 18951015 THREE FAINT ILL-DEFINED SPOTS ON OCTOBER 14. THE LAST HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 15. 4200 18951015 18951017 A DIMINISHING SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 15. 4201 18951019 18951030 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON OCTOBER 19. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND BECOMES A FINE STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B, NOW TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, ARE THE FIRST AND LAST. LATER, A BECOMES REGULAR, AND B DIVIDES INTO TWO SPOTS, C AND D. ON OCTOBER 29 THE GROUP CONSISTS ALMOST ENTIRELY OF SIX WELL DEFINED SPOTS, A, C, D, E, F AND G. 4202 18951020 18951026 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON OCTOBER 20 N OF GROUP 4201. A SECOND, B, FORMS A PAIR WITH IT ON OCTOBER 21. B REMAINS ALONE ON OCTOBER 22. THE GROUP HAS EXPANDED INTO A SHORT STREAM BY OCTOBER 24, AFTER WHICH IT DIMINISHES AGAIN. 4203 18951021 18951025 THREE SMALL SPOTS, A, B, AND C. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 23, B BY OCTOBER 24. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS PRECEDE C ON OCTOBER 25. 4204 18951022 18951022 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4205 18951022 18951102 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A. IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO LARGE SPOTS, B AND C, BY OCTOBER 24. B BECOMES MORE REGULAR DAY BY DAY. C TENDS TO DISINTEGRATE, AND A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARE THROWN OFF FROM IT, OR FORM ROUND IT. 4206 18951022 18951031 AN IRREGULAR BUT FAIRLY COMPACT CLUSTER OF SOMEWHAT UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGE, AND DIMINISHES VERY RAPIDLY AFTER OCTOBER 27. THE MEASURES ON OCTOBER 25 AND 27 ARE UNCERTAIN, AS THE GROUP APPEARS BLURRED ON THE PHOTOGRAPHS ON THOSE DAYS. 4207 18951022 18951102 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER IMMEDIATELY S OF GROUP 4206. A, B AND C ARE THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS. B INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS ON OCTOBER 31. THE OTHER SPOTS DIMINISH AND DIE OUT. THE MEASURES ON OCTOBER 25 ARE UNCERTAIN, AS THE GROUP APPEARS BLURRED ON THE PHOTOGRAPH ON THAT DAY. 4208 18951024 18951104 A FINE BUT BROKEN STREAM, CONSISTING USUALLY OF TWO DISTINCT CLUSTERS. A, THE LEADER, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. OTHER PRINCIPAL SPOTS ARE B, C AND D, OF WHICH D IS THE LARGEST. B AND C SOON BREAK UP AND DISAPPEAR, AND AFTER OCTOBER 30 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A, FOLLOWED AT A DISTANCE BY A LONG BUT VERY SPARSE AND SCATTERED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 4209 18951024 18951025 A SMALL SPOT. 4210 18951028 18951107 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 28. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES A FINE STREAM, WHICH UNDERGOES CONSTANT AND STRIKING CHANGE. ON OCTOBER 30 IT CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, CONNECTED BY A CHAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. OTHER WELL DEFINED SPOTS, C, D, E, F AND G, FORM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. E IS MEASURED AS TWO LARGE SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 2 AND 3. THE STREAM IS WEDGE-SHAPED ON NOVEMBER 2. ON NOVEMBER 5 THE GROUP CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO VERY LARGE SPOTS, A, AND A SPOT FORMED BY THE TEMPORARY UNION OF B AND C. 4211 18951029 18951109 A FINE STREAM WHICH UNDERGOES CONSTANT AND STRIKING CHANGE. THE LEADER, A, IS THROUGHOUT THE PRINCIPAL MEMBER OF THE GROUP, AND HAS BECOME VERY LARGE BY NOVEMBER 6. IT IS USUALLY REGULAR IN SHAPE. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE GENERALLY SMALL AND NUMEROUS, FOLLOWING A IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 4212 18951031 18951108 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSTANT CHANGE AS TO THE SIZE, NUMBER, AND ARRANGEMENT OF ITS MEMBERS. IT IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 2. 4213 18951102 18951102 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4214 18951102 18951104 A SMALL SPOT. 4215 18951103 18951108 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS S GROUP 4213. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 5-7. 4216 18951110 18951120 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSTANT CHANGE, AND IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 16 AND 18. 4217 18951112 18951112 A SMALL SPOT. 4218 18951113 18951124 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. B IS THE MOST STABLE SPOT OF THE FOLLOWING STREAM. A HAS BECOME A DOUBLE SPOT BY NOVEMBER 18, AND HAS THROWN OFF A PORTION C BY NOVEMBER 19. 4219 18951114 18951117 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY UNSTABLE SMALL COMPANIONS. 4220 18951114 18951123 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSTANT CHANGE, AND IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 21. 4221 18951114 18951126 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 4222 18951116 18951116 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 4223 18951117 18951117 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 4217. 4224 18951117 18951117 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4225 18951117 18951117 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4226 18951118 18951130 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 27. 4227 18951120 18951120 A VERY SMALL SPOT NP GROUP 4221. 4228 18951120 18951120 A SMALL SPOT S GROUP 4221. 4229 18951120 18951129 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS AFTER NOVEMBER 23. 4230 18951122 18951129 AN IRREGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A CLOSE COMPANION, B, ON NOVEMBER 23, AND A SECOND COMPANION WHICH IS VERY FAINT. A DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY, AND HAS BECOME REGULAR BY NOVEMBER 25. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON NOVEMBER 28. 4231 18951125 18951205 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, CLOSE TOGETHER. THEY ARE ACCOMPANIED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 25, AND BY TWO VERY SMALL ONES ON NOVEMBER 28. A AND B ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON NOVEMBER 29. THEY DIMINISH RAPIDLY AFTER THAT DATE, AND A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 2. 4232 18951126 18951126 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4233 18951201 18951201 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4234 18951202 18951205 AN IRREGULAR STREAM FORMING SUDDENLY, INCREASING RAPIDLY, AND DIMINISHING AS QUICKLY. A, THE LEADER, IS A LARGE SPOT; B, THE LAST SPOT, IS OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE ON DECEMBER 3. 4235 18951202 18951208 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 2. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND HAS BECOME BY DECEMBER 3 A NUMBER OF SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING EACH OTHER IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A AND B, ARE STABLE. THE SMALLER SPOTS BETWEEN THEM SOON DIE OUT. 4236 18951205 18951214 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 5. ON DECEMBER 6 TWO SMALL SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER, A AND B, AND A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, C THE LATTER CORRESPONDING TO THE PAIR SEEN THE PREVIOUS DAY. B ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 8. IT IS FOLLOWED BY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON DECEMBER 10 AND 11, AND UNDERGOES SEVERAL CHANGES AS TO ITS AREA. 4237 18951205 18951208 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON DECEMBER 5 S OF GROUP 4236. ANOTHER SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 6 AND 7. A IS FOLLOWED BY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON DECEMBER 8. 4238 18951205 18951211 A LONG IRREGULAR STRAGGLING GROUP, IN THREE PRINCIPAL CLUSTERS, NONE OF WHICH ARE LARGE, BUT OF WHICH THE FIRST IS THE MOST IMPORTANT, AND ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 10. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS ARE NEARLY ALL SMALL AND UNSTABLE. 4239 18951206 18951218 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED AT FIRST BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. A HAS BECOME REGULAR, AND THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 12. A IS AGAIN ATTENDED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 13 AND 18. 4240 18951206 18951214 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, MOSTLY DIVIDED INTO TWO CLUSTERS. THE LEADER, A, IS A COMPOSITE SPOT. A SECOND COMPOSITE SPOT, B, HAS FORMED AT THE END OF THE STREAM BY DECEMBER 9. THE OTHER SPOTS ARE SMALL, AND THE GROUP AS A WHOLE UNDERGOES MUCH CHANGE. 4241 18951207 18951219 A FINE BUT IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. THREE LARGE SPOTS, A B AND C SLIGHTLY CONNECTED BY LINES OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, ARE ITS CHIEF FEATURES. B HAS BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 13, AND C BY DECEMBER 14, BUT THE PRINCIPAL PORTION OF C IS STILL RECOGNISABLE. A HAS BECOME REGULAR BY DECEMBER 14. THE SMALL SPOTS DISAPPEAR AND A ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 17. 4242 18951208 18951217 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, A. IT IS ATTENDED BY ONE VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 10 AND 16, AND BY SEVERAL ON DECEMBER 14. 4243 18951209 18951219 A SPOT, A, WHICH, AT TIMES REGULAR, UNDERGOES SEVERAL CHANGES OF SHAPE AND SIZE. IT IS FREQUENTLY ACCOMPANIED BY A SMALL COMPANION. THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE A SUDDEN REVIVAL BY DECEMBER 16, AND IS THEN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, B AND C BEING THE PRINCIPAL. 4244 18951210 18951210 A SMALL FAINT SPOT XF GROUP 4238. THE GROUPS 4238, 4240, 4242, 4243, AND 4244 FOLLOW EACH OTHER IN ONE ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM. 4245 18951211 18951211 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. 4246 18951211 18951214 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 11. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 12 AND 13, BUT A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON DECEMBER 14. 4247 18951212 18951219 A FINE GROUP APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. IT CONSISTS OF TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A AND B, CONNECTED BY A SPARSE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A IS A LARGE ELLIPTICAL SPOT, B TENDS TO DIVIDE. 4248 18951213 18951219 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 13. IT HAS THROWN OFF A SMALL FRAGMENT, AND IS FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY DECEMBER 14. BY DECEMBER 16 A ALONE REMAINS, BUT IT IS AGAIN ATTENDED BY TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON DECEMBER 19. 4249 18951216 18951216 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4250 18951216 18951227 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY ATTENDED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 4251 18951218 18951227 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON DECEMBER 18. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, WHEN IT CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. B IS THE LESS COMPACT, AND IS MEASURED IN FOUR PARTS. A HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY DECEMBER 21, AND B HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED, AND IS REPRESENTED BY A PAIR OF SPOTS, C AND D, WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 23, WHEN A REMAINS ALONE. 4252 18951218 18951227 A SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 18. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, WHEN IT CONSISTS OF A SHORT STREAM, THE TWO CHIEF MEMBERS OF WHICH ARE A AND B, REGULAR SPOTS. B HAS BECOME A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BY DECEMBER 21; IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS, C AND D, BY DECEMBER 23, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP RAPIDLY DECLINES. 4253 18951220 18951220 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4254 18951220 18951228 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY UNTIL AFTER DECEMBER 23. A, THE LEADER ON THAT DAY, REMAINS ALONE ON DECEMBER 24, AS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, AND PERSISTS AS SUCH TILL DECEMBER 30. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON DECEMBER 26. 4255 18951220 18960101 A FINE STREAM. ON AND AFTER DECEMBER 22 IT CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A LONG SPARSE STREAM OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, OF WHICH B, C AND D ARE THE PRINCIPAL. THE STREAM DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY UP TO DECEMBER 29, WHEN A REMAINS ALONE. A INCREASES SLIGHTLY AFTER THIS DATE. 4256 18951221 18960102 A VERY FINE STREAM CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 4255. ITS PRINCIPAL MEMBERS ARE:-A, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT; B, A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT; C, A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, THE LATTER BEING OFTEN MEASURED IN TWO PARTS. C HAS DISAPPEARED, AND B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY DECEMBER 29. THE GROUP DIMINISHES STEADILY THROUGHOUT ITS WHOLE COURSE. 4257 18951222 18951222 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4258 18951224 18951227 A SHORT STREAM FORMING SUDDENLY S GROUP 4252. IT HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SECOND DAY, BUT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTERWARDS. THE LEADER, A, IS A REGULAR SPOT, AND THE TWO LAST SPOTS, B AND C, HAVE DEFINITE NUCLEI. THE OTHER SPOTS ARE UNSTABLE. 4259 18951224 18951225 A SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 24. THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON DECEMBER 25. 4260 18951226 18951228 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 28. 4261 18951226 18951228 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 28. THE GROUP LIES S OF GROUP 4260. 4262 18951227 18960107 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS, ALL SMALL EXCEPT THE LAST ONE, B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 1, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY JANUARY 6. 4263 18951228 18960102 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON DECEMBER 28, SP GROUP 4262. THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED INTO A SHORT STREAM BY DECEMBER 30. THE SPOTS ARE SMALL AND MOSTLY UNSTABLE. 4264 18951231 18960105 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 4265 18960103 18960111 AN IRREGULAR GROUP ON JANUARY 3; IT INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO JANUARY 5, WHEN IT CONSISTS OF A LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED AT A LITTLE DISTANCE BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. A HAS BECOME REGULAR AND THE SMALL SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 7. 4266 18960104 189601 4 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4267 18960105 18960107 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON JANUARY 6. 4268 18960106 18960110 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY. A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST AND ALONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 8. 4269 18960106 18960106 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4270 18960106 18960107 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JANUARY 7. 4271 18960106 18960107 TWO SPOTS ON JANUARY 6. THE PRECEDING SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED AND THE FOLLOWING SPOT BROKEN UP INTO SEVERAL VERY SMALL FRAGMENTS BY JANUARY 7. 4272 18960107 18960110 TWO IRREGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. THEY HAVE GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JANUARY 8. 4273 18960108 18960108 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4274 18960112 18960114 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 12. ONLY A, THE LAST, REMAINS BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 4275 18960113 18960114 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 4276 18960113 18960116 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. ONLY A, THE LEADER, REMAINS BY JANUARY 15. 4277 18960116 18960128 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 4278 18960118 18960129 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 4279 18960125 18960206 A LARGE SPOT, A, WHICH EVENTUALLY BECOMES REGULAR. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON FEBRUARY 1. A IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON FEBRUARY 6. 4280 18960126 18960126 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4281 18960126 18960202 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 26. AFTERWARDS A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 4282 18960127 18960202 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT STREAM, FORMING ONE STRAIGHT LINE WITH GROUP 4278. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED IN SIZE BY JANUARY 28, ESPECIALLY A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS. THE GROUP DECREASES AFTER JANUARY 29, A AND B ALONE REMAINING BY JANUARY 30, AND BREAKING UP BEFORE FEBRUARY 1. 4283 18960128 18960130 FOUR SMALL SPOTS, A, B, C AND D, ON JANUARY 28. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO BY JANUARY 29. ONLY D REMAINS BY JANUARY 30. 4284 18960131 18960208 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 5 AND 8. 4285 18960202 18960205 AN IRREGULAR STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY P GROUP 4282, AND DEVELOPING WITH GREAT RAPIDITY. 4286 18960204 18960208 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE ONLY STABLE MEMBER OF THE GROUP, AND IS SEEN ALONE ON FEBRUARY 6 AND 8. 4287 18960205 18960212 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE SPOTS ARE MOSTLY UNSTABLE, A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 5, BEING THE MOST STABLE. A WIDE GAP HAS FORMED BETWEEN THE PRECEDING AND FOLLOWING PORTIONS OF THE STREAM BY FEBRUARY 8, AND THE FOLLOWING PORTION HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 11. 4288 18960207 18960208 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. ONLY THE LEADER, A, REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 8. 4289 18960207 18960207 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4290 18960209 18960212 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 12. 4291 18960210 18960221 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP INCREASES, ESPECIALLY AS IT REGARDS THE LEADER, A, UP TO FEBRUARY 15, WHEN IT CONSISTS OF FIVE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B, C, D AND E. A, NOW A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 19. A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON FEBRUARY 18. 4292 18960213 18960213 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 4293 18960215 18960216 A CONSIDERABLE GROUP FIRST SEEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. IT CONSISTS ON FEBRUARY 15 OF TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A AND B, AND A SMALL COMPANION. B AND A SMALL COMPANION ARE ALONE SEEN ON FEBRUARY 16. 4294 18960215 18960215 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4295 18960218 18960229 A GREAT NUMBER OF SPOTS, SEVERAL OF WHICH ARE LARGE, IN A MAGNIFICENT STREAM. THE INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS OF THE GROUP UNDERGO CONTINUAL CHANGE, BUT THE GROUP ITSELF CONTINUES THROUGHOUT A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM. 4296 18960219 18960302 A FINE BUT VERY IRREGULAR STREAM. THE MAIN BODY OF THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM, COMPOSED OF LARGE IRREGULAR SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER IN THE PRECEDING PART, AND OF SMALLER SCATTERED SPOTS FOLLOWING THEM. A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL AND MOSTLY UNSTABLE SPOTS IS SEEN NORTH OF THE MAIN STREAM, FEBRUARY 20-29; AND A SMALLER AND MORE UNSTABLE STREAM SOUTH OF IT, FEBRUARY 22-25. THE ENTIRE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 4297 18960220 18960220 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, OF WHICH TWO ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. 4298 18960222 18960226 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM WEDGE-SHAPED ARE FIRST, BUT WHICH STRAIGHTENS OUT LATER. A, THE LAST SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE AND REMAINS ALONE ON FEBRUARY 25. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON FEBRUARY 26. 4299 18960222 18960224 A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A THIRD VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR THEM ON FEBRUARY 22 AND 23. ONLY A REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 24. 4300 18960222 18960305 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS HAVE FORMED NEAR IT, N, S AND P, BY MARCH 1, AFTER WHICH A DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 4301 18960226 18960302 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. 4302 18960227 18960310 A NUMBER OF IRREGULAR SPOTS IN A FINE, NEARLY STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP ON FEBRUARY 29 CONSISTS ALMOST ENTIRELY OF THREE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A, B AND C, BUT THESE CHANGE IN SHAPE, AND THE PRINCIPAL PORTIONS OF A AND B HAVE AMALGAMATED TO MAKE A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, D, BY MARCH 2. THE SMALLER SPOTS DIMINISH AFTER MARCH 5, AND D ALONE REMAINS AFTER MARCH 7. A FRESH OUTBREAK IS SEEN SF D ON MARCH 10. 4303 18960301 18960313 A LARGE NEARLY REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A LOOSE STREAM. A UNDERGOES SEVERAL STRIKING CHANGES. IT IS DIVIDED BY A BROAD BRIGHT BRIDGE, NEARLY PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR, ON MARCH 4, AND HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS BY MARCH 9. THESE ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON THAT DATE, BUT SEPARATELY AS B AND C AFTERWARDS. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 8, AND B BY MARCH 12. 4304 18960302 18960307 A SMALL SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A COUPLE OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 4305 18960303 18960308 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY N P GROUP 4302. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, ESPECIALLY THE LEADER, A, WHICH HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY MARCH 5, AND WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY MARCH 8. 4306 18960303 18960304 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4307 18960306 18960306 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4308 18960308 189603 8 A SMALL SPOT. 4309 18960309 18960309 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, PERHAPS A REVIVAL OF GROUP 4304. 4310 18960310 18960314 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. A SHORT COMPACT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 13. 4311 18960314 18960315 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 14. A HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY MARCH 14, AND A SECOND SPOT OF EQUAL SIZE HAS FORMED F IT. 4312 18960315 18960315 A SMALL FAINT SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL FAINT COMPANION. 4313 18960315 18960321 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON MARCH 15 AND 16. THIS HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 17, BUT SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN SF ITS PLACE. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY MARCH 18, BUT DIMINISHES AGAIN IMMEDIATELY, AND SHOWS ITSELF VERY UNSTABLE. 4314 18960316 18960321 A SMALL SPOT. 4315 18960318 18960319 A FEW SPOTS IN A SMALL CLUSTER. 4316 18960319 18960326 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON MARCH 19 AND 20. THE GROUP THEN RAPIDLY CHANGES; A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, APPEAR, AND THE WHOLE FORMS A VARIABLE CLUSTER. B, THE LAST SPOT ON MARCH 23, IS THE LARGEST, AND PERHAPS CORRESPONDS TO A. B HAS DIVIDED INTO C AND D BY MARCH 25. 4317 18960320 18960324 A SMALL SPOT. 4318 18960322 18960323 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4319 18960322 18960328 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 22. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY AND HAS BECOME A CONSIDERABLE STREAM, A, THE LARGEST SPOT, BEING IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP. THE OTHER SPOTS ARE SMALL. THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 27, EXCEPT FOR A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS AT THE F END OF THE STREAM. 4320 18960323 18960329 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 27. 4321 18960325 18960406 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. IT CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, AND A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PRINCIPAL PARTS, C AND D, BY MARCH 30; A INTO THREE, E, F AND G, BY MARCH 31; AND D INTO THREE, H, J, AND K, BY APRIL 2. THE GROUP DECLINES RAPIDLY AFTER THIS, AND E ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 5. 4322 18960328 18960328 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4323 18960328 18960328 A SMALL SPOT. 4324 18960330 18960330 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4325 18960330 18960409 TWO SMALL SPOTS IN A MASS OF BRIGHT FACULAE. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 31 AND APRIL 1, BUT A FRESH OUTBURST HAS OCCURRED BY APRIL 2, WHEN A SINGLE SMALL SPOT IS SEEN. THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A SMALL CLOSE PAIR ON APRIL 3, AND OF AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 4326 18960330 18960410 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C, BY APRIL 2, OF WHICH B IS A REGULAR SPOT. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SOMETIMES SEEN F THEM. B ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 8. 4327 18960330 18960411 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. 4328 18960331 18960406 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 4329 18960331 18960407 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, F GROUPS 4326 AND 4327, BUT IN AN INTERMEDIATE LATITUDE. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 2, 5 OR 6. 4330 18960401 18960405 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 4328, ON APRIL 1. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON APRIL 2. A REMAINS ALONE BY APRIL 3. 4331 18960401 18960404 A SMALL SPOT, A, F GROUP 4330, ON APRIL 1. A HAS EXPANDED AND DIVIDED INTO THREE PARTS, B, C AND D, BY APRIL 2. ONLY C, WHICH CORRESPONDS TO A IN PLACE, REMAINS BY APRIL 4. GROUPS 4328, 4330 AND 4331 FORM TOGETHER ONE STRAGGLING IRREGULAR STREAM. 4332 18960401 18960405 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 4333 18960403 18960413 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON APRIL 3. THE GROUP INCREASES GREATLY IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY UP TO APRIL 8, AND BECOMES A FINE BROAD COMPLEX STREAM. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS ARE IN A CONSTANT STATE OF CHANGE. THE MOST EASILY RECOGNIZED ARE LETTERED A TO F, BUT THESE ALSO CHANGE GREATLY, AND B, D AND E ARE EACH SOMETIMES DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS. ON APRIL 8, A, D AND E ARE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A BEING SPECIALLY COMPLEX IN STRUCTURE. 4334 18960405 18960405 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 4335 18960405 18960406 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 5. A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 6. 4336 18960407 18960407 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4337 18960414 18960414 A PAIR OF FAINT SMALL SPOTS. 4338 18960418 18960418 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4339 18960418 18960423 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 18. A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 19 AND 20, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS LARGEST. A ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 21, BUT IS ACCOMPANIED BY A DISTANT COMPANION ON APRIL 23. 4340 18960419 18960422 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 4339 ON APRIL 19. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 4341 18960420 18960423 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 4340 ON APRIL 20. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 4342 18960421 18960430 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 21. A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON APRIL 23 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE AS TO SIZE, APPEARANCE, AND COMPOSITION. 4343 18960423 18960428 A REGULAR SPOT,A, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN FOLLOWING IT ON APRIL 26 AND 27. 4344 18960425 18960428 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 4345 18960427 18960430 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 4346 18960428 18960428 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4347 18960429 18960429 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4348 18960430 18960506 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST, AND INCREASES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. 4349 18960504 18960512 A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 4, NOT SEEN ON MAY 5, BUT REAPPEARING BY MAY 6. A NUMBER OF CLOSELY CONNECTED SMALL SPOTS IN THE FORM OF HORSE-SHOE ON MAY 7. THE GROUP BREAKS UP AND DIMINISHES AFTER THIS DATE. 4350 18960505 189605 8 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON MAY 5. B HAS A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 6. A REMAINS ALONE ON MAY 7, AND HAS A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 8. 4351 18960508 18960508 A SMALL SPOT. 4352 18960510 18960515 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 13 AND 14. 4353 18960511 18960511 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 4354 18960514 18960514 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4355 18960518 18960522 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 4356 18960518 18960518 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A BRIGHT GROUP OF FACULAE. 4357 18960520 18960523 A SMALL SPOT SP GROUP 4355 ON MAY 20. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 21. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON MAY 22 AND 23. 4358 18960520 18960520 A SMALL SPOT. 4359 18960521 18960529 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. A IS OCCASIONALLY FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 4360 18960525 18960527 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4361 18960526 18960604 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON MAY 26. THE GROUP UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, FORMING, BY MAY 28, A FINE COMPLEX STREAM. THREE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A, B AND C, FORM IN THE COURSE OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE GROUP, OF WHICH A IS MUCH THE LARGEST. ALL THREE UNDERGO CONSTANT CHANGE. 4362 18960527 18960530 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LEADER, IS THE MOST STABLE, AND IS THE LARGEST AFTER MAY 27. 4363 18960528 18960530 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 4364 18960531 18960612 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS ON JUNE 3, 5, 7, AND 8. A HAS BECOME MARKEDLY ELLIPTICAL BY JUNE 5, THE MAJOR AXIS BEING INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 4365 18960602 18960613 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 4366 18960604 18960605 A SMALL SPOT. 4367 18960605 18960607 A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 5. A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 6 AND 7. 4368 18960609 18960618 A SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 9. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. ON JUNE 10 IT CONSISTS OF A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM; A, THE LEADER, BEING THE LARGEST AND MOST DISTINCT. A SPEEDILY BECOMES A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, AND UNDERGOES SEVERAL CHANGES OF SHAPE. ITS MAJOR AXIS ON JUNE 13 IS ALMOST AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THAT OF THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP AND TO THE EQUATOR. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH AFTER JUNE 13, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY JUNE 17. 4369 18960609 18960620 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE WELL DEFINED SPOT. ON JUNE 13 THE GROUP PRESENTS THE UNUSUAL APPEARANCE OF THREE STRAIGHT STREAMS, THE CENTRE ONE NEARLY PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR, THE OTHER TWO NEARLY AT RIGHT ANGLES TO IT. THE GROUP UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES, AND ON JUNE 15 FORMS BUT A SINGLE STREAM, NEARLY STRAIGHT AND PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR, THE GREAT BULK OF THE GROUP HAVING COALESCED INTO TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. THESE HAVE BROKEN UP AGAIN BY JUNE 16, THOUGH A LARGE PART OF A STILL REMAINS INTACT, AND BY JUNE 18, THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. BY JUNE 20, A REMAINS ALONE. 4370 18960613 18960613 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4371 18960615 18960618 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP APPEARS SUDDENLY OF ITS FULL SIZE, AND DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY AFTERWARDS. 4372 18960616 18960616 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4373 18960616 18960616 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4374 18960616 18960616 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4375 18960619 18960629 A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM UNDERGOING MUCH CHANGE. IT CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS ON JUNE 22 AND 23. THE GROUP EXTENDS IN LENGTH UP TO JUNE 25, AFTER WHICH THE GREAT SPOTS BREAK UP AND THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES. 4376 18960622 18960628 A STREAM OF SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY CLOSE TO THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND CHIEFLY COLLECTED IN TWO CLUSTERS. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY JUNE 23. THE PRECEDING CLUSTER IS THE MOST DEFINITE, AND TENDS TO ASSUME A REGULAR OUTLINE. 4377 18960623 18960623 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4378 18960625 18960625 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 4379 18960626 18960703 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE MOST STABLE. 4380 18960629 18960706 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM NP GROUP 4379. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE SEEN THROUGHOUT, BUT UNDERGO MUCH CHANGE. 4381 18960630 18960701 A SMALL SPOT. 4382 18960701 18960704 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 1 AND 2. A CLOSE PAIR ON JULY 3 AND 4. 4383 18960701 18960703 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 4382. 4384 18960704 18960707 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A CLOSE FAINT COMPANION ON JULY 7. 4385 18960705 18960709 A SMALL SPOT, A. ON JULY 7 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, THE LAST AND LARGEST OF WHICH IS B, IS SEEN FOLLOWING A. ONLY A AND B ARE SEEN ON JULY 8, AND ONLY A ON JULY 9. 4386 18960706 18960714 A REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY ATTENDED BY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 4387 18960706 18960713 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 4388 18960707 18960709 THREE SMALL SPOTS, A, B, AND C. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 8, B BY JULY 9. 4389 18960708 18960712 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 10 AND 11. 4390 18960710 18960721 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 10. THE GROUP CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY, ITS USUAL CHARACTER BEING THAT OF A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN A STRAIGHT BUT DISCONTINUOUS STREAM. 4391 18960711 18960717 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JULY 11 P GROUP 4390. THE GROUP CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY, ITS USUAL CHARACTER BEING THAT OF A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN A SHORT STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 16. 4392 18960712 18960712 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4393 18960712 18960712 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4394 18960713 18960713 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4395 18960713 18960724 A VERY LARGE, NEARLY REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. A BECOMES STRONGLY ELLIPTICAL, ESPECIALLY AS TO ITS UMBRA, AFTER PASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON JULY 19. 4396 18960714 18960714 A VERY SMALL SPOT F GROUP 4386. 4397 18960714 18960714 A VERY SMALL SPOT F GROUP 4396. 4398 18960714 18960714 A SMALL SPOT. 4399 18960714 18960725 A LARGE NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A FINE CLUSTER, SF GROUP 4395. THE GROUP CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY, STRETCHING OUT TOWARDS GROUP 4395, JULY 19-21, WITH WHICH IT MAY HAVE FORMED ONE MAGNIFICENT GROUP BEFORE COMING INTO VIEW AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE SPOTS ARE LETTERED A, B, C, AND D. A IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT; B HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 19, AND C IS THE LARGEST PORTION OF IT; D IS A LARGE SPOT FORMING IN ADVANCE OF THE GROUP ON JULY 24 AND 25. 4400 18960715 18960723 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A FINE CLUSTER, THE SOUTHERN PORTION OF WHICH IS THE LARGER. THE GROUP HAS DIVIDED BY JULY 20 INTO A PARALLEL PAIR OF SHORT STRAIGHT STREAMS. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS UNDERGO GREAT CHANGES; THE LARGEST AND MOST PERSISTENT ARE A AND B. B IS MEASURED AS TWO ON JULY 19. C IS A LARGE FRAGMENT BROKEN OFF FROM A. 4401 18960718 18960718 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4402 18960719 18960721 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 19. 4403 18960720 18960729 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 20. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSTANT CHANGE, AND HAS BECOME A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY JULY 21, WHICH HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JULY 24, AND HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO CLUSTERS BY JULY 25. A, THE LEADER, ON JULY 23, BECOMES A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, BUT SOON DIMINISHES AGAIN. 4404 18960722 18960722 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4405 18960727 18960806 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. A INCREASES GREATLY IN SIZE, AND HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C, BY AUGUST 4. 4406 18960804 18960804 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4407 18960809 18960821 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A PAIR OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS F ON AUGUST 15, AND ONE VERY SMALL COMPANION SP ON AUGUST 17. 4408 18960813 18960821 A NUMBER OF SCATTERED SPOTS, CHIEFLY SMALL. THE GROUP HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO CLUSTERS BY AUGUST 18, AFTER WHICH IT RAPIDLY DISAPPEARS. IT IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 20. 4409 18960813 18960824 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 13, 15 AND 16. A HAS BROKEN UP BY AUGUST 19, AND THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 20. IT HAS REVIVED AGAIN BY AUGUST 21, AND CONSISTS OF A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN TWO IRREGULAR CLUSTERS. THE LAST SPOT, B, ALONE REMAINS BY AUGUST 24. 4410 18960816 18960819 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4411 18960817 18960817 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4412 18960817 18960819 ONE SMALL SPOT. 4413 18960820 18960820 ONE SMALL SPOT. 4414 18960821 18960822 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 4415 18960821 18960827 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED ON AUGUST 21. THE GROUP INCREASES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND HAS BECOME A STRAIGHT STREAM COMPOSED CHIEFLY OF THREE DISTINCT CLUSTERS BY AUGUST 24. THE PRECEDING CLUSTER HAS BECOME A LARGE WELL-DEFINED SPOT, A, BY AUGUST 25. 4416 18960826 18960904 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A FINE STRAIGHT CONTINUOUS STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT ON AUGUST 27: THE STREAM TERMINATES IN A CLUSTER SOMEWHAT DENSER AND BROADER THAN THE BODY OF THE GROUP, FROM WHICH B HAS FORMED BY AUGUST 27, AND C TO THE NORTH OF B BY AUGUST 29, A REMAINS THROUGHOUT THE LARGEST OF THE THREE; B IS THE NEXT LARGEST TILL SEPTEMBER 1, AFTER WHICH IT RAPIDLY DIMINISHES, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 3. 4417 18960830 18960909 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT A, MEASURED AS ONE UNTIL SEPTEMBER 5, WHEN IT HAS DIVIDED TO FORM A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS B AND C; B, WHICH LIES TO THE NORTH OF C, HAS DIMINISHED BY SEPTEMBER 8 AND IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 9. 4418 18960901 189609 1 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4419 18960902 18960902 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 4420 18960905 18960906 THREE SMALL SPOTS. 4421 18960905 18960905 ONE SMALL SPOT. 4422 18960907 18960914 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, CLOSELY FOLLOWING EACH OTHER IN A CURVED STREAM; TWO CONSIDERABLE SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE FORMED BY SEPTEMBER 9, IN THE MIDDLE AND AT THE END OF THE GROUP; A THIRD, C, HAS FORMED AT THE HEAD BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY; C HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 12, B BY SEPTEMBER 13. ON SEPTEMBER 13 AND 14 THE GROUP CONSISTS ONLY OF A AND ANOTHER SPOT PRECEDING IT. 4423 18960907 18960907 A SMALL SPOT. 4424 18960908 18960914 A FINE GROUP CONSISTING OF A NUMBER OF SPOTS ARRANGED IN TWO PARALLEL STREAMS, WHICH APPEARS SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN PRECEDING GROUP 4422. IT COMPRISES TWO LARGE SPOTS. A AND B, AND A NUMBER OF SMALLER SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 8; C HAS FORMED BY SEPTEMBER 10; B HAS DIMINISHED BY SEPTEMBER 11, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY; C HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 13, LEAVING A ALONE. 4425 18960909 18960912 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN TWO CLUSTERS ON SEPTEMBER 9 P GROUP 4424. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND ON SEPTEMBER 11 THE TWO CLUSTERS HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A AND B; B ALONE IS SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 12. 4426 18960909 18960918 A REGULAR SPOT. A, OCCASIONALLY ACCOMPANIED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP IS OVERTAKEN AND ABSORBED BY GROUP 4428. 4427 18960910 18960910 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SP GROUP 4426. 4428 18960910 18960922 A VERY FINE GROUP CONSISTING OF AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM OF MOST UNUSUAL LENGTH. THE GROUP, WHICH PRESENTS A SERIES OF CURVES CONCAVE TO THE EQUATOR, COMPRISES A NUMBER OF LARGE SPOTS MOSTLY IRREGULAR IN SHAPE AND SHOWING FINE DETAIL, BUT AS THEY LIE CLOSE TO EACH OTHER, AND COMBINE AND DIVIDE FREQUENTLY, IT IS NOT POSSIBLE TO FOLLOW ANY PARTICULAR SPOT FOR LONG. 4429 18960912 18960914 A WELL-DEFINED SPOT, A, WITH TWO OR THREE SMALL COMPANIONS ON SEPTEMBER 12 AND 13; ONLY A REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 14. 4430 18960912 18960912 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4431 18960913 18960918 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 16. 4432 18960916 18960916 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 4433 18960917 18960917 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4434 18960917 18960923 A SPOT, A, LARGE ON SEPTEMBER 18 BUT DIMINISHING AFTER, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS. 4435 18960919 18960930 A FINE BROAD IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS. A PAIR OF LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LEADERS. THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP IS MADE UP MOSTLY OF SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP IS BROADER, AND CONTAINS A LARGE SPOT D, WITH TWO CONSIDERABLE COMPANIONS, C AND E, AND A NUMBER OF SMALLER SPOTS. THE CENTRAL AND FOLLOWING PORTIONS OF THE GROUP DIMINISH, AND ONLY A AND B, FOLLOWED BY TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, REMAIN BY SEPTEMBER 28. 4436 18960921 18960924 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. THE LEADER, A, AND A VERY SMALL COMPANION ALONE REMAIN BY SEPTEMBER 24. 4437 18960923 18960923 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS F GROUP 4434. 4438 18960923 18960925 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM F GROUP 4437. 4439 18960924 18960924 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4440 18960929 18961004 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE STRAIGHT STREAM. 4441 18961006 18961013 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY. 4442 18961010 18961011 TWO SMALL IRREGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. ONLY B REMAINS ON OCTOBER 11. 4443 18961014 18961017 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A VERY IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP CHANGES RAPIDLY FROM DAY TO DAY. 4444 18961014 18961015 TWO SMALL SPOTS. ONLY ONE REMAINS ON OCTOBER 15. 4445 18961017 18961026 THREE SMALL SPOTS, A, B, AND C, ON OCTOBER 17. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND A AND C ARE BOTH COMPOSITE SPOTS, C BEING MEASURED IN TWO PARTS. A HAS FURTHER INCREASED AND BECOME MORE REGULAR BY OCTOBER 19; WHILST C IS MEASURED IN FOUR PARTS. C HAS ENTIRELY BROKEN UP BY OCTOBER 21, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY OCTOBER 22. 4446 18961017 18961023 A SMALL SPOT, A, S GROUP 4447 AND SF GROUP 4445. A IS ACCOMPANIED BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS AFTER OCTOBER 19. TWO OF THESE, B AND C, REMAIN ON OCTOBER 23, AFTER A HAS DISAPPEARED. 4447 18961017 18961027 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. THESE INCREASE IN NUMBER ON THE P, S, AND F SIDES OF A, AND HAVE CONVERTED THE GROUP BY OCTOBER 23 INTO A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER OCTOBER 24, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY OCTOBER 27. 4448 18961017 18961024 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A LARGE SPOT B AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE N ON OCTOBER 17. A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM NEAR A AND B ON OCTOBER 18 AND 19, BUT DIMINISH LATER. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 21. GROUPS 4445, 4446, 4447, AND 4448 FORM ALMOST A SINGLE STRAIGHT STREAM. 4449 18961018 18961027 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 4450 18961023 18961023 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4451 18961024 18961102 A LARGE SPOT. A, WITH ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS. A TENDS TO LENGTHEN OUT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS, B AND C, BY OCTOBER 28; B HAS FURTHER DIVIDED INTO D AND E BY OCTOBER 30. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 1. 4452 18961025 18961025 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4453 18961025 18961025 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4454 18961030 18961031 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 30. THE THIRD HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 31. 4455 18961101 18961101 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4456 18961103 18961114 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. A TENDS TO BECOME ELONGATED IN THE DIRECTION OF MOTION ABOUT NOVEMBER 8 AND 9 WHEN IT CROSSES THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS HAVE FORMED S OF A BY NOVEMBER 9 AND 10. 4457 18961103 18961112 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS F GROUP 4456. A DIMINISHES RAPIDLY IN SIZE, AND ITS COMPANION SPOTS ARE VERY UNSTABLE. 4458 18961104 18961113 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS F GROUP 4457. A HAS ELONGATED IN A DIRECTION AT NEARLY RIGHT ANGLES TO THE EQUATOR BY NOVEMBER 8, AND HAS BROKEN UP INTO A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C, BY NOVEMBER 9. THE GROUP HAS BECOME BY NOVEMBER 11 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA. 4459 18961106 18961106 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4460 18961107 18961117 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON NOVEMBER 7. THE PHOTOSPHERE APPEARS PERTURBED IN ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD ON NOVEMBER 8, BUT NOTHING IS SEEN SUFFICIENTLY DEFINITE FOR MEASUREMENT. THE GROUP HAS RE-APPEARED BY NOVEMBER 9 AS A BROAD SEMICIRCULAR STREAM, CONCAVE TO THE EQUATOR. IT INCREASES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND IS SOON SEEN AS CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS NEAR THEM. B SOON BREAKS UP AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 14. A REMAINS ALONE AFTER THAT DATE AS A FINE DOUBLE SPOT. 4461 18961107 18961115 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST, AND IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT UP TO NOVEMBER 9, AFTER WHICH IT DIMINISHES IN SIZE AND BECOMES PARTLY DIVIDED, THOUGH STILL MEASURED AS ONE. B THE PRINCIPAL SPOT IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM IS AN IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, AND CONTINUALLY CHANGES IN SIZE AND SHAPE. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 13, AND AFTER THAT DATE A, WITH ONE VERY SMALL COMPANION, ALONE REMAINS. 4462 18961110 18961110 A VERY SMALL SPOT F GROUP 4461. 4463 18961110 18961117 FOUR OR FIVE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THESE BREAK UP AND FORM A NEARLY CONTINUOUS AND SEMICIRCULAR STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, CONVEX TO THE EQUATOR. THE GROUP FADES OUT VERY QUICKLY AFTER PASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON NOVEMBER 16. 4464 18961114 18961114 TWO SPOTS OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE SUDDENLY APPEARING IN A FACULOUS REGION CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 4465 18961114 18961117 A SMALL SPOT, A, P GROUP 4463. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED IN SIZE BY NOVEMBER 15, WHEN A IS FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, THE STREAM BEING INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. ALL THE SPOTS BUT A ARE VERY UNSTABLE.GROUPS 4456, 4457, 4458, 4460 AND 4461 FORM WHAT IS ALMOST ONE GRAND SLIGHTLY UNDULATING STREAM; WHILST GROUPS 4462, 4463 AND 4665 FOLLOW A LITTLE MORE LOOSELY ALMOST ON THE SAME PARALLEL OF LATITUDE. 4466 18961116 18961124 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON NOVEMBER 16. A HAS INCREASED IN SIZE BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, BUT DIMINISHES AGAIN LATER, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 21. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 18. THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON NOVEMBER 20 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE GROUP SHOWS A TEMPORARY EXPANSION ON NOVEMBER 22 AND 23. 4467 18961119 18961119 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4468 18961121 18961122 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 21. ONLY THE LAST, CONSIDERABLY INCREASED, REMAINS BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 4469 18961121 18961121 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4470 18961121 18961130 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SECOND SPOT ALMOST IN CONTACT WITH IT. THE LATTER MOVES IRREGULARLY WITH REGARD TO A, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 25. THE GROUP HAS BECOME A SPARSE STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS BY NOVEMBER 24. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 28. 4471 18961125 18961130 TWO OR THREE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH VARY FROM DAY TO DAY IN NUMBER, AREA AND PLACE. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 29. 4472 18961129 18961210 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. THE COMPANIONS, WHICH ARE AT FIRST IRREGULARLY SCATTERED ON ALL SIDES OF A, HAVE FORMED A STRAIGHT STREAM JUST S OF A BY DECEMBER 4, AND HAVE MOSTLY COALESCED BY DECEMBER 6 TO FORM A CONSIDERABLE IRREGULAR SPOT, B, SP A. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 8. 4473 18961129 18961209 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO OR THREE SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS BEGUN TO DIVIDE BY DECEMBER 3, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT UNTIL DECEMBER 5. THE GROUP ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS CONSIST OF A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. B AND C ARE THE TWO MOST STABLE FRAGMENTS OF A REMAINING. 4474 18961202 18961212 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. A INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO DECEMBER 7, WHEN IT IS A LARGE SPOT. IT DIMINISHES AGAIN AFTER DECEMBER 9. 4475 18961205 18961211 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 5. A HAS DIMINISHED BY DECEMBER 6, AND A SMALL COMPANION, B, HAS APPEARED NEAR IT. A HAS FURTHER DIMINISHED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, WHEN THE GROUP CONSISTS OF THREE EQUAL SPOTS, C, A AND D, FORMING A RIGHT-ANGLED TRIANGLE AND SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER THIS DATE. 4476 18961206 18961206 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4477 18961206 18961207 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P, GROUP 4475. A SECOND VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN WITH THE FIRST ON DECEMBER 7. 4478 18961207 18961214 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 7, P, GROUP 4477. A MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE, AND ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS A NUMBER OF OTHER SPOTS HAVE APPEARED FOLLOWING IT, FORMING A STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH B, THE LAST SPOT, IS THE LARGEST. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 12 AND B, NOW A DOUBLE SPOT, ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 13. 4479 18961212 18961217 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. B ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 17. 4480 18961214 18961222 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP IS SMALL AT ITS FIRST APPEARANCE, BUT INCREASES RAPIDLY, AND A, THE LEADER, HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY DECEMBER 15. THE GROUP CHANGES RAPIDLY IN SHAPE, AND CONSISTS ON DECEMBER 18 OF TWO STRAIGHT STREAMS RADIATING FROM A, AND INCLINED AT AN ANGLE OF ABOUT 30 TO EACH OTHER. THE GROUP UNDERGOES FURTHER CHANGE, AND CONSISTS, ON DECEMBER 19 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, CHIEFLY OF THREE LARGE SPOTS, A, B AND C. 4481 18961217 18961220 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON DECEMBER 17. TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION BETWEEN THEM ON DECEMBER 18. ONLY B REMAINS BY DECEMBER 20. 4482 18961218 18961220 A SMALL SPOT. 4483 18961218 18961218 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4484 18961219 18961219 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4485 18961219 18961221 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 19. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 20; IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO BY DECEMBER 21. 4486 18961219 18961229 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 24. 4487 18961220 18961220 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4488 18961220 18961230 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, A, B AND C ARE THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 22. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO DECEMBER 24. ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS IT CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND C. THESE BEGIN TO BREAK UP, C DIVIDING INTO D AND C, AND THE GROUP TO DIMINISH AFTER DECEMBER 25. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE, AND STEADILY INCREASES IN LENGTH THROUGHOUT ITS WHOLE COURSE. 4489 18961225 18970101 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, F, GROUP 4486, ON DECEMBER 25. THE GROUP INCREASES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND CONSISTS CHIEFLY ON DECEMBER 27 AND 28 OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, AND A FEW SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM : A IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON DECEMBER 29. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 4490 18961229 18961229 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4491 18961229 18970110 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 4492 18961230 18970106 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 2, 3 OR 4. 4493 18961231 18970107 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH IS BROKEN UP INTO SEVERAL VERY SMALL FRAGMENTS BY JANUARY 6. 4494 18970101 18970101 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4495 18970101 18970101 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 4496 18970101 18970101 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4497 18970103 18970115 A FINE GROUP; THE LEADER A, WHICH HAS ALONE APPEARED BY THE FIRST DAY, IS A MODERATELY LARGE DETACHED SPOT SP THE GROUP; B IS A VERY LARGE STABLE SPOT AT THE HEAD OF THE REMAINDER OF THE GROUP. ITS SHAPE IS AT FIRST REGULAR, BUT BEFORE IT REACHES THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN IT HAS DEVELOPED A MARKED INDENTATION IN ITS SF BOUNDARY. IT IS FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR SWARM OF SPOTS, AND THE GROUP IS USUALLY BROUGHT UP BY SOME SPOTS OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE, THOUGH, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF C FROM JANUARY 4-6, AND D FROM JANUARY 5-12, IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO FOLLOW ANY. THE CENTRAL PART OF THE STREAM IS VERY UNSTABLE, AND THE WHOLE OF THE FOLLOWING PORTIONS OF THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BEFORE THE LARGE SPOT B HAS PASSED BEHIND THE WESTERN LIMB. 4498 18970111 18970111 THREE SMALL SPOTS. 4499 18970113 18970124 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALLER SPOTS, USUALLY S OR F. ON JANUARY 20-22 THE COMPANIONS FORM A SPARSE BUT MODERATELY LONG STREAM. ON JANUARY 23 THE GROUP HAS DIMINISHED, AND ON JANUARY 24 ONE SMALL SPOT ALONE REMAINS. 4500 18970114 18970124 A COMPOSITE SPOT MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON JANUARY 18. 4501 18970115 18970120 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4502 18970115 18970118 A SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON JANUARY 15, F GROUP 4500; IT HAS CONSIDERABLY DIMINISHED BY THE LAST DAY. 4503 18970116 18970116 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 4499. 4504 18970117 18970117 A SMALL SPOT. 4505 18970120 18970126 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS THAT APPEARS SUDDENLY A LITTLE NORTH OF THE CENTRE OF THE SUN'S DISC. ON JANUARY 21 A HAS FORMED AT THE HEAD OF THE GROUP, AND BY THE NEXT DAY B AT THE TAIL. BOTH A AND B INCREASE RAPIDLY. ON JANUARY 26 THE WHOLE GROUP, EXCEPT B, HAS PASSED ROUND THE LIMB. 4506 18970121 18970121 A SMALL SPOT. 4507 18970123 18970125 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 4505. 4508 18970124 18970125 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, NF GROUP 4507. 4509 18970125 18970125 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4510 18970125 18970204 A LARGE OVAL-SHAPED STABLE SPOT, A, THE ELONGATION BEING PERPENDICULAR TO THE EQUATOR, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 4511 18970126 18970126 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4512 18970128 18970128 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4513 18970128 18970129 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 4514 18970128 18970128 THREE SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 4513. 4515 18970128 18970128 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4516 18970128 18970128 A SMALL SPOT. 4517 18970128 18970208 WHEN FIRST SEEN, THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT, BUT IT RAPIDLY INCREASES, AND BY FEBRUARY 1 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, HAS FORMED AT THE HEAD OF THE GROUP; A IS FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. FROM FEBRUARY 4 THE HEAD AND TAIL OF THE GROUP ARE SEPARATED BY AN INTERVAL FROM WHICH THE INTERVENING SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED . THE WHOLE GROUP HAS A FORWARD MOVEMENT IN LONGITUDE. 4518 18970130 18970211 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, ON JANUARY 30; BY THE NEXT DAY ANOTHER LARGE SPOT, B, HAS APPEARED SF SPOT A; ON FEBRUARY 1 A THIRD LARGE SPOT, IS SEEN TO THE NORTH OF B; THERE ARE USUALLY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS; B HAS A FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE, AND ON FEBRUARY 11 IS THE LEADER OF THE GROUP. 4519 18970131 18970201 A SMALL SPOT. 4520 18970131 18970131 A TRIANGLE OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 4519. 4521 18970131 18970203 A SMALL SPOT, A, WHICH BREAKS UP ON FEBRUARY 2 INTO B AND C. 4522 18970201 18970203 A SMALL SPOT, P GROUP 4510 ON FEBRUARY 1; TWO SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 2; OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 3. 4523 18970202 18970207 FIVE SMALL SPOTS IN TWO ROWS PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR; BY FEBRUARY 3 THE GROUP HAS MUCH INCREASED, AND A, B HAVE FORMED UP SF OF THE GROUP RESPECTIVELY. A HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE NEXT DAY; AND ON FEBRUARY 6, A AND B ALONE REMAIN; BY FEBRUARY 7, B HAS BROKEN UP INTO TWO PARTS, AND CONSIDERABLY DIMINISHED; A HAS THROUGHOUT A FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE, WHILE B IS NEARLY STATIONARY. 4524 18970206 18970208 A FEW STRAGGLING SPOTS THAT APPEAR SUDDENLY CONSIDERABLY WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN; A, THE LEADER, IS FAIRLY STEADY IN PLACE AND SIZE; B, AT THE TAIL OF THE GROUP, IS LARGER THAN A ON THE FIRST DAY, BUT IS NOT SEEN AGAIN. 4525 18970210 18970210 A SMALL SPOT. 4526 18970210 18970221 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, STEADY IN SIZE, SHAPE, AND POSITION; THERE ARE USUALLY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS, BUT THEY ARE INSIGNIFICANT, EXCEPT ON FEBRUARY 17. 4527 18970212 18970212 FOUR SMALL SPOTS. 4528 18970214 18970214 FOUR SMALL SPOTS. 4529 18970216 18970216 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4530 18970219 18970219 ONE SMALL SPOT. 4531 18970222 18970306 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A; TWO COMPANIONS, B AND C, APPEAR ON FEBRUARY 25, AND CAN BE FOLLOWED FOR TWO AND THREE DAYS RESPECTIVELY; D, ON FEBRUARY 27, IS PROBABLY A FRAGMENT BROKEN OFF FROM A ;ON FEBRUARY 28 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS APPEAR S OF A ; ON SUBSEQUENT DAYS A IS SEEN ALONE, OR WITH QUITE INSIGNIFICANT COMPANIONS. 4532 18970223 18970307 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW COMPANIONS, AND A FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE. ON MARCH 5, GROUP 4533 PASSES INTO THIS GROUP, AND SPOTS A, B OF GROUP 4533 ARE HENCEFORTH LETTERED B, C IN GROUP 4532. 4533 18970224 18970304 A CLUSTER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS, SF GROUP 4532, CONSTANTLY CHANGING IN NUMBER AND POSITION ; A, THE LARGEST ON FEBRUARY 27, RAPIDLY INCREASES, AND HAS A QUICK MOTION FORWARD IN LONGITUDE, AND A PERCEPTIBLE MOTION NORTHWARDS IN LATITUDE; B IS FORMED AT THE TAIL ON MARCH 3. ON MARCH 5 THE GROUP IS MERGED INTO GROUP 4532. 4534 18970226 18970226 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 4533. 4535 18970226 18970310 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, OCCASIONALLY WITH SMALL COMPANIONS; B,A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON MARCH 5 AND 6 S OF A. 4536 18970227 18970310 A LARGE SPOT, A, COMPOSITE TILL MARCH 2, SUBSEQUENTLY REGULAR, MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON FEBRUARY 28; WITH SMALL COMPANIONS, ONE OF WHICH, B, IS SEEN FROM MARCH 4 TO MARCH 9 FOLLOWING, AND GRADUALLY CATCHING UP A. 4537 18970303 18970303 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4538 18970303 18970303 A SMALL SPOT. 4539 18970305 18970307 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A IS THE LEADER. B HAS INCREASED BY MARCH 6, BUT IS NOT SEEN AGAIN. 4540 18970308 18970310 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 8. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 10. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 9. 4541 18970308 18970320 THREE SPOTS, A, B, C, OF WHICH C, THE LAST AND MOST NORTHERLY, IS THE LARGEST; B HAS DIMINISHED BY MARCH 9, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 10; A HAS DIMINISHED BY THE NEXT DAY; AND FROM MARCH 12 TO 14, C REMAINS ALONE. BY MARCH 15 THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP. D, FROM MARCH 15 TO 19, IS SEEN S OF C; E, FROM MARCH 15 TO 20, F OF C. ON MARCH 16, F AND G APPEAR AT THE HEAD OF THE GROUP, AND LAST FOR THREE AND TWO DAYS RESPECTIVELY. FROM MARCH 18, H IS THE LEADER. C IS THE LARGEST SPOT THROUGHOUT; IT IS COMPOSITE TILL MARCH 15, AND SUBSEQUENTLY REGULAR. 4542 18970309 18970313 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS SEEN ALONE ON MARCH 11. ON MARCH 12-13, B IS SEEN AT THE END OF THE GROUP. A HAS GREATLY INCREASED ON THE LAST DAY. THE PHOTOSPHERE APPEARS DISTURBED ON MARCH 8. 4543 18970309 18970316 A FEW UNSTABLE SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 11, 12, AND 14. 4544 18970310 18970310 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4545 18970313 18970313 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4546 18970316 18970316 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4547 18970317 18970317 A SPOT, WITH A SMALL COMPANION, THAT APPEARS SUDDENLY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 4548 18970317 18970317 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4549 18970322 18970401 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. A DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND HAS A FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE. 4550 18970323 18970323 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4551 18970324 18970326 SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4552 18970325 18970325 A VERY SMALL SPOT IN A HIGH SOUTH LATITUDE. 4553 18970326 18970405 A REGULAR SPOT, A, THAT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY FROM APRIL I, AND IS NOT SEEN ON THE LAST DAY. FROM APRIL 2 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A DENSE CLUSTER OF SPOTS, CHIEFLY VERY SMALL. 4554 18970328 18970409 A LARGE STABLE AND REGULAR SPOT, A, OCCASIONALLY ACCOMPANIED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 4555 18970331 18970410 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. ON APRIL 1 A SPOT IS SEEN AT SOME DISTANCE F THE GROUP; AFTER CROSSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN THE GROUP BEGINS TO SPREAD FORWARDS IN LONGITUDE, AND WHEN LAST SEEN IS INCREASING RAPIDLY. 4556 18970401 18970413 A LARGE SPOT,A, AT FIRST COMPOSITE, BUT SUBSEQUENTLY REGULAR; OCCASIONALLY WITH SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS A FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE. 4557 18970402 18970407 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP HAS CONSIDERABLY INCREASED IN SIZE ON APRIL 5 AND 7. 4558 18970404 18970405 A VERY SMALL SPOT, N GROUP 4557. 4559 18970404 18970414 A REGULAR SPOT, A, UNTIL APRIL 8. ON APRIL 9 IT SHOWS SIGNS OF BREAKING UP. THE GROUP HENCEFORTH CONSISTS OF A FRAGMENT OF A, ACCOMPANIED ON APRIL 10-11 BY SEVERAL, AND ON OTHER DAYS BY ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4560 18970404 18970416 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 4 AND 5. ON APRIL 6 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A, B ARE SEEN. BY APRIL 7 THERE HAS BEEN A COMPLETE TRANSFORMATION, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A LARGE SPOT, C, WITH D FOLLOWING, AND THREE OTHER CONSIDERABLE SPOTS, E, F, G, TO THE NORTH, F BEING THE MOST NORTHERLY. BY THE NEXT DAY D HAS DISAPPEARED, AND F HAS ABSORBED E AND G. F DIMINISHES RAPIDLY, AND HAS BROKEN UP BY APRIL 11. THE FRAGMENTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 14, LEAVING C ALONE, EXCEPT FOR A SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 15. C IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A PROGRESSIVE MOTION IN LONGITUDE. 4561 18970406 18970409 A PAIR OF COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B; BOTH SPOTS HAVE LARGELY INCREASED BY APRIL 7, AND DIMINISHED BY APRIL 9; THEIR DISTANCE APART INCREASES RAPIDLY TILL APRIL 8. SOME SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN A AND B ON APRIL 6 AND 8. 4562 18970408 18970412 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4563 18970409 18970416 SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 4562. 4564 18970409 18970410 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 4565 18970410 18970414 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 4563. 4566 18970417 18970418 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 4567 18970419 18970422 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM; A THE LEADER INCREASES AND IS A LARGE SPOT BY APRIL 21; B, THE LAST SPOT ON APRIL 20, HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 21. 4568 18970419 18970421 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 4569 18970425 18970430 A FAINT, IRREGULAR SPOT. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 26 AND 27, BUT IT RE-APPEARS ON APRIL 28 AS A CONSIDERABLE NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISH ON SUBSEQUENT DAYS. 4570 18970425 18970428 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 4569; THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 27. 4571 18970427 18970427 A SINGLE SPOT. 4572 18970428 18970510 A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, A, INCREASING RAPIDLY IN SIZE TILL MAY 4, FOLLOWED BY A SWARM OF SMALLER SPOTS, VARIABLE IN SIZE, SHAPE, AND POSITION, OF WHICH B ALONE CAN BE FOLLOWED FROM MAY 4 TO 8. 4573 18970501 18970512 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SLOWLY DECREASING IN SIZE, GENERALLY WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS, AND WITH A FAIRLY STEADY FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE AND A SLIGHT DRIFT NORTHWARD. 4574 18970501 18970505 A SMALL SPOT WITH A RAPID FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE, S GROUP 4573; IT HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 5. 4575 18970504 18970504 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NF GROUP 4573. 4576 18970520 18970527 FOUR SPOTS ON MAY 20, GREATLY INCREASED IN NUMBER BY THE NEXT DAY. BY MAY 22 AN IRREGULAR SPOT, A, HAS FORMED NEAR THE HEAD OF THE GROUP, WITH A RAPID FORWARD MOTION. ON MAY 24 A IS SEEN ALONE, CONSIDERABLY DIMINISHED IN SIZE. ON MAY 25 THERE IS A FRESH OUTBURST; A HAS CONTINUED TO DIMINISH, AND B, JUST FORMED NEAR THE END OF THE GROUP, IS NOW THE LARGEST SPOT. 4577 18970521 18970525 TWO SPOTS ON MAY 21, THE LEADER BEING THE LARGEST AND COMPOSITE. ON MAY 22 ONE SPOT ALONE REMAINS; THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 23 AND 24, BUT TWO SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY MAY 25. 4578 18970524 18970524 A SMALL SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 4579 18970525 18970606 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, GENERALLY WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS, VARYING FROM DAY TO DAY IN SIZE AND POSITION. 4580 18970527 18970604 A SINGLE SPOT, A, DIMINISHING AFTER MAY 31. 4581 18970531 18970531 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4582 18970609 18970609 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4583 18970613 18970616 SEVERAL IRREGULAR SPOTS; A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST AND HAS A FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE; B AND C FOLLOW A, FROM WHICH THEY ARE SEPARATED BY A SHORT THIN STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS; B DECREASES AND IS NOT SEEN AFTER JUNE 14; C HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY JUNE 14 BUT SUBSEQUENTLY DIMINISHES; D IS SEEN, F A ON JUNE 14 AND 15. ON JUNE 16 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A AND C WITH A LARGE NEW SPOT BETWEEN THEM. 4584 18970618 18970618 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4585 18970620 18970620 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4586 18970621 18970621 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4587 18970621 18970621 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4588 18970621 18970703 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON JUNE 24 AND 27. 4589 18970622 18970627 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4590 18970628 18970710 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT A; ON JUNE 29 THREE NEARLY EQUAL SMALLER SPOTS B, C AND D ARE SEEN FOLLOWING A; B IS NOT SEEN AGAIN; C HAS BROKEN INTO TWO PARTS BY JULY 1 AND THEN DISAPPEARS; D HAS BROKEN INTO TWO PARTS BY THE NEXT DAY, AFTER WHICH A REMAINS ALONE OR WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ONLY. ON JULY 7, A APPEARS COMPOSITE, AND SUBSEQUENTLY DIMINISHES RAPIDLY. 4591 18970630 18940630 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4592 18970703 18970714 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 8. 4593 18970707 18970710 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 7; BY JULY 8 THE GROUP HAS CONSIDERABLY INCREASED, AND CONSISTS PRINCIPALLY OF TWO PAIRS OF SPOTS: BY JULY 9 THE LEADING PAIR HAVE COALESCED AND THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE BROKEN UP: THERE IS A FURTHER DIMIMUTION BY JULY 10. 4594 18970707 18970717 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A, BREAKING UP INTO B AND C BY JULY 9; B, THE LARGER AND FOLLOWING FRAGMENT, IS COMPOSITE. BY JULY 15 C ALONE IS LEFT; THE GROUP DIMINISHES THROUGHOUT. 4595 18970713 18970715 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 13; THE GROUP HAS LARGELY INCREASED BY THE NEXT DAY, A BEING FORMED NEAR THE HEAD OF THE GROUP; A HAS LARGELY INCREASED BY JULY 15. 4596 18970713 18970716 A FEW SMALL SPOTS; THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 14. 4597 18970713 18970713 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4598 18970713 18970719 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4599 18970718 18970721 A SINGLE SPOT, A, RAPIDLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. 4600 18970720 18970801 A LARGE SPOT A, WITHOUT COMPANIONS UNTIL JULY 27, AFTER WHICH IT BEGINS TO BREAK UP. 4601 18970721 18970731 TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, A BEING THE LEADER; ON JULY 23 C APPEARS F A AND D S OF B; C AND D INCREASE IN SIZE, AND BY JULY 26 C HAS COALESCED WITH A; D IS NOT SEEN AFTER THIS DATE, NOR B AFTER JULY 28. ALL THE SPOTS ARE IRREGULAR AT FIRST, BUT LATTERLY A TENDS TO ASSUME A MORE REGULAR SHAPE. 4602 18970724 18970724 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4603 18970729 18970731 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 4604 18970731 18970803 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 31; TWO CONSIDERABLE SPOTS ON AUGUST 1, OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY THE NEXT DAY; A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 3. 4605 18970802 18970815 A VERY LARGE BUT SOMEWHAT IRREGULAR SPOT A, ACCOMPANIED AND FOLLOWED BY A LARGE NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP, WHICH IS OF CONSIDERABLE LENGTH, IS BROUGHT UP BY THREE CONSIDERABLE SPOTS B, C, AND D; D DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AND IS NOT SEEN AFTER AUGUST 5; B HAS BROKEN INTO TWO BY AUGUST 7, OF WHICH ONLY ONE PORTION IS SEEN AGAIN, AND THAT BUT ONCE; C LASTS UNTIL AUGUST 9. SUBSEQUENTLY THE GROUP CONTRACTS RAPIDLY IN LENGTH, AND AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED, THE LEADER A IS SEEN ALONE. 4606 18970805 18970812 A SPOT, A, AT FIRST LARGE, BUT DIMINISHING STEADILY THROUGHOUT. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON AUGUST 6 AND 8. 4607 18970806 18970811 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 4605. 4608 18970810 18970811 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4609 18970812 18970816 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MANY OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE, ARRANGED IN TWO PARALLEL ROWS, INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR: A, THE LEADER, HAS FORMED BY AUGUST 13, AND HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE NEXT DAY, BUT SUBSEQUENTLY DIMINISHES. 4610 18970814 18970814 A SMALL SPOT. 4611 18970816 18970827 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 4612 18970822 18970823 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS, S F GROUP 4611; ON AUGUST 23 TWO SMALL SPOTS ONLY. 4613 18970824 18970825 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 4614 18970827 18970829 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE MOST STABLE. A ALONE REMAINS BY AUGUST 29, WHEN IT HAS DIVIDED TO FORM A CLOSE PAIR. 4615 18970830 18970911 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. A REMAINS ALONE BY SEPTEMBER 4. 4616 18970831 18970831 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4617 18970831 18970912 A SPOT, A, WHICH SOON BECOMES LARGE, AND WHICH IS REGULAR IN OUTLINE EXCEPT IN THE S F DIRECTION, WHERE THE OUTLINE IS BROKEN, AND WHERE IT IS FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLOSE IRREGULAR CLUSTER BY SEPTEMBER 9. 4618 18970901 18970903 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE CENTRE SPOTS OF THE GROUP HAVE DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 3. 4619 18970902 18970913 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A FINE STREAM. A AND B, NEAR THE BEGINNING AND END OF THE GROUP, ARE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A BEING MUCH THE LARGER OF THE TWO. A HAS BROKEN UP BY SEPTEMBER 10 INTO A PAIR OF PARALLEL STRAIGHT STREAMS OF SPOTS. THE SPOTS COMPOSING THESE TWO STREAMS ENTER INTO FRESH COMBINATIONS WITH EACH OTHER ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THREE OF THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS BROKEN OFF FROM A ARE LETTERED C, D, AND E. 4620 18970903 18970909 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, FORMING P GROUP 4615, AND IN THE SAME STRAIGHT LINE WITH IT. OF THE THREE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B, AND C, B HAS BECOME MERGED INTO A BY SEPTEMBER 8. 4621 18970903 18970914 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 3. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 4, BUT A FRESH OUTBREAK, SOME DISTANCE F THE FIRST, HAS OCCURRED BY SEPTEMBER 5, AND THE GROUP SOON CONSISTS OF A STRAIGHT BUT SPARSE STREAM. THE SPOTS IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP DIMINISH, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS, BY SEPTEMBER 10, CHIEFLY OF TWO WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS A AND B. 4622 18970905 18970907 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4623 18970912 18970913 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4624 18970913 18970914 A FEW SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 4625 18970914 18970914 A SMALL DARK SPOT, WITH TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 4626 18970915 18970923 A LARGE SPOT, A, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY, AND WHICH HAS BROKEN UP BY SEPTEMBER 20. 4627 18970918 18970919 A FEW SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4628 18970918 18970921 A FEW SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4629 18970919 18970919 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4630 18970920 18970929 A STREAM OF SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY. A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST, AND SOON BECOMES REGULAR IN SHAPE. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 25. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY SEPTEMBER 29. 4631 18970921 18970929 A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A WELL-DEFINED SPOT. THE OTHERS ARE UNSTABLE AND FAINT, AND UNDERGO CONSTANT CHANGE. 4632 18970921 18971001 AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A WELL-DEFINED SPOT; THE REST OF THE GROUP UNDERGO MUCH CHANGE. 4633 18970923 18970923 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4634 18970926 18971007 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 4635 18970927 18971008 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 4636 18970929 18970929 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4637 18970930 18971005 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 4638 18971005 18971005 SEVERAL VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 4639 18971005 18971005 SEVERAL VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. 4640 18971005 18971009 A VERY SMALL SPOT, ON OCTOBER 5 AND 6. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 7 AND 8, BUT THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON OCTOBER 9. 4641 18971006 18971008 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. ONLY B REMAINS BY OCTOBER 8. 4642 18971010 18971012 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, ON OCTOBER 11; A ALONE IS SEEN ON OCTOBER 10. THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP BY OCTOBER 12. 4643 18971012 18971013 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON OCTOBER 12. A SECOND, B, FOLLOWS IT ON OCTOBER 13. 4644 18971015 18971019 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 4645 18971020 18971021 TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4646 18971020 18971023 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4647 18971031 18971102 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4648 18971101 18971102 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4649 18971102 18971109 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON AND AFTER NOVEMBER 5. 4650 18971103 18971103 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4651 18971112 18971116 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4652 18971118 18971122 A SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 18. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 19 AND 20, BUT HAS REVIVED BY NOVEMBER 21 AS A STRAGGLING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 4653 18971120 18971121 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 20. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 21. 4654 18971120 18971120 A SMALL SPOT. 4655 18971125 18971126 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, A, THE LEADER ON NOVEMBER 26 IS THE LARGEST AND BEST DEFINED. 4656 18971127 18971208 A GROUP WHICH UNDERGOES CONSTANT CHANGE. A PAIR OF SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 27 AND 28; IT HAS BECOME A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY NOVEMBER 30. THE GROUP THEN BECOMES BROAD AND STRAGGLING, BUT BY DECEMBER 3 HAS AGAIN BECOME A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH IT IS COMPOSED THEN BEGIN TO COALESCE, AND BY DECEMBER 5 IT CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF THREE LARGE SPOTS, A, B, AND C. OF WHICH C IMMEDIATELY BREAKS UP. A IS A NOTCH ON THE LIMB ON DECEMBER 8. 4657 18971129 18971129 A SMALL SPOT. 4658 18971129 18971201 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH SMALL DISTANT COMPANIONS ON NOVEMBER 30 AND DECEMBER 1. 4659 18971203 18971212 A FEW SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST ARE THE LARGEST. A AND B INCREASE IN SIZE UP TO DECEMBER 5, WHEN BOTH A AND B ARE LARGE, A BEING A COMPOSITE SPOT AND MEASURED IN TWO PARTS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER THIS, AND A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS, ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 8. 4660 18971204 18971204 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4661 18971205 18971209 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A PAIR OF SMALL COMPANIONS ON DECEMBER 6, A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 9, BUT SEVERAL VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN F ITS PLACE. 4662 18971206 18971207 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 6, ONE ON DECEMBER 7. 4663 18971206 18971218 A FINE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS, P GROUP 4665. 4664 18971207 18971209 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 7. A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON DECEMBER 8 AND 9. 4665 18971207 18971219 A VERY LARGE GROUP OF UNUSUAL BREADTH AND VERY COMPLICATED STRUCTURE. AT FIRST IT APPEARS LIKE TWO STRAIGHT STREAMS, INTERSECTING EACH OTHER SO AS TO FORM A ST. ANDREW'S CROSS, BUT THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE, AND TENDS TO BECOME MORE CONDENSED. 4666 18971208 18971210 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, NF GROUP 4665. 4667 18971210 18971217 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 4665. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 12 AND 16. 4668 18971211 18971213 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, SP GROUP 4665. A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST, BUT DIMINISHES VERY QUICKLY. 4669 18971214 18971218 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SF GROUP 4665. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 17. GROUPS 4663, 4665, 4667, 4668, AND 4669 MAKE UP ONE GRAND IRREGULAR STREAM. 4670 18971215 18971224 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 20. 4671 18971226 18980107 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO FOLLOWERS. 4672 18971230 18980101 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 4673 18971230 18980110 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 4674 18980103 18980115 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, OFTEN WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 4675 18980104 18980105 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 5. 4676 18980113 18980121 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON JANUARY 13, AND A PAIR OF SUCH SPOTS ON JANUARY 14. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED GREATLY BY JANUARY 17, AND CONSISTS OF A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS NEARLY ENCLOSING A DIAMOND-SHAPED AREA. BY THE FOLLOWING DAY THE GROUP HAS LENGTHENED OUT INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM OF WHICH A AND B, THE LEADER AND THE LAST, ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. THE GROUP CONTINUES TO LENGTHEN OUT, BUT THE SPOTS IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP DIE OUT, AND ONLY A AND B REMAIN BY JANUARY 21. 4677 18980114 18980125 A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH A AND B, TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS ARE THE CHIEF. B AND THE SMALLER SPOTS DIMINISH AND DISAPPEAR, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 23. 4678 18980116 18980126 A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING FROM DAY TO DAY. IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO BY JANUARY 26. 4679 18980118 18980124 A GROUP FIRST APPEARING NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISK AS TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS AND HAS BECOME BY JANUARY 20 A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS THE PRINCIPAL. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER JANUARY 20, BUT RECOVERS AGAIN LATER. IT LIES NF GROUP 4676. 4680 18980119 18980119 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4681 18980119 18980131 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FROM WHICH TWO STREAMS OF SMALL SPOTS PROCEED, SO AS TO ENCLOSE A CONSIDERABLE AREA, F, A. A IS FREQUENTLY MEASURED IN TWO PARTS, THE SPOT BEING DIVIDED INTO TWO DISTINCT REGIONS, THE MORE DIFFUSED PRECEDING, AND THE MORE REGULAR AND SHARPLY DEFINED FOLLOWING. THE SMALLER SPOTS HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 30, LEAVING A ALONE. 4682 18980125 18980127 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4683 18980126 18980127 A VERY SMALL SPOT, N, GROUP 4678. 4684 18980204 18980213 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE AND SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE SPOTS UNDERGO FREQUENT CHANGES. 4685 18980204 18980211 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. A IS FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS, FEBRUARY 6-8. 4686 18980207 18980208 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, SUDDENLY APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. BOTH A AND B HAVE A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 7. 4687 18980207 18980219 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 15, P GROUP 4688. 4688 18980209 18980220 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON FEBRUARY 9. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND COMPLEXITY AND HAS BECOME A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM BY FEBRUARY 13, TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, HAVING FORMED AT THE TWO EXTREMITIES OF THE STREAM. THE STREAM BECOMES VERY COMPLEX IN CHARACTER DURING THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, UNDERGOING CONTINUAL CHANGE. TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, C AND D, HAVE FORMED IN ADVANCE OF B, WHICH HAS THEN BECOME COMPOSITE, BY FEBRUARY 15, AND HAVE JOINED IT BY FEBRUARY 17. D IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON THAT DAY. 4689 18980213 18980214 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM N OF GROUP 4687. 4690 18980213 18980213 A SMALL SPOT N OF GROUP 4688 B. 4691 18980215 18980221 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LEADER, ON FEBRUARY 16, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 20, BUT A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON FEBRUARY 21. 4692 18980215 18980226 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A PAIR OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 23. 4693 18980216 18980217 THREE SPOTS, A, B, AND C, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB SP GROUP 4687. 4694 18980217 18980219 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM NF GROUP 4688. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 4695 18980217 18980226 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, WHICH HAVE FORMED SUDDENLY BY FEBRUARY 17, S OF GROUP 4692. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES, AND HAS BECOME A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM BY FEBRUARY 18; A, THE LAST SPOT, BEING LARGE AND REGULAR AND TEH CHEIF MEMBER OF THE GROUP. A ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 25. 4696 18980218 18980219 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS N OF GROUP 4687, AND OF GROUP 4688 A. 4697 18980222 18980305 A SMALL SPOT, A, SOMETIMES WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. A NUMBER OF SPOTS HAVE FORMED F, A BY FEBRUARY 26, FORMING WITH IT A STRAIGHT STREAM; B AND C, THE FIRST AND LAST OF THE NEW SPOTS, BEING THE LARGEST. A AND B HAVE UNITED TO FORM A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, D, BY FEBRUARY 27. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER THIS DATE, AND D AND C ALONE REMAIN AFTER MARCH 3. 4698 18980228 18980312 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, CLOSE TOGETHER. B, THE FOLLOWING SPOT, IS THE SMALLER, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 9. A FEW SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN FOLLOWING A AND B ON MARCH 5. 4699 18980303 18980303 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4700 18980304 18980310 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS BY MARCH 7. 4701 18980306 18980310 A DISTURBED AREA P GROUP 4700, IN WHICH VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR. 4702 18980306 18980317 A VERY FINE STRAIGHT STREAM,COMPOSED OF A GREAT NUMBER OF SPOTS WHICH UNDERGO CONTINUAL CHANGE AS TO THEIR NUMBER, SHAPE, SIZE, AND RELATIONSHIP. FOUR LARGE SPOTS, A, B, C, AND D, HAVE ATTAINED SOME STABILITY BY MARCH 15. 4703 18980306 18980316 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS RAPIDLY DIMINISH, AND A SLOWLY DISINTEGRATES, THROWING OFF SMALL SPOTS. IT HAS DIVIDED UP INTO A CLOSE CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS BY MARCH 14, WHEN IT IS MEASURED IN TWO DIVISIONS. 4704 18980307 18980318 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 4705 18980310 18980312 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT SP GROUP 4702. 4706 18980312 18980316 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON MARCH 12. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 13 OR 14. A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON MARCH 15 AND 16. 4707 18980318 18980318 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING EACH OTHER IN A CURVED STREAM. 4708 18980318 18980319 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN A STRAGGLING GROUP. 4709 18980322 18980322 A SMALL SPOT. 4710 18980326 18980326 A SMALL SPOT. 4711 18980326 18980329 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, CLOSE TOGETHER. THEY ARE MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 27. 4712 18980331 18980331 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4713 18980331 18980413 TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B. A IS IRREGULAR IN FORM, AND SPEEDILY BREAKS UP AND DIMINISHES. B IS REGULAR AND STABLE. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, MANY OF THEM FORMED BY THE DISINTEGRATION OF A, ARE SEEN NEAR A AND B FROM TIME TO TIME, MAKING WITH THEM AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 4714 18980406 18980409 A FEW FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS F GROUP 4713, AND FORMING A CONTINUATION OF ITS STREAM. 4715 18980408 18980414 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT BUT BROKEN STREAM. 4716 18980409 18980409 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4717 18980415 18980415 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, FORMING NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 4716. 4718 18980422 18980425 A SMALL VERY FAINT SPOT. A PAIR OF VERY FAINT SPOTS ON APRIL 25. 4719 18980426 18980426 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 4720 18980426 18980504 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON APRIL 26 AND 27. SMALL SPOTS APPEAR BETWEEN THEM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, MAKING UP WITH THEM A STRAGGLING STREAM. ONE OF THESE SPOTS, C, FORMS A CLOSE PAIR WITH A. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 30, AND THE GROUP HAS GENERALLY DIMINISHED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 3, BUT IS REPRESENTED BY A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAY 4. 4721 18980427 18980428 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 27. 4722 18980428 18980502 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING TWO DAYS PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND HAS BECOME A STRAIGHT STREAM BY APRIL 29; A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, BEING MUCH THE LARGEST. A THIRD SPOT, C, FORMS CLOSE TO A, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS ON MAY 1 OF THE THREE SPOTS, A, B, AND C, NOW ALL LARGE AND REGULAR. SEVERAL SMALLER SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR B AND C ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 4723 18980420 18980501 A SMALL SPOT. 4724 18980503 18980508 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 4 AND 5. 4725 18980506 18980509 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, THAT RAPIDLY DIMINISH IN SIZE. THEY ARE OCCASIONALLY ACCOMPANIED BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 4726 18980506 18980518 A STREAM OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, EXCEPT FOR A PAIR OF LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM. TWO CONSIDERABLE PORTIONS, C AND D, HAVE BROKEN OFF BY MAY 12 FROM B, WHICH IS NO LONGER REGULAR IN SHAPE, AND A HAS ELONGATED IN THE DIRECTION OF B, ITS UMBRA BEING REMARKABLY LONG, NARROW, AND STRAIGHT. THE SMALLER SPOTS UNDERGO A GOOD DEAL OF CHANGE. 4727 18980507 18980509 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 4728 18980509 18980511 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST, AND ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 11. 4729 18980514 18980514 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4730 18980514 18980518 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 16 AND 17. 4731 18980514 18980514 A VERY SMALL SPOT S OF GROUP 4730. 4732 18980517 18980528 A LARGE SPOT, A, DIVIDED BY A BRIDGE INTO TWO UNEQUAL PORTIONS, WHICH HAVE SEPARATED INTO DISTINCT SPOTS, B AND C, BY MAY 21. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR THE CHIEF SPOT ON MAY 19 AND 22. B ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 25. 4733 18980518 18980521 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 19. 4734 18980522 18980522 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4735 18980524 18980529 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 25. 4736 18980525 18980527 A SMALL SPOT. 4737 18980526 18980603 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAY 26. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON THE THREE SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY MAY 30 AS A VERY SMALL SPOT. ONE OR TWO MORE APPEAR ON THE NEXT TWO DAYS. 4738 18980527 18980527 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4739 18980529 18980602 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4740 18980530 18980604 THREE SPOTS,A, B, AND C, SUDDENLY APPEARING F GROUP 4737. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY UP TO JUNE 1, AND DIMINISHES AFTERWARDS. 4741 18980601 18980608 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 4, 5, AND 7. 4742 18980601 18980604 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4743 18980603 18980604 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER ONLY REMAINS BY JUNE 4. 4744 18980611 18980611 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4745 18980614 18980617 A PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM, FORMING TOGETHER A SPARSE STRAIGHT STREAM, CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. B HAS THROWN OFF A SMALL COMPANION BY JUNE 15. A MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE. 4746 18980616 18980623 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR GROUP, WHICH CHANGES RAPIDLY FROM DAY TO DAY. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 20, 21, OR 22; BUT A SMALL SPOT MARKS ITS PLACE ON JUNE 23. 4747 18980618 18980618 A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, ONLY SEEN CLOSE TO THE W. LIMB. 4748 18980618 18980620 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS SF GROUP 4746. 4749 18980620 18980630 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A RAPID FORWARD MOTION IN LONGITUDE. IT IS FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS ON JUNE 21, 25, 26, AND 27. 4750 18980625 18980625 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4751 18980626 18980629 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT,A, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT SMALL COMPANION ON JUNE 27 AND 29, AND BY A CLOSE PAIR ON JUNE 28. 4752 18980627 18980627 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 4749. 4753 18980627 18980627 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4754 18980628 18980628 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS SF GROUP 4751. 4755 18980629 18980629 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4756 18980701 18980702 A FEW VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS, IN A STRAGGLING STREAM, ALMOST PERPENDICULAR TO THE EQUATOR. 4757 18980715 18980717 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 4758 18980719 18980722 A PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A SMALLER SPOT BETWEEN THEM, ON JULY 19. 4759 18980722 18980726 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, APPEARING FIRST NEAR THE CENTER OF THE SUN. ON JULY 24 AND 25, THE GROUP APPEARS AS TWO IRREGULAR CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS. 4760 18980725 18980726 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 4761 18980727 18980727 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4762 18980728 18980803 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ON JULY 28 AND 29. THE GROUP INCREASES UP TO JULY 31, ON WHICH DAY IT APPEARS AS A STRAIGHT BUT RATHER DISCONNECTED STREAM. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES AFTER THIS DATE. 4763 18980729 18980729 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4764 18980730 18980807 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE IN ITS APPEARANCE AND COMPOSITION FROM DAY TO DAY. THE LEADER, A, ON AUGUST 1 AND 2, IS A LARGE SPOT, WITH TRIPLE NUCLEUS, BUT IT SPEEDILY BREAKS UP INTO FRAGMENTS, THE CHIEF OF WHICH ARE LETTERED B AND C. 4765 18980731 18980811 A LARGE ELLIPTICAL SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH SEVERAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 4766 18980801 18980801 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4767 18980801 18980801 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 4765. 4768 18980801 18980804 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, NF GROUP 4765. A FEW SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED PRECEDING A BY AUGUST 2, AND B HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 3. 4769 18980802 18980813 A FINE GROUP, USUALLY SEEN AS A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY ANOTHER SPOT, B, SOMEWHAT SMALLER, WITH WHICH IT SOOM COALESCES, FORMING A LARGE SPOT, F, REGULAR ON AUGUST 6, AND SHOWING A FOURFOLD NUCLEUS ON AUGUST 8. F HAS BROKEN UP BY AUGUST 10, H AND J BEING THE TWO CHIEF PORTIONS. THE CHIEF SPOTS IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP ARE LETTERED C, D, AND E, ON AUGUST 3, OF WHICH D AND E HAVE COALESCED TO FORM G BY AUGUST 5. THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER AUGUST 8, AND H REMAINS ALONE ON AUGUST 13. 4770 18980811 18980818 A CURVED STREAM OF SPOTS CONVEX TO THE EQUATOR, AND APPEARING FIRST NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. THE SPOTS ARE FEW AND SMALL AT FIRST, BUT THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO AUGUST 13, AFTER WHICH IT SLOWLY DIMINISHES. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON AUGUST 13, A AND B, ARE LARGE AND COMPOSITE. 4771 18980811 18980816 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A, THE LAST ON AUGUST 12, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 4772 18980814 18980814 A VERY SMALL SPOT, PRECEDED BY A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. 4773 18980817 18980819 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 17. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 18. A SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 19. 4774 18980821 18980821 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4775 18980822 18980823 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, WITH, ON AUGUST 22, A VERY SMALL COMPANION BETWEEN THEM. 4776 18980822 18980823 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4777 18980827 18980828 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, APPEARING SUDDENLY, AND QUICKLY DISAPPEARING AGAIN. 4778 18980827 18980907 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 4779 18980831 18980831 TWO SMALL SPOTS PRECEDING GROUP 4778. 4780 18980901 18980901 THREE SMALL SPOTS. 4781 18980903 18980915 A MAGNIFICENT GROUP. THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, A, IS A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, AND IS FOLLOWED AT FIRST BY ONLY A FEW SPOTS OF NO GREAT SIZE. THESE FOLLOWING SPOTS RAPIDLY INCREASE IN SIZE, AND, BY SEPTEMBER 10, FORM WITH A AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS STRAIGHT STREAM OF GREAT COMPLEXITY. OF THESE FOLLOWING SPOTS, B AND C, TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS ARE THE PRINCIPAL. B MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE AND HAS OVERTAKEN AND COALESCED WITH A BY SEPTEMBER 14. C HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, D AND E, BY SEPTEMBER 10. THE GROUP DIMINISHES SLIGHTLY AFTER SEPTEMBER 10, ESPECIALLY NEAR THE FOLLOWING END OF THE STREAM. 4782 18980909 18980909 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS NP GROUP 4781. 4783 18980909 18980909 A VERY SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 4781. 4784 18980913 18980919 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 13, APPEARING NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISK. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY THE NEXT DAY, AND FORMS A STRAIGHT STREAM; OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE LARGE AND WELL DEFINED BY SEPTEMBER 15. A IS REGULAR, BUT B IS INDENTED ON ITS S SIDE, AND HAS DIVIDED TO FORM A CLOSE PAIR BY SEPTEMBER 17, THE TWO PORTIONS BEING, HOWEVER, STILL MEASURED TOGETHER. 4785 18980914 18980917 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 16, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT MARKS ITS PLACE ON SEPTEMBER 17. 4786 18980916 18980924 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SHORT STREAM, ON SEPTEMBER 16. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. B HAS BROKEN UP BY THE NEXT DAY, C BEING ITS LARGEST PORTION. A INCREASES IN SIZE, AND HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY SEPTEMBER 21, AFTER IT HAS COALESCED WITH A SMALL SPOT D FOLLOWING IT. 4787 18980924 18980927 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED. 4788 18980927 18981005 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED ON SEPTEMBER 27. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE VERY RAPIDLY UP TO SEPTEMBER 29, AFTER WHICH IT DIMINISHES AGAIN. FOR THE GREATER PART OF ITS EXISTENCE IT APPEARS AS A STRAIGHT ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM OF GREAT COMPLEXITY OF DETAIL. THE COMPONENT SPOTS UNDERGO CONTINUAL CHANGES. 4789 18980928 18981009 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, NP GROUP 4791. IT SHOWS SYMPTOMS OF DIVISION ON OCTOBER 1, AND A CONSIDERABLE SPOT, B, HAS BECOME SEPARATED FROM A BY OCTOBER 2, BUT HAS RECOMBINED WITH IT BY OCTOBER 3. A HAS ELONGATED IN THE NP DIRECTION BY OCTOBER 6, AND HAS BROKEN UP BY OCTOBER 7 INTO THREE SPOTS, C, D, AND E, IN A SHORT STRAIGHT LINE NEARLY PERPENDICULAR TO THE EQUATOR. 4790 18980929 18981006 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, NP GROUP 4791. A DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY, AND IS PRECEDED BY A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 3. 4791 18980930 18981012 THE RETURN OF THE GREAT GROUP NO. 4781. THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, A, IS STILL A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. THE REST OF THE GROUP CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, ENCLOSING AN IMMENSE ELLIPTICAL AREA, THE SITE OF THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP AT THE PREVIOUS APPEARANCE, BUT WITHIN WHICH NO SPOTS ARE SEEN NOW. 4792 18981004 18981007 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 4. A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 4793 18981006 18981007 A VERY SMALL SPOT MIDWAY BETWEEN GROUPS 4790 AND 4791. 4794 18981007 18981016 A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON OCTOBER 8. THE SPOT IS MEASURED IN THREE PORTIONS ON OCTOBER 9; AND HAS BECOME REGULAR IN SHAPE BY OCTOBER 10. IT THEN ELONGATES IN THE DIRECTION OF MOTION AND HAS BROKEN UP INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, CLOSELY FOLLOWING EACH OTHER, BY OCTOBER 12. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 15, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT MARKS ITS PLACE ON OCTOBER 16. 4795 18981008 18981011 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, F, GROUP 4794. 4796 18981009 18981009 A SMALL SPOT, F, GROUP 4795. 4797 18981013 18981017 A NUMBER OF SMALL, FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. 4798 18981015 18981015 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4799 18981017 18981019 A SMALL SPOT. 4800 18981020 18981021 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4801 18981022 18981103 A VERY FINE AND ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM OF SPOTS. THE MAIN BODY OF THE GROUP IS MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT ON OCTOBER 22 AND 23, THE EFFECT OF FORESHORTENING PREVENTING THE COMPONENT SPOTS BEING SEEN SEPARATELY. BUT BY OCTOBER 24 THE GROUP HAS ADVANCED SUFFICIENTLY FAR ON THE DISC FOR THE SEPARATE SPOTS TO BE RECOGNISED. THE THREE PRINCIPAL, A, B, AND C, ARE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS. 4802 18981025 18981103 A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. A REMAINS ALONE BY OCTOBER 30, AND HAS BECOME ALMOST REGULAR. 4803 18981027 18981028 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4804 18981028 18981101 A SINGLE SPOT. IT IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 31, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON NOVEMBER 1. 4805 18981029 18981106 SEVERAL SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED, FOLLOWING GROUP 4804. THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME THE LARGEST MEMBER OF THE GROUP BY OCTOBER 30, AND IS THE MOST STABLE; ALONE REMAINING BY NOVEMBER 4. THE OTHER SPOTS ARE UNSTABLE, AND UNDERGO CONTINUAL CHANGE. 4806 18981101 18981104 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, FORMING S OF GROUP 4805. 4807 18981101 18981110 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE INCREASED AND COALESCED BY NOVEMBER 4 TO FORM A SECOND LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, B. BY NOVEMBER 5 THE GROUP HAS FORMED A FINE STRAIGHT AND ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM OF CONSIDERABLE COMPLEXITY. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP THEN BEGINS TO BREAK UP, BUT THE PRECEDING PORTION BECOMES MORE DEFINED, AND A HAS REFORMED AGAIN BY NOVEMBER 8 AS A FINE, LARGE, SHARPLY-DEFINED SPOT, WHICH HAS BECOME REGULAR BY NOVEMBER 9. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 10. 4808 18981102 18981113 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR BUT FAIRLY COMPACT CLUSTER. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS OF THE GROUP ARE UNSTABLE, AND THE GROUP TENDS TO DIMINISH AND TO LENGTHEN OUT INTO A STRAIGHT SPARSE STREAM. 4809 18981105 18981112 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B. A THIRD SPOT, C, HAS FORMED BETWEEN THEM BY NOVEMBER 7, AND BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY THE GROUP HAS BECOME A STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH A IS THE LEADER AND THE LARGEST. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER NOVEMBER 8, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 12. 4810 18981110 18981116 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 10. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY THE SUCCEEDING DAY, AND FORMS TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS, WHICH HAVE LENGTHENED OUT INTO STRAIGHT STREAMS BY NOVEMBER 12. THESE HAVE COMBINED INTO A SINGLE STRAIGHT STREAM BY NOVEMBER 14, OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. 4811 18981111 18981112 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 11, OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER, A, REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 12. 4812 18981117 18981117 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4813 18981118 18981126 A REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 4814 18981126 18981126 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4815 18981127 18981128 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON NOVEMBER 27. ANOTHER SIMILAR SPOT, F, THE PLACE OF THE FIRST ON NOVEMBER 28. 4816 18981127 18981202 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 27 AND 28, AND AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 4817 18981127 18981208 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ON NOVEMBER 30. THE NUCLEUS OF A HAS BEGUN TO DIVIDE BY DECEMBER 1, AND THE SPOT IS MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS ON DECEMBER 4. 4818 18981202 18981202 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4819 18981202 18981213 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS BECOME COMPOSITE BY DECEMBER 9, AND IS MEASURED IN TWO OR THREE PARTS ON DECEMBER 9 AND 10. IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO DISTINCT SPOTS, B AND C, BY DECEMBER 13. 4820 18981220 18981220 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4821 18981216 18981217 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 17. 4822 18981219 18981220 A SMALL BUT DARK AND WELL-DEFINED SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 4823 18981229 18990102 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 29. THE GROUP HAS INCREASED BY DECEMBER 31, AND FORMS A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. ONLY TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, REMAIN BY JANUARY 1. 4824 18981229 18981229 A SMALL SPOT. 4825 18990101 18990101 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4826 18990110 18990110 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM INCLINED AT A SMALL ANGLE TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER JANUARY 3, AND A, THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C, BY JANUARY 5. 4827 18990102 18990110 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING IN ADVANCE OF GROUP 4826 ON JANUARY 2. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO JANUARY 5, AND CONSISTS OF A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER JANUARY 5, AND ONLY A REMAINS BY JANUARY 8. 4828 18990104 18990104 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4829 18990105 18990116 SEVERAL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. A, B, AND C ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. A FOURTH SPOT, D, HAS FORMED CLOSE BEHIND A BY JANUARY 12, AND HAS AMALGAMATED WITH IT BY JANUARY 15. 4830 18990107 18990107 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4831 18990109 18990110 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, A AND B, ON JANUARY 9. ONLY A REMAINS ON JANUARY 10. 4832 18990110 18990119 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ON JANUARY 10 AND 11. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON THE FOUR SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT HAS BROKEN OUT AFRESH BY JANUARY 16 AS A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM; A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, BEING THE LARGEST. B IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON JANUARY 16. 4833 18990116 18990116 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION PRECEDING IT. 4834 18990121 18990121 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4835 18990122 18990123 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 4836 18990124 18990131 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, ON JANUARY 25. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON JANUARY 26, THE GROUP NOW APPEARING AS A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM, INCLINED AT A SMALL ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER JANUARY 26, AND A HAS BROKEN UP BY JANUARY 27, B BY JANUARY 30. 4837 18990130 18990205 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 4838 18990201 18990211 A SMALL SPOT, A; SOLITARY FROM FEBRUARY 1 TO 4, EXCEPT FOR A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 2. SEVERAL NEW SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY FEBRUARY 5, AND THE GROUP TAKES THE FORM OF A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM; B AND C, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, BEING THE LARGEST. 4839 18990219 18990221 A SMALL SPOT. 4840 18990222 18990222 THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4841 18990227 18990304 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, THE LEADER, A, ESPECIALLY. A HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY MARCH 3. 4842 18990302 18990302 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4843 18990303 18990303 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4844 18990311 18990317 A SMALL SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 15 OR 16, BUT HAS REAPPEARED AS TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 17. 4845 18990315 18990327 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 15. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND BECOMES A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS; THE LEADER, A, BECOMING BY MARCH 21 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS ALMOST ENTIRELY DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 23, BUT A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN PRECEDING A ON MARCH 25 AND 26. 4846 18990320 18990328 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES STEADILY FROM DAY TO DAY. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON MARCH 25 AND 26. 4847 18990322 18990324 A SMALL SPOT, A, ACCOMPANIED ON MARCH 22 AND 23 BY TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT COMPANIONS. 4848 18990327 18990407 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FROM MARCH 30 TO APRIL 4. 4849 18990403 18990404 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 3. 4850 18990409 18990419 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 15, AFTER WHICH DATE A DIMINISHES RAPIDLY. 4851 18990410 18990413 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES STEADILY FROM DAY TO DAY. 4852 18990412 18990415 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 4853 18990417 18990419 A SMALL SPOT, A. 4854 18990420 18990427 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES AFTER APRIL 21. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON APRIL 23 AND APRIL 26. 4855 18990423 18990504 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. VERY SMALL SPOTS BEGIN TO FORM TO THE SOUTH OF A ON APRIL 25, AND ARE MOST NUMEROUS ON APRIL 27 AND 28. THESE HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY MAY 1, LEAVING A ALONE. 4856 18990512 18990521 A SMALL SPOT, A. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 14 AND THE THREE SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY MAY 18 AS A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED. 4857 18990520 18990601 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 4858 18990604 18990610 SEVERAL SMALL AND MOSTLY UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN FOLLOWING B ON JUNE 6, 7, AND 8. 4859 18990610 18990612 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM WHICH HAS SUDDENLY SPRUNG UP BY JUNE 10, PRECEDING GROUP NO. 4858. 4860 18990612 18990617 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 12. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 13, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY JUNE 14 AS A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 4861 18990612 18990619 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, FORMING A CONSIDERABLE STRAIGHT STREAM, WHICH UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGES. 4862 18990616 18990620 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JUNE 19. 4863 18990623 18990705 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, ACCOMPANIED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. THE LATTER FORM A SEMICIRCLE ON THE S.F. SIDE, CONCENTRIC WITH A ON JUNE 27. A HAS BEGUN TO LENGTHEN OUT BY JUNE 29, AND HAS DIVIDED INTO THREE PORTIONS, B, C, AND D, BY JULY 2. 4864 18990702 18990708 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 4865 18990704 18990716 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 4866 18990705 18990714 A SMALL SPOT, A, PRECEDING GROUP NO. 4865. A IS ACCOMPANIED ON JULY 7 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS BY TWO OR THREE SMALL COMPANIONS, MAKING WITH IT A SMALL STREAM. 4867 18990714 18990716 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 4868 18990726 18990729 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM, FORMING A STRAIGHT STREAM. ONLY A REMAINS AFTER JULY 27. 4869 18990729 18990730 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 29. 4870 18990729 18990730 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. 4871 18990801 18990802 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4872 18990828 18990831 A VERY FAINT SMALL SPOT, A. IT IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 29, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY AUGUST 30, AND HAS A VERY SMALL DISTANT COMPANION ON AUGUST 31. 4873 18990830 18990830 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4874 18990904 18990904 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4875 18990904 18990904 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4876 18990913 18990914 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, A, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 14. 4877 18990918 18990920 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4878 18990922 18990922 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4879 18990926 18991001 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE PRINCIPAL ON SEPTEMBER 26; B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS, C AND D, BY SEPTEMBER 27. THESE THREE, WITH A VERY SMALL SPOT, E, MAKE UP THE GROUP ON SEPTEMBER 30. 4880 18990926 18991002 AN UNSTABLE STREAM, CONSISTING ON SEPTEMBER 27 CHIEFLY OF TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, WHICH HAVE BROKEN UP BEFORE SEPTEMBER 28. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 30, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON OCTOBER 1 AND OCTOBER 2. 4881 18991009 18991009 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 4882 18991010 18991010 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4883 18991010 18991010 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4884 18991011 18991011 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A VERY SMALL FAINT COMPANION. 4885 18991012 18991012 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4886 18991016 18991016 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4887 18991023 18991102 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS, WHICH UNDERGO CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE GROUP STEADILY DIMINISHES AFTER OCTOBER 27. 4888 18991027 18991029 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM, P, GROUP NO. 4887. A, THE LEADER, IS THE MOST STABLE. 4889 18991027 18991030 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 30, BUT A HAS A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON THAT DAY. 4890 18991111 18991121 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, ON NOVEMBER 11 AND 12. A HAS DIMINISHED BY NOVEMBER 13, AND A SHORT TRAIN OF VERY SMALL SPOTS HAS FORMED ON THE SF SIDE. B, THE LEADER OF THIS TRAIN, HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY NOVEMBER 14, AND MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE AND UPWARD IN LATITUDE, BUT DIMINISHES AGAIN VERY QUICKLY . A ALONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 19. 4891 18991113 18991120 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 13. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN AGAIN UNTIL NOVEMBER 17, WHEN TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN. THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A FEW SMALL VERY UNSTABLE SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 18 AND 19, AND A VERY SMALL SPOT ALONE REMAINS ON NOVEMBER 20. 4892 18991113 18991113 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4893 18991125 18991127 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4894 18991128 18991204 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH FREQUENTLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 4895 18991204 18991209 A SMALL SPOTS, A, ON DECEMBER 4. A SECOND, B, IS SEEN PRECEDING IT ON DECEMBER 5. THE GROUPS HAS DEVELOPED BY DECEMBER 6 INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH, A, THE LAST SPOT, IS MUCH THE LARGEST. ONLY A REMAINS BY DECEMBER 8. 4896 18991212 18991221 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, ON DECEMBER 12. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON DECEMBER 13 AND THE SUCEEDING DAYS, MAKING WITH THEM A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP GRADUALLY DIMINISHES AFTER DECEMBER 13, B HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 18, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY DECEMBER 19. 4897 18991213 18991219 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES QUICKLY AFTER DECEMBER 14. A VERY SMALL COMPANION FOLLOWS A ON DECEMBER 17. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 18, AND ONLY TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS MARK THE PLACE OF THE GROUP. 4898 18991215 18991220 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL SCATTERED COMPANIONS, ON DECEMBER 15. A HAS BROKEN UP BY THE NEXT DAY. B, THE PRINCIPAL FRAGMENT OF A, IS THEN THE LEADER OF THE GROUP, WHICH FORMS AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 4899 18991216 18991219 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4900 18991229 19000102 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 4901 19000112 19000119 A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT UNSTABLE STREAM. 4902 19000113 19000116 A FAIRLY LARGE SPOT, A, THAT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY IN SIZE, AND IS SEEN ALONE IN JANUARY 16. 4903 19000124 A SMALL SPOT. 4904 19000124 19000129 A SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS BROKEN UP BY JANUARY 27. 4905 19000128 19000206 A LARGE SPOT, A, MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS ON JANUARY 31, WITH SMALL COMPANIONS. 4906 19000129 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4907 19000204 19000212 A BROKEN GROUP, IN WHICH TWO SPOTS, A AND B, MAY BE IDENTIFIED. B IS THE LARGER; A IS NOT SEEN AFTER FEBRUARY 8. 4908 19000204 19000212 A BROKEN GROUP, FOLLOWING GROUP 4907. THE LARGEST SPOT, A, STEADILY DIMINISHES IN SIZE AND IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 12. 4909 19000206 19000213 A FEW REGULAR SPOTS, DIMINISHING RAPIDLY IN SIZE. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 10, BUT IS VERY LARGE ON THE NEXT DAY. 4910 19000208 19000209 A SINGLE SPOT, FOLLOWING GROUP 4909. 4911 19000211 19000212 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 11, ONE ON FEBRUARY 12. 4912 19000214 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4913 19000303 19000305 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 4914 19000304 19000306 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 5. 4915 19000306 19000311 TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH SMALLER COMPANIONS TILL MARCH 8. AFTER THIS DATE THE TWO LARGE SPOTS ARE SEEN ALONE, AND ARE REGULAR IN SHAPE. 4916 19000325 19000326 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 4917 19000326 19000407 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, THAT BECOMES IRREGULAR BY APRIL 4, OCCASIONALLY WITH SMALL COMPANIONS. 4918 19000329 19000330 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 29. A THIRD AND LARGER SPOT IS SEEN ON MARCH 30. 4919 19000408 19000415 A SINGLE SPOT THAT DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND HAS BROKEN UP BY APRIL 12. 4920 19000419 19000426 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON APRIL 25. 4921 19000424 19000429 A FEW UNSTABLE IRREGULAR SPOTS. 4922 19000426 19000427 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 4923 19000427 19000429 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 4924 19000427 19000506 AN IRREGULAR LARGE SPOT, A, ON APRIL 30, MAY 1 AND 2. IT HAS BROKEN UP ON MAY 3, AND BY MAY 5 THE SPOTS HAVE DIMINISHED IN SIZE, AND ARE EXTENDED IN A LONG STREAM, AND THE DIVISION BETWEEN THIS GROUP AND GROUP 4927 BECOMES SOMEWHAT ARBITRARY. 4925 19000427 19000506 A LARGE SPOT, A, WHICH HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 4, FOLLOWED BY A SECOND LARGE SPOT, B,ON APRIL 28 AND 29, AND SUBSEQUENTLY ACCOMPANIED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS. THIS GROUP FOLLOWS GROUP 4924. 4926 19000429 19000505 A LARGE SPOT, A, WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES AFTER MAY 3; ON MAY 2 THERE IS A CONSIDERABLE SPOT PRECEDING A. 4927 19000429 19000508 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH A FORWARD MOVEMENT IN LONGITUDE. THIS GROUP PRECEDES GROUP 4924. 4928 19000514 19000515 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4929 19000521 19000601 A LARGE SPOT, A, WHICH HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 27, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 4930 19000527 19000603 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LEADER HAS ATTAINED A CONSIDERABLE SIZE BY JUNE 1. 4931 19000615 19000624 PRINCIPALLY TWO SPOTS, A FOREMOST, B HINDERMOST, WITH SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS INTERVENING; A IS THE MORE PROMINENT AND THE LARGER OF THE TWO; B IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 19 4932 19000619 19000626 A SINGLE SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON JUNE 24. 4933 19000629 19000701 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, THAT HAS BROKEN INTO TWO PORTIONS JUST BEFORE DISAPPEARING BEHIND THE SUN'S LIMB. 4934 19000703 19000704 TWO SPOTS WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 3; ON JULY 4 THE GROUP IS SEEN CLOSE TO THE SUN'S LIMB. 4935 19000715 19000725 A LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SMALL COMPANIONS; A IS COMPOSITE AT FIRST, BUT BECOMES REGULAR. 4936 19000720 19000723 A SMALL SPOT, NEAR THE EASTERN LIMB OF THE SUN. 4937 19000807 19000812 A FEW SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. 4938 19000811 19000813 TWO OR THREE SPOTS. 4939 19000903 19000904 A SMALL SPOT NEAR THE WEST LIMB; IT HAS LARGELY INCREASED BY SEPTEMBER 4. 4940 19000903 19000908 ONE OR TWO SPOTS; ON SEPTEMBER 8 A VERY SMALL SPOT ONLY. 4941 19000905 19000911 SEVERAL SCATTERED SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 5, 6 AND 7; SUBSEQUENTLY A COMPOSITE SPOT MEASURED IN ONE PORTION. 4942 19001007 19001012 ON OCTOBER 7 A SMALL SPOT; ON OCTOBER 8 TWO SPOTS; BY THE NEXT DAY FRESH SPOTS HAVE APPEARED PRECEDING THOSE SEEN ON THE FIRST TWO DAYS, AND THE GROUP EXTENDS TO CONSIDERABLE LENGTH. 4943 19001016 19001027 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FORWARD MOVEMENT IN LONGITUDE. IT HAS GREATLY DECREASED IN SIZE BY OCTOBER 24. 4944 19001017 19001028 AN IRREGULAR GROUP FOLLOWING GROUP 4943; BY OCTOBER 21 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, HAS BEEN FORMED, WHICH IS HENCEFORTH SEEN EITHER ALONE OR WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 4945 19001029 19001030 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4946 19001113 19001114 A SMALL SPOT. 4947 19001118 19001123 A LONG GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS; THE LEADER IS THE LARGEST AND THE MOST PERMANENT. 4948 19010114 19010114 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4949 19010204 19010212 A SINGLE SPOT WHICH DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. IT IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 10 OR 11, BUT A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT IS SEEN NEAR IT'S PLACE ON FEBRUARY 12. 4950 19010303 19010304 A SMALL SPOT. 4951 19010304 19010310 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 7. 4952 19010308 19010310 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL,IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE LARGEST SPOT, A, IS THE LAST IN THE GROUP, AND ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 10. 4953 19010519 19010531 A FINE GROUP CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, AND A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT B, FOLLOWING IT. THEY ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON MAY 19-21. B HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 30. 4954 19010603 19010603 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4955 19010616 19010626 A RETURN OF GROUP NO. 4953. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL FAINT COMPANIONS UP TO JUNE 21, AFTER WHICH A REMAINS ALONE. 4956 19010622 19010625 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, A, ON JUNE 22. A HAS INCREASED IN SIZE BY JUNE 23, AND TWO OTHER SPOTS HAVE FORMED NEAR IT. ONE OF THESE, B, IS SEEN ALSO ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 4957 19010608 19010608 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4958 19010622 19010624 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4959 19010912 19010912 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4960 19011007 19011012 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 7 AND 8, AND A COMPACT CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 9. THE GROUP HAS CHANGED ITS APPEARANCE BY OCTOBER 10, AND HAS BECOME TWO SPOTS, A AND B, BOTH OF WHICH STEADILY DIMINISH IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 4961 19011028 19011101 TWO SPOTS, A AND B ON OCTOBER 28. B HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO, C AND D BY OCTOBER 29, AND THESE HAVE BOTH DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 31, LEAVING A ALONE. 4962 19011113 19011125 A LARGE WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT COMPANIONS ON NOVEMBER 15 AND 16. 4963 19020105 19020115 THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JANUARY 5. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY JANUARY 6 AND HAS BECOME A SHORT COMPACT STREAM OF SPOTS. ON JANUARY 7 IT IS SEEN AS A SINGLE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH HAS DIVIDED AGAIN INTO SEVERAL DISTINCT SPOTS BY JANUARY 10, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS THE DARKEST, BEST DEFINED AND MOST REGULAR. 4964 19020110 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4965 19020213 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4966 19020302 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4967 19020303 19020307 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 4968 19020303 19020314 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON MARCH 3. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND HAS BECOME A BROAD SHORT STREAM OF IRREGULAR SPOTS BY MARCH 7. THE PRECDING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS COALESCED TO FORM A VERY LARGE ELLIPTICAL SPOT, A, BY MARCH 9. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES. A IS MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS ON MARCH 12 AND 14. 4969 19020305 A SMALL SPOT UP GROUP 4967. 4970 19020505 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4971 19020521 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 4972 19020524 19020624 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON MAY 24, 25, 26 AND 29. 4973 19020526 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 4972. 4974 19020623 19020623 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 4975 19020704 19020704 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4976 19020807 19020807 A VERY FAINT SMALL SPOT. 4977 19020817 19020818 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON AUGUST 17. 4978 19020820 19020820 A PAIR OF VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS. 4979 19020824 19020824 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4980 19020918 19020923 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM ON SEPTEMBER 18. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST AND BEST DEFINED, AND ALONE REMAIN AFTER SEPTEMBER 21. 4981 19020921 19020924 A SPOT, A, WHICH STEADILY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON SEPTEMBER 24. 4982 19020922 19021002 A LARGE ELLIPTICAL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON SEPTEMBER 24 AND SUCCEEDING DAYS BY SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. ON SEPTEMBER 25, AND AGAIN ON SEPTEMBER 28 AND SUCCEEDING DAYS, A IS ALSO PRECEDED BY A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 4983 19021005 19021016 SEVERAL SPOTS IN A SINUOUS STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST. A HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY OCTOBER 9. B HAS BROKEN UP BY OCTOBER 8. A REMAINS ALONE BY OCTOBER 14. 4984 19021007 19021009 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A VERY SMALL SPOT ACCOMPANIES B ON OCTOBER 9. 4985 19021021 19021022 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4986 19021022 19021030 THREE CLOSE PAIRS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 22. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND HAS BECOME A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM BY OCTOBER 24. THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY OCTOBER 26, AND HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY OCTOBER 29, WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON OCTOBER 30. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY THIS LAST DATE. 4987 19021024 19021030 A PAIR OF VERY FAINT SPOTS ON OCTOBER 24. ONLY ONE OF THESE, A, REMAINS ON OCTOBER 26. A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS HAS FORMED PRECEDING A BY OCTOBER 28. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 29. 4988 19021028 19021028 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 4989 19021114 19021116 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. A ALONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 16. 4990 19021114 19021126 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, FROM NOVEMBER 14 TO NOVEMBER 17. THE GROUP HAS ENTIRELY CHANGED ITS APPEARANCE BY NOVEMBER 18, AND HAS BECOME A COMPACT CLUSTER OF IRREGULAR SPOTS. THE GROUP RAPIDLY EXTENDS ITSELF PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR AND HAS BECOME A FINE STREAM BY NOVEMBER 20. IT UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 4991 19021115 19021116 A SMALL SPOT. 4992 19021115 19021116 A SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 4990. A SECOND SPOT IS SEEN ON NOVEMBER 16. 4993 19021127 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 4994 19021128 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4994*19021202 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4995 19021212 A SMALL SPOT. 4996 19021214 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4997 19021216 19021217 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, WHICH TEND TO MOVE APART. 4998 19030103 19030103 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 4999 19030104 19030107 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, OF WHICH B IS THE LARGER. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE AND B INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON JANUARY 4-5. 5000 19030107 19030108 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JANUARY 7. THE FOLLOWING SPOT HAS BROKEN UP TO FORM A COMPACT CLUSTER BY JANUARY 8. 5001 19030118 19030124 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES A GREAT BUT SHORT-LIVED EXPANSION ON JANUARY 23. 5002 19030126 19030128 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 27. 5003 19030128 19030204 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. A, THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP, BECOMES THE LARGEST, AND IS SEEN ALONE ON FEBRUARY 2 AND 4. 5004 19030206 19030212 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON FEBRUARY 6 AND THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS. A HAS DISAPPEARED ON FEBRUARY 9, AND A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM HAVE FORMED A LITTLE TO THE REAR OF ITS PLACE. B, THE LEADER OF THE STREAM ON FEBRUARY 10, MOVES RAPIDLY FORWARD AND REMAINS ALONE ON FEBRUARY 12. 5005 19030209 19030219 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 14 AND 16. 5006 19030210 19030221 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWING GROUP 5005. A DIMINISHES IN SIZE AND THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 16. THE GROUP HAS FORMED AFRESH BY FEBRUARY 17, AS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, B, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A FAINT CLUSTER; B IS SEEN ALONE ON FEBRUARY 18. BY FEBRUARY 19. A SMALL SPOT, C, HAS FORMED PRECEDING B, AND ANOTHER VERY SMALL SPOT, D, FOLLOWING IT. 5007 19030219 19030225 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LEADER SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE. 5008 19030223 19030305 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 24 AND MARCH 2. 5009 19030224 19030302 A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 24. ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS IT IS A SHORT STREAM OF WHICH A AND B ARE THE TWO LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBERS. 5010 19030302 19030303 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 2. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 3. 5011 19030309 19030309 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5012 19030312 19030314 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. 5013 19030321 19030402 A LARGE WELL-DEFINED SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FROM TIME TO TIME. 5014 19030322 19030327 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER FOLLOWING GROUP 5013. IT RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. IT IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 26, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON MARCH 27 NEAR ITS PLACE. 5015 19030326 19030405 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM BY APRIL 1, AND RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 5016 19030329 19030403 A FINE STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY FOLLOWING GROUP 5013. A, THE LEADER SPOT, IS THE LARGEST, AND B, THE LAST SPOT, THE NEXT IN SIZE. B REMAINS ALONE ON APRIL 3. 5017 19030402 19030414 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 5018 19030407 19030407 A SMALL SPOT. 5019 19030408 19030413 A SMALL SPOT. 5020 19030419 19030422 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON APRIL 19. ONLY B REMAINS BY APRIL 20. 5021 19030419 19030422 A STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT IS FAINTLY SEEN ON APRIL 22. 5022 19030422 19030427 A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 22 AND 23. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 24. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 25 AND 26, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON APRIL 27. 5023 19030422 19030501 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5024 19030424 19030505 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A LONG SCATTERED STREAM ON APRIL 24. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND HAS BECOME A FINE COMPACT STREAM BY APRIL 30, AFTER WHICH IT DIMINISHES IN SIZE. A, THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP ON APRIL 28, IS THE LARGEST. 5025 19030425 19030425 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5026 19030426 19030503 A SHORT, COMPACT, IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT AND BECOMES STRAIGHTER ON SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS TEND TO DIE OUT AND ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS BY MAY 4. 5027 19030427 19030428 TWO SMALL CLUSTERS APPEARING SUDDENLY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. THE MORE NORTHERN CLUSTER, A, HAS DISAPPEARED BEFORE APRIL 28. 5028 19030429 19030429 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5029 19030430 19030503 A SHORT STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR GROUP 5023. IT IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 5030 19030430 19030501 A SMALL SPOT. 5031 19030502 19030505 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON MAY 4 AND 5 BY ANOTHER, B. 5032 19030507 19030507 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5033 19030512 19030515 A SMALL SPOT. 5034 19030516 19030522 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. ONLY ONE OF THESE REMAINS BY MAY 18. BUT A FRESH OUTBURST IN THE REGION OF THE PRECEDING PART OF THE GROUP HAS TAKEN PLACE BY MAY 19. THIS OUTBURST HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 21, AND A THIRD OUTBURST HAS TAKEN PLACE IN THE REGION OF THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP. 5035 19030520 19030526 THREE SPOTS ON MAY 20. THE TWO FIRST OF THESE HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A SPOT, A, OF DOUBLE NUCLEUS BY MAY 21. THE THIRD SPOT HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 21 AND DISAPPEARED BY MAY 23. A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN AGAIN IN ITS PLACE ON MAY 24. 5036 19030521 19030530 A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 21, NOT SEEN AGAIN UNTIL MAY 25. IT HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 26, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 28. IT IS SEEN AGAIN ON MAY 30 AS A SMALL SPOT. 5037 19030525 19030525 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5038 19030526 19030528 A SPOT CROSSED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE. IT DIMINISHES ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 5039 19030526 19030527 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 5038. IT HAS BROKEN UP BY THE NEXT DAY. 5040 19030605 19030605 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5041 19030608 19030608 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ARRANGED IN A LONG ROW ALMOST AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 5042 19030608 19030608 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5043 19030608 19030608 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5044 19030610 19030616 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 13, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY JUNE 15. 5045 19030613 19030616 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 5046 19030613 19030614 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 5047 19030616 19030627 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE LEADING PORTION OF THE GROUP INCREASES, AND A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, ARE SEEN HERE ON JUNE 20. A AND B HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A LARGE SPOT C WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS BY JUNE 23. 5048 19030616 19030624 A FAINT SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 5047 ON JUNE 16 AND RAPIDLY DIMINISHING ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. IT IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 20, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY JUNE 22. 5049 19030618 19030620 A VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 5048. 5050 19030620 19030623 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. 5051 19030620 19030628 A STREAM OF SPOTS FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 5048 AND 5049. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 25, AND A REMAINS ALONE ON JUNE 26. 5052 19030630 19030705 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 4. 5053 19030630 19030711 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. A NUMBER OF SPOTS HAVE FORMED ROUND A BY JULY 7, AND BY JULY 9 A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM HAS FORMED TO THE SOUTH OF IT, AND A IS SEEN AS THE CENTRE OF A WIDE AREA OF DISTURBANCE. 5054 19030707 19030714 A STREAM OF SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 5053. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. A REMAINS ALONE ON JULY 13. 5055 19030709 19030716 SEVERAL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY JULY 14, AND REMAINS ALONE BY JULY 15. 5056 19030711 19030718 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON JULY 11. A SECOND, B, HAS FORMED BEHIND IT BY JULY 15. NEITHER SPOT IS SEEN ON JULY 16, PROBABLY ON ACCOUNT OF A DEFECT ON THE PHOTOGRAPH, AS BOTH ARE SEEN ON JULY 17. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 18. 5057 19030715 19030721 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM NORTH OF GROUP 5056. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST, ARE THE MOST STABLE. THIS GROUP, LIKE GROUP 5056, IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 16. 5058 19030716 19030724 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A, THE LEADER, MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE. IT REMAINS ALONE ON JULY 21 AND 22. 5059 19030718 19030721 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS, PRECEDING GROUP 5057. 5060 19030718 19030718 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NORTH OF GROUP 5058. 5061 19030724 19030730 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM ON JULY 24. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY JULY 25. 5062 19030726 19030726 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. 5062*19030727 19030727 TWO SMALL DARK SPOTS. 5063 19030729 19030731 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 5061. 5064 19030729 19030729 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5065 19030729 19030805 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 3 AND 4. 5066 19030729 19030729 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5067 19030802 19030805 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 5068 19030806 19030815 A NUMBER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER ON AUGUST 6. A SPOT, A, ON AUGUST 7, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION ON AUGUST 8. BOTH THESE SPOTS HAVE BROKEN UP BY AUGUST 10, AND THE GROUP FORMS AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON AUGUST 10 AND 11. IT SLOWLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND IS SEEN AS A SMALL STRAIGHT STREAM. 5069 19030806 19030813 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM, FOLLOWING GROUP 5068. 5070 19030808 19030816 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM BETWEEN GROUPS 5068 AND 5069. 5071 19030810 19030813 A SMALL SPOT. 5072 19030811 19030821 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 5073 19030812 19030816 A SINGLE SPOT ON AUGUST 12, WHICH HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS BY AUGUST 15. 5074 19030814 19030817 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM SF GROUP 5072. 5075 19030819 19030819 A FEW SMALL SPOTS PRECEDING GROUP 5072. 5076 19030820 19030826 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT ON AUGUST 20. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 21, BUT ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN IN THE SAME NEIGHBOURHOOD FROM AUGUST 22 TO AUGUST 26. 5077 19030821 19030824 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON AUGUST 21. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON THE NEXT TWO DAYS, BUT ON AUGUST 24 A NUMBER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS ARE SEEN IN THE SAME NEIGHBOURHOOD. 5078 19030824 19030824 THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5079 19030824 19030824 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5080 19030827 19030830 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS A SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 27. THE GROUP CONSISTS CHIEFLY, ON AUGUST 29, OF A SHORT STREAM CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR, PRECEDED BY A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, AND ON AUGUST 30 OF A CLOSE CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5081 19030901 19030901 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5082 19030909 19030911 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 9. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT, NF THE PLACE OF THE GROUP ON SEPTEMBER 9 IS SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 10. 5083 19030909 19030917 A REGULAR SPOT, A , WHICH DIMINISHES IN SIZE AFTER SEPTEMBER 13. SOME SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 16 AND 17. 5084 19030912 19030912 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5085 19030914 19030915 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. ONLY THE LEADER SPOT, A, REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 15. 5086 19030915 19030916 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER SPOT, A, ALONE REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 16. 5087 19030916 19030918 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE DARKEST SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 16, ALONE REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 18. 5088 19030923 19030929 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING AT THE CENTRE OF THE DISC ON SEPTEMBER 23. THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED INTO A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM BY SEPTEMBER 24. ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS THE GROUP CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, AN IRREGULAR SPOT, IS THE LARGER. 5089 19030927 19030930 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON SEPTEMBER 27. OTHER SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED FOLLOWING IT BY SEPTEMBER 28, MAKING WITH IT A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 5090 19031001 19031001 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5091 19031002 19031014 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF MUCH SMALLER AND FAINTER SPOTS. THE LATTER HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 12, LEAVING A ALONE. 5092 19031004 19031013 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. THE GROUP PRECEDES THE GREAT GROUP 5093. 5093 19031005 19031018 MUCH THE LARGEST GROUP OF THE YEAR. IT CONSISTS PRINCIPALLY OF ONE IMMENSE IRREGULAR SPOT OF COMPOSITE STRUCTURE, SUBDIVIDED BY BRIGHT BRIDGES IN A VERY IRREGULAR MANNER. THE GREAT SPOT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, BY OCTOBER 12. OF THESE, A STEADILY DIMINISHES AND B INCREASES IN AREA. 5094 19031008 19031011 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. 5095 19031014 19031026 A FINE REGULAR SPOT, A. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON OCTOBER 25. 5096 19031017 19031018 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, FOLLOWING GROUP 5093. 5097 19031021 19031021 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5098 19031025 19031106 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE GROUP UNDERGOING A CONTINUAL CHANGE OF SHAPE. THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP INTO A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM BY OCTOBER 31; THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP BEING INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR AND TO THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE GROUP. THIS FOLLOWING PORTION HAS ENTIRELY DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 4. 5099 19031029 19031105 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 3. 5100 19031030 19031112 A FINE STREAM CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. 5101 19031102 19031102 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5102 19031102 19031112 A LARGE SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 8, AND A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA CONSTITUTE THE GROUP. 5103 19031103 19031113 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS, FOLLOWING GROUP 5102. THE SMALL SPOTS INCREASE IN SIZE AND SCATTER, WHILST A DIMINISHES IN SIZE AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 9. THE GROUP THEN, LIKE GROUP 5102, CONSISTS OF A GREAT NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA. 5104 19031104 19031117 A VERY FINE STREAM FOLLOWING GROUP 5103. THE STREAM IS SO COMPACT THAT IT IS FREQUENTLY MEASURED AS CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF ONE VERY LARGE COM-POSITE SPOT. BY NOVEMBER 13 TWO VERY LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE FORMED AT THE FRONT AND REAR OF THE GROUP RESPECTIVELY. 5104*19031106 19031116 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS FORMING VERY CLOSE TO GROUP 5104, BUT NORTH AND PRECEDING IT. THE GROUP EXPANDS RAPIDLY INTO A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, IS THE BEST DEFINED AND MOVES FORWARD THE MOST RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE. 5104#19031116 19031116 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER, NF, GROUP 5104. 5105 19031105 19031105 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5106 19031106 19031107 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5107 19031110 19031111 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE LIMB IN A GREAT MASS OF FACULAE. 5108 19031113 19031113 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE LIMB IN A GREAT MASS OF FACULAE. 5109 19031114 19031114 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5109*19031114 19031114 A SMALL FAINT SPOT FORMING A VERY WIDE PAIR WITH GROUP 5109. 5110 19031114 19031114 A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY NEAR THE LIMB IN A MASS OF FACULAE. 5111 19031116 19031124 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT,A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 23 AND 24. 5112 19031120 19031120 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE LIMB IN A MASS OF FACULAE. 5113 19031122 19031127 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA,SF,GROUP 5111. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 23 AND 24, BUT HAS REVIVED BY NOVEMBER 25 AFTER THE DISAPPEARANCE OF GROUP 5111. THE DIFFERENT COMPONENTS OF THE GROUPS ARE EXCEEDINGLY UNSTABLE. 5114 19031124 19031124 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5115 19031125 19031202 A LARGE SPOT,A, DIMINISHING IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY AND USUALLY SEEN WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 5116 19031127 19031208 TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. A THIRD BUT MUCH SMALLER SPOT IS SEEN PRECEDING A ON NOVEMBER 28 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN NEAR A AND B. 5117 19031201 19031212 A REGULAR SPOT, A, SLOWLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. A PORTION HAS BROKEN OFF FROM DEC. 3, AND SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED FOLLOWING IT. THESE SMALL SPOTS ARE VERY UNSTABLE, AND A IS SEEN ALONE ON DEC. 5 AND AFTER DEC. 6. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 11, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT MARKS THE PLACE OF THE GROUP ON DEC. 12. 5118 19031202 19031208 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5119 19031202 19031214 A VERY WIDE AREA OF DISTURBANCE. THE GROUP FORMS, FOR THE MOST PART, TWO STREAMS AT RIGHT ANGLES TO EACH OTHER; THE FIRST STREAM LYING NORTH AND SOUTH, THE SECOND STREAM EAST AND WEST. ON DEC. 5 THE GROUP SHOWS THREE PRINCIPAL SPOTS: A REGULAR SPOT, A, TO THE NORTH; ALMOST DUE SOUTH OF IT A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, B, AT THE RIGHT ANGLE OF THE GROUP; AND DUE EAST OF B, A SECOND LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, C. SPOT C HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS, D AND E, BY DEC. 7, AND A NUMBER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS HAVE BEGUN TO FORM BETWEEN A AND B ON THE SAME DATE. D AND E HAVE BOTH BROKEN UP BY DEC. 9, AND THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A NUMBER OF SMALL FAINT WIDELY SCATTERED SPOTS. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS HAVE FORMED NEAR A BY DEC. 10, AND B HAS BEGUN TO BREAK UP BY DEC. 11, AND IS MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS ON DEC. 12. 5120 19031202 19031211 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, DUE SOUTH OF GROUP 5119B. THE TWO COMPONENTS OF A ARE USUALLY MEASURED TOGETHER; THEY ARE TAKEN SEPARATELY ON DEC.7. THE SPOT IS QUITE BROKEN UP BY DEC. 10. 5121 19031203 19031204 A FEW SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5121*19031207 19031211 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, APPARENTLY A RECRUDESCENCE OF GROUP 5121. 5122 19031203 19031203 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5123 19031204 19031206 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE LIMB IN A MASS OF FACULAE. 5124 19031206 19031206 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5125 19031207 19031211 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING IN FRONT OF GROUP 5119. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 8 OR DECEMBER 10. 5126 19031207 19031219 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON DECEMBER 10. A IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE ON DECEMBER 9, MAKING IT A DOUBLE SPOT, THE TWO COMPONENTS OF WHICH HAVE COMPLETELY SEPARTED TO FROM THE SPOTS, B AND C BY DECEMBER 13. B ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 16. 5127 19031208 19031208 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 5119. 5128 19031208 19031208 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 5119. 5129 19031208 19031220 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON DECEMBER 10 AND DECEMBER 13 AND THE SUCCEDING DAYS. 5130 19031210 19031210 A SMALL SPOT AND A VERY FAINT COMPANION FORMING DUE NORTH OF GROUP 5126. 5131 19031210 19031219 A DOUBLE SPOT WITH THE MAJOR AXIS AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE EQUATOR. THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP INTO A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY DECEMBER 14. 5132 19031211 19031211 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING SOUTH OF GROUP 5125. 5133 19031211 19031211 A VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 5120. 5134 19031215 19031225 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 18 AND 19. A HAS BECOME A DOUBLE SPOT BY DECEMBER 19 AND HAS COMPLETELY DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS, B AND C, BY DECEMBER 20. 5135 19031216 19031224 A SMALL SPOT. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 19 OR 20, BUT THERE HAS BEEN A SUDDEN REVIVAL BY DECEMBER 21. THE GROUP IS SEEN AS A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST, ARE THE LARGEST. 5136 19031217 19031223 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON DECEMBER 17. A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 5137 19031217 19031218 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 5138 19031220 19031221 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5139 19031224 19031224 A SMALL SPOT ONLY SEEN CLOSE TO THE LIMB IN A MASS OF FACULAE. 5140 19031228 19040103 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS A SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 29. THE GROUP IS AN IRREGULAR STREAM AFTER DECEMBER 31. 5141 19031229 19031230 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 29; A SECOND, B, HAS FORMED FOLLOWING IT BY DECEMBER 30. 5142 19031229 19040109 A STREAM OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST SPOT OF THE GROUP, AND IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE LAST SPOT, B, IS THE NEXT IN SIZE. B HAS BROKEN UP BY JANUARY 1. 5143 19040101 A FEW VERY FAINT SPOTS. 5144 19040101 19040109 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS, NONE OF THEM LARGE IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 5145 19040102 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5146 19040104 19040116 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 5147 19040107 19040113 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, PRECEDING GROUP 5146. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 11 OR 12, BUT A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN IN ITS PLACE ON JANUARY 13. 5148 19040111 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5149 19040111 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5150 19040111 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5151 19040113 19040124 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SMALLER SPOT, B, AND ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS BROKEN UP INTO TWO PARTS BY JANUARY 19, OF WHICH C IS A REGULAR SPOT, AND D FAINTER AND LESS REGULAR. 5152 19040116 19040125 A STREAM OF SPOTS CLOSE BEHIND GROUP 5151, AND FORMING WITH IT A FINE PROCESSION OF SPOTS. IT IS A SINGLE SMALL SPOT, A, ON JANUARY 16; BUT A SECOND SPOT, B, HAS FORMED BEHIND A BY JANUARY 17, AND RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, BECOMING A TRIPLE SPOT BY JANUARY 19. B HAS BROKEN UP BY THE NEXT DAY, BUT HAS REVIVED AS AN IRREGULAR STREAM BY JANUARY 21, OF WHICH C AND D, A REGULAR AND A COMPOSITE SPOT, ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. D SOON DIVIDES INTO E AND F, AND BY JANUARY 25 LITTLE REMAINS OF THE GROUP BESIDE C AND F. 5153 19040117 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5154 19040120 19040128 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 20. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, A NUMBER OF SPOTS BREAKING OUT TO FORM A COMPACT BUT IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE SPOTS AT THE TWO EXTREMITIES OF THE CLUSTER COMBINE TO FORM TWO LARGE WELL-DEFINED SPOTS, A AND B, AND THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT TO FORM A FINE STREAM OF THE USUAL TYPE. 5155 19040122 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5156 19040122 19040124 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, OF WHICH THE PRECEDING ONE, A, HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 23. 5157 19040123 A CLUSTER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5158 19040124 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5159 19040124 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5160 19040125 19040131 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ARE THE LARGEST. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 28. 5161 19040127 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5162 19040201 19040206 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 5163 19040204 19040214 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 7, BUT HAS REVIVED AGAIN BY FEBRUARY 8 AS A SCATTERED STREAM. A, THE LEADER, AND LARGEST MEMBER OF THE GROUP, IS A REGULAR SPOT, AND REMAINS ALONE BY FEBRUARY 13. 5164 19040204 19040216 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS. A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST, AND IS COMPOSITE IN FORM. A INCREASES IN LENGTH, COALESCING WITH THE SPOTS THAT FOLLOW IT, AND BY FEBRUARY 9 HAS BECOME AN UNUSUALLY LONG NARROW SPOT. IT HAS BROKEN UP BY FEBRUARY 11, THE PRINCIPAL PORTION, B, BEING IN THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP. 5165 19040205 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5166 19040208 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5167 19040211 19040213 A SMALL SPOT IN A GREAT MASS OF BRIGHT FACULAE. THE SPOT IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 12. 5168 19040213 19040213 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5169 19040216 19040216 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5170 19040217 19040227 AN UNSTABLE GROUP,CONSISTING OF A NUMBER OF SPOTS,MOSTLY SMALL,IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5171 19040219 19040302 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A FINE STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. SOME OF THE FOLLOWING SPOTS GRADUALLY COALESCE WITH A. 5172 19040218 19040222 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 18. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 19,BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 20,AS TWO SMALL SPOTS,A AND B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 22. 5173 19040226 19040228 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS SF, GROUP 5170. 5174 19040302 19040306 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS,A AND B,WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. B HAS BROKEN UP BY MARCH 6. 5175 19040303 19040303 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5176 19040304 19040312 A SMALL SPOT,A,USUALLY FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5177 19040304 19040309 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, FOLLOWING GROUP 5176. 5178 19040308 19040308 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5179 19040308 19040312 TWO SMALL DOUBLE SPOTS,A AND B,ON MARCH 8. BOTH HAVE BECOME MORE CONDENSED BY MARCH 9. B,THE FOLLOWING SPOT,IS THE LARGER AND BETTER DEFINED. A HAS PASSED OUT OF SIGHT BY MARCH 12. 5180 19040308 19040309 TWO SMALL SPOTS,A AND B, FOLLOWING GROUP 5179. ONLY B REMAINS ON MARCH 9. 5181 19040308 19040309 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5182 19040309 19040321 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT,A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 5183 19040315 19040326 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT,A; GENERALLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 5184 19040319 19040325 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, FORMING NORTH OF GROUP 5183. A, THE LAST SPOT OF THE STREAM IS THE LARGEST, MOST DEFINITE AND MOST STABLE. 5185 19040319 19040319 A SMALL SPOT. 5186 19040319 19040326 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A,THE LEADER,IS A COMPOSITE SPOT,WHICH HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLOSE CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS BY MARCH 23; B IS A CLOSE CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS IN THE REAR PART OF THE STREAM. 5187 19040322 19040330 A FEW SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER A, IS THE LARGEST AND BEST DEFINED SPOT. 5188 19040322 19040330 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 26 OR 27. 5189 19040323 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5190 19040324 19040326 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. B,THE FOLLOWING SPOT,IS THE BEST DEFINED,AND ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 26. 5191 19040324 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5192 19040324 19040324 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5193 19040325 19040325 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5194 19040325 19040330 A VERY SMALL SPOT, ON MARCH 25, PRECEDING GROUP 5187. THE GROUP DEVELOPES INTO A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 5195 19040325 19040405 A REGULAR SPOT,A. 5196 19040328 19040331 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, FOLLOWING GROUP 5188. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS,A AND B, ARE THE MOST STABLE AND BEST DEFINED. 5197 19040328 19040401 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 5195. 5198 19040329 19040405 A SMALL SPOT, A WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 3 AND 4. 5199 19040329 19040405 A SPOT, A, FOLLOWING GROUP 5197 AND SOUTH FOLLOWING GROUP 5198. SMALL COMPANIONS FOLLOW A ON MARCH 30 AND 31. 5200 19040402 19040412 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SPARSE STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A REGULAR SPOT, AND THE LARGEST IN THE GROUP. 5201 19040406 19040406 A PAIR OF FAINT SMALL SPOTS, PRECEDING GROUP 5200. 5202 19040408 19040421 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A AND A LARGE CLUSTER, B, FOLLOWING IT. THE GROUP IS MEASURED AS A WHOLE ON APRIL 9. 5203 19040410 19040411 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, FOLLOWING GROUP 5202. ONE OF THE SPOTS HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 11. 5204 19040410 19040419 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT,A. 5205 19040414 19040414 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5206 19040414 19040426 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 17. 5207 19040419 19040420 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5208 19040420 19040426 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 20. A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 5209 19040421 19040503 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 5210 19040421 19040503 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A IS A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT THE OTHER MEMBERS OF THE GROUP ARE UNSTABLE. THE LEADER LENGTHENS OUT IN THE DIRECTION OF MOTION AND THE WHOLE GROUP STRAIGHTENS AS IT DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 5211 19040422 19040422 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER. 5212 19040423 19040423 A SMALL BUT WELL-DEFINED SPOT. 5213 19040428 19040504 A SINGLE SPOT, A. 5214 19040429 19040504 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 5215 19040502 19040505 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5216 19040503 19040504 A SMALL SPOT, A, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. A SMALL COMPANION FOLLOWS A ON MAY 4. 5217 19040503 19040513 A FEW SPOTS IN A LONG SCATTERED STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON MAY 6, ARE THE MOST STABLE MEMBERS OF THE GROUP. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 10. 5218 19040504 19040511 A PAIR OF SPOTS FIRST SEEN NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE GROUP DEVELOPES INTO A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM, MOSTLY OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 5219 19040506 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5220 19040506 19040507 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 6. 5221 19040507 19040511 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 7. THE GROUP HAS BECOME AN UNSTABLE CLUSTER BY MAY 9. 5222 19040508 A SMALL SPOT IN A BRIGHT MASS OF FACULAE. 5223 19040508 A VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 5222. 5224 19040508 19040512 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, NOT SEEN ON MAY 9. A SMALL SPOT, A, IS SEEN ON MAY 10, AND INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. IT IS FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 11 AND 12. 5225 19040508 19040516 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5226 19040508 19040511 A SMALL SPOT. 5227 19040511 19040518 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 15, OR 17. 5228 19040512 19040519 A FEW SPOTS MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE MOST STABLE SPOT OF THE GROUP. 5229 19040514 19040516 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SOUTH, PRECEDING GROUP 5227. 5230 19040516 A SPOT FORMING SUDDENLY ON THE WEST LIMB. 5231 19040516 19040517 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5232 19040516 19040522 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A DOUBLE SPOT, AND THE MOST STABLE MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 5233 19040516 19040520 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 5232. 5234 19040517 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, SOUTH OF GROUP 5232. 5235 19040520 19040524 TWO OR THREE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5236 19040521 19040524 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAY 21. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 22, BUT ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MAY 23 AND 24. 5237 19040521 A SMALL SPOT. 5238 19040525 19040525 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5239 19040525 19040530 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 5240 19040526 19040606 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, GENERALLY WITH A SMALL COMPANION. A HAS BROKEN UP BY JUNE 2 INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, FORMING A STREAM MUCH INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. THE LAST SPOT OF THIS STREAM, B, IS THE MOST STABLE, AND REMAINS ALONE ON JUNE 5. 5241 19040527 19040528 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 27, MEASURED TOGETHER. A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 28. 5242 19040527 19040527 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5243 19040528 19040531 TWO OR THREE UNSTABLE SPOTS, IN A SCATTERED UNSTABLE GROUP. 5244 19040529 19040531 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED TOGETHER ON MAY 29. TWO SMALL CLUSTERS, A AND B, ON MAY 30 AND 31. 5245 19040529 19040529 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5246 19040603 19040611 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5247 19040604 19040609 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5248 19040605 19040607 A SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 5 AND 7. NO SPOT IS SEEN ON JUNE 6. 5249 19040605 19040614 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 5. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 6, BUT HAS REVIVED BY JUNE 7, AS A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR AND VERY SCATTERED STREAM. 5250 19040610 19040616 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 10 AND 11. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY DEVELOPED BY JUNE 12, AND BECOME A LARGE COMPACT CLUSTER. THE GROUP CONTINUES TO CHANGE RAPIDLY, AND IS A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS ON JUNE 14. 5251 19040610 19040615 A SMALL BUT DARK SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. A HAS BROKEN UP BY JUNE 15. 5252 19040613 19040625 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR AND QUICKLY CHANGING STREAM. A, THE LEADER, IS A DOUBLE SPOT WHICH HAS BROKEN UP BY JUNE 20. 5253 19040613 19040625 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A FEW COMPANIONS IN A SHORT TRAIN FOLLOWING IT. 5254 19040614 19040619 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWING GROUP 5252. A VERY SMALL COMPANION PRECEDES A ON JUNE 17. 5255 19040619 19040620 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5256 19040619 19040629 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED ON JUNE 19 AND 20. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND ON JUNE 22 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS, A AND B, WHICH QUICKLY COALESCE INTO TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS. 5257 19040625 19040625 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5258 19040625 19040626 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5259 19040626 19040708 A SMALL SPOT, A, UNTIL JUNE 29, WHEN SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR A, FORMING WITH IT A COMPACT CLUSTER. THE GROUP HAS EXPANDED BY JUNE 30 INTO A STREAM, OF WHICH B AND A, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST MEMBERS. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 3, AND B BY JULY 6, BUT A FRESH OUTBURST, S.F., B HAS TAKEN PLACE BY THE LATTER DATE AND INCREASES RAPIDLY. 5260 19040627 19040627 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5261 19040629 19040703 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, PRECEDING GROUP 5259. 5262 19040630 19040711 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR AND QUICKLY CHANGING STREAM. A, WHICH IS GENERALLY THE LEADER, IS THE ONLY STABLE MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 5263 19040703 19040707 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON JULY 3. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 4, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY JULY 5 AS A PAIR OF WELL-DEFINED SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS A SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 6. 5264 19040708 19040720 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS A REGULAR SPOT, AND THE REAR SPOT, B, IS COMPOSITE. THESE TWO ARE THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS OF THE GROUPS. B HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 17. 5265 19040713 19040714 A SMALL SPOT. 5266 19040714 19040720 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM PRECEDING GROUP 5265. 5267 19040715 19040716 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5268 19040715 19040720 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. THE GROUP CHANGES QUICKLY ; A, THE REAR SPOT, BEING THE MOST STABLE MEMBER. 5269 19040715 19040727 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A FINE STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT AT FIRST, BUT BECOMES MORE REGULAR IN SHAPE AS THE GROUP APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. A REMAINS ALONE AFTER JULY 23. 5270 19040716 19040720 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS PRECEDING GROUP 5268. 5271 19040719 19040719 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5272 19040721 19040725 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. 5273 19040721 19040728 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, WITH AT FIRST A FEW SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM FORMING A SCATTERED STREAM. A IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 26. 5274 19040722 19040722 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5275 19040722 19040801 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SPOTS, NORTH FOLLOWING GROUP 5273. THE GROUP GRADUALLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 5276 19040723 19040723 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5277 19040723 19040726 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 5278 19040725 19040731 A FEW SPOTS IN A SCATTERED STREAM. THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE CHIEF MEMBERS OF THE GROUP. 5279 19040727 19040728 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5280 19040727 19040730 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM SOUTH OF GROUP 5278. 5281 19040728 19040804 A GROUP APPEARING SUDDENLY SOME DISTANCE FROM THE EAST LIMB. IT RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND HAS BECOME A LARGE IRREGULAR CLUSTER BY JULY 30. THE CLUSTER IS USUALLY MEASURED AS ONE. 5282 19040801 19040808 A VERY SMALL SPOT APPEARING FIRST NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND FORMS A CLOSE CLUSTER ON APRIL 5 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 5283 19040802 19040813 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 5284 19040804 19040806 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 5285 19040804 19040815 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. A HAS BROKEN UP BY AUGUST 12. 5286 19040807 19040816 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE TRAIN DIMINISHES QUICKLY IN SIZE. A IS MEASURED TOGETHER WITH THE TRAIN ON AUGUST 8. 5287 19040808 19040808 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5288 19040809 19040809 A SMALL SPOT. 5289 19040810 19040813 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5290 19040811 19040815 A FEW SMALL SPOTS PRECEDING GROUP 5285. 5291 19040811 19040819 A REGULAR SPOT, A. 5292 19040815 19040818 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 17. A HAS A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 18. 5293 19040817 19040821 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A VERY SMALL SPOT BETWEEN THEM ON AUGUST 19. 5294 19040819 19040820 A FEW SMALL SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 5295 19040819 19040825 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL DISTANT COMPANION ON AUGUST 20, FOLLOWING GROUP 5293. 5296 19040822 19040902 A VERY FINE AND COMPLEX STREAM OF SPOTS. THE COMPONENTS OF THE GROUP UNDERGO CONSTANT CHANGE. 5297 19040824 19040825 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5298 19040824 19040903 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 5299 19040825 19040902 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON AUGUST 27, ARE THE MOST STABLE, BUT A HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 31. 5300 19040826 19040903 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LARGEST AND DARKEST MEMBER OF THE GROUP, IS NEARLY IN THE CENTRE. 5301 19040829 19040831 TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5302 19040902 19040902 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5303 19040903 19040907 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5304 19040904 19040904 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5305 19040905 19040905 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5306 19040907 19040907 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5307 19040908 19040914 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5308 19040908 19040910 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A THIRD IS SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 10. 5309 19040913 19040918 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. 5310 19040914 19040918 A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM FOLLOWING GROUP 5309. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 15. 5311 19040917 19040917 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5312 19040918 19040920 A SMALL SPOT, A, APPEARING FIRST NEAR THE WEST LIMB. IT IS FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 19 AND 20. 5313 19040918 19040925 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 18, DEVELOPING LATER INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS THE PRINCIPAL MEMBER. 5314 19040920 19040920 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5315 19040920 19040924 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5316 19040921 19041003 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 21, DEVELOPING LATER INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS THE PRINCIPAL MEMBER. 5317 19040922 19040926 A FINE STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY, FOLLOWING GROUP 5313. THE LEADER, A , AND THE REAR SPOT, B, ARE THE CHIEF MEMBERS OF THE GROUP. 5318 19040924 19041002 A SMALL CLUSTER COMPOSED OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 28, 29 OR 30. 5319 19040927 19041002 A REGULAR SPOT, A. IT HAS A PAIR OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON OCTOBER 2. 5320 19041003 19041009 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A FINE STREAM. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST AND BEST DEFINED, BUT HAS BROKEN UP BY OCTOBER 8. 5321 19041005 19041011 A GROUP APPEARING IN FRONT OF GROUP 5320, AND FORMING WITH IT AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM ON OCTOBER 7. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 5322 19041006 19041017 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS. DURING ITS GREATEST DEVELOPMENTS IT CONSISTS MAINLY OF A, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY B AND C, TWO CLUSTERS, OR COMPOSITE SPOTS. C HAS BROKEN UP BY OCTOBER 12, B BY OCTOBER 16. 5323 19041007 19041013 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 5324 19041008 19041008 TWO PAIRS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5325 19041008 19041020 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. A TENDS TO BREAK UP AFTER OCTOBER 13. 5326 19041008 19041010 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 5325. 5327 19041011 19041018 A SMALL SPOT, A. A SECOND IS SEEN FOLLOWING IT ON OCTOBER 14. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 15 OR 17. 5328 19041012 19041016 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, APPEARING PRECEDING GROUP 5323. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 14. 5329 19041013 19041021 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 5330 19041016 19041016 A VERY SMALL SPOT, FOLLOWING GROUP 5322. 5331 19041017 19041026 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5332 19041017 19041024 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF VERY UNSTABLE SMALL SPOTS. 5333 19041019 19041021 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5334 19041019 19041022 A COMPACT CLUSTER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5335 19041021 19041021 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5336 19041023 19041031 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON OCTOBER 23. A SECOND HAS FORMED IN ADVANCE OF IT BY OCTOBER 24, AND THE GROUP BECOMES LATER A SCATTERED STREAM. 5337 19041024 19041025 A FEW SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 5331. 5338 19041024 19041031 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. 5339 19041024 19041101 A STREAM OF SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 5336 AND 5338. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE AND UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGES, AND ON OCTOBER 27 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, FORMS WITH GROUPS 5336 AND 5338 ONE VERY FINE AND NEARLY CONTINUOUS STREAM. 5340 19041025 19041025 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, PRECEDING GROUP 5338. 5341 19041026 19041026 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 5342 19041027 19041030 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5343 19041027 19041107 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, ON OCTOBER 31 IS A DOUBLE SPOT, FORMED BY THE COALESCENCE OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS. 5344 19041028 19041029 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING NORTH OF GROUP 5338. 5345 19041028 19041028 A SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 5343. 5346 19041030 19041030 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 5347 19041030 19041030 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM FOLLOWING GROUP 5342. 5348 19041031 19041101 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM PRECEDING GROUP 5343. APPARENTLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 5345. 5349 19041101 19041101 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5350 19041101 19041101 A SMALL SPOT SOUTH FOLLOWING GROUP 5343. 5351 19041101 19041112 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 5352 19041103 19041103 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5353 19041105 19041108 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5354 19041105 19041107 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5355 19041106 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5356 19041110 19041121 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 5357 19041111 19041112 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5358 19041113 19041120 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. 5359 19041116 A FAINT SPOT. 5360 19041116 19041127 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. 5361 19041118 19041122 A STREM OF SMALL SPOTS. 5362 19041118 19041126 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, FOLLOWING GROUP 5361 AND NORTH PRECEDING GROUP 5360, SO THAT THE THREE GROUPS FORM ON NOVEMBER 20 PRACTICALLY A SINGLE STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 25. 5363 19041119 A SPOT SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. APPARENTLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 5357. 5364 19041119 19041201 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE AS TO THE NUMBERS AND AREAS OF ITS COMPONENT SPOTS. IT IS A COMPACT CLUSTER ON NOVEMBER 27, BUT HAS DEVELOPED AGAIN INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM BY NOVEMBER 28, ITS TWO CHIEF MEMBERS, A AND B, BEING REGULAR SPOTS. 5365 19041121 19041124 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NORTH OF GROUP 5360. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 23. 5366 19041122 19041127 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 22, WHICH DEVELOP WITH GREAT RAPIDITY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS TO FORM A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A. 5367 19041125 A VERY SMALL SPOT SOUTH OF GROUP 5366. 5368 19041125 19041126 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 5369 19041126 A SMALL SPOT SOUTH OF GROUP 5366, BUT NORTH OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 5367 5370 19041126 19041128 A STREAM OF SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 5368. 5371 19041127 19041130 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING PRECEDING GROUP 5364. 5372 19041127 19041204 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. 5373 19041128 19041201 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS FORMING SOUTH FOLLOWING GROUP 5364. 5374 19041128 A SMALL SPOT. 5375 19041128 19041129 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5376 19041129 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5377 19041129 19041130 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 29. 5378 19041130 19041202 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 5379 19041201 A VERY SMALL SPOT, FOLLOWING GROUP 5378. 5380 19041203 19041205 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, FOLLOWING GROUP 5372, AND FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 5381 19041204 19041215 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 5382 19041205 19041208 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, ON DECEMBER 5. A HAS BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 6. B IS A REGULAR SPOT. 5383 19041205 19041216 A FINE STREAM FOLLOWING GROUP 5381. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT AT FIRST, BUT LENGTHENS OUT, AND IS DIVIDED BY BRIDGES AS IT APPROACHES THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND HAS BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 11. 5384 19041205 19041209 A SMALL SPOT, A, SOUTH OF GROUP 5383. IT HAS A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 9. 5385 19041207 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5386 19041207 19041213 A VERY SMALL SPOT SOUTH OF GROUP 5381; NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 8. THE GROUP HAS REAPPEARED AS A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY DECEMBER 9, BUT HAS AGAIN DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 10, AND REAPPEARS A THIRD TIME ON DECEMBER 13. 5387 19041207 19041214 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, SOUTH OF GROUP 5386, AND PRECEDING GROUP 5384. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON DECEMBER 8, A AND B, ARE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, BUT DIMINISH IN SIZE RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 5388 19041208 19041218 A STREAM OF SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 5383. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST, AND MOST STABLE; BUT A IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 12, AND B HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 14. THE ENTIRE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 16, BUT A SMALL SPOT MARKS ITS PLACE ON DECEMBER 18. 5389 19041208 19041219 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWING GROUP 5388. THE SPOT LENGTHENS OUT AND BECOMES COMPOSITE IN CHARACTER, AND HAS BROKEN UP TO FORM A STREAM OF SPOTS BY DECEMBER 16, OF WHICH B AND C ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBERS. 5390 19041209 19041222 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM FOLLOWING GROUP 5389. THE LARGEST SPOT, A, IS A FINE REGULAR SPOT, AND IS NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP. THE OTHER MEMBERS OF THE GROUP ARE VERY UNSTABLE AND THE GROUP AS A WHOLE UNDERGOES RAPID CHANGE. 5391 19041211 19041218 A SHORT STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS NORTH OF GROUP 5390. 5392 19041211 19041212 A SMALL SPOT. 5393 19041212 19041214 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 5394 19041212 19041212 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 5395 19041212 19041212 A VERY SMALL SPOT FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 5383 AND 5388. 5396 19041212 19041220 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 19. THE PHOTOGRAPHS FOR DECEMBER 10 MARKED K.K. IN THE COLUMN "GREENWICH CIVIL TIME" WERE TAKEN AT THE KODAI-KANAL OBSERVATORY, INDIA. 5397 19041213 19041213 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5398 19041213 19041213 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5399 19041213 19041216 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION. THE PHOTOGRAPHS FOR DECEMBER 14 MARKED K.K. IN THE COLUMN "GREENWICH CIVIL TIME" WERE TAKEN AT THE KODAI-KANAL OBSERVATORY, INDIA. 5400 19041217 19041221 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 18. A SECOND, B, HAS FORMED NEAR A BY DECEMBER 19. B ALONE REMAINS ON DECEMBER 20. 5401 19041220 19041221 A SMALL SPOT. 5402 19041221 19041222 A PAIR OF SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER ON DECEMBER 21, BUT SEPARATELY ON DECEMBER 22. 5403 19041221 19041221 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5404 19041222 19041225 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 23. 5405 19041222 19041224 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 5406 19041223 19041223 A SMALL SPOT SOUTH FOLLOWING GROUP 5404. 5407 19041223 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. 5408 19041223 19041223 A SMALL SPOT. 5409 19041224 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5410 19041224 19041225 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. 5411 19041224 19041225 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 5412 19041225 19041228 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 5413 19041225 19050106 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS UNTIL DECEMBER 29, ON WHICH DAY THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN. THE GROUP HAS REVIVED IN A MOST REMARKABLE MANNER BY DECEMBER 30, WHEN IT FORMS A LARGE COMPACT CLUSTER, WHICH LEGTHENS OUT INTO A REGULAR STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE LARGE REGULAR SPOTS. THIS IS THE MOST USUAL TYPE ASSUMED BY SPOT-STREAMS; THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS OF THE STREAM ARE MUCH ITS LARGEST MEMBERS, THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM BEING COMPOSED OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE LEADER SPOT IS USUALLY A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AND THE MOST STABLE MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 5414 19041227 19041231 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 5415 19041228 19041228 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 5416 19050105 19050114 A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5417 19050106 19050115 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5418 19050107 19050111 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, P GROUP 5417. 5419 19050107 19050113 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 5420 19050107 19050116 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 5421 19050107 19050119 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. THE GROUP FOLLOWS GROUP 5420. 5422 19050108 19050109 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON JANUARY 8 BY SOME FAINT COMPANIONS. 5423 19050109 19050109 A VERY SMALL SPOT, N, OF GROUP 5419. 5424 19050110 19050122 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH A, B AND C, LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND A, B, AND C BECOME LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS. 5425 19050112 19050117 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5426 19050114 19050124 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, F GROUP 5424. 5427 19050114 19050125 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY IN SIZE AFTER PASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND BECOMES A FINE STREAM OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST MEMBERS, TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. 5428 19050114 19050123 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 5429 19050116 19050117 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 5430 19050118 19050118 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 5431 19050119 19050119 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED TOGETHER. 5432 19050120 19050120 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5433 19050120 19050120 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5434 19050121 19050201 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 5435 19050125 19050125 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5436 19050125 19050129 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5437 19050125 19050128 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 26 AND 27. 5438 19050125 19050201 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 5439 19050127 19050202 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, N F GROUP 5436. 5440 19050128 19050129 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5441 19050129 19050211 A MAGNIFICENT COMPOSITE SPOT, A, OF GREAT COMPLEXITY OF STRUCTURE; ATTENDED BY A FEW COMPANIONS. IT ATTAINS ITS GREATEST AREA ON FEBRUARY 4, AFTER WHICH IT STEADILY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. ON FEBRUARY 11 A HAS ENTIRELY PASSED OUT OF SIGHT AT THE WEST LIMB, BUT TWO SMALL ATTENDANT SPOTS ARE STILL SEEN. 5442 19050202 19050214 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM COMPOSED OF MANY SMALL SPOTS. A BECOMES ELONGATED AND FINALLY DIVIDES INTO TWO SPOTS, VERY CLOSE TOGETHER, WHICH ARE, HOWEVER, STILL MEASURED AS ONE. 5443 19050203 19050208 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 4. 5444 19050203 19050215 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION. 5445 19050204 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5446 19050204 19050213 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 5444. 5447 19050204 19050210 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. 5448 19050205 19050211 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5449 19050206 19050211 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, USUALLY IN A COMPACT CLUSTER, N OF GROUP 5442. 5450 19050207 19050214 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER, P GROUP 5443. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 13. 5451 19050207 A VERY SMALL SPOT N OF GROUP 5447. 5452 19050208 19050219 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 5453 19050208 19050213 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IRREGULARLY GROUPED, S OF GROUP 5452. 5454 19050209 19050211 A SMALL SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A SMALL COMPANION. 5455 19050209 19050217 A SPOT, A, F GROUP 5452. A RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND SOME SMALL COMPANIONS FORM NEAR IT. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 15. 5456 19050209 19050218 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM, S F GROUPS 5452 AND 5455. THE GROUP UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES. IT IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 17. 5457 19050209 19050218 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LEADER, IS THE MOST STABLE. THE GROUP UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES. 5458 19050210 19050215 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE,AND BY FEBRUARY 12 HAS BECOME A FINE STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B, LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, ARE THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS AND THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. 5459 19050210 19050214 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 12. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 13, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 14 AS A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 5460 19050211 19050211 A SMALL SPOT S OF GROUP 5449 AND P GROUP 5442. 5461 19050211 19050211 A SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 5448. 5462 19050212 19050213 A FAINT SPOT, A, IN A LARGE GROUP OF FACULAE. A HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 13, BUT ANOTHER SPOT HAS FORMED FOLLOWING IT. 5463 19050212 TWO SMALL SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER SF GROUP 5461. 5464 19050212 19050215 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS S GROUPS 5452 AND 5453. 5465 19050213 19050218 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM F GROUP 5456, AND ALMOST MINGLING WITH IT. 5466 19050216 19050225 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE STREAM HAS BECOME AN ELLIPTICAL CLUSTER BY FEBRUARY 19, AND IS THEN MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT. THE CLUSTER HAS BROKEN UP BY FEBRUARY 21 INTO A SCATTERED STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST. 5467 19050216 19050222 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 5468 19050217 19050219 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS SF GROUP 5467. 5469 19050217 19050227 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL SPOTS, IN A SHORT STREAM. 5470 19050220 19050303 A FEW SMALL SPOTS RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A FINE STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AGAIN WITH GREAT RAPIDITY, AND B HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 2. 5471 19050225 19050310 THE RETURN OF GROUP 5441. A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL ATTENDANTS. SOME LARGE PORTIONS BECOME BROKEN OFF FROM A, AND TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C, HAVE FORMED IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP BY MARCH 4. 5472 19050227 19050302 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 5471. 5473 19050301 19050313 A MAGNIFICENT COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL OUTLIERS. A GRADUALLY BREAKS UP, AND THE GROUP HAS BECOME BY MARCH 11 A FINE STREAM, INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. THE GROUP ON MARCH 12 IS DIVIDED INTO FIVE PRINCIPAL SECTIONS, B, C, D, E, AND F. 5474 19050302 19050304 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS FORMING SUDDENLY NF GROUP 5470,AND INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. ONLY TWO SPOTS, A AND B, ARE SEEN ON MARCH 3 AND 4. 5475 19050303 19050303 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. 5476 19050304 19050304 A VERY SMALL SPOT P GROUP 5471. 5477 19050304 19050310 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON MARCH 4 BY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS NP GROUP 5473. 5478 19050304 19050307 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 5479 19050309 19050309 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM N OF GROUP 5473. 5480 19050310 19050310 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5481 19050314 19050325 A REGULAR SPOT, A WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 5482 19050315 19050323 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 15. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND BECOMES A FULLY DEVELOPED STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST MEMBERS. 5483 19050316 19050320 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, F GROUP 5481. 5484 19050317 19050318 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, A AND B. 5485 19050319 19050329 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS A COMPOSITE SPOT AT FIRST, BUT THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE SPOT GRADUALLY BREAKS UP AND DISAPPEARS, LEAVING A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 5486 19050321 19050325 A SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 24. 5487 19050322 19050322 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 5488 19050323 19050326 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 5489 19050325 19050405 THE RETURN OF GROUP 5471. A WIDE AREA OF DISTURBANCE, CHIEFLY OCCUPIED BY AN IRREGULAR STREAM ROUND WHICH SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR FROM TIME TO TIME. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE, SETTING DOWN INTO THE FORM OF A SHORT, STRAIGHT STREAM BY APRIL 3. 5490 19050327 19050331 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 5491 19050329 19050407 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGES. 5492 19050402 19050402 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, SF GROUP 5491. 5493 19050402 19050405 A SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 5491. IT IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 3 AND 4. 5494 19050403 19050413 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF IRREGULARLY SCATTERED COMPANIONS, MOSTLY TO THE NORTH. 5495 19050404 19050404 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, NF GROUP 5489. 5496 19050404 19050408 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 5494. THE GROUP UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGES. 5497 19050407 19050407 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5498 19050407 19050407 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5499 19050409 19050409 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5500 19050409 19050416 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. 5501 19050410 19050421 A STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, SOON BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AND THE PRINCIPAL MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 5502 19050410 19050418 A COMPACT CLUSTER OF SPOTS, F GROUP 5501. THE MAJOR AXIS OF THE GROUP IS AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE EQUATOR AT FIRST, BUT THE GROUP SOON ASSUMES THE FORM OF A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL ATTENDANTS. 5503 19050412 19050412 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5504 19050412 19050415 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5505 19050412 19050419 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 5506 19050414 19050414 A SMALL SPOT. 5507 19050416 19050416 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5508 19050416 19050416 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 5502. 5509 19050416 19050417 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5510 19050417 19050417 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5511 19050419 19050419 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5512 19050420 19050501 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS, THE FIRST AND LAST OF WHICH, A AND B, ARE THE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS. THE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP BY APRIL 25 INTO AN IMMENSE NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A NEARLY CONTINOUS STREAM. 5513 19050423 19050427 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 26. 5514 19050424 19050428 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SPARSE STREAM. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. ONLY A REMAINS ON APRIL 27. 5515 19050428 19050428 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5516 19050428 19050501 A SMALL SPOT. 5517 19050429 19050429 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5518 19050430 19050501 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. ONLY B REMAINS ON MAY 1. 5519 19050430 19050512 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS A REGULAR SPOT, WHICH RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND SOON ENGROSSES ALMOST THE WHOLE OF THE GROUP. 5520 19050501 19050501 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FIRST TWO ARE MEASURED TOGETHER. 5521 19050502 19050502 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5522 19050502 19050504 A SMALL SPOT. 5523 19050507 19050513 A FINE STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE LEADER, A, SOON BECOMES A LARGE SPOT, AND MOVES FORWARD MORE RAPIDLY THAN THE REST OF THE GROUP. 5524 19050507 19050515 A FINE STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE LEADER, A, SOON BECOMES A LARGE SPOT, AND MOVES FORWARD MORE RAPIDLY THAN THE REST OF THE GROUP. 5525 19050507 19050511 AN ISOLATED SPOT. 5526 19050509 A SMALL SPOT. 5527 19050510 19050511 A SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 5519. 5528 19050511 19050521 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 5529 19050511 19050522 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE THREE MOST STABLE MEMBERS ARE A, THE LEADER, A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, B, A SMALLER AND FAINTER COMPOSITE SPOT, AND C, THE LAST OF THE GROUP , A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 5530 19050512 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 5524. 5531 19050513 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 5524. 5532 19050513 19050514 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P GROUP 5528. 5533 19050513 19050518 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, FORMING ON MAY 15, A SHORT STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGES. 5534 19050514 19050520 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 5535 19050514 19050515 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5536 19050517 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, GREATLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. 5537 19050517 19050522 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON MAY 17 AND 18. A IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 19, BUT ANOTHER SMALL SPOT HAS APPEARED SF ITS PLACE. THIS HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 20, BUT ANOTHER SPOT HAS FORMED BY MAY 22. 5538 19050520 A SMALL SPOT; A REVIVAL OF GROUP 5532. 5539 19050522 19050528 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR IRREGULARLY. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 24. 5540 19050525 19050601 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAY 25. THE GROUP GRADUALLY INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, BECOMING AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL. 5541 19050531 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5542 19050531 19050611 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A AND B, THE TWO PRINCIPAL MEMBERS OF THE GROUP, ARE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS. B IS AT FIRST IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP, BUT THE SPOTS FOLLOWING B SOON DIE OUT, REVIVING AGAIN LATER ON, AS A AND THE SPOTS IN THE FRONT OF THE GROUP DIMINISH. 5543 19050531 19050608 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM NF GROUP 5542. THE GROUP UNDERGOES FREQUENT CHANGES. 5544 19050601 19050603 A SMALL SPOT, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE. 5545 19050604 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NF GROUPS 5542 AND 5543. 5546 19050604 19050613 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 5546*19050614 19050615 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, APPEARING S OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 5546, AFTER THAT GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED. 5547 19050605 19050610 AN AREA IN WHICH A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISSIPATE. 5548 19050607 19050609 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, FORMING WHEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 5549 19050607 19050607 A VERY SMALL SPOT, S GROUP 5542. 5550 19050607 19050618 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON JUNE 7. 5551 19050608 19050608 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5552 19050608 19050619 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5553 19050608 19050619 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS. 5554 19050610 19050611 A COMPOSITE SPOT, FORMING NP GROUP 5542. TWO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JUNE 11. 5555 19050611 19050611 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5556 19050611 19050611 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5557 19050612 19050612 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5558 19050612 19050616 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5559 19050614 19050622 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 5560 19050615 19050617 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 5550. 5561 19050616 19050616 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 5553. 5562 19050616 19050622 A SMALL SPOT. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 19, 20, AND 21. 5563 19050618 19050618 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5564 19050620 19050702 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 20 AND 21. THE GROUP THEN INCREASES IN SIZE VERY RAPIDLY, BECOMING A VERY FINE STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, BUT THE CHIEF MEMBER OF THE GROUP IS A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, B, IN THE CENTRE OF THE STREAM. 5565 19050621 19050621 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5566 19050621 19050621 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5567 19050622 19050626 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. A HAS DIVIDED INTO A CLOSE PAIR BY JUNE 25, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE SPOT. 5568 19050624 19050627 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. BOTH A AND B HAVE DIVIDED INTO CLOSE PAIRS BY JUNE 26, BUT ARE STILL MEASURED AS SINGLE SPOTS. 5569 19050624 19050630 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON JUNE 24. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY JUNE 26 AND 27, BUT DIMINISHES AGAIN LATER. 5570 19050630 19050702 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 5571 19050630 19050704 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5572 19050701 19050701 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5573 19050701 19050701 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5574 19050701 19050704 A SMALL SPOT. 5575 19050702 19050702 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5576 19050702 19050706 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 3. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 5, BUT TWO SMALL SPOTS MARK ITS PLACE ON JULY 6. 5577 19050702 19050713 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, GRADUALLY CHANGING INTO THE REGULAR TYPE. ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN NEAR IT. 5578 19050703 19050703 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5579 19050703 19050711 A FEW SMALL AND UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER, F GROUP 5578. 5580 19050704 19050704 A SMALL SPOT. 5581 19050704 19050704 A VERY SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. 5582 19050704 19050704 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5583 19050705 19050705 A SMALL SPOT. 5584 19050705 19050706 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 5585 19050705 19050707 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5586 19050705 19050717 A FINE COMPACT STREAM OF SPOTS. THE DETAILS OF THE STREAM UNDERGO CONTINUAL CHANGES, BUT THE STREAM REMAINS STRAIGHT AND COMPACT THROUGHOUT. 5587 19050709 19050709 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, F GROUP 5586. 5588 19050710 19050713 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 10. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 12, BUT TWO SMALL SPOTS MARK ITS PLACE ON JULY 13. 5589 19050710 19050722 A MAGNIFICENT STREAM OF SPOTS, THE LEADER, A, BEING A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. 5590 19050711 19050714 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A, AND B. 5591 19050711 19050716 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5592 19050712 19050713 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5593 19050712 19050722 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5594 19050714 19050725 A REGULAR SPOT, A, GENERALLY WITH SEVERAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5595 19050715 19050727 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, AT FIRST ARRANGED IN TWO SHORT COMPACT STREAMS INCLINED AT AN ANGLE OF ABOUT 60 DEGREES TO EACH OTHER. THE GROUP GRADUALLY LENGTHENS OUT INTO A SINGLE STRAIGHT STREAM. 5596 19050716 19050716 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5597 19050718 19050725 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 5589. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES A FINE STREAM OF THE USUAL TYPE THE LEADING AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, BEING LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS. A HAS BECOME REGULAR IN FORM AND B HAS BROKEN UP INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS, C AND D, BY JULY 23. 5598 19050719 19050724 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A VERY STRAGGLING STREAM. 5599 19050720 19050722 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5600 19050721 19050724 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, F GROUP 5598. 5601 19050723 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5602 19050726 19050803 A VERY SMALL DOUBLE SPOT, NOT SEEN FROM JULY 27 TO AUGUST 2. 5603 19050729 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5604 19050729 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5605 19050731 A FINE GROUP FORMING VERY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 5606 19050731 A VERY SMALL DARK SPOT. 5607 19050731 19050811 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS BECOME REGULAR IN FORM BY AUGUST 7. 5608 19050731 19050811 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 5609 19050801 19050802 TWO CLOSE PAIRS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5610 19050801 19050808 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, NF GROUP 5607. 5611 19050801 19050812 A FINE GROUP, SF GROUP 5608. IT CONSISTS PRINCIPALLY OF A VERY LARGE AND WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT, A, SURROUNDED BY A NUMBER OF SCATTERED SMALL SPOTS. A LONG IRREGULAR SPOT, B, HAS FORMED DUE NORTH OF A BY AUGUST 7. 5612 19050802 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5613 19050802 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5614 19050803 19050812 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED VERY CLOSELY BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 5615 19050804 19050807 A VERY SMALL SPOT NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON AUGUST 4. SEVERAL OTHER SMALL SPOTS APPEAR NEAR THE FIRST ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, FORMING AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. 5616 19050804 19050807 A VERY SMALL SPOT NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON AUGUST 4. SEVERAL OTHER SMALL SPOTS APPEAR NEAR THE FIRST ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, FORMING AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. 5617 19050804 19050805 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 5618 19050806 19050809 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. ONLY A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, REMAIN BY AUGUST 7. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 8. 5619 19050806 A VERY SMALL SPOT, WITH A CLOSE PAIR TO THE NORTH OF IT. 5620 19050806 19050818 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 5621 19050808 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5622 19050808 19050820 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION FOLLOWING IT. A NUMBER OF SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY AUGUST 13, FOLLOWING A AND FORMING WITH IT A STREAM OF THE USUAL TYPE. B, THE LAST SPOT OF THE STREAM, IS, AFTER A, THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER OF IT. A REMAINS ALONE ON AUGUST 18. 5623 19050812 19050812 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5624 19050814 19050814 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, NF GROUP 5622. 5625 19050815 19050815 TWO SMALL VERY FAINT SPOTS, NF GROUP 5622. 5626 19050815 19050824 TWO SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 17, AND A SLOWLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE, THROWING OFF A SMALL FRAGMENT ON AUGUST 23. 5627 19050817 19050829 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, OCCASIONALLY FOLLOWED BY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5628 19050818 19050824 A STREAM OF SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY CLOSE TO THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. THE LEADER, A, MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE AND INCREASES IN SIZE, BECOMING A LARGE, WELL-DEFINED, COMPOSITE SPOT. A IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 24, HAVING PASSED ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 5629 19050819 19050820 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, NP GROUP 5628. 5630 19050819 19050826 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION, ON AUGUST 23. 5631 19050820 19050825 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. THE GROUP HAS BECOME TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS BY AUGUST 22, WHICH TEND TO COSLESCE TO FORM TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. 5632 19050820 19050823 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A, THE LEADER, ON AUGUST 21, REMAINS ALONE ON AUGUST 22, BUT IS FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 23. 5633 19050820 19050826 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SF GROUP 5630. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 22. 5634 19050821 19050821 A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 5635 19050822 19050825 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, N OF GROUP 5626. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 24. 5636 19050822 19050824 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5637 19050823 19050823 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 5635. 5638 19050824 19050904 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS, INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS, B AND C, BY AUGUST 30. 5639 19050828 19050909 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, WITH A FEW CLOSE COMPANIONS. THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT, BECOMING BY SEPTEMBER 5, A STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH A, NOW MUCH REDUCED, IS THE LARGEST MEMBER. 5640 19050828 19050831 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 30. 5641 19050829 19050908 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY AUGUST 31, WHILST THE REST OF THE GROUP TENDS TO DIMINISH AND TO SCATTER. A REMAINS ALONE BY SEPTEMBER 6. 5642 19050829 19050829 A SMALL SPOT, N OF GROUP 5640. 5643 19050829 19050910 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5644 19050830 19050908 A SPOT,F GROUP 5643. THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 2, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN IN ITS PLACE ON SEPTEMBER 8. 5645 19050831 19050901 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5646 19050831 19050831 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5647 19050831 19050831 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5648 19050831 19050901 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN A SCATTERED STREAM. 5649 19050901 19050904 A PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPTEMBER 1. AFTERWARDS TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5650 19050903 19050905 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, IN A SCATTERED STREAM, MUCH INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. 5651 19050904 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5652 19050904 19050906 TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5653 19050904 19050912 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS, F GROUP 5652. 5654 19050905 19050911 A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 5653. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 9, BUT HAS REVIVED BY SEPTEMBER 10. 5654*19050907 19050908 A SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 5639. 5655 19050907 19050918 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 5656 19050908 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5657 19050908 19050910 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 9. 5658 19050908 19050918 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, AND ANOTHER LARGE SPOT, B, IS NEAR THE END OF THE STREAM. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 17. 5659 19050910 19050919 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS, F GROUP 5658. 5660 19050910 19050921 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE CHIEF MEMEBERS OF THE GROUP; A BEING A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, B A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. 5661 19050912 19050912 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5662 19050913 19050922 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A SHORT CURVED STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE, AND CONSISTS BY SEPTEMBER 17 OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 5663 19050917 19050922 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, FORMING S OF GROUP 5662. A THE PRECEDING SPOT, IS A REGULAR SPOT, AND REMAINS ALONE ON SEPTEMBER 19. 5664 19050922 19050922 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5665 19050923 19050927 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, ARRANGED IN THE FORM OF A HORSE-SHOE ON SEPTEMBER 23. THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED A LITTLE BY SEPTEMBER 25, AND HAS BECOME A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5666 19050925 19050928 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 27, BUT HAS REVIVED ON A MUCH LARGER SCALE BY SEPTEMBER 28. 5667 19050927 19050929 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5668 19050927 19051003 A SHORT STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF THREE SPOTS, A, B, AND C. ONLY C REMAINS ON OCTOBER 3. 5669 19050928 19050929 A LARGE SPOT, SUDDENLY APPEARING S OF GROUP 5666 AND CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 5670 19050928 19051001 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPTEMBER 28. THEY HAVE BOTH INCREASED IN SIZE BY SEPTEMBER 29, BUT A HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 30. 5671 19050928 19051004 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, WHICH SOON INCREASE AND FORM A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM, INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR, OF WHICH A, THE LAST SPOT, IS THE LARGEST. 5672 19050928 19051010 A SHORT STREAM WITH TWO LARGE PRINCIPAL SPOTS; A, THE LEADER, DOUBLE; B, THE LAST, COMPOSITE. 5673 19050930 19051008 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOT IN A RING ON SEPTEMBER 30. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE AND LENGTH ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND HAS BECOME A VERY FINE STREAM BY OCTOBER 4, TWO VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, BEING THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS OF THE GROUP ON OCTOBER 5. 5674 19051001 19051011 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. 5675 19051002 19051009 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 5676 19051004 19051014 A FEW SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT BUT SPARSE STREAM. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE A CONSIDERABLE DEVELOPMENT BY OCTOBER 9. 5677 19051007 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5678 19051007 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5679 19051008 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5680 19051008 19051020 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 5681 19051009 19051013 A SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 9. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 10, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 11 AS A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. 5682 19051014 19051026 A MAGNIFICENT GROUP, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF ONE IMMENSE SPOT OF MOST INTRICATE STRUCTURE, A, CLOSELY SURROUNDED BY A NUMBER OF COMPANIONS. 5683 19051016 19051016 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 5680. 5684 19051018 19051018 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, SP GROUP 5680. 5685 19051021 19051103 AN IMMENSE REGULAR SPOT,A, SURROUNDED BY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A BECOMES INTERSECTED BY MANY BRIDGES AND ASSUMES A COMPOSITE STRUCTURE. 5686 19051025 19051025 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 5687 19051025 19051102 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, F GROUP 5685. 5688 19051026 19051026 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5689 19051028 19051030 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 5690 19051028 19051031 AN ILL-DEFINED SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 30. 5691 19051029 19051109 A FINE STREAM, CONSISTING OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, AND A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. A TENDS TO BECOME REGULAR IN FORM B RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 5692 19051030 19051030 A SMALL SPOT, S OF GROUP 5687. 5693 19051031 19051102 A SMALL SPOT, S OF GROUP 5692. 5694 19051101 19051101 A GROUP SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 5695 19051102 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5696 19051102 19051104 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SP GROUP 5691. 5697 19051102 19051105 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY ONE SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 3, AND BY SEVERAL ON NOVEMBER 5. 5698 19051102 19051114 A LARGE NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE, AND HAS DEVELOPED BY NOVEMBER 12 INTO A FINE STREAM OF THE USUAL TYPE ; A AND B, ITS TWO PRINCIPAL MEMBERS, BEING LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS. 5699 19051103 19051104 A PAIR OF VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS. 5700 19051103 19051107 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS, F GROUP 5699. IT CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO UNSTABLE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. 5701 19051103 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 5700. 5702 19051104 19051116 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5703 19051104 19051116 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, WHICH UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES. A IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT AT THE REAR OF THE GROUP, AND THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER OF IT. 5704 19051106 19051110 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A CLUSTER OF BRIGHT FACULAE, SF GROUP 5700. 5705 19051106 19051116 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 5706 19051107 19051119 A VERY LARGE COMPACT CLUSTER OF SPOTS F GROUP 5705. THE GROUP HAS COALESCED INTO AN IMMENSE COMPOSITE SPOT BY NOVEMBER 12, BREAKING UP AGAIN INTO A COMPACT CLUSTER BY NOVEMBER 14. 5707 19051108 19051116 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A VERY SCATTERED STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES A SUDDEN DEVELOPMENT AFTER PASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND IS, ON NOVEMBER 12, AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM, WHICH QUICKLY CONFORMS TO THE USUAL TYPE ; A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 13, BEING THE LARGEST MEMBERS OF THE GROUP, WHILST THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS RAPIDLY DIMINISH AND DISAPPEAR. 5708 19051108 19051119 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, OCCASIONALLY WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION, F GROUP 5706. 5709 19051109 19051111 A SMALL SPOT. 5710 19051110 19051117 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 5702 AND 5703. THE GROUP INCREASES RAPIDLY IN SIZE, AND HAS BECOME A FINE STREAM BY NOVEMBER 12, BUT DOES NOT CONFORM TO THE USUAL TYPE, AND SPEEDILY DIMINISHES. 5711 19051110 19051117 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FORMING SUDDENLY SF GROUP 5705 AND P GROUP 5706. IT STEADILY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. GROUPS 5698, 5702, 5703, 5710, 5705, 5711, 5706, AND 5708 FORM DETAILS IN ONE SUPERB PROCESSION OF SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 10 TO 15. 5712 19051110 19051121 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE AND SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER, WHICH UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES. 5713 19051111 19051123 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WHICH GRADUALLY BECOMES SIMPLER IN STRUCTURE, AND IS A REGULAR SPOT BY NOVEMBER 21. A IS FREQUENTLY ATTENDED BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 5714 19051113 19051118 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING P GROUP 5712. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 14, BUT HAS BROKEN OUT AGAIN ON A LARGER SCALE BY NOVEMBER 15. IT DIMINISHES AGAIN IMMEDIATELY AFTER. 5715 19051113 19051117 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 5712 AND 5714. 5716 19051115 19051122 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS F GROUP 5712. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED BY NOVEMBER 20. THE FOUR GROUPS 5712, 5714, 5715 AND 5716, FORM ON NOVEMBER 16 A REMARKABLE STRAIGHT STREAM COMPOSED OF AN IMMENSE NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, THE STREAM BEING A CONTINUATION OF AND NEARLY REACHING TO THE GREAT PROCESSION OF GROUPS ENDING WITH GROUP 5711. 5717 19051116 19051126 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED ON NOVEMBER 16 AND 17. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE AND HAS BECOME, BY NOVEMBER 19, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR TRAIN OF SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, CONTINUALLY CHANGING. 5718 19051117 19051119 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SPARSE STREAM, P GROUP 5713. 5719 19051118 19051121 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON NOVEMBER 18. TWO CLUSTERS OF SPOTS, A AND B, FORMING NP GROUP 5712. BOTH CLUSTERS COALESCE TO FORM COMPOSITE SPOTS. 5720 19051118 19051130 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS MOSTLY TO THE SOUTH. A BECOMES COMPOSITE IN STRUCTURE AND HAS BROKEN UP BY NOVEMBER 24, THE PRINCIPAL PORTIONS BEING B, C AND D. 5721 19051121 19051130 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS F GROUP 5720. IT CONSISTS ON NOVEMBER 23 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. 5722 19051122 19051126 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A SHORT SPARSE STREAM SF GROUP 5717. 5723 19051122 19051123 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 5722 AND 5720, TO THE NORTH. 5724 19051122 19051123 A PAIR OF CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, NF GROUP 5721. 5725 19051122 19051203 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 5726 19051123 19051130 A FEW FAINT SPOTS FORMING P GROUP 5725. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES A CONSIDERABLE STREAM, CHIEFLY ARRANGED IN TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS. 5727 19051123 19051123 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 5726. 5728 19051124 19051126 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 5722 AND 5720. 5729 19051124 19051205 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP FOLLOWS GROUP 5725. 5730 19051124 19051206 A MAGNIFICENT BUT IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS, F GROUP 5729. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE SPOTS ARE LETTERED, A, B, C, D AND E. 5731 19051125 19051125 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS FORMING N OF GROUP 5721. 5732 19051126 19051126 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS FORMING N OF GROUP 5722. 5733 19051126 19051207 A FINE COMPACT CLUSTER, OF WHICH A AND B, TWO LARGE SPOTS, ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS, F GROUP 5730. B SOON BREAKS UP AND DISAPPEARS, AND A REMAINS ALONE BY DECEMBER 4. 5734 19051127 19051130 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 28, BUT ONE SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON NOVEMBER 29 AND 30. 5735 19051130 19051205 A FEW SMALL SPOTS FORMING N OF GROUP 5730, AND RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A CONSIDERABLE STREAM. GROUPS 5726, 5725, 5727, 5729, 5730, 5733 AND 5735, MAKE UP A MAGNIFICENT PROCESSION OF SPOT GROUPS, ANALOGOUS TO THAT WHICH HAD FORMED IN THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE A LITTLE EARLIER. 5736 19051202 19051205 A DOUBLE SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5737 19051203 19051213 SEVERAL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGES, AND IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 11 OR 12. 5738 19051204 19051208 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. 5739 19051204 19051216 A REGULAR SPOT, A, F GROUP 5738. SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR, MOSTLY PRECEDING A, AFTER DECEMBER 8, AND THE GROUP BECOMES A STREAM OF WHICH A NEW SPOT, B, IS THE LEADER AND LARGEST, WHILST A IS THE REAR-SPOT AND SECOND IN SIZE. 5740 19051204 19051212 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5741 19051207 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5742 19051207 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5743 19051207 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5744 19051207 19051218 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 5745 19051208 19051213 TWO SPOTS, A AND B. B BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 13. 5746 19051212 19051214 A REGULAR SPOT, A. 5747 19051212 19051224 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 5748 19051214 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5749 19051214 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5750 19051214 19051225 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A LINE OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP FOLLOWS GROUP 5747, AND ALMOST TOUCHES IT. 5751 19051215 19051217 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 5744. 5752 19051216 19051221 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, FORMING N OF GROUP 5752. THE GROUP BECOMES A SMALL STREAM OF CHANGING FORM. 5753 19051218 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5754 19051218 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5755 19051218 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 5752. GROUPS 5755, 5752, 5747 AND 5750, FORM A FINE PROCESSION OF SPOT-GROUPS ON DECEMBER 18. 5756 19051218 19051225 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. OTHER SPOTS APPEAR AND THE GROUP BECOMES A SPARSE STREAM. 5757 19051218 19051223 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5758 19051219 19051225 A SMALL SPOT, A, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 22 OR 23. THE GROUP HAS REVIVED BY DECEMBER 24. A HAS TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON DECEMBER 20. 5759 19051220 19051226 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 20. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 24 AND 25. GROUPS 5757, 5758 AND 5759 MAKE UP TOGETHER A LONG SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM. 5760 19051221 19051223 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A, AND B, N OF GROUP 5756. 5761 19051221 19051227 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR AND N OF GROUP 5759. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE, INCREASING IN SIZE UNTIL DECEMBER 23. THE LEADER, A, ON DECEMBER 22 IS A REGULAR SPOT. 5762 19051222 19051228 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 22. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, BY DECEMBER 24. A IS SOMETIMES PRECEDED BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 5763 19051223 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, N GROUP 5761. 5764 19051224 19051228 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. GROUPS 5758, 5764 AND 5762 FORM TOGETHER A LONG INTERMITTENT STREAM, PARALLEL TO AND SOUTH OF GROUP 5761. 5765 19051224 19060103 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES SEVERAL CHANGES, BUT GENERALLY CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS. 5766 19051226 19060106 A FINE STREAM OF THE USUAL TYPE. A, THE LEADER, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT; B, THE LAST, A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, C, HAS FORMED BY JANUARY 2, IMMEDIATELY BEHIND A. 5767 19051229 19060103 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP HAS BECOME A STRAIGHT STREAM BY JANUARY 1. 5768 19060102 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5769 19060103 19060109 A REGULAR SPOT,SLOWLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. 5770 19060105 19060110 A FEW SMALL SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. 5771 19060105 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5772 19060106 19060108 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT LITTLE CLUSTER. 5773 19060108 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5774 19060108 19060116 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 5775 19060108 19060120 RETURN OF GROUP 5747. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT,A,FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SPOTS,OF WHICH B,A COMPOSITE SPOT,IS THE LARGEST. B BREAKS UP AND A ALONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 18. THE GROUP LIES SF GROUP 5774. 5776 19060112 19060115 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5777 19060109 19060116 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A CLUSTER NF GROUP 5775. 5777*19060114 19060115 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS s OF GROUP 5777. 5778 19060112 19060118 RETURN OF GROUP 5762. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT A WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 5779 19060113 19060120 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS N OF GROUP 5775. IT IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 15,17 OR 19. 5780 19060117 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5781 19060118 A SMALL SPOT. 5782 19060120 A SMALL SPOT. 5783 19060120 19060129 RETURN TO GROUP 5767. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM. A,THE LEADER,A SMALL REGULAR SPOT,ALONE REMAINS AFTER JANUARY 26. 5784 19060120 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5785 19060121 19060130 A VERY FINE STREAM,CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF A AND B, TWO VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS OF ELLIPTICAL SHAPE. THE GROUP DEVELOPS VERY RAPIDLY,AND DIMINISHES AGAIN NEARLY AS FAST. 5786 19060121 19060124 A SMALL SPOT, a, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION. 5787 19060121 19060129 A FEW SMALL SPOTS,IN A A SHORT STREAM F GROUP 5785. THE LEADER,A,IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT,AND ALONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 26. 5788 19060122 19060202 RETURN OF GROUP 5766. A REGULAR SPOT,A,SLOWLY CLOSING UP AFTER JANUARY 30. A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON JANUARY 25. 5789 19060123 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5790 19060123 19060201 A FEW SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. TWO SPOTS,A AND B, ARE LARGER AND MORE STABLE THAN THE REST. THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME A WELL-MARKED REGULAR SPOT BY JANUARY 28, WHILST THE REST OF THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 30. 5791 19060126 19060206 A GROUP OF STRIKING APPEARANCE, CONSISTING OF THREE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B, AND C, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALLER ATTENDANTS, NOT DRAWN OUT INTO A STREAM OF THE USUAL FORM, BUT SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA. 5791*19060207 A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 5791, AND SEEN ONLY WHEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 5792 19060126 19060126 A SMALL SPOT. 5793 19060127 19060127 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, SF GROUP 5787. 5794 19060131 19060204 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO DISTANT ATTENDANTS. THE GROUP LIES SP GROUP 5791. 5795 19060131 19060201 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, N OF GROUP 5791. 5796 19060202 19060205 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 3 OR 4. 5797 19060204 A SMALL SPOT. 5798 19060204 19060215 RETURN OF GROUP 5775. THIRD AND LAST APPEARANCE. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS HAVE BROKEN OUT BY FEBRUARY 8 ON ALL SIDES OF A, BUT PRINCIPALLY ON THE SOUTH, WHERE THEY FORM BY FEBRUARY 9 AN UNSTABLE STREAM, THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER OF WHICH, B, IS IMMEDIATELY SOUTH OF A. A SMALL SPOT, C, HAS FORMED TO THE REAR OF A BY FEBRUARY 11. 5798*19060208 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, n OF GROUP 5798. 5798#19060213 19060214 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, np GROUP 5798; FIRST SEEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 5799 19060206 19060206 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 5799*19060206 19060206 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5800 19060205 19060207 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 5800*19060215 19060215 A FEW VERY FAINT, SMALL MARKINGS. 5801 19060211 19060215 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, N OF GROUP 5798. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 13. 5801*19060215 19060215 A NUMBER OF SMALL, VERY FAINT MARKINGS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. 5802 19060214 19060226 RETURN OF GROUP 5785. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5802*19060216 19060216 A NUMBER OF SMALL, VERY FAINT MARKINGS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. 5803 19060217 19060228 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. ONLY A REMAINS AFTER FEBRUARY 24. 5804 19060218 19060218 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5805 19060219 19060220 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5806 19060218 19060228 WITH GROUP 5803, A RETURN OF GROUP 5790. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM CLOSE TO IT ON THE S SIDE, MAKING UP, WITH GROUP 5803, A VERY LONG STRAGGLING STREAM. MOST OF THE SMALLER SPOTS ARE VERY UNSTABLE AND THE GROUP CHANGES IN APPEARANCE RAPIDLY. 5807 19060220 19060227 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SCATTERED GROUP, WHICH CHANGES QUICKLY. 5807*19060222 19060222 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5808 19060224 19060224 A SMALL SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 5808*19060224 19060224 A SMALL SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION, nf GROUP 5808. 5809*19060224 19060224 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5809 19060227 19060302 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SMALL CLUSTER. 5810 19060228 19060304 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5811 19060303 19060303 A FEW VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS. 5811*19060303 19060303 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, n OF GROUP 5811. 5812 19060227 19060301 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5813 19060228 19060228 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5813*19060302 19060302 A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. 5814 19060305 19060309 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5815 19060302 19060310 A REGULAR SPOT, A, ACCOMPANIED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 5815*19060307 19060307 A VERY SMALL SPOT, n GROUP 5815. 5816 19060306 19060318 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 5816*19060310 19060310 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS, n OF GROUP 5816. 5816#19060310 19060310 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, f GROUP 5816. 5817 19060308 19060316 A FEW SMALL SPOTS RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A COMPACT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, ON MARCH 10 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 5818 19060308 19060317 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. THE STREAM DEVELOPS QUICKLY, AND THE LEADER, A, BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP SOON DISAPPEARS, AND A REMAINS ALONE ON MARCH 12. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SOMETIMES SEEN NEAR IT LATER. 5819 19060311 19060311 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P GROUP 5817. 5819*19060314 19060314 A PAIR OF SPOTS SUDDENLY APPEARING CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 5820 19060314 19060319 A STRAIGHT STREAM DEVELOPING SUDDENLY AND DECLINING AS QUICKLY. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 5820*19060314 19060315 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5820#19060317 19060317 A SMALL SPOT, nf GROUP 5820. 5821*19060315 19060318 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5821 19060316 19060327 RETURN, OR RATHER NEW OUTBREAK, OF GROUP 5803. A NUMBER OF SPOTS AT FIRST SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA. THE SPOTS MOSTLY INCREASE AND COALESCE, FORMING BY MARCH 22 A VERY LARGE COMPLEX SPOT, A, WITH BUT LITTLE UMBRA. 5822 19060317 19060327 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS ALMOST AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE EQUATOR. THE TWO PRINCIPAL MEMBERS OF THE GROUP, A AND B, ARE REGULAR SPOTS. 5823 19060319 19060325 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, SOMETIMES WITH A VERY SMALL SPOT BETWEEN THEM. A REMAINS ALONE AFTER MARCH 21. 5824 19060319 19060324 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 23. 5825 19060319 19060327 A FEW FAINT SPOTS RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A SCATTERED STREAM WITH THREE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B, AND C. THE LEADER, A, DEVELOPS INTO A REGULAR SPOT. 5826 19060318 19060330 A VERY FINE PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. THEY HAVE COALESCED TO FORM ONE VERY LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, C, BY MARCH 21. C IS SOMETIMES ATTENDED BY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5827 19060319 19060322 A SMALL SPOT, A, S OF GROUP 5826. A IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 22, BUT A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IS SEEN IN ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD. 5828 19060319 19060327 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, F GROUP 5826. THE SPOT BECOMES COMPOSITE IN STRUCTURE, AND HAS BEGUN TO BREAK UP BY MARCH 24. IT HAS ENTIRELY BROKEN UP BY MARCH 26, AFTER WHICH IT QUICKLY DISAPPEARS. 5829 19060319 19060327 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, S OF GROUP 5822. 5830 19060321 19060401 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5831 19060322 19060327 A SMALL UNSTABLE CLUSTER, SF GROUP 5830. 5832 19060325 19060327 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 5822, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 26. 5833 19060319 19060325 A CLUSTER OF SMALL VERY FAINT SPOTS, P GROUP 5826. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN FROM MARCH 21 TO MARCH 23 INCLUSIVE. 5834 19060325 19060401 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP HAS CONDENSED INTO TWO CLUSTERS, A AND B, BY MARCH 29. THE LEADER, A, DEVELOPS INTO A REGULAR SPOT; B BREAKS UP, AND HAS ALMOST DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 31. 5835 19060326 19060327 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. 5836 19060327 19060401 A PAIR OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 29 OR 30. 5837 19060327 19060407 A FINE STREAM, CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A LONG TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 5838 19060330 19060402 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON APRIL 1. 5839 19060329 19060404 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, GRADUALLY EXTENDING INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5840 19060402 TWO SMALL SPOTS, N.P., GROUP 5839. 5841 19060401 19060404 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 5842 19060401 19060407 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, DEVELOPS INTO A REGULAR SPOT. 5843 19060331 19060412 RETURN OF GROUP 5817. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 5844 1906 5845 19060402 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5846 19060404 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5847 19060404 19060413 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN UNSTABLE STREAM. IT HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 11, BUT ONE OR TWO SMALL MARKINGS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON APRIL 12 AND 13. 5848 19060404 19060405 A SMALL SPOT. 5848*19060407 A SMALL SPOT. 5849 19060405 19060417 RETURN OF GROUP 5820. A FINE STREAM OF UNUSUAL FORM, THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE SPOTS, A AND B, BEING IN THE REAR OF THE STREAM. THE PRECEDING PART OF THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 13. A AND B ARE BOTH REGULAR IN SHAPE. 5849*19060407 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5850 19060407 19060408 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. 5850*19060407 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5851 19060408 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5852 19060407 19060418 A STRAGGLING STREAM, SOON BECOMING LITTLE MORE THAN TWO DISTANT SPOTS, A AND B, THE ORIGINAL LEADER AND REARGUARD. A ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 13. A FRESH OUTBURST OCCURS IN THE REAR OF THE GROUP ON APRIL 16. 5853 19060409 19060412 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 5854 19060410 19060418 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 10. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 11, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY APRIL 12, AS A STRAGGLING STREAM, WHICH SOON RESOLVES ITSELF INTO TWO DISTANT SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS BROKEN UP BY APRIL 16. 5854*19060415 19060415 A SMALL CLUSTER OF VERY FAINT SPOTS. 5855 19060414 19060426 RETURN OF GROUP 5826. A LARGE CLUSTER OF WHICH A CLOSE PAIR OF LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, FORMS THE CHIEF ITEM. A AND B ALONE REMAIN AFTER APRIL 25. 5855*19060422 19060422 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS sf GROUP 5855. 5855#19060423 19060423 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS sf GROUP 5855*. 5855@19060423 19060423 A VERY SMALL SPOT, f GROUP 5855#. 5856 19060416 19060418 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 5857 19060416 19060422 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 18 AND 21. 5857*19060420 19060420 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5858 19060423 19060430 RETURN OF GROUP 5842. A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A VERY IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 29. 5859 19060425 19060504 AN IRREGULAR STREAM, UNDERGOING GREAT AND FREQUENT CHANGES, FORMING IMMEDIATELY IN ADVANCE OF GROUP 5858. THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY APRIL 27, BUT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS BY APRIL 30 THOUGH THE TWO PARTS ARE STILL MEASURED TOGETHER. 5860 19060425 19060428 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, NF GROUP 5858. 5861 19060426 19060426 A VERY CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 5861*19060426 19060426 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5862 19060427 19060427 TWO SPOTS SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 5863 19060427 19060503 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, F, GROUP 5858. 5864 19060501 19060505 A SMALL STREAM, NF GROUP 5863. THE LEADING SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER OF THE STREAM. 5864*19060504 19060504 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 5865 19060504 19060516 RETURN OF GROUP 5854. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 5865*19060507 19060509 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 5866 19060504 19060517 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 5867 19060506 19060518 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP SUDDENLY DEVELOPES AFTER MAY 13 INTO A FINE STREAM, WHICH QUICKLY CONSISTS OF THREE LARGE SPOTS. A, B AND C. B AND C SOON COALESCE TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, D. 5868 19060507 19060509 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 5865. 5869 19060511 19060522 A VERY INTERESTING GROUP COMMENCING AS SOME FAINT MARKINGS. IT IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 12, BUT BREAKS OUT AFRESH ON MAY 13 AS A NEARLY CIRCULAR RING OF SPOTS, ENCLOSING A GREAT AREA OF THE SURFACE. THE SPOTS OF THE RING DRAW OUT ON MAY 14 AND 15, TO FORM A VERY COMPACT STREAM OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ARE THE LARGEST. 5869*19060513 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 5869. 5870 19060518 19060531 RETURN OF GROUP 5859. THIRD APPARITION. A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM, DIVIDED INTO THREE PRINCIPAL SECTIONS. A, THE PRINCIPAL SPOT IN THE FIRST SECTION, IS A LARGE WELL-DEFINED COMPOSITE SPOT. B, THE PRINCIPAL SPOT IN THE SECOND SECTION, SOON BREAKS UP INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE TWO FOLLOWING SECTIONS OF THE GROUP HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MAY 29. 5871 19060523 19060604 TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. A IS AT FIRST A DOUBLE SPOT, BUT ITS TWO SECTIONS SOON COMPLETELY COALESCE. B GRADUALLY BREAKS UP. 5872 19060524 19060602 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, F GROUP 5870. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER OF THE GROUP AT FIRST. THE GROUP DIMINISHES IN SIZE UP TO MAY 27, AFTER WHICH IT REVIVES, AND BECOMES A STRAIGHT STREAM OF THE ORDINARY TYPE, A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, BEING THE LARGEST. 5873 19060525 19060531 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5874 19060525 19060529 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MAY 28. 5875 19060526 19060527 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 5876 19060527 19060603 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. A AND B,THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBERS. 5877 19060529 19060604 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 29. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 30 OR 31,BUT HAS REVIVED BY JUNE 1. IT THEN CONSISTS OF A SMALL DARK SPOT, A,FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5877*19060601 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5878 19060531 THE ORIENTATION OF THE PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN AT KODAIKANAL ON THIS DAY APPEARS TO BE IN ERROR. 5878 19060531 19060610 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, IN A BEAUTIFUL SERPENTINE CURVE AT FIRST,BUT STRAIGHTENING OUT INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; A AND B,THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS,BEING THE LARGEST. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 8, BUT A REVIVAL TAKES PLACE IN THIS PART OF THE GROUP ON JUNE 9 AND 10. 5879*19060529 19060529 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5879 19060602 19060602 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 5879*. 5880 19060602 19060602 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5880*19060605 19060605 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F THE PLACE OF GROUP 5880. 5881 19060602 19060610 RETURN OF GROUP 5866. A NUMBER OF SMALL SCATTERED UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5882 19060603 19060611 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM,NP GROUP 5881. THE LEADER,A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE SPOT. 5883 19060604 19060607 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN TWO CLUSTERS,A AND B, F GROUP 5881. GROUPS 5881,5882 AND 5883 TOGETHER FORM A WIDE AREA OF SMALL DISTURBANCES. 5884 19060604 19060607 A REGULAR SPOT, DIMINISHING IN SIZE. 5884*19060606 19060607 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 5884. 5885 19060605 19060617 RETURN OF GROUP 5869. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS ON JUNE 9 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 5885*19060606 19060606 A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE EAST LIMB, IN THE MIDST OF BRIGHT FACULAE. 5886 19060608 19060614 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A SHORT BROAD STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY AND DEVELOPING QUICKLY. THE TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS ON THE NORTH SIDE OF THE STREAM ARE A AND B. B HAS DIVIDED INTO A CLUSTER OF SPOTS BY JUNE 11. OF WHICH THE LEADER. C. IS MEASURED BY ITSELF. AND THE REST OF THE CLUSTER, D, IS USUALLY MEASURED AS ONE OBJECT. 5887 19060614 19060617 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 5887*19060614 19060614 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5888*19060615 19060618 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P THE PLACE OF GROUP 5888. THE SPOT IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 16 AND 17. 5888#19060616 19060617 A SMALL SPOT, SP THE PLACE OF GROUP 5888, AND N THAT OF GROUP 5888* 5888 19060619 19060627 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 25 AND 26. 5889*19060616 19060617 A COMPACT CLUSTER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5889 19060619 19060630 RETURN OF GROUP 5871. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 5890 19060620 19060622 A FEW VERY SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS ON JUNE 20. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JUNE 21, AND THIS INCREASES IN SIZE AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 5891 19060619 19060624 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 23. 5891*19060622 19060623 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5891#19060622 19060623 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 5892 19060621 19060630 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON JUNE 22. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND BECOMES A SPARSE STREAM, CONSISTING OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, LOOSELY SCATTERED, BETWEEN THEM. A HAS BROKEN UP, AND B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 29. 5893 19060624 19060705 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A LONG TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE TRAIN HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 4, LEAVING A ALONE. 5893*19060626 19060626 THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5894 19060626 19060707 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM ALMOST AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE EQUATOR. A LARGE SPOT, A, FORMS NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP. 5895 19060626 19060707 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LAST SPOT OF THE TRAIN, B, IS ITS LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER. B HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 2. 5896 19060624 19060705 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY DEVELOPED BY JUNE 28, AND BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE TRAIN HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 2, LEAVING A ALONE. 5897 19060627 19060704 RETURN OF GROUP 5878. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 5898 19060628 19060711 RETURN OF GROUP 5886. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 5899 19060627 19060629 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 5894. 5900 19060626 19060702 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 5894. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 1. 5901 19060629 19060709 A CLOSE BUT IRREGULAR AND UNSTABLE CLUSTER, S OF GROUP 5898. IT HAS DIMINISHED TO A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL COMPANIONS, BY JULY 5. 5902 19060629 19060702 A REMARKABLE OUTBURST; A FINE STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY BETWEEN GROUPS 5893 AND 5896, AND DISAPPEARING AS SUDDENLY. 5903*19060703 19060708 RETURN OF GROUP 5885. THIRD APPARITION. A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 7. 5903 19060703 19060712 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP FOLLOWS GROUP 5898. 5904 19060702 19060710 A STRAIGHT STREAM, F GROUP 5901, AND S GROUP 5898. THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, A, IS A REGULAR SPOT AT THE REAR OF THE GROUP, AND ALONE REMAINS ON JULY 9. 5905 19060703 19060711 A LONG SPARSE STREAM, WITH THREE PRINCIPAL SPOTS, A, B AND C, OF WHICH C, THE LAST-FORMED, IS THE LEADER. A SOON DISAPPEARS, AND B HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 9, LEAVING C FOLLOWED BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A LONG STRAGGLING LINE. 5906 19060705 19060706 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 5901. THE GROUPS 5898, 5901, 5903, 5904, 5905 AND 5906, ARE PARTS OF ONE GREAT AREA OF DISTURBANCE OF WHICH 5898 IS THE LEADER. 5907 19060705 19060709 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 5908 19060705 19060715 A STREAM OF SPOTS UNDERGOING MUCH CHANGE. IT IS CHIEFLY ARRANGED IN TWO CLUSTERS, EACH OF WHICH COALESCES TO FORM A LARGE SPOT. OF THESE TWO SPOTS, A AND B, B, THE REAR SPOT, IS THE LARGER AND MORE REGULAR. 5909 19060708 19060716 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. ON JULY 8. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 10. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 13 OR 15. 5910 19060708 19060710 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JULY 8. ONLY A REMAINS ON JULY 10. 5911*19060710 19060710 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, P GROUP 5911. 5911 19060710 19060714 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5912 19060711 19060722 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 5913 19060712 19060724 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 5914 19060713 19060718 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. 5915 19060712 19060719 A NUMBER OF SPOTS MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER, P GROUP 5913. 5916 19060712 19060718 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5917 19060712 19060719 A REGULAR SPOT, A, QUICKLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 5918 19060715 19060724 A COMPACT CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, N OF GROUP 5916. IT DEVELOPS INTO A LONG SPARSE STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST, ARE THE MOST CONSIDERABLE MEMBERS. 5919 19060716 19060718 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5920 19060714 19060719 A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL CLOSE COMPANIONS. THE GROUP FORMS P GROUP 5915, AND MAKES UP WITH IT AND WITH GROUP 5913, A LONG PROCESSION. 5921 19060716 19060723 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, F GROUP 5917, AND MAKING UP WITH IT AND WITH GROUP 5912 A LONG PROCESSION. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 22. 5922 19060716 19060725 RETURN OF GROUP 5889. THIRD APPARITION. AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 5923 19060718 19060730 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, WITH CLOSE COMPANIONS. THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM, AND A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C, BY JULY 23. 5924 19060718 19060730 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A FEW CLOSE COMPANIONS, FOLLOWING GROUP 5923. 5925 19060720 19060721 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING, SF GROUP 5918, AND NEARLY IN THE PLACE OF GROUP 5916. 5926 19060720 19060727 RETURN OF GROUP 5893. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 5926a19060721 19060721 THE ORIENTATION OF THE PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN AT DEBRA DUN ON THIS DAY APPEARS TO BE IN ERROR. 5926*19060723 19060723 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NF GROUP 5926. 5927 19060723 19060723 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 5928 19060722 19060730 RETURN OF GROUP 5894. A REGULAR SPOT, A, QUICKLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. SEVERAL SMALL FAINT COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON JULY 27 AND 30. GROUPS 5923, 5924, 5926, AND 5928 MAKE UP A LONG, SOMEWHAT SPARSE PROCESSION. 5928*19060730 19060730 SEVERAL SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NP GROUP 5928. 5929 19060723 19060725 RETURN OF GROUP 5895. A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 24. 5930 19060724 19060731 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE AND IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 5931 19060725 19060807 RETURN OF GROUP 5898. THIRD APPARITION. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 5931*19060727 19060727 TWO SMALL VERY FAINT SPOTS, NP GROUP 5931. 5931#19060727 19060728 TWO SMALL SPOTS, S GROUP 5931. 5931@19060727 19060727 A FAINT DIFFUSED MARKING, F GROUP 5931. 5932 19060726 19060729 A SMALL SPOT, A, SOMETIMES WITH A DISTANT SMALL COMPANION. 5932*19060805 19060805 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, SP GROUP 5931. 5933 19060727 19060805 A SUDDEN OUTBURST. A FEW SMALL SPOTS AT FIRST, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A FINE STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, SOON BECOMES A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, THE REST OF THE STREAM REMAINING SMALL BY COMPARISON. 5934 19060729 19060731 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM; A, THE LAST SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE AND ALONE REMAINS ON JULY 31. 5935 19060807 19060819 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 5936 19060806 19060817 A SMALL SPOT, ON AUGUST 6, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 7. ON AUGUST 8 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 12, BUT HAS BROKEN OUT AFRESH BY AUGUST 13. THE NEW LEADER, B, INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. 5937 19060809 19060810 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 10. 5937*19060813 19060813 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. A SUDDEN OUTBURST. 5938 19060809 19060818 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADE, A, ALONE REMAINS BY AUGUST 16. 5939 19060815 19060817 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5940 19060816 19060817 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5941 19060818 19060818 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 5942 19060818 19060825 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 18. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DEVELOPS INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM, WITH, A, A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, AS LEADER, AND TWO SPOTS VERY CLOSE TOGETHER, B AND C, AS REAR GUARD. THE GROUP SPEEDILY DIMINISHES AFTER AUGUST 21. 5943 19060817 19060820 A DISTURBED AREA, S GROUP 5942, WHEREIN A FEW FAINT UNSTABLE MARKINGS FORM AND DISAPPEAR. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 19. 5944 19060821 19060901 RETURN OF GROUP 5933. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A LARGE SPOT, B, ON AUGUST 21. OTHER SPOTS BREAK OUT IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS FORMING, WITH A AND B, A SCATTERED IRREGULAR STREAM, MUCH INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. 5945 19060820 19060825 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 5942. 5946 19060822 19060904 RETURN OF GROUP 5931. FOURTH APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 5947 19060821 19060824 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING A BROKEN RING ON AUGUST 21. THE GROUP QUICKLY DIMINISHES. 5948 5949 5950 19060824 19060901 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, N, OF GROUP 5944. THE LEADER, A, BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT; AND B, A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, OCCUPIES THE REAR OF THE GROUP. 5951 19060824 19060830 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 5950. 5951a19060825 19060825 THE ORIENTATION OF THE PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN AT DEBRA DUN ON THIS DAY APPEARS TO BE IN ERROR. 5952 19060826 19060902 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FORMING P GROUP 5951. OCCASIONALLY A IS ACCOMPANIED BY SOME SMALL ATTENDANTS. GROUPS 5944, 5950, 5951 AND 5952 FORM ONE GREAT AREA OF DISTURBANCE. 5953 19060826 19060830 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 28. 5954 19060826 19060902 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 26. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 27. IT HAS REVIVED BY AUGUST 28, AS A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN ELLIPTICAL RING. THE GROUP GRADUALLY STRAIGHTENS OUT TO FORM A SHORT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 5954*19060827 19060827 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, S, OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 5954. 5955 19060829 19060830 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL ATTENDANT ON AUGUST 29. 5956 19060829 19060908 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, BREAKING UP, LITTLE BY LITTLE, TO FORM A COMPACT STREAM. 5957 19060830 19060904 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, NF GROUP 5956. 5958 19060830 19060909 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE MOST STABLE MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 5959 19060901 19060902 A SMALL SPOT. 5960 19060901 19060912 RETURN OF GROUP 5936. A REGULAR SPOT, A, AT FIRST QUICKLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. THE GROUP DEVELOPS LATER INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM, WHICH DIMINISHES AGAIN AFTER SEPTEMBER 9. 5961 19060904 19060915 RETURN OF GROUP 5938. AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING LATER INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY SEPTEMBER 8. 5961*19060907 19060907 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5962 19060906 19060908 A SMALL SPOT. 5963 19060907 19060910 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP APPEARS SUDDENLY, AND QUICKLY DIMINISHES. 5964 19060908 19060910 A SMALL SPOT. 5965 19060908 19060918 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, THAT HAVE DEVELOPED BY SEPTEMBER 11 INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FROM SEPTEMBER 13 TO SEPTEMBER 16, AFTER WHICH IT BREAKS UP. 5966 19060910 19060921 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, UNTIL SEPTEMBER 14, AFTER WHICH IT BREAKS UP. THE GROUP IS NOT DETECTED ON SEPTEMBER 19. 5967 19060911 19060914 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 11. A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPTEMBER 12. THE TWO SPOTS RAPIDLY INCREASE IN SIZE. 5968 19060911 19060924 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 5942. A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 5966, ON SEPTEMBER 11, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A VERY FINE STREAM. 5969 19060915 19060923 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN A LONG SPARSE STREAM. THE REAR SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST, BUT HAS BROKEN UP INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C, BY SEPTEMBER 19. 5970 19060916 19060919 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 5971 19060920 19060922 RETURN OF GROUP 5946. FIFTH APPARITION. TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPTEMBER 20. ONLY B REMAINS ON SEPTEMBER 21. 5972 19060921 19060925 A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH ALL THE MEMBERS ARE VERY SMALL, EXCEPT A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 25. 5973 19060921 19060924 A FEW SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 5974 19060922 19060922 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, F GROUP 5973. 5975 19060923 19060929 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON SEPTEMBER 23. THE GROUP HAS BECOME A SHORT STREAM OF THE USUAL TYPE BY SEPTEMBER 24, BUT UNDERGOES SEVERAL CHANGES ON SEPTEMBER 25 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND A NEW STREAM HAS FORMED BY SEPTEMBER 28, OF WHICH TWO NEW SPOTS, C AND D, ARE THE FIRST AND LAST MEMBERS. 5976 19060924 19060929 USUALLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. A SMALL CLUSTER ON SEPTEMBER 29. 5977 19060926 19060927 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 26. 5978 19060925 19060927 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 25. THE LEADER, A , ALONE REMAINS ON SEPTEMBER 26. 5979 19060927 19061002 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. SF GROUP 5983. 5980 19060927 19060927 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5981 19060926 19060927 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. ONLY B REMAINS ON SEPTEMBER 27. 5983 19060926 19061007 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE MOST STABLE MEMBERS OF THE GROUP. 5984 19060930 19061001 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5985 19060929 19061002 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 29; S OF GROUP 5979. 5986 19061003 19061005 A SUDDEN OUTBURST, P GROUP 5983, AND CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO SPOTS, A AND B, A BEING THE LARGER. THE FOUR GROUPS 5979, 5983, 5985, AND 5986 FORM PARTS OF A WIDE AREA OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE. 5987 19061004 19061007 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 5. 5987*19061007 19061007 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 5987. 5988 19061004 19061004 A SMALL SPOT. 5988*19061005 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5989 19061007 19061012 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY IN TWO SMALL CLUSTERS, A AND B. 5990 19061008 19061011 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH TWO VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS ON OCTOBER 9. 5991 19061008 19061008 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 5992 19061005 19061010 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 5. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN AGAIN UNTIL OCTOBER 10, WHEN TWO SPOTS ARE OBSERVED CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 5993 19061015 19061015 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5994 19061020 19061025 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION, B, ON OCTOBER 21 AND 22. 5995 19061021 19061021 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 5996 19061024 19061024 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5997 19061014 19061016 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, ON OCTOBER 14. THE GROUP IS SEEN AS A SHORT STREAM ON OCTOBER 15. ONLY A IS SEEN ON OCTOBER 16. 5998 19061016 19061016 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 5999*19061023 19061023 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, P, THE PLACE OF GROUP 5999. 5999 19061024 19061026 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 5999a19061025 19061026 THE ORIENTATION OF THE PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN AT DEBRA DUN ON THESE DAYS APPEARS TO BE IN ERROR. 6000 19061025 19061026 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 6000*19061027 19061027 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NP, THE PLACE OF GROUP 6000. 6001 19061029 19061110 A REVIVAL OF GROUP 5990. A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM UP TO THE TIME OF ITS REACHING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AFTER WHICH IT DIMINISHES, AND ITS COMPONENT SPOTS ARE SMALL AND WIDELY SCATTERED. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. 6002 19061031 19061102 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 6003 19061108 19061113 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 6004. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 11. 6004 19061108 19061119 A LARGE WELL-DEFINED COMPOSITE SPOT, A, OCCASIONALLY CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6005 19061110 19061110 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 6006 19061108 19061117 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IRREGULARLY ARRANGED, BUT PRINCIPALLY COLLECTED IN A SINGLE CLUSTER. THE GROUP FORMS A TRAIN TO GROUP 6004, AT FIRST CURVED, BUT LATER LONG AND STRAIGHT. 6007 19061110 19061115 A FEW SMALL, VERY FAINT, UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6008 19061110 19061118 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6009 19061111 19061114 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6010 19061112 19061117 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SHORT STREAM, P GROUP 6012. THE TWO LARGEST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE ALSO THE MOST STABLE. 6011 19061119 19061119 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6012 19061111 19061111 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6010. 6013 19061114 19061114 SOME SMALL SPOTS. 6014 19061116 19061118 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6015 19061118 19061127 A FINE WELL-DEFINED SPOT, A, WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS, EVENTUALLY BREAKING UP INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C, OF WHICH C SPEEDILY DISAPPEARS. A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ARE GENERALLY SEEN WITH THE PRINCIPAL SPOT. 6015*19061126 A SMALL SPOT,SF GROUP 6015. 6017 19061119 19061119 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 6018 19061119 19061119 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 6015. 6019 19061122 19061127 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 6020 19061122 19061122 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6021 19061123 19061205 A FINE DOUBLE SPOT, A, EVENTUALLY BREAKING UP INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C. A IS FOLLOWED BYA FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6022 19061125 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NF GROUP 6015. 6023 19061124 19061129 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 6021. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 6024 19061125 19061206 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6025 19061126 19061128 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6026 19061126 19061204 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 26. THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED BY NOVEMBER 28 INTO A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM. 6027 19061126 19061203 A SMALL SPOT A, NF GROUP 6030, AND FORMING WITH IT, AND WITH GROUP 6024, A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM. A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SOMETIMES SEEN NEAR A. 6028 19061127 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NP GROUP 6015. 6029 19061127 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 6030 19061126 19061204 A SMALL STREAM, F GROUP 6024. THE REAR SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST AT FIRST, BUT HAS BROKEN UP BY NOVEMBER 29, AFTER WHICH THE STREAM RAPIDLY DIMINISHES. 6031*19061201 19061202 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, S OF GROUP 6031. 6031 19061201 19061205 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 6032*19061201 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6032 19061202 19061208 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT, CHANGING STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 6 OR 7. 6033 19061204 19061206 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6034 19061205 19061212 RETURN OF GROUP 6004. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON DECEMBER 9 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 6035 19061208 19061211 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 9. 6035 19061208 19061211 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6036 19061207 19061210 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 10, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN F THE PLACE OF THE GROUP. 6037 19061205 19061213 RETURN OF GROUP 6006. A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6034. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 12. 6037*19061211 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 6037. 6039 19061208 19061209 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 8; ONE ON DECEMBER 9. 6041 19061209 19061214 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN RAPID CHANGE. 6042 19061211 19061222 A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM IN CONSTANT CHANGE. 6042*19061212 19061213 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING MIDWAY BETWEEN GROUPS 6041 AND 6042. 6043 19061212 19061213 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTALBE SPOTS. 6044 19061211 19061216 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SP GROUP 6041. THE TWO GROUPS FORM TOGETHER AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM FROM DECEMBER 11 TO DECEMBER 13. 6045 19061212 19061225 RETURN OF GROUP 6019. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT A, WITH OCCASIONAL SEVERAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6046 19061212 19061225 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, BEHIND WHICH A FINE TRAIN OF SPOTS GRADUALLY FORMS. THE TRIAN UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES. 6046*19061216 19061216 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NF GROUP 6046. 6047 19061215 19061218 A STRAGGLING CHANGING STREAM OF WHICH, A, THE LAST SPOT IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER. 6048 19061214 19061222 A STREAM OF SPOTS FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 6042 AND 6045. THE GROUP UNDERGOES GREAT CHANGES, BUT GRADUALLY BECOMES A STRAIGHT STREAM PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR. 6049 19061218 19061225 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6045 ON DECEMBER 18. THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED SUDDENLY BY DECEMBER 21 INTO A FINE STREAM OF WHICH A AND B, TWO LARGE SPOTS, ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. ON DECEMBER 25, THE SPOTS 6045A AND 6049A APPEAR AS IF FUSED TOGETHER BY THE EFFECT OF THE EXCESSIVE FORESHORTENING. THEY HAVE BEEN THEREFORE MEASURED AS A SINGLE OBJECT, AND THE POSITIONS AND AREAS OF THE TWO SEPARATE SPOTS HAVE BEEN INFERRED FROM THE ONE MEASURE BY ESTIMATION. 6051 19061219 19061229 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6051a19061221 19061221 THE ORIENTATION OF THE PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN AT DEHRA DUN ON THIS DAY APPEARS TO BE IN ERROR. 6052 19061221 19061225 RETURN OF GROUP 6026. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME VERY SMALL DISTANT AND UNSTABLE COMPANIONS, F GROUP 6051. A RAPIDLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 6053 19061221 19061231 A RAPIDLY CHANGING STREAM OF SPOTS FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 6051 AND 6052. THE GROUP BECOMES ONE LARGE, COMPLEX, AND ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM. 6054 19061225 19061227 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 25. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION, B, ON DECEMBER 26. 6055 19061226 19061226 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 6056 19061227 19070103 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOST OF THEM VERY SMALL, IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON 1906 DECEMBER 31 AND 1907 JANUARY 2. 6057 19061229 19061229 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6058 19061230 19070107 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. 6059 19061229 19070109 A MAGNIFICENT STREAM, CHIEFLY COMPOSED OF TWO VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. OF THESE A HAS BECOME REGULAR IN FORM BY JANUARY 3, AND B HAS BROKEN UP, AND THE GROUP HAS TAKEN THE FORM OF A GREAT CIRCULAR LEADER SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A LONG STRAIGHT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 6060 19061230 19061231 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 6053. 6061 19061231 19070104 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, SF GROUP 6060. 6062 19061231 19070107 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SP GROUP 6058. 6063 19061231 19070103 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SF GROUP 6058 AND F GROUP 6062, AND FORMING WITH THE LATTER GROUP AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. 6064 6065 19070101 19070103 A DISTURBED AREA WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6066 19070101 19070110 RETURN OF GROUP 6044. A REGULAR SPOT, A, ON JANUARY 1. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS FORM AROUND A, ON JANUARY 3, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND A HAS BROKEN UP BY JANUARY 8; THE GROUP NOW APPEARING AS AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6067 19070102 19070106 TWO SMALL CLUSTERS AT FIRST, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A VERY IRREGULAR STREAM, INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, A, IS IN THE REAR OF THE GROUP, AND DEVELOPS INTO A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS. 6068 19070103 19070106 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 4. 6069 19070103 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 6070 19070103 19070107 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 6071 19070102 19070105 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 6070. 6072 19070104 19070106 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 6073 19070104 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 6059. 6073*19070105 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, P THE PLACE OF GROUP 6073. 6074 19070108 19070114 RETURN OF GROUP 6045. THIRD APPARITION. FINAL STAGE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6074*19070116 19070116 SOME SMALL SPOTS, N, OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 6074. 6075 19070108 19070119 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6076 19070108 19070120 RETURN OF GROUP 6046. A VERY FINE IRREGULAR CLUSTER, F GROUP 6075. IT IS CONFUSED TOGETHER WITH GROUP 6075, THROUGH THE EFFECT OF FORESHORTENING, ON JANUARY 8. GROUPS 6075, 6076 AND 6077 TOGETHER REPRESENT THE RETURN OF GROUP 6046. 6077 19070109 19070120 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL COMPANIONS, SF GROUP 6076. 6078 19070110 A CONSIDERABLE STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE W. LIMB. 6079 19070109 19070114 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE BUT STRAIGHT STREAM. 6080 19070111 19070113 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. 6081 19070111 19070121 A FEW SMALL SPOTS AT FIRST, FORMING F GROUP 6076. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES AND BECOMES AN IRREGULAR UNSTABLE STREAM, OF WHICH A, A PAIR OF SPOTS MERGING INTO A DOUBLE SPOT, IS THE MOST PERMANENT MEMBER. A IS MEASURED AS TWO SPOTS ON JANUARY 12 AND 20. THE FOUR GROUPS, NOS 6075, 6076, 6077 AND 6081, MAKE UP TOGETHER A SINGLE DISTURBANCE OF MAGNIFICENT PROPORTIONS. 6082 19070112 19070116 A FEW VERY FAINT FORMLESS SPOTS, IRREGULARLY ARRANGED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 14. 6082*19070113 19070113 A FEW VERY FAINT SPOTS SIMILAR IN CHARACTER TO GROUP 6082, AND IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE. 6082#19070113 19070113 ANOTHER GROUP LIKE GROUP 6082 IN THE SAME REGION. 6082@19070115 19070115 A THIRD GROUP LIKE GROUP 6082 IN THE SAME REGION. 6083 19070113 19070117 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 14. 6084 6085 19070116 19070116 A SMALL SPOT, N, GROUP 6076. 6086 19070116 19070120 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6087 19070116 19070127 RETURN OF GROUP 6053. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6088 19070116 19070127 A FEW SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, ON JANUARY 22 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. 6089 19070116 19070119 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, F, GROUP 6088. 6090 19070120 19070201 POSSIBLY A RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 6061. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6090*19070127 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 6090. 6091 19070121 19070121 A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6092 19070121 19070121 A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6093 19070121 19070202 RETURN OF GROUP 6067. A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS, B AND C, BY JANUARY 23. B HAS BROKEN UP BY JANUARY 28, AND C BY JANUARY 31. SOME SMALL COMPANIONS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN. 6093*19070127 19070128 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 6093. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON JANUARY 28. 6093#19070131 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEARING, S GROUP 6093. 6094 19070122 19070125 A FEW SMALL SPOTS RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A CONSIDERABLE STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF THREE LARGE SPOTS, A, B, AND C, ON JANUARY 24 AND 25. 6095 19070123 19070123 SOME SMALL SPOTS, N GROUP 6087. 6096 19070122 19070131 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 6090 AND 6093. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 28, 29, AND 30. 6096a19070130 THERE IS AN UNCERTAINTY IN THE TIME OF THIS PHOTOGRAPH, AND THEREFORE IN THE LONGITUDES OF THE SPOTS AND FACULAE. 6097 19070124 19070128 PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 6072. A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A COMPANION ON JANUARY 25. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 27. 6098 19070125 19070205 RETURN OF GROUP 6059. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6098*19070201 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 6098. 6098#19070203 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NF GROUP 6098. 6099 19070128 19070207 A MAGNIFICENT STREAM, COMPOSED OF A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, WITH SINGLE UMBRA, FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE TRAIN OF SPOTS, AND WITH SMALLER ATTENDANTS NEAR, PRINCIPALLY TO THE SOUTH. 6100 19070128 19070208 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH THE CENTRAL PORTION DISAPPEARS BY FEBRUARY 2, LEAVING TWO CLUSTERS WIDELY SEPARATED. THE LEADER IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A; AND A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, B, FORMS NEAR THE REAR OF THE GROUP. 6100*19070201 A VERY SMALL SPOT, ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6100, BUT IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6101 19070129 19070208 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL TRAIN OF SPOTS. THE GROUP BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS BY FEBRUARY 4. 6102 19070130 19070203 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 30. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, HAS APPEARED PRECEDING THE REST OF THE GROUP BY JANUARY 31, AND MOVES FORWARD RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE. 6102*19070202 19070204 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 6103 19070204 19070216 RETURN OF GROUP 6075. A FINE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS SOMETIMES MEASURED IN TWO PARTS. 6104*19070204 19070205 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NP GROUP 6104. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 5. 6104 19070204 19070213 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, RAPIDLY INCREASING TO FORM A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM. A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, IS THE LEADER, AND ANOTHER, B, THE REARMOST OF THE GROUP. BOTH A AND B ARE SOMETIMES MEASURED AS EACH BEING TWO SEPARATE SPOTS. 6105 19070205 19070210 WITH GROUP 6106, A RETURN OF GROUP 6076. A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SF GROUP 6103. 6106 19070205 19070207 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, N GROUP 6105. 6107 19070205 19070217 RETURN OF GROUP 6091. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6108 19070206 19070219 RETURN OF GROUP 6081. A MAGNIFICENT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, AND B, C AND D ARE VERY LARGE SPOTS IN THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP. THE INDIVIDUAL SPOTS UNDERGO MANY CHANGES, COALESCING AND DIVIDING AGAIN, SO THAT EVEN THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS CANNOT BE CLEARLY IDENTIFIED FOR ANY LONG TIME. 6109 19070208 19070213 A SOMEWHAT SPARSE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING, NP GROUP 6103. 6110 19070208 19070209 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. 6111 19070210 19070216 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, AND REAR SPOT B, BECOME LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS. 6112 19070211 19070215 RETURN OF GROUP 6088. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 14. 6113 19070213 19070223 RETURN, OR RATHER REVIVAL, OF GROUP 6087. A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE TRAIN UNDERGOES A GREAT DEVELOPMENT ON FEBRUARY 17, AND THE GROUP HAS TAKEN THE FORM OF TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS BY FEBRUARY 20. THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER SOON DISAPPEARS. 6113*19070215 19070215 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6113, BUT IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6113#19070223 19070225 SOME SMALL SPOTS, N GROUP 6113, QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE TWO LARGEST. ONLY B REMAINS IN SIGHT ON FEBRUARY 25. 6114 19070215 19070215 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6115 19070216 19070222 RETURN OF GROUP 6090. THIRD AND FINAL APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 19 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 6116 19070218 19070221 A FEW SMALL SPOTS 6116*19070219 19070219 A SMALL SPOT, SP GROUP 6116. 6117 19070217 19070301 RETURN OF GROUP 6093. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 6118 19070220 19070301 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, THAT RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE, AND DEVELOPS INTO A FINE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A, AND B, ARE THE TWO LARGEST, AND EVENTUALLY BECOME VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOTS. 6119 19070220 19070227 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, N GROUP 6115. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE, AND FINALLY BECOMES A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 6120 19070221 19070226 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6121 19070221 19070302 A REVIVAL, RATHER THAN A RETURN, OF GROUP 6102*. A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 6122 19070223 19070224 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6123 19070224 19070306 RETURN OF GROUP 6099. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, GENERALLY WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 6124 19070225 19070227 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 6125 19070226 19070303 RETURN, OR MORE PROBABLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6101. A FEW SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST MEMBER OF THE GROUP, BUT HAS DISAPPEARED BEFORE MARCH 3. 6126 19070226 19070226 A VERY SMALL SPOT, PROBABLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6116. 6127 19070228 19070304 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SCATTERED TRAIN. 6128 19070228 19070305 A COMPACT CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 6129 19070228 19070307 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. 6130 19070228 19070302 RETURN OF GROUP 6104. SOME SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6131 19070228 19070309 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6132 19070302 19070302 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6133 19070301 19070303 A SMALL SPOT. 6134 19070302 19070313 PERHAPS A RETURN OF THE LEADING SPOT OF GROUP 6111, BUT MORE PROBABLY A NEW FORMATION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6135 19070303 19070313 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 6136 19070303 19070315 RETURN OF GROUP 6103. THIRD APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL COMPANIONS, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 6135. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE AFTER MARCH 3, A LARGE ILL-DEFINED MASS FORMING JUST BEHIND A. 6137 19070304 19070307 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM SUDDENLY APPEARING, NF GROUP 6129, AND QUICKLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. 6138 19070303 19070311 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS WHEN FIRST SEEN. THE GROUP SUDDENLY INCREASES IN SIZE BY MARCH 8, AND BECOMES A FINE CLUSTER, THAT EVENTUALLY STRAIGHTENS OUT INTO AN ORDINARY STREAM. 6139*19070305 19070317 RETURN, OR PERHAPS ONLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6107. A SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 6139. 6139 19070305 19070312 A REGULAR SPOT, A, CROSSED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE. IT IS USUALLY ATTENDED BY SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS AND IT DIMINISHES STEADILY FROM DAY TO DAY. 6140 19070305 19070317 RETURN OF GROUP 6108. THIRD APPARITION. A VERY FINE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL ATTENDANTS, F GROUP 6139. 6140*19070308 19070308 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6140, BUT IN THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6141 6142 19070307 19070313 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, NP GROUP 6140. 6143 19070309 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P GROUP 6144. 6144 19070308 19070310 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6145 19070312 19070319 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, OCCASIONALLY WITH A SMALL COMPANION. 6145 19070315 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 6145. 6146 19070314 19070316 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 6147 19070314 19070316 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 6146. 6148 6149 6150 19070315 19070325 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SCATTERED STREAM. THE GROUP GRADUALLY INCREASES IN SIZE AS IT CROSSES THE DISC. 6151 19070315 19070316 RETURN OF GROUP 6119. A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6152 19070315 19070322 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6153 19070317 19070318 RETURN OF GROUP 6118. A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6154 19070317 19070322 RETURN OF GROUP 6117. THIRD APPARITION. A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6155 19070323 19070329 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING QUICKLY INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON MARCH 24, A AND B, ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT. ONLY A REMAINS ON MARCH 27. 6155*19070326 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6155#19070326 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6156 19070329 19070409 RETURN OF GROUP 6134. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 1. 6157 19070331 19070404 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. 6158 19070401 19070410 AT FIRST A FEW SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6156. THE GROUP DEVELOPS LATER INTO A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, AND FINALLY INTO A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR TRAIN. 6159 19070331 19070412 A VERY FINE GROUP. THE LEADER, A, IS A VERY LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, AND IS FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE TRAIN, IN WHICH B AND C ARE THE TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS. B SOON BREAKS UP, AND DISAPPEARS. 6160 19070401 19070404 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, SOMETIMES WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 6161 19070402 19070413 RETURN OF GROUP 6140. FOURTH AND LAST APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 10. 6162 19070329 SOME SMALL SPOTS. 6163 19070403 SOME SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6157. 6164*19070405 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 6164. 6164 19070405 19070415 APPARENTLY A REVIVAL, NOT A RETURN, OF GROUP 6145. A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE GROUP UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES. 6164#19070405 19070405 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, S GROUP 6164. 6165 19070407 19070415 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, N OF GROUP 6164. OTHER SMALL SPOTS ARE SOMETIMES SEEN NEAR. 6167 19070411 19070411 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6164. 6168 19070413 19070419 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A LARGE IRREGULAR CLUSTER RAPIDLY DEVELOPING IN SIZE, AND BECOMING AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 6169 19070413 19070415 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 6170 19070418 19070425 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR, STRAGGLING STREAM. 6171 19070419 19070420 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6172 19070419 19070430 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 6173 19070422 19070422 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6174 19070421 19070423 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 6175 19070424 19070501 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 6175*19070428 A SMALL SPOT, ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6175, BUT IN THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6176 19070419 19070425 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 6170. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 22 AND 24. 6177 19070425 19070426 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 6178 19070424 19070425 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6175. 6179 19070427 19070428 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS, N GROUP 6175. 6180 19070430 19070503 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6181 19070503 19070510 A FINE STREAM, TAKING ITS RISE NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISC AND DEVELOPING RAPIDLY. THE CHIEF SPOT, A, IS IN THE REAR OF THE GROUP. 6183 19070503 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6184 19070503 19070515 RETURN OF GROUP 6168. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH COMPANIONS FORMING CLOSELY AROUND IT. 6184*19070507 19070508 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 6184. 6185 19070506 19070515 A VERY SMALL SPOT, AT FIRST RAPIDLY DEVELOPING TO BECOME A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LARGEST SPOT, A, IS REGULAR; THE NEXT LARGEST, B, IS A FAINTER COMPOSITE SPOT. 6186 19070507 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6187 19070511 19070519 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SLOWLY GROWING STREAM. 6188 19070514 19070519 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 18. 6188*19070517 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6189 19070516 19070525 RETURN OF GROUP 6172. A REGULAR SPOT, A. 6190 19070519 19070529 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 26 AND 27. 6191 19070520 19070526 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6192 19070521 19070522 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6193 19070522 19070524 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6194 19070523 19070525 A SMALL SPOT FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6194 19070525 THE POSITION ANGLES AND THEREFORE THE HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDES AND LATITUDES ARE ONLY APPROXIMATE ON THIS DAY. 6195 19070525 19070530 A REGULAR SPOT, A. 6195*19070529 19070530 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6195. 6196 19070527 19070527 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6197 19070529 19070609 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6198 19070602 19070605 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6199 19070602 19070609 SOME SMALL FAINT SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 6. 6200 19070605 19070607 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6200*19070605 19070607 RETURN, OR MORE PROBABY A REVIVAL, OF GROUP 6187. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6201 19070608 19070618 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6201 19070608 19070618 THE LONGITUDES OF THE SPOTS AND FACULAE UPON THIS PHOTOGRAPH APPEAR TO BE IN ERROR, PROBABLY DUE TO A MISTAKE IN THE TIME. 6202 19070610 19070620 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 6202 19070610 19070620 THE POSITION-ANGLES AND THEREFORE THE HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDES AND LATITUDES ARE ONLY APPROXIMATE ON THIS DAY. THE DEFINITION IS ALSO VERY BAD, AND THE AREAS ARE PROBABLY TOO LARGE IN CONSEQUENCE. 6203 19070613 19070618 A DISTURBED REGION SHOWING ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6204 19070610 19070619 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SMALL CLUSTER. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 11. RETURN OF GROUP 6194. 6205 19070613 19070625 A STRAIGHT AND ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF THREE VERY LARGE SPOTS, A, B, AND C, NEARLY EQUAL IN SIZE, AND NEAR EACH OTHER, BESIDE A MULTITUDE OF SMALL ATTENDANTS. THE LEADER, A, IS A NEARLY CIRCULAR SPOT, AND WAS THE BEST DEFINED MEMBER OF THE GROUP; THE REAR SPOT, C, IS INTERSECTED BY A NUMBER OF BRIGHT BRIDGES. A IS SOMETIMES MEASURED WITH B, AND B WITH C. 6206 19070617 19070617 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P GROUP 6201. 6208 19060625 19060627 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6209 19070625 19070701 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 6210 19070702 19070703 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 2. ONLY A, THE LEADER, REMAINS ON JULY 3. 6211 19070702 19070712 A FINE BUT SOMEWHAT IRREGULAR AND UNSTABLE STREAM OF SPOTS. 6211*19060705 19060705 A SMALL SPOT AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE, NP, FROM GROUP 6211. 6212 19070703 19070706 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6213 19070711 19070715 A FEW SMALL SPOTS GRADUALLY DEVELOPING INTO A PAIR OF CLUSTERS. 6214 19070709 19070717 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 10 OR 14. 6215 19070711 19070723 RETURN OF GROUP 6205. A VERY LARGE WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6216 19070712 19070723 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A VERY FINE IRREGULAR TRAIN OF SPOTS UNDERGOING CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6217 19070712 19070715 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 13 AND 14. 6218 19070720 19070723 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 6219 19070720 19070721 A SMALL SPOT. 6220 19070720 19070801 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, B, CLOSE TO IT ON THE SOUTH. THE TWO GRADUALLY MERGE TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, C. A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS ACCOMPANY THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS. 6221 19070723 19070726 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 25. 6222 19070722 19070724 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A CLOSE PAIR, N OF GROUP 6221. ONLY A REMAINS ON JULY 24. 6223 19070724 19070804 A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE STREAM UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE, DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER JULY 28, AND REVIVING AGAIN LATER. 6223*19070725 19070726 A SMALL SPOT FORMING ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6223, BUT IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6223#19070726 A VERY SMALL SPOT FORMING ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6223, BUT IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6223@19070729 19070730 SOME SMALL SPOTS FORMING ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6223, BUT IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6224 19070725 A SMALL SPOT. 6225 19070727 19070805 A DOUBLE SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 30 AND 31. 6226 19070728 19070808 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 6227 19070729 19070807 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6228 19070801 19070802 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 6229 19070803 19070805 A SMALL SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 6230 19070805 19070808 SOME SMALL SPOTS RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A LARGE REGULAR SPOT A, FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR TRAIN. 6231 19070805 19070813 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. MOST OF THEM HAVE COMBINED BY AUGUST 9 TO FORM TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. 6232 19070805 19070814 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 13. 6233 19070807 19070819 RETURN OF GROUP 6215. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6233*19070814 SOME SMALL SPOTS, NP GROUP 6233. 6233@19070816 19070818 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, N OF GROUP 6233. 6234 19070810 19070822 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6234 19070810 19070822 THE PHOTOGRAPH ON THIS DAY WAS TAKEN THROUGH CLOUD AND IS VERY BADLY DEFINED. THE MEASURES ARE ONLY APPROXIMATE. 6235 19070813 19070816 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A SMALL COMPANION LIES BETWEEN THEM ON AUGUST 13. 6236 19070814 19070825 A VERY FINE LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ARE RATHER LOOSELY SCATTERED, N AND F OF A, WHILST THE REAR OF THE GROUP IS MADE UP OF A COMPACT CLUSTER OF SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE LARGEST. B HAS BROKEN UP BY AUGUST 22. 6237 19070815 19070818 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, N GROUP 6233. 6238 19070815 19070826 RETURN OF GROUP 6220. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6239 19070819 19070830 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6239*19070824 19070826 A CLUSTER OF SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 6239, AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE. 6240 19070821 19070822 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6240, BUT NORTH OF THE EQUATOR. 6240*19070822 19070829 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, N OF GROUP 6239. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 24, 25, OR 26. 6241 19070827 19070908 RETURN OF GROUP 6231. A VERY FINE CONTINUOUS STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF THREE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A, B, AND C. A AND B ARE SOMETIMES MEASURED TOGETHER. 6241*19070830 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6242 19070828 19070829 A SMALL SPOT. 6242*19070828 A SMALL SPOT. 6243 19070831 19070909 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 31, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 1. IT HAS REVIVED AGAIN BY SEPTEMBER 2 AS A SPARSE STREAM CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. THE LEADER, A, SOON BECOMES THE CHIEF MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 6244 19070901 19070902 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING IN A FACULOUS REGION. 6245 19070902 19070913 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE, IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM, UNDERGOING SEVERAL CHANGES. THE GROUP CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF THE LEADER, A, A SMALL STABLE SPOT, AND B, A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT UNDERGOING DISINTEGRATION. 6246 19070905 19070911 RETURN OF GROUP 6237. A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS PRECEDING IT. 6247 19070906 19070916 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT; A, FREQUENTLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6248 19070905 19070909 A SMALL SPOT, NF GROUP 6243. 6248*19070905 A SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 6248. 6249 19070907 19070915 A COMPACT CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. RETURN OF GROUP 6234. 6250 19070908 19070910 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, MEASURED TOGETHER ON SEPTEMBER 8. 6251 19070908 19070914 A STRAIGHT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, SUDDENLY FORMING A LITTLE WEST OF THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE SOON LEFT ALONE. THE REAR SPOT, B, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AND THE CHIEF MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 6252 19070906 19070918 A VERY VARIABLE GROUP, F GROUP 6247. AT FIRST IT CONSISTS OF A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES FROM DAY TO DAY UNTIL SEPTEMBER 12, WHEN A GREAT CLUSTER OF SPOTS SUDDENLY APPEARS. THE CLUSTER GRADUALLY LENGTHENS OUT TO FORM A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, WITH THREE PRINCIPAL COMPOSITE SPOTS, B, C, AND D. 6253 19070909 19070917 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, OF WHICH B DISAPPEARS BEFORE SEPTEMBER 11. 6253*19070910 19070911 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P GROUP 6353. 6254 19070907 19070912 A SMALL VARIABLE SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 10. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 12, BUT A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN ON THAT DAY AT SOME DISTANCE F ITS PLACE. 6255 19070911 19070922 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL COMPANIONS ROUND IT, MAKING UP WITH IT, AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. RETURN OF GROUP 6236. 6255*19070918 19070918 A SMALL SPOT A GOOD WAY, NP GROUP 6255. 6256 19070911 19070924 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6257 19070912 19070912 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 6258 19070917 19070918 A SMALL SPOT. 6259 19070917 19070928 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LAST SPOT OF THE GROUP, A, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AND THE LARGEST AND BEST DEFINED MEMBER OF IT. 6260 19070917 19070929 A LARGE CIRCULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. A IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE, AND SLOWLY DIVIDES TO FORM TWO SEPARATE SPOTS, B AND C. RETURN OF GROUP 6244. 6261*19070918 19070918 A VERY SMALL SPOT, N OF GROUP 6261. 6261 19070919 19070923 A SMALL SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6262 19070918 19070923 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 22. 6263 19070918 19070929 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6263 19070929 THE POSITION-ANGLES AND THEREFORE THE HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDES AND LATITUDES ARE ONLY APPROXIMATE ON THIS DAY. 6263*19070929 19070930 A SMALL SPOT FORMING WHEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB BEHIND GROUP 6263. IT HAS DEVELOPED INTO A CONSIDERABLE STREAM BY SEPTEMBER 30. 6264 19070921 19070923 A SMALL SPOT. 6265 19070924 19070930 A FINE STREAM ARISING SUDDENLY, F GROUP 6259, AND RAPIDLY DEVELOPING UNTIL IT UNITES WITH IT TO FORM AN UNUSUALLY LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS OF THE STREAM ARE A AND B, TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS. BOTH HAVE BROKEN UP BY SEPTEMBER 29. 6266 19070926 19071002 RETURN OF GROUP 6241. THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL FAINT SPOT. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 29 AND 30. 6267 19070925 19071007 RETURN OF GROUP 6243. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 3. 6267*19071001 19071001 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, DISTANTLY FOLLOWING GROUP 6267. 6268 19070926 19071003 A SMALL STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST; A BEING A REGULAR SPOT, AND THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMEBER OF THE GROUP. 6268*19070928 19071001 A VERY SMALL SPOT, ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6268, BUT IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 29 AND 30. 6268#19071002 19071002 A SMALL SPOT, NP THE PLACE OF GROUP 6268*. 6269*19070925 19070925 A PAIR OF VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 6269. 6269 19070927 19071007 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE MOST STABLE. THE GROUP INCREASES UP TO OCTOBER 3, AND DIMINISHES AFTERWARDS. 6270 19070927 19071004 A SMALL SPARSE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B ARE THE LARGEST. ONLY A REMAINS ON OCTOBER 2, BUT IT HAS BROKEN UP BY OCTOBER 3, AND B HAS REAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 4. 6271 19070930 19071009 A REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A SMALL COMPANION. 6271*19071010 19071010 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NF GROUP 6271. 6272 19071002 19071007 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON OCTOBER 3. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 6, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN F ITS PLACE ON OCTOBER 6 AND 7. 6273 19071002 19071009 RETURN OF GROUP 6247. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SURROUNDED, AFTER OCTOBER 5, BY A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 6273 19071007 19071008 THE POSITION-ANGLES, AND THEREFORE THE HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDES AND LATITUDES, ARE ONLY APPROXIMATE ON THESE DAYS. 6274 19071001 19071004 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A THIRD, C, IS SEEN WITH THEM ON OCTOBER 2, AND ALONE REMAINS ON OCTOBER 4. 6275 19071008 19071012 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM FORMING SP GROUP 6273. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. ONLY A REMAINS BY OCTOBER 11. 6276 19071008 19071018 A FEW SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS ROUND IT. 6277 19071009 19071018 AN IRREGULAR STREAM FORMING F GROUP 6276, AND FINALLY JOINING WITH IT. THE REAR SPOT, A, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER. THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE. 6278 19071010 19071017 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FORMING IN ADVANCE OF GROUP 6276. A FEW COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON OCTOBER 14. THE THREE GROUPS, 6276, 6277, AND 6278, MAKE UP A VERY LONG STRAIGHT AND CONTINUOUS STREAM THAT UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6279 19071009 19071020 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 6279*19071012 19071014 SOME SMALL SPOTS, N OF GROUP 6279. 6280 19071009 19071021 RETURN OF GROUP 6256. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS, ON OCTOBER 16 AND 17. 6281 19071011 19071018 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 6279. 6281*19071013 19071014 A SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6281, AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE. 6282 19071013 19071025 A LARGE VERY IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, OR CLUSTER OF SPOTS, A, GRADUALLY LENGTHENING OUT INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A BREAKS UP INTO THREE CHIEF PORTIONS, B, C, AND D, OF WHICH THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE, B, IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 6283 19071014 19071027 RETURN OF GROUP 6259. A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS ON BOTH SIDES OF IT. THE GROUP TENDS TO DRAW OUT INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH B, AN UNSTABLE COMPOSITE SPOT, IS THE LAST ON OCTOBER 19. 6284 19071015 19071026 A LARGE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT, OR CLUSTER OF SPOTS, A, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 6283. RETURN OF GROUP 6265. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C, BY OCTOBER 22. 6284*19071027 19071027 A SPOT FORMING CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB, N OF GROUP 6284. 6285 19071016 19071027 AN IRREGULAR GROUP, F GROUP 6284. THE FOUR GROUPS, 6282, 6283, 6284, AND 6285, MAKE UP A VERY LONG, STRAIGHT, AND ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM, OR PROCESSION, OF DISTURBANCES. ITS MOST STABLE MEMBER IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A; SOUTH OF WHICH TWO UNSTABLE COMPOSITE SPOTS, B AND C, FORM TOGETHER WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. C HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 23, AND B BY OCTOBER 25. 6286 19071020 19071024 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, N OF GROUP 6282. 6287 19071020 19071021 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 6288 19071022 19071024 RETURN OF GROUP 6269. A SMALL SPOT, A. 6289 19071022 19071102 RETURN OF GROUP 6267. A REGULAR SPOT, A. SOME SMALL SPOTS FORM BEHIND A ON OCTOBER 27, AND FORM A TRAIN TO IT. 6290 19071028 19071028 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6291 19071027 19071108 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS SOON LENGTHENING OUT INTO A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER SPOT, A, ALONE REMAINS ON NOVEMBER 5, BUT HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 6, WHEN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP HAS BROKEN OUT AFRESH. 6292 19071031 19071105 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A CIRCULAR CLUSTER WHICH SOON LENGTHEN OUT INTO A SHORT STREAM, OF WHICH, A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST MEMBER. 6293 19071101 19071101 THE POSITION-ANGLES, AND THEREFORE THE HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDES AND LATITUDES, ARE ONLY APPROXIMATE ON THIS DAY. 6293 19071102 19071111 RETURN OF GROUP 6276. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6294 19071102 19071107 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, NP GROUP 6293. 6295 19071104 19071107 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 6293. IT REVIVES, AS GROUP 6304, ON NOVEMBER 12, AFTER AN INTERVAL OF FOUR DAYS. 6296 19071104 19071115 A DOUBLE SPOT, A, F GROUP 6295, AND FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. A IS MEASURED IN TWO PARTS ON NOVEMBER 7 AND 8. 6297 19071105 19071112 RETURN OF GROUP 6279. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6298 19071107 19071115 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM, WHICH DEVELOPS BY NOVEMBER 12 INTO A LARGE RING-SHAPED GROUP, AND LATER STILL INTO A LARGE LEADER SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT TRAIN. 6298a19071110 19071110 THE ORIENTATION OF THE WIRES, AND THEREFORE THE HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDES AND LATITUDES, APPEAR TO BE IN ERROR ON THIS DAY. 6299 19071109 19071110 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6300 19071109 19071121 A MAGNIFICENT GROUP COMPOSED OF A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY AN IMMENSE CLUSTER, WITH ITS LONGER AXIS AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE EQUATOR. RETURN OF GROUP 6286. 6301 19071109 19071120 RETURN OF GROUP 6282. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON NOVEMBER 18. THE GROUP LIES SF GROUP 6300, WITH WHICH IT IS FINALLY INVOLVED. 6302 19071111 19071111 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6303 19071110 19071120 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6304 19071112 19071112 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, SF GROUP 6296. A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6295, AFTER AN INTERVAL OF FOUR DAYS. 6305 19071111 19071114 RETURN OF GROUP 6283. THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 6303. 6306 19071117 19071122 A RING-SHAPED GROUP OF SPOTS, F GROUP 6300. IT SPEEDILY CONDENSES INTO A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A NUMBER OF CLOSE COMPANIONS. 6307 19071117 19071123 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 22. 6308 19071119 19071125 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A VERY IRREGULAR STREAM. 6309 19071120 19071121 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 6310 19071122 19071201 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 25-27, OR NOVEMBER 29. 6311 19071121 19071126 RETURN OF GROUP 6292. A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 24, BUT A FRESH OUTBURST OCCURS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAY. 6312 19071121 19071128 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM. 6313 19071121 19071124 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 6314 19071124 19071126 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. REVIVAL AFTER TWO DAYS OF GROUP 6209. 6315 19071124 19071128 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6316 19071130 19071212 RETURN OF GROUP 6295. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN, WHICH GRADUALLY DISAPPEARS. 6317 19071205 19071208 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 6317*19071206 A VERY SMALL SPOT, S GROUP 6317. 6318 19071205 19071217 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. WITH GROUP 6319, THE RETURN OF GROUP 6300. 6318*19071210 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 6318. 6319 19071206 19071218 WITH GROUP 6318, THE RETURN OF GROUP 6300. A FINE TRIANGULAR GROUP CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 6318. TWO VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, OF WHICH A IS DUE SOUTH OF B FORM THE BASE OF THE TRIANGLE. THE APEX LEADS THE GROUP. 6319*19071211 19071214 A SMALL SPOT, N OF GROUP 6319, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 12. 6320 19071207 19071212 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM, SF GROUP 6316, AND S GROUP 6317, AND MAKING UP WITH THEM BOTH A SPARSE IRREGULAR PROCESSION. 6321 19071208 19071217 RETURN OF GROUPS 6301 AND 6306. THIRD APPARITION. A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, F GROUP 6318 AND 6319, AND MAKING UP WITH THEM A VERY FINE PROCESSION. 6321*19071216 SOME SMALL SPOTS FAR N OF GROUP 6321. 6322 19071209 19071216 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. 6323 19071214 19071222 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM ON DECEMBER 14. THE GROUP DEVELOPES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND BECOMES A FINE STREAM, OF WHICH THE FIRST AND LAST, A AND B, TWO VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, ARE BY FAR THE MOST CONSPICUOUS MEMBERS. A HAS PASSED OUT OF SIGHT AT THE WEST LIMB BY DECEMBER 22. 6324 19071215 19071227 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN. RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 6310. 6324*19071221 19071222 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6324. 6324#19071226 19071227 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6324. A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6324*. 6325 19071218 19071222 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 6326 19071220 19071230 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6327 19071222 19071224 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. ONLY B REMAINS ON DECEMBER 24. 6328 19071222 19071227 A VERY SMALL SPOT, FORMING S OF GROUP 6324, AND RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A SHORT STREAM. ONLY A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, REMAIN ON DECEMBER 24, AND ONLY A ON DECEMBER 26. 6329 19071225 19080101 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. 6329*19071231 19080101 SOME SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6329. 6330 19071226 19071227 SOME SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6326. 6331 19071227 19080101 A SMALL SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6331*19071228 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NF GROUP 6331. 6331#19071231 19080101 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6331. 6332 19071230 SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 6331. 6333 19071230 19080108 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN AN IRREGULAR AND VERY CHANGEFUL STREAM. PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 6322. 6333*19080105 19080105 A VERY SMALL SPOT, N GROUP 6333. 6334 19071231 19080101 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6334*19080102 A SMALL SPOT, F THE PLACE OF GROUP 6334. 6335 19080102 19080110 RETURN OF GROUP 6318. FOURTH APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT, A. 6336 19080102 19080106 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, S GROUP 6335 AND P GROUP 6337. 6337 19080102 19080107 A SPOT RAPIDLY DIMINISHING. 6338 19080103 19080114 RETURN OF GROUP 6319. FOURTH APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A LONG SCATTERED TRAIN. 6339 19080103 19080112 AN IRREGULAR STREAM, S GROUP 6338. 6340 19080103 19080105 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 6340*19080105 19080108 SOME SMALL FAINT SPOTS S OF GROUP 6340. THE SEVEN GROUPS, NOS. 6335, 6336, 6337, 6338, 6339, 6340 AND 6340 MAKE UP A DOUBLE "PROCESSION," THE GROUPS BEING ARRANGED IN TWO CLOSE PARALLEL LINES. REVIVAL OF GROUP 6321. 6341 19080104 19080105 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 6342*19080102 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P THE PLACE OF GROUP 6342. 6342 19080104 19080109 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP STEADILY INCREASES IN SIZE. 6342A19080106 THE POSITION-ANGLES, AND THEREFORE THE HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDES AND LATITUDES, ARE ONLY APPROXIMATE ON THIS DAY. 6342#19080105 19080105 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6343 19080105 19080108 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 6344 19080105 19080117 RETURN OF GROUP 6323A. A REGULAR SPOT, A. 6344*19080111 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6345 19080106 19080106 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 6346 19080110 19080116 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 6347 19080111 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 6348 19080111 19080114 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 6349 19080111 19080123 RETURN OF GROUP 6324. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 6349*19080118 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6350 19080116 19080118 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, SOMETIMES WITH ONE OR TWO SMALLER SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. 6351 19080117 19080119 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS PASSED OUT OF SIGHT AT THE WEST LIMB BY JANUARY 19. 6352 19080117 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6353 19080117 19080127 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JANUARY 17 AND 18. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 19 AND 20, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY JANUARY 21 AND RAPIDLY DEVELOPS INTO A FINE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, C AND D, ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 6353 19080119 19080120 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6353. 6353A19080121 A MISTAKE BETWEEN MAURITIUS AND GREENWICH TIME HAS APPARENTLY BEEN MADE IN DATING THIS PHOTOGRAPH. THE TIME HAS THERFORE BEEN ADVANCED 3H 50M CORRESPONDING TO THE LONGITUDE OF MAURITIUS EAST OF GREENWICH, AND THE HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDES OF THE SPOTS AND FACULAE HAVE BEEN DIMINISHED BY 2.1 DEGREES. 6354 19080122 19080127 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6354*19080127 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6354#19080201 A SMALL SPOT, N OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 6354. 6355 19080124 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 6356 19080129 19080207 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6357 19080130 19080203 RETURN OF GROUP 6338. FIFTH AND LAST APPARITION. A SMALL SPOT, A. 6358 19080201 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6359 19080203 19080206 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FAINT SPOT PRECEDING IT. A INCREASES IN SIZE. 6360 19080204 19080208 RETURN OF GROUPS 6344 AND 6351. THIRD AND LAST APPARITION. TWO SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING SOON BREAKS UP. 6360*19080208 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6361 19080209 19080213 RETURN OF GROUP 6349. FOURTH AND LAST APPARITION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 11. 6362 19080209 19080211 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 6362A19080209 19080211 THE POSITION-ANGLES, AND THEREFORE THE HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDES AND LATITUDES, ARE ONLY APPROXIMATE ON THESE DAYS. 6363 19080209 19080215 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A THIRD TO THE SOUTH ON FEBRUARY 9. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 12, AND A FAINT CLUSTER IS SEEN PRECEDING A ON FEBRUARY 15. 6364 19080209 19080217 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE TRAIN HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 15. 6365 19080210 19080211 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6366 19080211 19080218 A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 11; A STRAIGHT STREAM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 6367 19080212 19080217 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED AT FIRST BY A SMALL COMPANION. THE LATTER IS NOT SEEN AFTER FEBRUARY 14, BUT A NEW ONE HAS FORMED FOLLOWING A. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 16, BUT A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS HAS FORMED BY FEBRUARY 17. 6368 19080212 19080217 RETURN OF GROUP 6353. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6368A19080220 19080220 THE POSITION-ANGLES, AND THEREFORE THE HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDES AND LATITUDES, ARE ONLY APPROXIMATE ON THIS DAY. 6369 19080218 19080218 TWO SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER, SEEN ONLY WHEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 6370 19080219 19080224 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 6371 19080219 19080224 A SMALL SPOT, A. 6372 19080220 19080303 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. RETURN OF GROUP 6359. 6373 19080223 19080223 A SMALL SPOT. 6374 19080224 19080229 TWO SMALL SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND DEVELOPING RATHER RAPIDLY INTO A FINE COMPLEX STREAM. 6375 19080227 19080227 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 6376 19080304 19080305 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 6377 19080304 19080311 RETURN OF GROUP 6369. A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE REAR SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE, AND ALONE REMAINS AFTER MARCH 8. 6377*19080306 19080308 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING SF GROUP 6377. 6378 19080306 19080308 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, FORMING SUDDENLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6379 19080307 19080315 A REGULAR SPOT, A. 6380 19080310 SOME SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 6377. 6381 19080308 19080314 A VERY SMALL SPOT AT FIRST. IT SUDDENLY DEVELOPS, WHEN NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, INTO A CONSIDERABLE STREAM, BUT DIMINISHES AGAIN LATER. 6382 19080310 19080321 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 10. SOME NEW SPOTS FORM IN ADVANCE OF THIS MARCH 11, AND BY MARCH 12 THE GROUP HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. A LENGTHENS OUT, AND FINALLY DIVIDES INTO TWO PARTS, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS ONE. 6382*19080318 19080320 SOME SMALL SPOTS, S GROUP 6382. 6383 19080314 19080323 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS FORM, N OF A, ON MARCH 19. 6384 19080315 19080316 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB, AND RAPIDLY INCREASING IN SIZE. 6385 19080315 19080325 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS SF ON MARCH 19, AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 6386 19080315 19080325 RETURN OF GROUP 6374. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6387 19080318 19080323 A SMALL SPOT, SOMETIMES WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 6388 19080319 19080321 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. 6389 19080327 19080401 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 27, DEVELOPING ON THE SUCCEEDINGS DAYS INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBERS. 6390 19080401 19080411 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WHICH BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT BY APRIL 7 BY THROWING OFF SOME OF ITS OUTLYING PORTIONS. THE GROUPS, NOS. 6390 TO 6399 INCLUSIVE, MAKE UP TOGETHER A MAGNIFICENT SINUOUS "PROCESSION" OF SPOTS, EXTENDING OVER NEARLY 90 DEGREES OF LONGITUDE. 6391 19080401 19080410 A CLUSTER OF SPOTS, F GROUP 6390, AND COALESCING TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, BY APRIL 3. A BREAKS UP INTO A SHORT STREAM BY APRIL 5. GROUPS 6390 AND 6391 TOGETHER MAKE UP A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM. 6392*19080403 19080403 A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6392 19080403 19080410 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP DEVELOPES RAPIDLY, AND THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BY APRIL 5. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, B, FORMS IN THE REAR OF THE GROUP BY APRIL 9. 6393 19080403 19080413 A CLUSTER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS, ON APRIL 3 RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. IT APPEARS TO BE A REVIVAL, NOT A RETURN, OF GROUP 6384. 6394 19080403 19080410 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS ON APRIL 6 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A DIMINISHES RAPIDLY IN SIZE. 6395 19080403 19080407 SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SCATTERED OVER A CONSIDERABLE AREA, S OF GROUPS 6390 AND 6391. 6396*19080403 19080404 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SF GROUP 6396. 6396 19080404 19080412 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE IN A CLUSTER, F GROUP 6393, AND FORMING WITH IT A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE AND FREQUENT CHANGES. 6397 19080404 19080408 SOME SMALL SPOTS, NP GROUP 6394. 6398 19080405 19080414 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUPS, NOS. 6390 TO 6399 INCLUSIVE, MAKE UP TOGETHER A MAGNIFICENT SINUOUS "PROCESSION" OF SPOTS, EXTENDING OVER NEARLY 90 DEGREES OF LONGITUDE. 6398*19080412 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 6398. 6398#19080412 19080413 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6398. 6399 19080403 19080407 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6400 19080408 19080411 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6400*19080410 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P GROUP 6400. 6401 19080409 19080421 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6402 19080411 19080412 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 6403 19080411 19080414 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6404 19080415 19080422 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 16, 17, OR 18. 6405 19080418 19080423 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 19. 6406 19080418 19080429 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6407 19080419 19080430 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. POSSIBLY A RETURN OF GROUP 6392*. 6407*19080429 19080429 SOME SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 6407. 6408 19080419 19080421 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6409 19080421 19080422 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6410 19080421 19080422 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 6411 19080420 19080421 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 6412 19080423 19080423 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6413 19080423 19080427 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 6414 19080424 19080503 RETURN OF GROUP 6392. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 6415 19080425 19080505 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER; NOT SEEN ON APRIL 30. 6416 19080427 19080508 RETURN OF GROUP 6390. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 6. 6417 19080425 19080428 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON APRIL 26 AND 27. 6418 19080428 19080508 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6419 19080428 19080509 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON MAY 2 AND 6. A REVIVAL, NOT A RETURN, OF GROUP 6391. 6420 19080429 19080511 RETURN OF GROUP 6393. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6421 19080429 19080508 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM, NOT SEEN ON MAY 7. 6422 19080430 19080505 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER. 6423 19080505 19080508 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. 6424 19080506 19080515 RETURN OF GROUP 6408. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, BREAKING UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS AFTER MAY 9. 6424*19080515 19080515 A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 6424. 6425 19080506 19080509 A SMALL SPOT. 6426 19080507 19080509 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6427 19080507 19080511 A DOUBLE SPOT, A PRECEDED BY A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6428 19080507 19080513 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT RAPIDLY DEVELOPING IN SIZE. 6429 19080509 19080511 A REGULAR SPOT, FORMING NP GROUP 6427. 6430 19080509 19080512 RETURN OF GROUP 6505. A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT, A. 6431 19080509 19080518 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 6432 19080510 19080513 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ON MAY 10, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 6433 19080510 19080513 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 11. 6434 19080512 19080512 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 6435 19080512 19080512 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6436 19080513 19080525 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, GENERALLY FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN. 6437 19080515 19080522 SOME SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 6436. 6438 19080521 19080522 A SMALL SPOT. 6439 19080523 19080526 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6439*19080525 19080525 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NF GROUP 6439. 6440 19080526 19080606 RETURN OF GROUP 6420. THIRD APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT,A, FOLLOWED ON MAY 29 BY A SMALL COMPANION. 6441 19080527 19080607 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, CROSSED BY SEVERAL BRIGHT BRIDGES, AND GENERALLY ACCOMPANIED BY A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY JUNE 7. 6441*19080602 19080603 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P GROUP 6441, AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE. 6442 19080528 19080530 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6443 19080528 19080602 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. REVIVAL OF GROUP 6426. 6444 19080530 19080530 A SMALL SPOT. 6445 19080531 19080609 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST MEMBER. 6446 19080531 19080609 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN. A BREAKS UP INTO A SHORT STREAM BY JUNE 7. 6447 19080531 19080607 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER FOLLOWING GROUP 6445, AND FORMING WITH IT A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM. 6448 19080531 19080610 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH THE PRINCIPAL MEMBER, B, IS A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT IN THE REAR OF THE GROUP. A IS A LARGE NEARLY REGULAR SPOT IN THE FORE PART OF THE STREAM. B IS DIVIDED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE AND MEASURED IN TWO PARTS, C AND D, ON JUNE 6. THE GROUP FOLLOWS GROUP 6446, FORMING WITH IT A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. 6449 19080601 19080602 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, OF WHICH A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 2. 6450 19080601 19080603 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JUNE 1. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 2, BUT SOME SMALL SPOTS ARE THEN SEEN, S OF A, BUT DISAPPEAR BEFORE JUNE 3. 6450*19080602 19080602 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6451 19080605 19080611 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, S OF GROUPS 6446 AND 6448. 6452 19080607 19080607 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6448. 6453 19080609 19080620 RETURN OF GROUP 6436. A REGULAR SPOT, A. 6454 19080610 19080613 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH, A, THE LAST SPOT, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER. 6455 19080613 19080615 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. REVIVAL OF GROUP 6437. 6456 19080616 19080619 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON JUNE 19. 6456*19080620 19080621 A SMALL SPOT, S, THE PLACE OF GROUP 6456. 6457 19080616 19080623 A REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN. 6458 19080618 19080619 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6459 19080618 19080619 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6460 19080619 19080621 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. 6461 19080620 19080620 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6461*19080623 19080623 A VERY SMALL SPOT, POSSIBLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6461. 6461#19080623 19080623 A SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6461*. 6462 19080621 19080621 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6457. 6463 19080623 19080629 SEVERAL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM MUCH INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. THE STREAM UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE. 6463*19080623 19080623 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 6464 19080623 19080704 RETURN OF GROUP 6441. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES PRECEDED BY SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS. 6465 19080624 19080706 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 6466 19080628 19080706 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. 6467 19080701 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6468 19080701 19080705 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM. 6469 19080702 19080705 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 6470 19080704 19080711 SOME SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 7, 8, AND 10. 6471 19080704 19080709 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, THAT SPEEDILY BREAKS UP. 6472 19080705 19080714 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6473 19080707 19080709 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, MUCH INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. 6475 19080709 19080711 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6476 19080713 19080714 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS; PROBABLY A REVIVAL OF PART OF GROUP 6473. 6477 19080713 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6478 19080714 19080725 AN IRREGULAR STREAM, WHICH SOON CONDENSES TO FORM A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 6480 19080715 19080719 A FINE IRREGULAR CLUSTER, APPEARING SUDDENLY SOME DISTANCE WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND DIMINISHING AGAIN AS QUICKLY AS IT GREW. THE LEADER, A, IS A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT ON JULY 16. 6481 19080715 19080725 RETURN OF GROUP 6463. AN IRREGULAR STREAM, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 6478. 6482 19080717 19080725 A FINE IRREGULAR CLUSTER, FORMING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE CHANGES IN THE GROUP ARE GREAT AND RAPID. 6483 19080717 19080718 A SMALL SPOT, A, PRECEDED ON JULY 17 BY TWO OTHER SMALL SPOTS. 6484 19080717 19080721 SOME SMALL SCATTERED UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6485 19080717 19080722 A DIMINISHING SPOT, A, NOT SEEN ON JULY 20 OR 21. 6485*19080728 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS F THE PLACE OF GROUP 6485. 6486 19080718 19080725 A SMALL SPOT FORMING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND DEVELOPING INTO A FINE IRREGULAR CLUSTER, WHICH DRAWS OUT INTO A STREAM, OF WHICH, A, THE LAST SPOT, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER. 6487 19080722 19080726 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6488 19080722 19080725 A SMALL SPOT, A, SOMETIMES PRECEDED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6489 19080722 19080802 RETURN OF GROUP 6465. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. 6490 19080729 19080810 A MAGNIFICENT STREAM, OF CLOSELY COMPACTED SPOTS, SHOWING MUCH DETAIL. THREE VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A, B, AND C, ARE THE CHIEF MEMBERS OF THE GROUP, ON AUGUST 3 AND 4, AND A SMALLER SPOT, D, LIES S OF C. THE GROUP UNDERGOES RAPID CHANGE, AND A AND B HAVE COALESCED BY AUGUST 7 TO FORM A VERY LARGE SPOT, E; WHILST E AND C HAVE SIMILARLY COMBINED TO FORM F BY AUGUST 9. EASLIY VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 6491 19080731 19080813 REVIVAL RATHER THAN RETURN OF GROUP 6472. A VERY LARGE OVAL SPOT, A, CROSSED BY BRIGHT BRIDGES, WITH SOMETIMES ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C, BY AUGUST 11. VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 6492 19080802 19080811 AN IRREGULAR STREAM, CHIEFLY CONSISTING OF THREE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A, B, AND C, BESIDES MANY SMALLER SPOTS. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE, AND BY APRIL 8, A NEW REGULAR SPOT, D, HAS FORMED F A, WHILST B AND C HAVE COALESCED TO FORM E. 6493 19080804 19080805 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NP GROUP 6490. 6493*19080808 19080809 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, N, THE PLACE OF GROUP 6493. 6494 19080804 19080813 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE TRAIN. 6495 19080808 A SMALL SPOT. 6496 19080808 19080809 A SMALL SPOT. 6497 19080810 19080811 A SPOT FORMING F GROUP 6490. 6498 19080813 19080815 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 14. 6499 19080813 19080819 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DEVELOPS INTO A FINE COMPACT STREAM OF WHICH A AND B,THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST MEMBERS. A AND B CONTINUE TO GROW,AND BY APRIL 17 HAVE BECOME VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, AND HAVE PRACTICALLY ABSORBED THE WHOLE OF THE GROUP. 6500 19080813 19080823 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED BY AUGUST 16 INTO A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL TRAIN. 6501 19080814 19080816 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6502 19080814 19080818 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 17. 6503 19080814 19080826 A NUMBER OF SPOTS,MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE,IRREGULARLY SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA. THE GROUP CHANGES VERY RAPIDLY. 6504 19080814 19080818 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 17. 6505 19080817 19080823 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE,IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 6506 19080821 19080824 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6507 19080822 19080828 A FEW SMALL SPOTS QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, OF WHICH TWO DOUBLE SPOTS, A AND B,ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. 6508 19080823 19080824 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 24. 6509 19080824 19080824 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 6510 19080825 19080906 RETURN OF GROUP 6492. A MAGNIFICENT IRREGULAR AND NEARLY CONTINOUS STREAM, UNDERGOING FREQUENT CHANGES. 6511 19080825 19080906 RETURN OF GROUP 6490. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT,A, USUALLY WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. A CONSIDERABLE CLUSTER,B,HAS FORMED SF THE CHIEF SPOT BY SEPTEMBER 2,BUT SOON BREAKS UP. 6511*19080905 19080907 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, NF GROUP 6511. 6512 19080826 19080827 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 6513 19080826 19080902 A SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 26. A SECOND IS SEEN NEAR IT AND IS MEASURED WITH IT, ON AUGUST 27. THE TWO ARE MEASURED SEPARATELY,AS A AND B ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. BOTH A AND B HAVE DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 1, BUT SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD. 6514 19080827 19080827 A SMALL SPOT. 6514*19080828 19080828 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, N, OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 6514. 6515 19080827 19080828 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6516 19080827 19080901 RETURN OF GROUP 6497. A SMALL SPOT. 6517 19080828 19080909 RETURN OF GROUP 6494. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT,A, WITH, VERY OCCASIONALLY,A SMALL COMPANION. 6518 19080830 19080907 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. REVIVAL OF GROUP 6491. 6518*19080902 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NF GROUP 6518. 6519 19080902 19080915 RETURN OF GROUP 6499. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6520 19080904 19080916 A SMALL SPOT, A, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 6521 19080906 19080911 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. F GROUP 6519, AND FORMING A FEEBLE TRAIN TO IT. 6522 19080905 19080916 A FEW SMALL SPOTS AT FIRST, DEVELOPING INTO A FINE, VERY COMPACT STREAM OF MANY SMALL SPOTS, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 6520, AND FORMING A TRAIN TO IT. THE TWO GROUPS WERE VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE AS A SINGLE STREAM. 6523 19080907 19080910 AN IRREGULAR STREAM SUDDENLY APPEARING, P GROUP 6519. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE TWO CHIEF MEMBERS. ONLY B REMAINS ON SEPTEMBER 10. 6524 19080908 19080918 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE SPOTS ARE LETTERED A, B, AND C. THE LEADING PORTION OF THE GROUP SOON DIES OUT, AND NEW SPOTS FORM IN THE REAR. 6524*19080909 A SMALL SPOT, SP GROUP 6524. 6525 19080910 19080922 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6526 19080914 19080926 A COMPACT STREAM OF WHICH THE CHIEF MEMBERS ARE TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. THE LATTER BREAKS UP BEFORE SEPTEMBER 19, AND SOON DISAPPEARS. 6526*19080925 19080925 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN, APPEARING SUDDENLY WHEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB, S OF GROUP 6526. 6527 19080917 19080919 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER. 6527*19080917 19080917 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER, NF GROUP 6527. 6528 19080917 19080926 A SMALL SPOT. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN FROM SEPTEMBER 20 TO SEPTEMBER 25 INCLUSIVE. 6529 19080918 19080927 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN. 6530 19080918 19080925 A REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6531 19080919 19080919 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6532 19080919 19080920 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 6533 19080920 19081002 RETURN OF THE PRECEDING PORTION OF GROUP 6510. A VERY FINE COMPACT CLUSTER IN CONSTANT CHANGE. 6533*19080928 19080928 SOME SMALL SPOTS, SF GROUP 6533. 6533#19080929 19080929 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 6533. 6534 19080922 19081001 A REGULAR SPOT, A, APPEARING SUDDENLY, P GROUP 65339. SOME SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SOMETIMES SEEN NEAR A. 6535 19080924 19081003 RETURN OF GROUP 6517. A REGULAR SPOT, A, STEADILY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. A SMALL SPOT, B, IS SEEN NEAR IT ON OCTOBER 2, AND ALONE REMAINS ON OCTOBER 3. 6535*19080928 19080928 A SMALL SPOT. 6535#19080929 19080929 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SP GROUP 6535. IT IS ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6535, AND AT THE SAME DISTANCE FROM THE EQUATOR BUT IN THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6536 19080925 19080925 A SMALL SPOT, SP, THE PLACE OF GROUP 6536. 6536*19080926 19080926 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 6537 19080928 19081009 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL ATTENDANT. 6538 19080930 19081005 TWO WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS, A AND B, P GROUP 6537. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 4. 6539 19080930 19081012 RETURN OF GROUP 6519. THIRD APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6540 19080930 19081012 RETURN OF GROUP 6520. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS. 6541 19081001 19081009 SOME SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6539. 6541*19081001 19081002 A SMALL SPOT, S GROUP 6541. 6542 19081002 19081002 A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 6537. 6543 19081004 19081005 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. 6544 19081005 19081007 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. PROBABLY A REVIVAL, RATHER THAN A RETURN, OF GROUP 6524. 6545 19081006 19081007 SOME VERY FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, P GROUP 6545. 6546 19081008 TWO VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS. 6547 19081007 19081015 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH ONE OR MORE UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 6548 19081009 19081010 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, SP GROUP 6540. 6549 19081010 19081013 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 6550 19081020 19081026 A REGULAR SPOT, A, RAPIDLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. AS IT DIMINISHES SMALL SPOTS FORM IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD. PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 6543. 6551 19081021 19081022 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6551*19081021 19081025 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NF GROUP 6551, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 23 AND 24. 6551#19081025 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NF GROUP 6551 AND 6551*. 6552 19081022 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6553 19081022 19081024 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6554 19081023 19081027 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 6555 19081027 19081028 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE REAR SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST, AND ALONE REMAINS BY OCTOBER 28. 6556 19081027 19081031 A SMALL SPOT, A. PROBABLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6548. 6557 19081028 19081029 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 29. 6558 19081028 19081107 RETURN OF GROUP 6540. THIRD APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT, A. 6559 19081102 19081112 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 8. A BECOMES OVAL IN SHAPE, AND IS DIVIDED BY BRIGHT BRIDGES INTO SEVERAL SECTIONS ON NOVEMBER 9 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 6560 19081105 19081109 A SMALL SPOT,A CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 6562. SOME UNSTABLE COMPANIONS FORM IN ADVANCE OF A. 6561 19081106 19081114 A FEW SMALL SPOTS,DEVELOPING INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM IMMEDIATELY AFTER PASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE TWO CHIEF SPOTS,A AND B,ARE BOTH DOUBLE SPOTS; BUT B QUICKLY DISAPPEARS,AND A ALONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 13. 6562 19081105 19081115 A REGULAR SPOT,A,CLOSELY PRECEDING GROUP 6560 WHICH FORMS A TRAIN TO IT. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN FOLLOWING A ON NOVEMBER 6 AND 7. 6563 19081107 19081117 A SMALL SPOT. A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6556. 6564 19081107 19081117 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 7,RAPIDLY DEVELOPING ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 6565 19081108 19081118 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 6564,ON NOVEMBER 8,AND RAPIDLY DEVELOPING ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE TWO GROUPS TOGETHER MAKE UP A MAGNIFICENT AND COMPACT STREAM OF BROKEN SPOTS, OVER 20 DEGREES OF HELIOGRAPHIC LONGITUDE IN LENGTH. THE COMBINED GROUPS WERE VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 6566 19081112 19081118 A SMALL SPOT,A,ON NOVEMBER 12. OTHER SPOTS FORM IN ADVANCE OF A ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS MAKING UP WITH IT A VERY SPARSE STREAM. 6567 19081113 19081124 A REGULAR SPOT,A,WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS,A BREAKS UP BY NOVEMBER 17,BUT PART OF IT HAS REFORMED,AS B,BY NOVEMBER 19. 6568 19081113 19081119 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A LOOSE CLUSTER,F GROUP 6567. 6569 19081115 19081125 SOME SMALL SPOTS RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A FINE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. BUT A,THE LEADER,IS NEITHER SO LARGE NOR SO STABLE AS B,THE REAR SPOT. A LARGE SPOT C,FORMS JUST BEHIND A,AND HAS COALESCED WITH IT,BY NOVEMBER 20,FORMING A LARGE REGULAR SPOT,D. 6570 19081115 19081116 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. 6571 19081121 19081124 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 22. 6572 19081124 19081127 RETURN OF GROUP 6558. FOURTH AND FINAL APPARITION. A SMALL SPOT. 6572*19081127 19081128 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6572. 6573 19081124 19081126 A SMALL SPOT. A REVIVAL, OR PERHAPS A RETURN, OF GROUP 6563. 6574 19081125 19081204 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED, DEVELOPING INTO A REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A SCATTERED FLIGHT OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6575 19081130 19081209 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6576 19081201 19081204 A CLUSTER OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6573. 6577 19081202 19081214 RETURN OF GROUP 6564. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6578 19081206 19081215 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR INTERMITTENTLY. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 8, OR ON DECEMBER 12 AND 13. A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6565. 6578*19081209 A SMALL SPOT ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6578, BUT IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6579 19081209 19081213 A SMALL SPOT. 6580 19081210 19081216 RETURN OF GROUP 6569. A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6581 19081216 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6582 19081216 19081218 SOME SMALL SPOTS. 6583 19081216 19081224 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6584 19081216 19081225 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBERS OF THE GROUP ARE A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST ON DECEMBER 20. B HAS BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 22, AND THE SMALLER SPOTS ARE UNSTABLE, SO THATE A ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 25. 6585 19081217 19081225 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 20, 21, OR 22. 6586 19081218 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 6587 19081221 19081226 A STREAM OF SPOTS SUDDENLY APPEARING ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN AND DEVELOPING RAPIDLY WITH MANY CHANGES. ITS FINAL FORM IS THAT OF A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY AN UNSTABLE TRAIN. 6587*19081223 19081225 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SF GROUP 6587. 6588 19081221 19081231 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 21. THE GROUP DEVELOPS RAPIDLY, AND BECOMES A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM MADE UP OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6589 19081225 19081230 A STRAIGHT STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND DEVELOPING RAPIDLY. THE TWO CHIEF SPOTS, A AND B, ALONE REMAIN BY DECEMBER 288 AND THEN APPEAR AS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPOSITE FOLLOWER. 6590 19081227 19090103 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, UNDERGOING FREQUENT CHANGES. 6591 19081228 19090109 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, SURROUNDED BY MANY SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO CHIEF PARTS, B AND C, BY JANUARY 2; B BEING LARGE, WELL-DEFINED, AND REGULAR, AND C, COMPOSITE AND LESS DEFINED. C SOON BREAKS UP, AND THE GROUP CONSISTS OF, B, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN. 6592 19081230 19090110 RETURN OF GROUP 6577. THIRD APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH SMALL COMPANIONS. 6593 19081229 19090104 AN ILL-DEFINED SPOT, A, BETWEEN GROUPS 6591 AND 6592. SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR NEAR A IN AN IRREGULAR MANNER. 6594 19090104 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6592. 6595 19090105 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS, S GROUP 6592. 6596 19090101 19090106 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING N GROUP 6592. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 3 AND 4. 6597 19090105 19090110 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 6592. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 7. 6598 19090107 19090111 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A IS A DOUBLE SPOT, AND B HAS BECOME A SMALL CLUSTER BY JANUARY 10. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 11. 6599 19090107 19090118 A LARGE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY AN UNSTABLE TRAIN. AT FIRST A IS NOT QUITE CIRCULAR IN OUTLINE, BUT IT SOON BECOMES MORE REGULAR. THE TRAIN CONSISTS AT FIRST OF AN IRREGULAR SPOT, B, BUT AS THIS DIMINISHES SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM NEAR IT. THE TRAIN HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 15. 6600 19090109 19090111 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6600*19090114 A SMALL SPOT, SF THE PLACE OF GROUP 6600. 6601 19090109 19090116 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 6585. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. 6602 19090114 19090126 RETURN OF GROUP 6589. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. 6603 19090114 19090125 RETURN OF GROUP 6588. AT FIRST A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WHICH BREAKS UP BY JANUARY 17 TO FORM A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. THE LEADER, B IS A REGULAR SPOT; THE LAST SPOT, C, IS COMPOSITE AND SOON BREAKS UP. 6604 19090116 19090128 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS AFTER JANUARY 19. 6605 19090122 19090126 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST, AND ALONE REMAINS AFTER JANUARY 24. 6606 19090123 19090203 A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR CLUSTER UNDERDOING CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6607 19090123 19090204 A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM UNDERGOING CONSIDERABLE CHANGE. THE TWO PRINCIPAL SPOTS ARE COMPOSITE; A, THE LEADER, AND B, IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP. TWO OTHER COMPOSITE SPOTS, C AND D, HAVE FORMED IN THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP BY JANUARY 29; AND A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS, E AND F BY FEBRUARY 1, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES. 6608 19090124 19090204 RETURN OF GROUP 6591. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL FOLLOWERS. THESE INCREASE RAPIDLY ON JANUARY 28 AND 29, AND MANY OF THEM COALESCE WITH A, FORMING WITH IT A VERY LARGE UNSTABLE COMPOSITE SPOT. THE GROUP THEN CHANGES RAPIDLY, AND BECOMES AN IRREGULAR STREAM, LIKE A HOOK IN SHAPE. 6609 19090126 19090206 RETURN OF GROUP 6592. FOURTH APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6610 19080127 19080208 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED AT FIRST BY A SCATTERED TRAIN, AND OFTEN PRECEDED BY A SMALL COMPANION. PROBABLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6598. 6611 19080126 19080203 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM, NP GROUP 6607. THE LEADER, A, IS THE MOST STABLE MEMBER OF THE GROUP AND ALONE REMAINS AFTER FEBRUARY 1. 6612 19090129 19090129 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 6606. 6613 19090129 19090129 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, F GROUP 6606. 6614 19090128 19090129 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, P GROUP 6609. 6615 19090130 19090204 A CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, N GROUP 6608. 6616 19090208 19090212 A SMALL SPOT, A. SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS HAVE FORMED P A BY FEBRUARY 11, MAKING UP WITH IT A SPARSE STRAIGHT STREAM. 6617 19090210 19090212 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6617*19090211 19090211 A VERY SMALL SPOT, S OF GROUP 6617. 6618 19090210 19090219 RETURN OF GROUP 6602. THIRD APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT, A, STEADILY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. 6619 19090211 19090216 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 15. 6620 19090211 19090222 RETURN OF GROUP 6603. THIRD APPARITION. A FINE LONG IRREGULAR STREAM, CONCAVE TO THE EQUATOR. IT CONSISTS AT FIRST OF A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH HAVE AGGREGATED CHIEFLY INTO THREE, A, B AND C, BY FEBRUARY 13. A IS A DOUBLE SPOT, WHICH BECOMES REGULAR, AND BY FEBRUARY 18 HAS ATTRACTED TO ITSELF A LARGE SPOT, D, WHICH HAS FORMED CLOSE BEHIND IT. THE TWO HAVE CONLESCED TO FORM A REGULAR SPOT, E, BY FEBRUARY 20. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES BUT DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 6621 19090212 19090224 RETURN OF GROUP 6604. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6622 19090213 19090214 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6623 19090213 19090214 A SMALL SPOT. 6624 19090215 19090215 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6625 19090220 19090304 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS. 6625*19090226 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 6625. 6626 19090221 19090224 A SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6625. 6627 19090222 19090306 RETURN OF GROUP 6609. FIFTH APPARITION. A FINE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS ON FEBRUARY 23 AND 24. THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT PARTLY BY A THROWING OFF SPOTS, AND PARTLY BY SPOTS FORMING IN ADVANCE OF A. OF THESE NEW SPOTS, THE LEADER, B, IS THE LARGEST . THE GROUP IS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE, A SUDDEN INCREASE IN SIZE HAVING TAKEN PLACE BY MARCH 3. 6627*19090305 19090306 TWO SPOTS F GROUP 6627. 6628 19090223 19090305 RETURN OF GROUP 6610. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6629 19090223 19090307 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH THE CHIEF MEMBERS AFTER FEBRUARY 26 ARE, A, A REGULAR SPOT, AND B, A COMPOSITE SPOT. THE GROUP IS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6630 19090224 19090308 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 6629, AND MAKING UP WITH IT A VERY FINE AND MUCH EXTENDED STREAM OF IRREGULAR FORM;THE TWO GROUPS, THOUGH USUALLY QUITE DISTINCT, ARE INDEED SOMETIMES PARTLY INTERMIXED. THE CHIEF MEMBER IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, IN THE SOUTHERN PORTION OF THE GROUP. THE GROUP IS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6631 19090226 19090305 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM P GROUP 6627, AND MAKING UP WITH IT ONE VERY LONG STRAGGLING STREAM ; THE TWO GROUPS, THOUGH USUALLY QUITE DISTINCT, ARE INDEED SOMETIMES PARTLY INTERMIXED. THE GROUP IS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6632 19090226 19090309 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. THE CHIEF SPOTS SOON COALESCE TO FORM A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH, AFTER FEBRUARY 28, FORMS, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS, THE WHOLE OF THE GROUP. 6633 19090228 19090304 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, NF GROUP 6630. 6634 19090303 19090307 DOUBLE SPOT FORMING N OF GROUP 6630. 6635 19090303 19090306 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS NF GROUP 6632. 6636 19090305 19090314 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 7, 8, 11, OR 12. 6636*19090307 A SMALL SPOT, P THE PLACE OF GROUP 6636. 6637 19090308 19090320 RETURN OF GROUP 6620. FOURTH APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, AROUND WHICH A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM FROM MARCH 12 TO MARCH 15. 6638 19090312 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6640 19090316 A VERY SMALL SPOT, S GROUP 6637. 6641 19090316 19090319 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LAST SPOT, A, IS THE MOST STABLE, AND SOON BECOMES THE LARGEST OF THE GROUP. 6642 19090319 19090330 A VERY FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, NEARLY CONTINUOUS AT FIRST, SO AS TO ALMOST FORM A SINGLE SPOT OF IMMENSE EXTENT, AND MOST IRREGULAR OUTLINE; LATER, BREAKING UP INTO DETACHED SPOTS. THE CHIEF SPOT OF THE GROUP, A, IS A VERY LARGE CIRCULAR SPOT, CROSSED BY SOME BEAUTIFUL BRIGHT BRIDGES. A IS AT FIRST IN THE FRONT OF THE STREAM, BUT LATER, OWING TO THE FORMATION OF NEW SPOTS BEFORE IT, IT IS IN THE CENTRE. THE GROUP IS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6642*19090323 19090323 TWO SMALL SPOTS, NP GROUP 6642. 6643 19090319 19090327 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. 6644 19090319 19090331 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6645 19090319 19090326 RETURN OF GROUP 6625. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 6643 AND MAKING UP WITH IT, AN IRREGULAR, STRAGGLING STREAM. 6645*19090328 19090328 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN BETWEEN THE PLACES OF GROUPS 6643 AND 6645. 6646 19090320 19090330 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS AT FIRST IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A DOUBLE SPOT, BUT DIMINISHES AS THE GROUP INCREASES. THE GROUP IS AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM ON MARCH 24, BUT BREAKS UP AND DIMINISHES AFTERWARDS, A, THE LEADER, NOW A REGULAR SPOT, INCREASING AS THE OTHER SPOTS DIMINISH. P GROUP 6645, AND WITH IT A RETURN OF GROUP 6625. 6647 19090322 19090402 RETURN OF GROUP 6627. SIXTH APPARITION. A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA. THE LEADER, A, HAS DEVELOPED INTO A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT BY MARCH 25, WHICH IS FOLLOWED ON MARCH 28 BY A SCATTERED AND DISTANT TRAIN. THIS TRAIN HAS GREATLY DEVELOPED BY MARCH 29, AND CHANGES RAPIDLY ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 6648 19090323 19090330 RETURN OF GROUP 6629. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6648*19090328 19090331 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, SP GROUP 6648. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 29. 6649 19090328 19090404 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON APRIL 1 AND 3. 6650 19090329 19090331 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6651 19090329 19090409 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM ON MARCH 29. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DEVELOPS AND BECOMES A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, IS THE PRINCIPAL MEMBER. THE REAR SPOT, B, ALSO BECOMES A VERY LARGE SPOT, BUT SOON DIMINISHES. 6652 19090329 19090409 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 2. 6653 19090401 19090403 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, SP GROUP 6651. 6654 19090411 19090413 SOME SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6655 19090414 19090424 RETURN OF GROUP 6642. A REGULAR SPOT, A. SMALL COMPANIONS FORM NEAR A AS IT DIMINISHES, AND THE GROUP BECOMES AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 6655*19090416 19090416 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6656 19090416 19090417 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 6657 19090416 19090416 A SMALL SPOT. 6658 19090417 19090422 A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 17, NOT SEEN ON APRIL 18, 19, OR 20. A SUDDEN REVIVAL HAS TAKEN PLACE BY APRIL 21, WHEN THE GROUP HAS REAPPEARED AS A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; THE LEADER, A, BEING A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 6659 19090417 19090421 TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS A SMALL COMPANION ON APRIL 18. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 20, BUT TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR. PROBABLY A NEW FOMATION AND NOT A RETURN OF GROUP 6644. 6660 19090418 19090429 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. A FRESH OUTBREAK OCCURS AFTER APRIL 21, A LARGE NEW SPOT, B, FORMING JUST BEHIND A, FOLLOWED BY A STREAM OF WHICH C, THE LAST, A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, IS THE LARGEST MEMBER. THE ENTIRE GROUP IS NOW A STRAIGHT COMPACT STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE DOUBLE SPOTS: A AND B TOGETHER MAKING UP THE LEADER, WHILST C IS THE REAR SPOT. 6662 19090421 19090424 A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 21, THAT HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 22. A MORE STABLE SPOT, A, HAS HOWEVER FORMED F ITS PLACE. 6663 19090424 19090503 SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE SPOT. RETURN OF GROUP 6651. 6664 19090429 19090501 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 29. ONLY ONE REMAINS BY APIRL 30. 6665 19090430 19090504 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, WHICH INCREASES IN LENGTH VERY QUICKLY. 6666 19090430 19090507 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWERS. THE GROUP FORMS SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. 6667 19090505 19090515 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED AT FIRST BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS, MAKING UP WITH A, A STRAIGHT STREAM. LATER ON COMPANIONS FORM ON ALL SIDES OF A. 6668 19090507 19090518 RETURN OF GROUP 6658. A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS 6669 19090507 19090519 PART OF THE SAME GENERAL DISTURBANCE AS GROUP 6668, AND THEREFORE, WITH IT, A RETURN OF GROUP 6658. A VERY FINE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, OF UNUSUAL SHAPE UNDERGOING CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE GREATEST LENGTH OF A IS USUALLY AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. SMALL COMPANIONS FORM ALL ROUND A, OR BREAK OFF FROM IT, AND A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, B, FORMS IN THE FRONT OF THE GROUP. 6670 19090518 19090521 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 6671 19090518 19090526 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 21, AND B IS FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON THAT DAY. 6672 19090520 19090528 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. OTHER SMALL SPOTS FORM BETWEEN THEM, AND THE GROUP DEVELOPS INTO A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM, A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, C, FORMING IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE, DIMINISHING AFTER MAY 24. A REVIVIAL OF GROUP 6664. 6673 19090521 19090522 PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 6665. A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 22. 6674 19090522 19090602 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 6675 19090527 19090529 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SMALL CLUSTER. 6676 19090604 19090610 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS AT FIRST, QUICKLY INCREASING TO FORM A FINE IRREGULAR BUT COMPACT STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE CLUSTER. 6677 19090604 19090607 RETURN OF GROUP 6669. THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL SPOT, A, SOMETIMES WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6677*19090609 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6677#19090614 SOME SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NF THE PLACE OF GROUP 6677. 6678 19090606 19090616 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, GENERALLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6679 19090615 19090618 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6680 19090613 19090619 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON JUNE 13 AND 14. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 15, BUT BY JUNE 16 HAS REAPPEARED AS A FINE STREAM CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. 6681 19090616 19090618 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6682 19090617 19090621 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT BUT SPARSE STREAM. THE GROUP IS SOON REDUCED TO TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. 6682*19090622 19090623 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, FORMING SUDDENLY N OF GROUP 6682. A HAS PASSED OUT OF SIGHT AT THE WEST LIMB BY JUNE 23. 6683 19090621 19090628 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM, FORMING SUDDENLY AND DEVELOPING QUICKLY. THE GROUP SOON TAKES THE FORM OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL ATTENDANT, B, AND A DISTANT FOLLOWER, C. ONLY A REMAINS BY JUNE 27. 6684 19090623 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6685 19090623 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6686 19090625 19090706 RETURN OF GROUP 6676. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6686*19090701 A SMALL SPOT, A GOOD WAY SF GROUP 6686. 6687 19090626 19090630 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6688 19090706 19090707 A SMALL SPOT A, WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON JULY 6. 6689 19090708 19090710 A FEW SPOTS IN A SMALL CLUSTER. 6690 19090712 19090719 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6691 19090712 A SMALL SPOT. 6692 19090714 19090715 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER. 6693 19090715 19090727 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. A REVIVAL OR RETURN OF GROUP 6687. 6694 19090718 19090723 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE MOST STABLE IS A, THE LEADER ON JULY 19. 6695 19090718 19090730 A FINE COMPLEX STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, THAT GRADUALLY BECOMES REGULAR. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP DIMINISHES AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 29. 6696 19090719 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 6697 19090719 19090727 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A LONG STRAIGHT BUT SPARSE STREAM, N GROUP 6695. THE COMPONENT SPOTS UNDERGO MANY CHANGES. THE LEADER ON JULY 20, IS THE MOST STABLE, BUT HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 27. 6698 19090719 19090726 A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO FOLLOWERS. A HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 25. 6698*19090722 19090726 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, SP GROUP 6698. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN FROM JULY 23 TO JULY 25. 6699 19090722 19090803 A FINE COMPACT STREAM, CHIEFLY COMPOSED OF TWO CLUSTERS, OR COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B. THE CHIEF PORTION OF A HAS BECOME A DETACHED REGULAR SPOT, C, BY JULY 27, AND ALONE REMAINS BY AUGUST 2. 6700 19090724 19090727 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS, FORMING JUST S GROUP 6693. 6701 19090730 19090804 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER. 6702 19090730 19090802 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT STREAM. 6703 19090802 19090810 A FEW SPOTS IN A SMALL CLUSTER, GRADUALLY BECOMING A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN. 6704 19090802 19090810 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 6703, AND MAKING UP WITH IT A LONG SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM. 6705 19090804 19090807 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 7. 6706 19090809 19090816 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, SOON BECOMING A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN. THE TRAIN HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 13. 6706*19090811 A SMALL SPOT, A LONG WAY, P GROUP 6706. 6707 19090811 19090816 RETURN OF GROUP 6700. A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 12. 6708 19090812 19090815 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6709 19090812 A SMALL SPOT. 6710 19090813 19090817 PERHAPS A RETURN OF PART OF GROUP 6693. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER ON AUGUST 13. 6711 19090814 19090825 RETURN OF GROUP 6695. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON AUGUST 17. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 25, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN FOLLOWING ITS PLACE. 6712 19090815 19090821 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A VERY SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS, AND LASTLY INTO A VERY SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL FOLLOWER ON AUGUST 19. 6713 19090816 19090820 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 18. TWO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON AUGUST 19. 6714 19090819 19090820 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6715 19090822 19090822 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6716 19090823 19090827 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING INTO A LONG, STRAIGHT SPARSE STREAM. 6717 19090826 19090827 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A STRAIGHT BUT VERY SMALL SPARSE STREAM. 6718 19090829 19090831 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 6703, OR POSSIBLY OF THE COMBINATION OF GROUPS 6703 AND 6704. ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 6719 19090829 19090831 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A VERY SPARSE STREAM. 6720 19090829 19090829 A SMALL SPOT. 6721 19090831 19090904 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A REVIVAL, NOT A RETURN, OF GROUP 6705. 6722 19090904 19090914 A SMALL SPOT RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A FINE COMPLEX STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 11, A AND B, ARE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, AND ARE THE CHIEF MEMBERS OF THE STREAM. REVIVAL OR RETURN OF GROUP 6706. 6722*19090911 19090913 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6723 19090905 19090914 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS N OF GROUP 6722, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A VERY FINE COMPLEX STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 10, A AND B, ARE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS; AND B, BY COALESCING WITH NEIGHBOURING SPOTS HAS BECOME A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT, C, BY SEPTEMBER 12. 6724 19090911 19090914 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER ON SEPTEMBER 12 AND 13. 6725 19090911 19090916 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT, QUICKLY CHANGING STREAM. 6726 19090915 19090922 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT, QUICKLY CHANGING STREAM. 6726*19090920 19090920 A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6727 19090917 19090917 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 6728 19090917 19090930 TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, QUICKLY COALESCING TO FORM A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, C. A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ARE USUALLY SEEN NEAR C, WHICH UNDERGOES SEVERAL VIOLENT CHANGES, AND HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS, D AND E, BY SEPTEMBER 28. A REVIVAL, NOT A RETURN, OF GROUP 6719. 6729 19090920 19090928 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR STRAGGLING STREAM, SP GROUP 6728. 6730 19090922 19090924 A SMALL SPOT. 6730*19091002 19091002 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6731 19090925 19090925 TWO VERY SMALL AND WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS. 6732 19090928 19091003 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A CHANGING CLUSTER. 6733 19090928 19091010 RETURN OF GROUP 6722. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6734 19090928 19091010 RETURN OF GROUP 6723. A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, GENERALLY WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6735 19091002 19091007 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM UNDERGOING CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6736 19091002 19091013 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A FINE STRAIGHT ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM. THE LAST SPOT ON OCTOBER 9, A, IS THE LARGEST, AND A COMPOSITE SPOT. TWO OTHER COMPOSITE SPOTS, B AND C, HAVE FORMED IN THE FRONT OF THE GROUP BY OCTOBER 10. 6737 19091005 19091005 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A CLUSTER, F, GROUP 6734. 6738 19091005 19091016 A FEW SMALL SPOTS AT FIRST. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FORMS IN THE FRONT OF THE GROUP, AND AN IMMENSE NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, LOOSELY SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA, FORM BEHIND IT. THESE TEND TO COALESCE; A BECOMES A VERY LARGE AND MOST COMPLEX SPOT, AND TWO OTHER LARGE SPOTS, B AND C, FORM IN THE FRONT AND REAR OF THE GROUP RESPECTIVELY. A SOON BREAKS UP, CHIEFLY INTO TWO LARGE SPOTS, D AND C. 6738*19091014 19091016 A FRESH OUTBURST,N OF GROUP 6738, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM. 6739 19091005 19091006 A SMALL SPOT, PERHAPS A RETURN OF GROUP 6726*. 6739*19091009 19091009 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6740 19091008 19091015 A SMALL CLUSTER,NF GROUP 6738. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 14. 6740*19091016 19091016 A SMALL SPOT SF THE PLACE OF GROUP 6740. 6741 19091007 19091019 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A DOUBLE TRAIN. 6741*19091015 19091015 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6742 19091011 19091013 A SMALL SPOT,A,WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON OCTOBER 13. 6743 19091013 19091016 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 6744 19091014 19091019 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE;A THE FIRST,AND B THE LAST SPOT,BEING THE TWO LARGEST MEMBERS. A NEIGHBOURING SPOT IS MEASURED WITH B ON OCTOBER 18. 6745*19091013 19091014 A SMALL SPOT,POSSIBLY A RETURN OF PART OF GROUP 6729. 6745 19091014 19091021 A REGULAR SPOT,A, RAPIDLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. 6746 19091016 19091026 A SMALL SPOT,QUICKLY INCREASING TO BECOME A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. REVIVAL, RATHER THAN RETURN,OF GROUP 6728. 6747 19091015 19091021 A SMALL SPOT,A, INCREASING AND BECOMING REGULAR,AND RAPIDLY DIMINISHING AGAIN. SOME SMALL COMPANIONS ARE FREQUENTLY SEEN NEAR A. 6748 19091019 19091019 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS,WIDELY SEPARATED IN LATITUDE. 6749 19091020 19091020 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS,N OF GROUP 6746. 6750 19091020 19091023 TWO SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER ON OCTOBER 20. ONLY THE PRECEDING SPOT IS SEEN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 6751 19091023 19091101 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM. 6752 19091024 19091026 SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. 6753 19091025 19091106 RETURN OF GROUP 6734. THIRD APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. 6754 19091025 19091107 RETURN OF GROUP 6733. THIRD APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 30, AND NOVEMBER 4. A FRESH OUTBURST HAS OCCURED BY NOVEMBER 5, AND THE GROUP HAS SUDDENLY INCREASED IN SIZE AND TAKEN THE FORM OF A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM. 6754*19091028 A SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 6754. 6755 19091030 19091104 A FEW SMALL SPOTS RAPIDLY DEVELOPING TO FORM A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 6756 19091031 19091112 RETURN OF GROUP 6738*. A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE AT FIRST; THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS, A AND B, BEING THE LARGEST. B, A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, SOON BREAKS UP, LEAVING A, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS, UNTIL NOVEMBER 7, AFTER WHICH THE TRAIN DISAPPEARS. 6756*19091104 19091110 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, S GROUP 6756. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 5 OR NOVEMBER 8 OR 9. 6757 19091101 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6757*19091102 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS, NF THE PLACE OF GROUP 6757. 6758 19091101 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6759 19091101 19091104 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS NF GROUP 6753. 6760 19091103 19091111 RETURN OF GROUP 6741. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM, IN CONSTANT CHANGE. 6760*19091109 A SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6760. 6761*19091104 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS A LONG WAY SP GROUP 6761. 6761 19091104 19091109 A CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6762 19091105 19091108 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 8. 6763 19091105 19091111 RETURN OF GROUP 6744. A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, DRAWING OUT TO FORM A STRAIGHT SPARSE STREAM. 6764 19091111 19091116 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE, IRREGULAR STREAM. 6764*19091112 19091112 A SMALL SPOT, NEARLY ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6764, BUT IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6765 19091112 19091123 RETURN OF GROUP 6746. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 20. 6766 19091112 19091120 A REGULAR SPOT, A, F GROUP 6765, ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS PRECEDE A ON NOVEMBER 14-17. 6767 19091114 19091115 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. 6768 19091115 19091116 A SMALL SPOT. 6769 19091116 19091123 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRE OF THE DISC. THE STREAM RAPIDLY DEVELOPS INTO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE, THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS, A AND B, BEING LARGE AND COMPOSITE. B BREAKS UP, AND A BECOMES REGULAR, AND REMAINS ALONE ON NOVEMBER 22. 6770 19091119 19091126 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. OTHER SPOTS FORM NEAR, MAKING UP WITH A AND B A STRAIGHT STREAM. 6771 19091121 19091202 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 6772 19091122 19091203 RETURN OF GROUP 6754. FOURTH APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. SOME IRREGULAR SPOTS FORM BEHIND IT, AND HAVE TO SOME EXTENT COALESCED WITH IT BY NOVEMBER 28. THE GROUP THEN CONSISTS OF A, NOW A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR TRAIN. 6773 19091123 19091124 A SMALL SPOT. 6774 19091124 19091204 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SMALL CLUSTER RAPIDLY INCREASING TO FORM A LONG CURVED STREAM CONVEX TO THE EQUATOR. THE STREAM CONTINUES TO INCREASE IN SIZE, TAKING THE FORM SUCCESSIVELY OF TWO FINE COMPACT CLUSTERS, AND THEN OF A FINE STRAIGHT, ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM, OF WHICH TWO VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE CHIEF MEMBERS. A HAS PASSED OFF THE DISC BY DECEMBER 4. 6775 19091125 19091126 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6776 19091126 A VERY SMALL SPOT, PERHAPS A RETURN OF GROUP 6761. 6777 19091128 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6778 19091127 19091204 RETURN OF GROUP 6756. THIRD APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER ON NOVEMBER 29. 6779 19091128 19091203 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM. 6780 19091129 19091206 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, RAPIDLY COALESCING TO FORM A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH FREQUENTLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6780*19091129 19091203 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6780. 6781 19091130 19091211 AN EXCEEDINGLY LONG STRAGGLING STREAM, MOST OF THE MEMBERS OF WHICH ARE UNSTABLE, THAT BY THE DISAPPEARANCE OF MANY OF THE SMALLER SPOTS BECOMES, AFTER DECEMBER 5, THREE WIDELY SEPARATED CLUSTERS. THE TWO MOST STABLE SPOTS ARE TWO REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B. A COMPOSITE SPOT, C, HAS FORMED IN THE REAR OF THE GROUP BY DECEMBER 5. 6782 19091130 19091204 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A SMALL COMPANION, FORMING P GROUP 6779. 6783 19091213 19091224 A FEW SMALL SPOTS THAT RAPIDLY DEVELOP INTO A FINE COMPACT STREAM. THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS, A AND B, ARE LARGE AND COMPOSITE, AND THE CHIEF MEMBERS OF THE GROUP. THE SMALLER SPOTS DISAPPEAR OR COALESCE WITH A. 6784 19091217 19091224 TWO OR THREE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS AT FIRST. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON DECEMBER 19, THAT INCREASE IN SIZE AND MOVE APART. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN NEAR THEM. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER DECEMBER 21. 6785 19091217 19091222 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, GENERALLY WITH A SMALL COMPANION. 6786 19091218 19091230 RETURN OF GROUP 6771. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 21 AND 24. 6787 19091219 19091230 RETURN OF GROUP 6772. FIFTH APPARITION. A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 25 AND 27. 6788 19091219 19091230 RETURN OF GROUP 6774. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH SOME SMALL ATTENDANTS. 6789 19091223 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6790 19091223 19091225 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 23. 6790*19091223 19091224 RETURN OF GROUP 6780. A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 6790. 6791 19091223 19100104 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR MORE SMALL ATTENDANTS. 6791 19091223 19100104 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR MORE SMALL ATTENDANTS. 6792 19091226 19091229 SOME SMALL FAINT SPOTS, P GROUP 6793. 6792*19091229 19091230 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 6792. 6793 19091225 19100106 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW SMALL ATTENDANTS. PROBABLY NOT A RETURN OF GROUP 6781, BUT A NEW FORMATION. 6793 19091225 19100106 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A FEW SMALL ATTENDANTS. PROBABLY NOT A RETURN OF GROUP 6781, BUT A NEW FORMATION. 6794 19091226 19091227 A REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 26. 6795 19091227 19091231 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6796 19091228 19100108 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FINE BUT UNSTABLE TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 6797 19091229 19100102 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6798 19091231 19100103 SOME SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, N OF GROUP 6793. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 2. 6799 19100101 SOME SMALL FAINT MARKINGS, F GROUP 6793. 6800 19100101 19100105 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 6801 19100102 A SMALL SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL FAINT COMPANION. 6802 19100107 19100109 A VERY SMALL SPOT, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY TO FORM AN IRREGULAR STREAM, AND DIMINISHING AGAIN AS RAPIDLY. 6803 19100107 TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, MEASURED TOGETHER. 6804 19100108 19100109 TWO SMALL SPOTS SEEN ONLY NEAR THE EAST LIMB. 6805 19100110 19100121 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6806 19100118 19100130 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL JANUARY 26. 6806*19100120 A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, P, GROUP 6806 6806#19100122 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6806. 6806@19100126 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 6806. 6807 19100120 19100126 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 20, GRADUALLY DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE BY JANUARY 24. THE LAST SPOT, A, ALONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 25. 6808 19100122 19100203 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR AND VARIABLE STREAM. 6809 19100122 19100203 RETURN OF GROUP 6793. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. GROUP 6808 APPEARS TO BE A DEPENDENT OUTBURST OF THIS GROUP. 6810 19100123 19100127 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 26. 6811 19100123 19100203 RETURN OF GROUP 6796. A REGULAR SPOT, A. 6812 19100127 19100201 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 28. 6813 19100211 19100222 A FINE STREAM, THE MAJOR AXIS OF WHICH IS INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. IT CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, A AND B, NEARLY CIRCULAR IN OUTLINE, CONNECTED BY SOME SMALL SPOTS S OF B. B IS ALSO GENERALLY FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL SPOTS. 6814 19100212 19100215 A SMALL SPOT, A, PRECEDED ON FEBRUARY 13 AND 14 BY A SMALL COMPANION. 6815 19100215 19100223 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON FEBRUARY 15, DEVELOPING BY FEBRUARY 16 INTO A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST MEMBERS. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 21, AND A ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 22. 6815*19100222 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6816 19100217 19100225 A REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A LONG TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 24, BUT THE PLACE OF THE GROUP IS MARKED ON THIS AND THE SUCCEEDING DAY BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6817 19100217 19100228 A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 17, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS INTO A STRAIGHT AND NEARLY CONTINUOUS STREAM, THE LEADING MEMBERS OF WHICH HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, BY FEBRUARY 22. 6818 19100218 19100301 A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR CLUSTER FORMING CLOSE BEHIND GROUPS 6816 AND 6817, AND FORMING WITH THEM AND WITH GROUP 6821 A STRIKING AND WIDE-SPREAD DISTURBANCE. TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE FORMED THROUGH THE COALESCENCE OF SMALLER SPOTS BY FEBRUARY 24, A BEING DUE SOUTH OF B; AND THE GROUP TAKES THE FORM OF TWO STRAIGHT PARALLEL STREAMS, OF WHICH A AND B SEVERALLY FORM THE REAR-GUARDS. B AND ITS COMPANIONS DIMINISH MORE RAPIDLY THAN A, WHICH ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 1. THE GROUP UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6819 19100221 19100222 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 6820 19100221 19100227 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 23. 6821 19100223 19100226 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, PRECEDING GROUP 6816. A AND B ARE BOTH DOUBLE ON FEBRUARY 25, AND A IS ATTENDED BY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 6822 19100226 19100305 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STRAIGHT STREAM. 6822*19100228 A VERY SMALL SPOT, N GROUP 6822. 6823 19100301 19100308 A FEW SMALL SPOTS RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A FINE STRAIGHT GROUP OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. THE MAJOR AXIS OF THE GROUP IS SOMEWHAT INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 6824 19100304 19100305 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON MARCH 4. ONLY A IS SEEN ON MARCH 5. 6825 19100308 19100314 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM UNDERGOING CONSTANT CHANGE. 6826 19100310 19100321 RETURN OF GROUP 6813. A FINE STREAM OF WHICH THE CHIEF MEMBERS ARE FOUR REGULAR SPOTS, A, B, C, AND D. THE MAJOR AXIS OF THE GROUP IS NEARLY PERPENDICULAR TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. C MOVES FORWARD RELATIVELY TO THE REST OF THE GROUP AND PERSISTS THE LONGEST; D DIES OUT SPEEDILY. 6827 19100315 19100324 RETURN OF GROUP 6817. A REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 6827*19100316 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6828 19100323 19100403 RETURN OF GROUP 6823. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 6828*19100325 A SMALL SPOT, NF GROUP 6828, AND, PROBABLY, WITH IT A RETURN OF GROUP 6823. 6829 19100325 19100326 A SPOT SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 6830 19100325 19100328 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAGGLING STREAM. 6831 19100325 19100326 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6832 19100409 19100420 A REGULAR SPOT, A, AT FIRST, FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. A HAS BROKEN UP BY APRIL 13, AND THE GROUP TAKES THE FORM OF A SPARSE AND IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 6829. 6833 19100411 19100412 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 6834 19100415 19100418 TWO CLOSE PAIRS OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 15. A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS ON APRIL 16. A ALONE REMAINS ON APRIL 17. 6835 19100415 19100416 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 6836 19100416 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 6832. 6837 19100417 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS F GROUP 6832. 6838 19100418 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 6839 19100420 19100421 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT, A, PRECEDED ON APRIL 20 BY A SMALL COMPANION. 6840 19100423 19100424 A SMALL SPOT. 6841 19100426 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6842 19100429 19100510 TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. THE MAJOR AXIS OF THE GROUP IS NEARLY PERPENDICULAR TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. A DIMINISHES MORE RAPIDLY THAN B, AND B ALONE REMAINS ON MAY 7. A FRESH OUTBURST HAS OCCURED BY MAY 8, AND THE GROUP HAS BECOME A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, OF WHICH B AND A NEW SPOT, C, ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. C IS THE LEADER. 6842*19100507 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT MARKINGS NF GROUP 6842. 6843 19100429 19100507 SOME SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS F GROUP 6842. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 6. 6844 19100504 19100506 A SMALL FAINT SPOT, A, WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON MAY 6. 6845 19100508 19100519 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO DISTANT FOLLOWERS. 6846 19090512 TWO SMALL SPOTS, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6847 19090512 19090522 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS AFTER MAY 16. 6847*19090513 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT MARKINGS MEASURED TOGETHER; NEARLY ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6847, BUT IN THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6848 19090513 19090519 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER SF GROUP 6847. 6849 19090513 19090525 A FINE STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A STRAIGHT TRAIN OF SMALLER SPOTS. GROUPS 6847, 6848, AND 6853 MAKE UP A LONG BUT RATHER SPARSE "PROCESSION" OF SPOTS, OF WHICH 6849 A IS MUCH THE MOST IMPORTANT MEMBER. A INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES MORE COMPLEX UP TO MAY 18, AFTER WHICH IT IS VERY STABLE. 6850 19100519 19100522 A SMALL SPOT. 6851 19100519 19100522 A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 6850. 6852 19100520 SOME SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 6852*19100521 19100523 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, NP THE PLACE OF GROUP 6852, IN A SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM THAT UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6853 19100521 19100523 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, P GROUP 6847, ON MAY 21. A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, ON MAY 22. ONLY B IS SEEN ON MAY 23. 6854 19100523 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6854*19100524 SOME FAINT MARKINGS NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 6854. 6855 19100525 19100604 PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 6842. SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE LEADER, A, IS THE MOST STABLE SPOT, BUT HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 29. 6855*19100528 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. 6855#19100530 A SMALL FAINT MARKING, F GROUP 6855. 6856 19100531 19100605 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 31 IN A SHORT STREAM, N GROUP 6855. TWO CHIEF SPOTS, A AND B, DEVELOP BY JUNE 1, BUT THE GROUP DOES NOT QUITE CONFORM TO THE NORMAL TYPE, SEVERAL FRESH SPOTS APPEARING ON JUNE 3, AND A NEW SPOT, C, FORMING BEHIND A, BECOMES THE CHIEF MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 6857 19100601 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6857*19100604 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF THE PLACE OF GROUP 6857. 6858 19100603 19100608 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, USUALLY IN A SMALL IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 6859 19100609 19100618 RETURN OF GROUP 6849. A DIMINISHING SPOT, A, SOMETIMES WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 15 OR 16, BUT HAS REVIVED BY JUNE 17. 6859*19100613 19100615 A DISTURBED AREA, P GROUP 6859, IN WHICH VERY SMALL FAINT SHORT-LIVED MARKINGS ARE SEEN. 6860 19100610 19100613 A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 6859. 6861 19100623 19100701 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 6862 19100625 19100628 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB, AND RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A LARGE COMPACT CLUSTER, OF WHICH TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, BOTH IN THE REAR OF THE GROUP, ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. 6863 19100701 19100706 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE MOST STABLE. 6864 19100630 19100712 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH A SMALL COMPANION. A GRADUALLY DIVIDES INTO TWO PORTIONS, BUT IS ALWAYS MEASURED AS ONE. 6865 19100630 19100709 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH SMALL COMPANIONS, FOLLOWING GROUP 6864, AND MAKING UP WITH IT A SPARSE STREAM. A HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 7. 6866 19100704 19100705 A SMALL SPOT. 6866*19100706 A SMALL SPOT P, THE PLACE OF GROUP 6866. 6867 19100706 19100713 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR IRREGULARLY. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 10, 11 OR 12. 6868 19100711 19100712 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 6869 19100712 19100721 RETURN OF GROUP 6862. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS ON JULY 17 AND 18. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 20, BUT A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON JULY 20 AND 21. 6870 19100716 19100717 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN. 6871 19100726 19100802 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON JULY 29, ARE THE MOST STABLE, AND ALONE REMAIN ON JULY 30. A REVIVAL, NOT A RETURN OF GROUP 6863. 6872 19100727 19100728 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT SPARSE STREAM. 6873 19100727 19100806 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM THAT UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE. A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FORMS TOWARDS THE REAR OF THE GROUP, AND GROWS RATHER RAPIDLY, BUT DIMINISHES AGAIN AS QUICKLY. 6874 19100803 19100815 A FINE REGULAR SPOT, A, GENERALLY WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. A IS CROSSED BY SEVERAL BRIGHT BRIDGES. 6875 19100804 19100805 A DISTURBED AREA SP GROUP 6873, WHICH ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN. 6876 19100808 19100810 A FEW SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 6874. 6876*19100808 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS A LONG WAY P GROUP 6876. 6877 19100816 19100819 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. 6878 19100826 19100827 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6878*19100827 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 6878. 6879 19100830 19100906 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STRAIGHT STREAM WHICH BECOMES LARGER AND MORE CONTINUOUS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6880 19100831 19100911 RETURN OF GROUP 6874. A LARGE WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6881 19100907 19100913 A DIMINISHING SPOT, A, WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 13, WHEN A SMALL FOLLOWER ALONE IS SEEN. 6882 19100907 19100914 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 11. 6883 19100917 19100921 SOME SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE MARKINGS, DEVELOPING BY SEPTEMBER 20 INTO A SMALL SPARSE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. 6884 19100918 19100920 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS. 6885 19100918 19100927 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, CHANGING IRREGULARLY FROM DAY TO DAY UNTIL SEPTEMBER 24, WHEN THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 6886 19100921 19101002 RETURN OF GROUP 6879. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6887 19100922 A SMALL SPOT. 6888 19100922 19100928 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 6886, AND PART OF THE SAME DISTURBANCE. IT IS THEREFORE, PROBABLY, WITH GROUP 6886, A RETURN OF GROUP 6879. 6889 19100923 19100926 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 6888. 6890 19100924 19101003 A DOUBLE SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE SMALL COMPANION; AND ON SEPTEMBER 27 AND 28 WITH SEVERAL. 6891 19100925 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NP GROUP 6886. 6892 19100927 19100929 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SMALL CLUSTER, F GROUP 6889. 6892*19100930 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6892, BUT NORTH OF THE EQUATOR. 6893 19100926 19101007 A STRAIGHT STREAM MOSTLY COMPOSED OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6894 19100927 19101009 RETURN OF GROUP 6880. THIRD APPARITION. A VERY FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 6893, AND MAKING UP WITH IT A MAGNIFICENT CURVED STREAM, NEARLY 20 DEGREES IN LENGTH, VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. AT FIRST THE STREAM APPEARS TO CONSIST CHIEFLY OF THREE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A, B, AND C; AND A FOURTH, D, IS SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 28. THESE SPOTS CHANGE RAPIDLY BOTH IN SIZE AND SHAPE, BUT A, THE LARGEST, IS MUCH THE MOST STABLE; AND BY OCTOBER 3 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A, PRECEDED AND FOLLOWED BY A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A HAS BROKEN UP BY OCTOBER 6, THE LARGEST PORTION, E, BEING IN THE REAR. THE PARTS OF A ARE MEASURED TOGETHER ON OCTOBER 8. 6894*19100930 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NP GROUP 6894. 6894#19100930 SOME FAINT MARKINGS, NF GROUP 6894. 6895 19101008 19101014 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A LONG SPARSE STREAM. A AND B, THE LEADER AND LAST SPOTS ON OCTOBER 12, ARE THE MOST STABLE. 6896 19101007 19101011 A SMALL SPOT, A, SOMETIMES WITH A COMPANION. 6897 19101016 19101027 AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE; TWO SPOTS IN PARTICULAR, B AND C, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY. B HAS COALESCED WITH A BY OCTOBER 19 TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, D, AND THE GROUP TAKES THE FORM OF A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, D, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR TRAIN. C SPEEDILY BREAKS UP, AND D THROWS OFF IMPORTANT FRAGMENTS, AND UNITES WITH SOME OF THEM AGAIN, THUS CHANGING ITS SIZE AND SHAPE FROM DAY TO DAY. D HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO CHIEF FRAGMENTS, E AND F, BY OCTOBER 25. 6898 19101017 19101018 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. SOME SMALL FAINT MARKINGS ARE SEEN NEAR A ON OCTOBER 18. 6899 19101017 19101028 RETURN OF GROUP 6886. THIRD APPARITION. AN IRREGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, B. A SOON BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL FAINT MARKINGS, WHICH ARE USUALLY MEASURED AS ONE; B IS ALSO USUALLY MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 25, BUT B HAS DEVELOPED INTO AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER BY THAT DAY, DIMINISHING AGAIN LATER. 6899*19101024 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 6899. 6900 19101019 19101020 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 6901 19101021 19101030 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN A LONG SPARSE STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT; THE REAR SPOT, B, IS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, BREAKING UP BEFORE OCTOBER 26. REVIVAL, RATHER THAN RETURN, OF GROUP 6890. 6902 19101022 19101027 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR AND VARIABLE CLUSTER, NP GROUP 6899. 6903 19101024 RETURN OF GROUP 6893. A SMALL SPOT. 6903*19101025 19101027 A SMALL SPOT, N GROUP 6903. 6904 19101025 19101026 A SMALL SPOT, A, S GROUP 6902. A SMALL FAINT COMPANION PRECEDES A ON OCTOBER 26. 6905 19101026 19101030 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE MARKINGS FORM AND QUICKLY DISAPPEAR. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 27. 6906 19101029 19101104 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS IN RAPID CHANGE. 6907 19101103 19101104 A SMALL SPOT. 6908 19101107 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SMALL CLUSTER. 6909 19101114 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6910 19101116 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6911 19101116 19101120 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A COMPACT IRREGULAR STREAM ARISING SUDDENLY. 6912 19101117 19101120 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 6913 19101118 19101119 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS S GROUP 6911. 6914 19101120 19101124 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 23. 6914*19101124 A SMALL FAINT MARKING, P THE PLACE OF GROUP 6914. 6915 19101123 19101126 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NF THE PLACE OF GROUP 6914. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 24. 6916 19101209 19101215 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, QUICKLY DIVIDING INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C, WHICH ARE MEASURED TOGETHER, AS A, ON DECEMBER 10 AND 12. 6916*19101211 SOME VERY FAINT SMALL MARKINGS A LONG WAY SP GROUP 6916. 6917 19101211 19101217 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A SMALL COMPANION. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 16. 6918 19101211 19101213 A SMALL SPOT. THE THREE GROUPS, 6916, 6917 AND 6918 FORM PRACTICALLY A SINGLE DISTURBANCE. 6919 19101218 19101222 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 6919*19101228 A SMALL SPOT, SF THE PLACE OF GROUP 6919. 6920 19101230 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS MEASURED TOGETHER. 6920a19110101 NO PHOTOGRAPH IS, AS YET, AVAILABLE FOR THIS DATE. 6921 19110103 19110114 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 6922 19110130 19110201 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL, UNSTABLE SPOTS. NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 31. 6923 19110220 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6924 19110209 19110210 A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6921. SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6925 19110209 19110220 A REGULAR SPOT, A. A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS FORMS FOLLOWING A ON FEBRUARY 14, AND THE SUCCEEDINGS DAYS; THE TRAIN IS ESPECIALLY DEVELOPED ON FEBRUARY 16. 6926 19110210 19110212 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6927 19110210 19110218 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, MOSTLY IN TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS AT FIRST, FORMING IN THE REAR OF GROUP 6925, AND MAKING UP WITH IT ON FEBRUARY 16 A LONG STRAIGHT BUT SPARSE STREAM. 6928 19110226 19110307 APPARENTLY A RETURN OF GROUP 6924. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, CROSSED BY SEVERAL BRIGHT BRIDGES AND FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. SPOTS BEGIN TO FORM PRECEDING A, AND A DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER MARCH 3, AND BY MARCH 6 THE GROUP IS A SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 6929 19110302 19110307 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 2. A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN ON MARCH 3 AND 4, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP BREAKS UP INTO A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. 6929*19110310 19110311 A SPOT RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM, FORMING CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB, SP THE POSITION OF GROUP 6929. 6930 19110305 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 6931 19110307 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6932 19110308 19110312 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. 6933 19110313 TWO SMALL VERY FAINT SPOTS. 6934 19110315 19110316 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6935 19110307 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6936 19110324 19110325 SOME SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 6937 19110328 19110406 A FEW SMALL SPOTS RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A LONG STREAM, SPARSE BUT OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER, A, SI A REGULAR SPOT, AND A DIFFUSED IRREGULAR SPOT, C, SOON FORMS SF IT. THE REAR SPOT, B, SOON BREAKS UP, LEAVING A FOLLOWED BY A LONG SPARSE TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS A REVIVAL, NOT A RETURN, OF GROUP 6928. 6938 19110401 19110410 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A WHITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. A SPEEDILY BREAKS UP INTO THREE SEPARATE SPOTS, BUT IS MEASURED AS ONE UNTIL AFTER APRIL 5, WHEN THE GROUP HAS GRATLY DIMINISHED IN SIZE. AND CONSISTS OF A FEW SMALL SCATTERED AND UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6939 19110402 19110403 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON APRIL 2 BY A SMALL COMPANION. 6940 19110403 19110415 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. 6941 19110409 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS MEASURED AS ONE. 6942 19110421 19110503 RETURN OF GROUP 6937. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A. 6942*19110425 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A LONG WAY SP GROUP 6942. 6943 19110424 19110426 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. THE THREE GROUPS 6944, 6945, AND 6943, MAKE UP A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE EQUATOR. 6944 19110423 19110504 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 1. 6945 19110423 19110503 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 6945*19110428 19110429 A FEW SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE MARKINGS SF GROUP 6945. 6946 19110430 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6947 19110502 19110505 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. 6948 19110504 19110509 A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B ARE COMPOSITE, AND SOON BECOME SMALL COMPACT CLUSTERS RATHER THAN SINGLE SPOTS. 6949 19110505 19110509 SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM OF VERY IRREGULAR FORM. THE GROUP IS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 6950 19110520 19110523 RETURN OF GROUP 6944. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 23. 6950*19110521 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A LONG WAY SP GROUP 6950. 6951 19110525 19110605 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE TRAIN. 6952 19110602 19110603 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6953 19110621 19110622 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6954 19110623 A SMALL SPOT. 6955 19110629 19110702 A FEW VERY FAINT SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6956 19110630 19110704 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 6957 19110702 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 6958 19110712 19110716 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM. THE REAR SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE UP TO JULY 15. 6959 19110725 19110726 A SMALL SPOT. 6959*19110729 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NEARLY ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 6959, BUT IN THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE. 6960 19110801 19110805 A SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 1; A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 5. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 2, 3 AND 4. 6961 19110805 19110814 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 9 AND 10, AND USUALLY BY A SINGLE SMALL COMPANION ON OTHER DAYS. 6962 19110814 19110815 A SMALL SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 15. 6963 19110815 19110817 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 15 AND 17. A HAS DIVIDED TO FORM A CLOSE PAIR ON AUGUST 17, BUT IS STILL MEASURED AS A SINGLE SPOT. 6964 19110901 19110910 A SHORT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS BEING THE CHIEF MEMBERS OF IT. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 5, LEAVING A AS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL ATTENDANTS. 6965 19110904 19110905 A SMALL SPOT. 6965*19110922 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6966 19111002 19111008 A REGULAR SPOT, A, GENERALLY FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN. 6967 19111011 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6968 19111101 19111104 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 1; A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN FOLLOWING A ON NOVEMBER 2. 6969 19111101 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 6968. 6970 19111109 19111112 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 6971 19111114 A PAIR OF VERY FAINT SMALL SPOTS. 6972 19111121 19111202 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 6973 19111124 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6974 19111218 19111219 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON DECEMBER 18. ONE VERY SMALL REGULAR SPOT ON DECEMBER 19. 6975 19111219 19111224 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 19, WHICH ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS IS A COMPACT CLUSTER, FOLLOWED BY ANOTHER SMALL CLUSTER B. B HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 24. 6976 19111227 19111230 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 6977*19120304 VERY SMALL SPOT. 6977 19120307 19120318 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL VERY UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. THE LEADER IS WELL DEFINED AND STEADY IN ITS POSITION, AND SLOWLY DIMINISHES IN SIZE; THE COMPANIONS ARE SHORT LIVED, AND THEIR NUMBER AND DISTRIBUTION ALTER QUICKLY FROM DAY TO DAY. 6978 19120401 VERY SMALL SPOT. 6979 19120407 19120409 PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 6980 19120408 19120414 A REVIVAL, NOT A RETURN, OF GROUP 6977. A FEW SMALL SPOTS WHICH RAPIDLY INCREASE IN SIZE, FORMING BY APRIL 10, A STREAM WITH TWO LARGE WELL-DEFINED SPOTS, A AND B, IN THE FRONT AND REAR OF THE GROUP, WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. 6981 19120421 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 6982 19120430 19120509 RETURN OF GROUP 6980. A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS CLUSTERED TOGETHER. 6982*19120504 VERY SMALL SPOT, 6982#19120504 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 6983 19120430 19120501 SMALL FAINT SPOT. 6984 19120507 SMALL FAINT SPOT. 6985 19120509 19120510 SMALL SPOT. 6986 19120513 VERY SMALL SPOT. 6987 19120513 VERY SMALL SPOT. 6987*19120514 VERY SMALL SPOT. 6988 19120526 19120531 CLUSTER OF FAINT SPOTS. 6989 19120531 19120602 CLUSTER OF SPOTS, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 6990 19120531 19120603 A DOUBLE SPOT, SOUTH OF GROUP 6989. 6991 19120616 VERY SMALL SPOT. 6991*19120618 CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 6992 19120617 19120628 RETURN OF GROUP 6989. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON JUNE 20. 6993 19120625 19120627 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 6994 19120702 19120705 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 6994*19120702 A SMALL SPOT. 6995 19120705 19120713 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 5, EXPANDING INTO A SHORT STREAM; ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS BY JULY 12 AND 13. 6996 19120717 19120718 SMALL FAINT SPOT. 6997 19120828 A SMALL SPOT, APPARENTLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 6995. 6998 19120906 19120913 SOME SMALL SPOTS CHIEFLY ARRANGED IN TWO CLUSTERS; THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER DISAPPEARS BEFORE SEPTEMBER 10. 6998*19120907 19120908 A SMALL SPOT. 6999 19120912 19120920 A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE SPOTS UNDERGO MANY CHANGES. 7000 19120914 A FEW SCATTERED SPOTS. 7001 19120925 19120928 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. 7002 19121005 19121011 A CONSIDERABLE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS ON OCTOBER 6, A AND B, ARE MUCH THE LARGEST AND BEST DEFINED MEMBERS OF THE GROUP. A DEVELOPS INTO A REGULAR SPOT; B BREAKS UP AFTER OCTOBER 8, AND A ALONE REMAINS ON OCTOBER 11. 7003 19121018 19121020 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 7004 19121116 19121119 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 7005 19121212 19121222 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. THE LEADER, A, INCREASES RAPIDLY AFTER DECEMBER 17 TO FORM A LARGE COMPACT SPOT CROSSED BY MANY BRIDGES, AND SEVERAL OF ITS COMPANIONS COALESCE TO FORM A SIMILAR SPOT, B, FOLLOWING IT. 7006 19121212 19121218 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 7005, AND MAKING UP WITH IT A BROKEN STREAM. 7007 19121216 19121218 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS. 7008 19121229 19130102 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS. 7009 19130113 19130115 A CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7010 19130116 19130118 A VERY FAINT CLUSTER. 7011 19130125 19130127 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 7012 19130219 19130227 A REGULAR SPOT WITH TRAIN IN HIGH LATITUDE. 7013 19130220 19130225 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN HIGH LATITUDE. THIS GROUP, TOGETHER WITH GROUP 7012, MAY BE CONSIDERED AS FORMING A SINGLE SPARSE AND BROKEN STREAM, BUT THERE IS A CLEAR GAP BETWEEN THE TWO. 7014 19130313 19130314 A SMALL SPOT IN HIGH LATITUDE. 7015 19130405 19130407 A SHORT STREAM. 7016 19110709 19110714 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 9, EXPANDING INTO A SHORT STREAM; ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON JULY 14. 7017 19130907 19130909 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 7018 19131006 19131008 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL CLUSTERS. 7019 19131025 19131031 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP. 7020 19131124 19131125 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 7021 19131209 19131214 A FAIRLY STABLE SPOT A, WITH SEVERAL SHORT-LIVED COMPANIONS, OF WHICH ONE, B, APPEARS IN ADVANCE OF A ON DECEMBER 13, AND REMAINS ALONE ON DECEMBER 14. 7022 19131230 19140104 A PAIR OF DOUBLE SPOTS VARYING THEIR DISTANCE FROM EACH OTHER, WITH OCCASIONAL DIFFERENT COMPANIONS. 7023 19140101 19140102 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP. 7023*19140103 A VERY SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOT. 7024 19140105 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. 7024*19140106 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7024#19140109 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7025 19140202 19140206 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 7026 19140204 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL EVANESCENT SPOTS. 7027 19140218 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7027*19140221 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 7027#19140227 A VERY SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. 7028*19140312 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7028 19140312 19140314 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7029 19140315 19140318 A SMALL STREAM IN HIGH LATITUDE, THE REAR SPOT, A, ALONE REMAINING AFTER MARCH 16. 7030 19140330 19140411 A LARGE CONTINUOUSLY ACTIVE SPOT-GROUP. THE MAIN SPOT, A, SOON BREAKS UP INTO AN INCREASING NUMBER OF COMPONENTS-THE MOST IMPORTANT BEING B AND C - WHICH FORM A STREAM COVERING 12 DEGREES IN LONGITUDE ON APRIL 6. AFTER THIS DATE THEY DIMINISH IN NUMBER, ONLY THE REAR SPOT, C, REMAINING VISIBLE ON APRIL 11 CLOSE TO THE LIMB. 7031 19140412 19140414 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 7032 19140416 19140424 A SUCCESSION OF SMALL SHORT-LIVED SPOTS VARYING IN RELATIVE IMPORTANCE. 7033 19140419 19140422 A PAIR OF SMALL UNSTABLE GROUPS. 7033*19140420 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SP, GROUP 7033. 7034 19140423 A SMALL SPOT. 7035 19140424 19140425 TWO OR THREE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7036 19140426 19140503 A FINE STREAM OF ACTIVE SPOTS OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER SPOT, A, CONTINUES TO BE THE MOST IMPORTANT MEMBER, AS THE REAR OF THE STREAM SOON DISAPPEARS. A, THE UMBRA OF WHICH IS FREQUENTLY CROSSED BY BRIGHT BRIDGES, IS MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS ON APRIL 29. 7036*19140502 19140504 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 7037 19140427 A VERY SMALL SPOT IN THE SAME AREA OF DISTURBANCE AS GROUP 7038. 7038 19140428 19140504 RETURN OF GROUP 7030. A GROUP OF SPOTS APPEARING ON THE EAST LIMB AND SHOWING SIGNS OF DYING ACTIVITY. 7038*19140504 A VERY SMALL SPOT, P, THE PLACE OF GROUP 7038. 7039 19140505 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, N, OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 7038. 7040 19140505 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7041 19140506 A SMALL EVANESCENT SPOT. 7042 19140521 19140525 A SHORT AND UNIMPORTANT STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7043 19140522 A GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7044 19140524 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT. 7045 19140529 19140530 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7046 19140608 19140615 A STABLE SPOT, A, WITH SMALL EVANESCENT COMPANIONS. 7047 19140612 19140622 A FINE ACTIVE STREAM. A SMALL GROUP ON JUNE 12, DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE SPOT, A, AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM HAS, BY JUNE 19, COMPLETELY COALESCED WITH SPOT B (REPRESENTED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 17) TO FORM C, WHICH REMAINS STABLE AS THE REAR OF THE STREAM GRADUALLY DISAPPEARS. 7048 19140613 TWO SMALL SPOTS. A IS DOUBLE. 7049 19140613 19140618 A FEW SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH A IS THE MOST STABLE. 7050 19140701 19140702 A SMALL CLUSTER OF SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 7051 19140702 19140713 A REVIVAL OF GROUP 7048. A FAIRLY REGULAR SPOT, A, PASSING THOUGH A PHASE OF INSTABILITY FROM JULY 6-8; IT IS MEASURED IN TWO PORTIONS ON JULY 7. 7052 19140702 19140707 A SPOT SOON BREAKING UP INTO EVANESCENT COMPONENTS. THE AREA OF ACTIVITY CONNECTED WITH THIS GROUP IS CLOSELY RELATED TO THAT OF GROUP 7051, AND SHOWS A REMARKABLE DRIFT BOTH IN LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE. 7053 19140707 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7054 19140711 19140713 ONE OR TWO UNSTABLE SPOTS; NONE ARE VISIBLE ON JULY 12. 7055 19140713 A MINUTE SPOT. 7056 19140716 19140719 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP. 7057 19140721 19140723 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 7057*19140729 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7058 19140730 19140731 REVIVAL OF GROUP 7057. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 7059 19140730 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 7060 19140813 19140826 A FINE LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SHOWING PRACTICALLY NO ACTIVITY, WITH OCCASSIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS, GENERALLY ON THE FOLLOWING SIDE. 7061 19140816 19140818 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B; B ALONE REMAINS ON AUGUST 18. 7062 19140816 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 7061, BUT IN THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE. 7063 19140816 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 7060, BUT SOUTH OF THE EQUATOR. 7064 19140818 19140819 A VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOT. 7065 19140823 19140824 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 7066 19140830 19140831 A FEW SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH A IS DOUBLE. 7067 19140908 19140920 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, OCCASIONALLY WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS, AND GRADUALLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. 7068 19140910 19140922 RETURN OF GROUP 7060. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON SEPTEMBER 16 AND 17, AND SHOWING SIGNS OF BREAKING UP AS THE WESTERN LIMB IS APPROACHED. A WAS VISIBLE RIGHT ON THE EASTERN LIMB ON SEPTEMBER 9, BUT ITS POSITION AND AREA COULD NOT WELL BE DETERMINED. 7069 19140911 19140921 AN UNSTABLE SPOT, A, WITH COMPANIONS, BREAKING UP AFTER SEPTEMBER 15. 7070 19140912 19140913 A SMALL SPOT, P, GROUP 7069. 7071 19140912 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7072 19140916 19140919 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A DISTURBED AREA NF, GROUP 7068. 7073 19140924 19141002 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, COMMENCING TO BREAK UP RAPIDLY ON OCTOBER 1. TWO DISTANT FOLLOWERS APPEAR ON OCTOBER 2. 7074 19141002 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7075 19141003 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7076 19141009 19141011 A SHORT SPARSE STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, BEING APPARENTLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 7071. 7077 19141011 19141013 A FEW SCATTERED EVANESCENT SPOTS-NONE SEEN ON OCTOBER 12. THIS GROUP MARKS THE POSITION OF THE GREAT SPOT OF AUGUST AND SEPTEMBER-GROUPS 7060 AND 7068. 7078 19141015 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS IN LOW LATITUDE. 7079 19141019 19141021 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP. 7080 19141021 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7081 19141021 19141030 AN ACTIVE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, REMAINS FAIRLY STABLE UNTIL OCTOBER 26, AFTER WHICH DATE A SPOT, B, IN THE REAR OF THE STREAM BECOMES THE MOST PROMINENT FEATURE. 7082 19141025 19141026 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7083 19141026 A SMALL TRIPLE SPOT. 7084 19141026 A MINUTE SPOT. 7085 19141026 19141103 AN ACTIVE STREAM OF GENERALLY UNIMPORTANT SPOTS ; A SPOT, A, IN THE REAR OF THE STREAM BECOMING PREDOMINANT AFTER OCTOBER 31 AND INCREASING IN AREA UNTIL ITS DISAPPEARANCE ROUND THE WESTERN LIMB. 7086 19141030 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SP, GROUP 7085. 7087 19141102 19141111 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7088 19141106 19141115 AN ACTIVE STREAM OF SPOTS OF RAPID BIRTH. THE STREAM IS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR, AND ITS LENGTH STEADILY INCREASES AS THE TWO PRINCIPAL COMPONENTS, A AND B, MOVE AWAY FROM EACH OTHER. THE REAR SPOT, B, IS BREAKING UP ON NOVEMBER 12, THE LEADER SPOT, A, ALONE REMAINING ON NOVEMBER 14. 7089 19141113 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, P, THE PLACE OF GROUP 7087. 7090 19141113 A VERY SMALL SPOT FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7091 19141113 19141115 TWO OR THREE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7092 19141118 19141120 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7093 19141118 19141119 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 7094 19141118 19141127 RETURN OF GROUP 7085. TWO STABLE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL ATTENDANTS. 7095 19141120 19141124 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F, GROUP 7094, IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON NOVEMBER 23. 7096 19141121 19141124 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, F, GROUP 7095. 7097 19141121 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7098 19141122 19141124 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NF, GROUP 7094 ; NONE ARE SEEN ON NOVEMBER 23. 7099 19141122 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT IN LOW LATITUDE. 7100 19141122 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F, GROUP 7094. 7100*19141124 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7101 19141124 19141127 A PAIR OF SPOTS, A AND B, WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE AND DIMINISHING RAPIDLY IN AREA. 7102 19141127 19141209 A LARGE ALMOST REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL FOLLOWERS. A REACHES A MINIMUM IN LATITUDE ON DECEMBER 1 AND A MAXIMUM IN LONGITUDE ABOUT DECEMBER 3. 7103 19141128 19141206 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, DIVIDING INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C, WHICH SOON DISAPPEAR. THIS GROUP CLOSELY FOLLOWS GROUP 7102 IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA. 7104 19141128 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7105 19141128 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7106 19141129 19141211 RETURN OF GROUP 7090. A FAIRLY REGULAR SPOT, A, OFTEN ACCOMPANIED BY SMALL COMPANIONS AND GRADUALLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. 7107 19141201 19141206 REVIVAL OF GROUP 7105. AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 7108 19141202 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS, BEING APPARENTLY A REVIVAL IN THE AREA OF GROUPS 7087 AND 7089. 7109 19141202 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF, GROUP 7106. 7109*19141203 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7110 19141203 19141215 TWO ILL-FORMED SPOTS, THE FIRST OF WHICH, A, DIES AWAY AFTER DECEMBER 8, WHILE B, THE SECOND AND LARGER, BREAKS UP INTO A SMALL CLUSTER ON DECEMBER 11. 7111 19141205 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F, A DISTURBED AREA. 7112 19141208 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 7113 19141208 19141219 A FEW SPOTS DEVELOPING NORMALLY INTO A STREAM OF WHICH THE REAR SPOT, B, BECOMES THE LARGER AFTER DECEMBER 12, THE LEADER SPOT, A, GRADUALLY DIMINISHING IN SIZE. 7114 19141209 19141212 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A COMPANION ON DECEMBER 9. 7115 19141209 19141210 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL ISOLATED SPOTS IN HIGH LATITUDE. 7116 19141211 19141213 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 7117 19141212 19141213 A SMALL SPOT. 7118 19141214 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7119 19141217 19141225 A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS COALESCING TO FORM A SINGLE SPOT, A, BY DECEMBER 18. THE GROUP SHOWS A CONTINUATION OF ACTIVITY IN THE AREA OCCUPIED BY GROUPS 7094, 7095, AND 7096. 7120 19141220 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS SHOWING A REVIVAL OF GROUP 7091. 7121 19141224 19141225 ONE OR TWO SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 7122 19141225 19150104 RETURN OF GROUP 7102. A SLOWLY CONTRACTING SPOT, A OF GROUP 7102, WITH A MASS OF FACULAE TO THE SOUTH. THE MOTION OF THE SPOT IN LONGITUDE, SINCE ITS MAXIMUM ABOUT DECEMBER 3, APPEARS TO BE CONSISTENTLY MAINTAINED. 7123 19141226 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 7121, BUT IN THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE. 7124 19141229 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SP, GROUP 7122. 7125 19141230 19141231 A SMALL GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7126 19141230 19150105 PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 7116 OR 7117. A FEW SMALL SPOTS, IN AN INTERMITTENT GROUP NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 3 AND 4. 7127 19141231 19150112 A FINE CLUSTER BY JANUARY 3, DEVELOPING INTO TWO LARGE AND ACTIVE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A FEW FAINT COMPANIONS. A, THE LARGER, HAS DIVIDED UP BY JANUARY 11, WHILE B IS QUICKLY DISAPPEARING. PERHAPS A RETURN OF GROUP 7110, BUT MORE PROBABLY A NEW DISTURBANCE IN ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD. 7128 19150102 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7129 19150103 19150105 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7130 19150104 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS PRECEDING THE PLACE OF GROUP 7126, AND IN THE SAME LATITUDE. 7131 19150105 A FAINT MARKING FOLLOWING GROUP 7126, AND IN THE SAME LATITUDE. 7132 19150105 A FAINT MARKING, NF GROUP 7127. 7133 19150106 A SMALL SPOT SURROUNDED BY FACULAE. NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 7113, BUT PROBABLY A FRESH OUTBURST. 7134 19150107 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 7127. 7135 19150111 A VERY SMALL DARK SPOT, PRECEDED BY A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7136 19150112 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A SPARSE CLUSTER. 7137 19150112 19150117 A SMALL WELL-DEFINED SPOT, A, F GROUP 7136. OTHER SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, FORM IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD OF A, MAKING UP WITH IT A SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH SOME MEMBERS ARE FAIRLY STABLE. 7138 19150112 19150123 A REGULAR SPOT STEADILY DIMINISHING AFTER JANUARY 15. 7139 19150114 19150117 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 7140 19150115 19150122 RETURN OF GROUP 7125. A REGULAR SPOT, A, STEADILY DIMINISHING AFTER JANUARY 17. A VERY SMALL COMPANION, B, IS SEEN NEAR A ON JANUARY 21; A HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 22, BUT B AND ANOTHER VERY SMALL SPOT ARE SEEN ON THAT DAY. 7141 19150116 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, SURROUNDED BY FACULAE, NP GROUP 7139. 7142 19150116 19150117 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LAST ONE, A, IS THE LARGEST AND DARKEST, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. ONLY A REMAINS ON JANUARY 17. 7143 19150116 19150126 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEPARATED BY A NARROW TONGUE OF BRIGHT MATERIAL ON JANUARY 16. THIS TONGUE HAS NARROWED BY JANUARY 17, AND THE GROUP APPEARS AS A SINGLE REGULAR SPOT, A, CROSSED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE. THE SPOT DIMINISHES AFTER JANUARY 18, AND IS PRECEDED BY TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON JANUARY 22. 7144 19150119 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7145 19150119 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7146 19150120 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7147 19150122 A SMALL SPOT. 7148 19150123 A FAINT SPOT SURROUNDED BY BRIGHT FACULAE, F GROUP 7138. 7149 19150127 19150129 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON JANUARY 27. A SECOND, B, HAS FORMED F A BY JANUARY 28. 7150 19150128 19150129 A VERY CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 7151 19150128 19150128 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7152 19150128 19150203 A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, A AND B. THE SPOTS CANNOT BE CERTAINLY DETECTED FROM JANUARY 30 TO FEBRUARY 1, BUT BOTH HAVE RE- APPEARED BY FEBRUARY 2. THE REGION IN WHICH ARE THIS GROUP AND GROUP 7151 SEEMS IN A STATE OF FEEBLE AND INTERMITTENT ACTIVITY. 7153 19150129 19150129 TWO FAINT MARKINGS. 7154 19150129 19150129 TWO VERY FAINT MARKINGS. 7155 19150129 19150129 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 7156 19150130 19150130 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7157*19150125 19150125 A SMALL FAINT MARKING, P THE POSITION OF GROUP 7157. 7157 19150131 19150131 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7158 19150131 19150210 WITH GROUP 7160, A RETURN OF GROUP 7137. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, B AND C, BY FEBRUARY 3, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP DISINTEGRATES. SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD ON FEBRUARY 9 AND 10. 7159 19150201 19150201 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7160 19150201 19150213 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, FOLLOWING GROUP 7158. NEW SPOTS FORM, AND BY FEBRUARY 6 A WIDE AREA IS AFFECTED BY THE DISTURBANCE. BY FEBRUARY 8 THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED INTO A LONG, STRAIGHT, AND NEARLY CONTINUOUS STREAM, INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. BY FEBRUARY 10, TWO OF THE LEADING SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE BECOME REGULAR, AND HAVE APPARENTLY COALESCED TO FORM C BY FEBRUARY 12. ONLY C IS VISIBLE ON FEBRUARY 13. 7161 19150204 19150212 A WIDE AREA OF DISTURBANCE UNDERGOING MUCH THE SAME TYPE OF CHANGES AS GROUP 7160. A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, HAS FORMED AT THE HEAD OF THE GROUP BY FEBRUARY 6, BUT DIMINISHES SLOWLY AFTERWARDS. IT IS FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH B IS THE MOST STABLE. OUTBREAK HAS OCCURRED BY FEBRUARY 9, NF THE POSITION OF B, AND A LONG, SPARSE, STRAIGHT STREAM IS FORMED INCLINED AT A CONSIDERABLE ANGLE TO THE EQUATOR. THESE NEW SPOTS HAVE DEVELOPED LARGELY BY FEBRUARY 11, WHILE A HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 12. 7162 19150204 19150208 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A DISTURBED AREA, S OF GROUP 7158. 7163 19150204 19150205 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 7164 19150205 19150208 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A DISTURBED AREA, N OF GROUP 7160. 7165 19150205 19150218 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, CROSSED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE. AFTER FEBRUARY 11, WHEN A HAS DIMINISHED A GOOD DEAL, A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL AND UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR ROUND A AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE FROM IT. 7166 19150206 19150209 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS, FORMING NF GROUP 7160. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 8. 7167 19150207 19150214 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. THE REAR SPOT, A, HAS DEVELOPED CONSIDERABLY BY FEBRUARY 10, AND BECOME A DOUBLE SPOT, BUT HAS ALMOST DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 13. 7168 19150208 19150209 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, FORMING NF GROUP 7167. 7169 19150208 19150220 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SEVERAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 7170 19150209 19150210 A FEW SMALL SPOTS FORMING CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB, AND P GROUP 7158. 7171 19150209 19150210 RETURN OF GROUP 7138. A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 7169. 7172 19150209 19150214 A REGULAR SPOT, A, SF GROUP 7171, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. A DIMINISHES QUICKLY AFTER FEBRUARY 12. 7173 19150210 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 7172. 7174 19150211 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NP GROUP 7158, AND NF THE PLACE OF GROUP 7170. 7175 19150215 19150216 A VERY SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 7165. 7176 19150215 19150215 A SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 7165. 7177 19150220 19150220 A CLOSE PAIR OF FAINT MARKINGS, MEASURED TOGETHER AS ONE. 7178 19150220 19150220 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING, SF GROUP 7177. 7179 19150220 19150220 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING, SF GROUP 7178. 7180 19150220 19150303 A SMALL SPOT, A, ON FEBRUARY 20. OTHER SMALL SPOTS APPEAR F A, ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. BUT BY FEBRUARY 24 THE GROUP HAS UNDERGONE A GREAT CHANGE. A HAS DEVELOPED INTO A FINE COMPOSITE SPOT AT THE HEAD OF THE GROUP, AND A CONSIDERABLE CLUSTER IS IN PROCESS OF FORMING AT A DISTANCE, SF. THE GROUP CONTINUES TO DEVELOP, AND BY FEBRUARY 26 CONSISTS OF A, NOW A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AND B, A TRIPLE CLUSTER FAR IN THE REAR, AND A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 7181 19150221 19150303 A FEW SMALL SPOTS LOOSELY SCATTERED OVER AN EXTENSIVE AREA. THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 25, BUT HAS REVIVED BY FEBRUARY 27, WHEN IT CONSISTS OF A SHORT BROAD STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT, A. 7182 19150222 19150222 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 7183 19150223 19150306 A REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH SOME UNSTABLE SMALL COMPANIONS. 7184 19150224 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7185 19150225 19150307 AN EXTENSIVE AREA IN WHICH SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 4, BUT HAS REVIVED BY MARCH 5. THE LEADER, A, ON MARCH 6 IS A REGULAR SPOT, AND ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 7. 7186 19150226 19150227 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 26. ONLY THE LAST ONE, A, IS SEEN ON FEBRUARY 27. 7187 19150226 19150311 RETURN OF GROUP 7170. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 7188 19150227 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SP GROUP 7187. 7189 19150228 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT IN BRIGHT FACULAE. POSSIBLY A RETURN OF GROUP 7161. 7190 19150228 19150311 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MARCH 1. 7191 19150301 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 7183. 7192 19150302 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 7181. 7193 19150302 19150309 A SMALL SPOT, SP GROUP 7187, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A REGULAR SPOT, A, BUT DIMINISHING AGAIN AFTER MARCH 5. 7194 19150303 A SMALL SPOT. 7195 19150303 19150305 A VERY SMALL DOUBLE SPOT,F GROUP 7193, SEEN ONLY ON MARCH 4, BUT A FAINT MARKING IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON MARCH 5. 7196 19150303 19150304 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT, SF GROUP 7187. 7197 19150304 19150312 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE, IRREGULARLY SCATTERED. A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, IN THE SOUTHERN PORTION OF THE GROUP ON MARCH 8 DEVELOPS RAPIDLY INTO A REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS BY MARCH 12. 7198 19150305 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7199 19150305 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING, SP GROUP 7190. 7200 19150305 19150310 A PAIR OF SPOTS, S OF GROUP 7197. THE GROUP QUICKLY DEVELOPS INTO A SPARSE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, WITH THREE CHIEF SPOTS, A, B, AND C. 7201 19150307 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING, SF THE PLACE OF GROUP 7183, WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED. 7202 19150306 19150308 SOME SMALL SPOTS, NP GROUP 7197. 7203 19150307 19150313 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. ALL THE MEMBERS OF THE GROUP ARE UNSTABLE EXCEPT THE LEADER, A. 7203*19150314 19150315 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING THE POSITION OF GROUP 7203. 7204 19150307 19150319 RETURN OF GROUP 7169. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS BY MARCH 11. THESE ARE MEASURED AS ONE UNTIL MARCH 14, AFTER WHICH THEY ARE TAKEN SEPARATELY AND ARE LETTERED B AND C. NUMEROUS SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD OF THE PRINCIPAL SPOTS FROM DAY TO DAY. 7205 19150313 A VERY SMALL SPOT, SF GROUP 7204. 7206 19150314 19150320 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER THAT GRADUALLY STRAIGHTENS OUT INTO A SPARSE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE REAR SPOT, B, IS LARGER AND BETTER DEFINED THAN THE LEADER, A, AFTER MARCH 17. 7207 19150315 A SMALL FAINT MARKING NF GROUP 7204. 7208 19150315 SEVERAL FAINT MARKINGS IN A COMPACT CLUSTER. 7209 19150315 19150326 RETURN OF GROUP 7186. A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL FAINT MARKINGS, ON MARCH 15 AND 16. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 17-19, AND AGAIN ON MARCH 21-24, BUT SMALL MARKINGS ARE SEEN IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD ON MARCH 20, 25, AND 26. 7210 19150316 19150322 AN IRREGULAR AND UNSTABLE CLUSTER TENDING TO STRAIGHTEN OUT INTO A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER SPOT, A, IS AT FIRST THE LARGEST, THE REAR SPOT, B, IS THE PRINCIPAL SPOT LATER, AND FINALLY, C, AN INTERMEDIATE SPOT, IS LARGEST. 7211 19150317 A SMALL FAINT SPOT SF GROUP 7204. 7212 19150318 A SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7213 19150318 A SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7214 19150320 19150323 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY DISTRIBUTED OVER A SMALL AREA. 7215 19150321 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS SF GROUP 7214. POSSIBLY A RETURN OF GROUP 7181. 7216 19150322 19150403 RETURN OF GROUP 7185. A REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 7216*19150327 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 7216 BUT IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE. 7217 19150326 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING NF GROUP 7216. 7218 19150329 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7219 19150329 A VERY SMALL SPOT F GROUP 7216. 7220 19150329 19150405 A REGULAR SPOT, A, SMALL AT FIRST, BUT QUICKLY INCREASING AND AS QUICKLY DIMINISHING. OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN F. 7221 19150329 19150330 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, BEING THE LARGEST. 7222 19150330 19150402 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LAST, A, IS THE LARGEST, IN A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM F THE PLACE OF GROUP 7218. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 1. 7223 19150330 19150410 A VERY LARGE SPOT, A, SF GROUP 7221, NEARLY REGULAR IN OUTLINE AT FIRST, BUT HAVING A LONG NARROW PROJECTION, B, ON THE F SIDE, WHICH IS INCLUDED IN THE MEASURE OF A ON APRIL 3. ANOTHER PROJECTION FROM A ON THE SP SIDE IS MEASURED AS A SEPARATE SPOT, C, ON APRIL 4, AND HAS BECOME QUITE DETACHED FROM A BY APRIL 5. A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ARE ALSO SOMETIMES SEEN. 7224 19150330 19150411 A FINE STRAIGHT AND ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM, SF GROUP 7223, OF WHICH THE TWO FIRST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. A AND B INCREASE IN SIZE AND HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A VERY LARGE DOUBLE SPOT, C, BY APRIL 3. A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS USUALLY FOLLOWS C. 7225 19150331 19150410 THREE SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT LINE PERPENDICULAR TO THE EQUATOR, F GROUP 7224. THESE HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, BY APRIL 2. A DIMINISHES AND BREAKS UP, CHIEFLY BY FORMING SPOTS ON THE P SIDE, AFTER APRIL 3. 7226 19150401 19150413 A NUMBER OF SPOTS, NONE OF THEM LARGE, IN A STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST MEMBERS, ARE THE LARGEST. A IS CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A DOUBLE SPOT, C, ON APRIL 4, AND THE TWO HAVE COALESCED BY APRIL 6 TO FORM A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, D. THE OTHER MEMBERS OF THE GROUP ARE SMALL AND UNSTABLE, AND D ALONE REMAINS AFTER APRIL 9. 7226*19150410 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS SP GROUP 7226. 7227 19150402 19150413 A LONG NARROW SPOT A, FOLLOWED BYA A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS, MAKING UP WITH IT A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM NF GROUP 7225. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS, B AND C, BY APRIL 10, AFTER WHICH BOTH DIMINISH IN SIZE, AND C ALONE REAMINS BY APIRL 13. 7228 19150403 19150410 A IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE, AND RATHER FAINT IN APPEARANCE, F GROUP 7227. THE GROUP STEADILY DIMINISHES IN SIZE. 7229 19150404 19150405 RETURN OF GROUP 7204. THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 7228, AND MAKING UP WITH IT AND GROUP 7227 A SMALL PROCESSION. 7230 19150406 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 7231 19150406 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 7232 19150406 19150412 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS FORMING NF GROUP 7225. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 8, 9, OR 10. THE GROUPS 7223, 7224, 7225, AND 7232 MAKE UP A MAGNIFICENT PROCESSION, 30 IN LENGTH. 7233 19150406 A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS S OF GROUP 7232. 7234 19150411 19150418 RETURN OF GROUP 7209. THIRD APPARITION. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN EXTENDED GROUP OF FACULAE. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 14 OR APRIL 17. 7234*19150415 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS sf GROUP 7234. 7235 19150412 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING S GROUP 7233. 7236 19150412 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING N THE POSITION OF GROUP 7229. 7237 19150412 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7238 19150413 19150415 A FEW SMALL SCATTERED AND UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7239 19150415 19150416 A VERY SMALL SPOT APPEARING NEAR THE W. LIMB ON APRIL 15, N OF THE POSITION OF GROUP 7237. IT HAS DEVELOPED INTO A LARGE SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION, BY APRIL 16. 7240 19150418 19150427 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 18. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY APRIL 21 AND BECOMES AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADING SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE, AND ALONE REMAINS AFTER APRIL 25. 7241 19150418 19150423 A VERY SMALL INTERMITTENT SPOT F GROUP 7240; NOT SEEN ON APRIL 21 OR 22. 7242 19150419 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A FAINT COMPANION; SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE W. LIMB. 7243 19150419 19150420 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A FAINT COMPANION IN BRIGHT FACULAE. ONLY A REMAINS ON APRIL 20. 7244 19150419 19150420 A SMALL SPOT N OF GROUP 7243, AND IN THE SAME MASS OF FACULAE. 7245 19150420 19150428 A FEW SMALL SPOTS SP GROUP 7240, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A WELL-FORMED STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER, A, IS A REGULAR SPOT, MUCH THE LARGEST MEMBER OF THE GROUP. THE REAR SPOT, B, IS NEXT IN SIZE; THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS ARE SMALL. B HAS BROKEN UP BY APRIL 22, BUT IS MEASURED AS A SINGLE CLUSTER ON APRIL 23 AND AFTER APRIL 24. 7246 19150420 19150422 A DISTURBED AREA SF GROUP 7240, IN WHICH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN. 7247 19150421 A VERY SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOT. 7248 19150422 A VERY SMALL MARKING SP GROUP 7245. 7249 19150422 A VERY SMALL MARKING P THE PLACE OF GROUP 7243. 7250 19150423 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7251 19150423 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7252 19150423 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7253 19150424 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7254 19150425 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7255 19150426 19150508 RETURN OF GROUP 7223. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, NF A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM. THE STREAM HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 6, LEAVING A ALONE. 7256 19150426 19150508 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT TRAIN. 7257 19150427 A VERY SMALL SPOT P GROUP 7255. 7258 19150427 19150504 RETURN OF GROUP 7224. A SMALL COMPACT CLUSTER, A, SF GROUP 7255. A COMPANION CLUSTER, B, HAS FORMED CLOSE TO A ON THE S BY MAY 2. 7258*19150505 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS N OF THE POSITION OF GROUP 7258. 7259 19150428 19150507 A SMALL, ILL-DEFINED SPOT, A, SF GROUP 7256, WITH OCCASSIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 4, 5, AND 6. 7260 19150428 19150508 PERHAPS A RETURN OF GROUP 7232. AN ENLONGATED SPOT, A, CROSSED BY MANY BRIGHT BRIDGES, AND FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 7, BUT THE GROUP IS REPRESENTED BY FAINT MARKINGS ON MAY 7 AND 8. 7261 19150428 19150509 RETURN OF GROUP 7226. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 7262 19150430 19150501 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 7263 19150430 19150510 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR TRAIN. THE TRAIN HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 8, LEAVING A ALONE. 7264 19150501 19150502 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM ON MAY 1. ONLY THE TWO LEADERS REMAIN BY MAY 2. 7265 19150501 19150503 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, SOMETIMES WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION SF GROUP 7264. 7266 19150502 19150507 A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM FORMING SUDDENLY NP GROUP 7255. THE GROUP DEVELOPS RAPIDLY, AND CONSISTS ON MAY 3 CHIEFLY OF A, THE LEADER, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AND A COMPACT CLUSTER IN THE REAR OF THE GROUP. THE CLUSTER, WHEN CLOSE TO THE LIMB ON MAY 7, APPEARS FROM THE FORESHORTENING LIKE A REGULAR SPOT,B. 7267 19150502 19150503 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS S GROUPS 7255 AND 7258. 7268 19150506 19150509 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. THE REAR SPOT REMAINS ALONE ON MAY 9. 7269 19150506 19150509 PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 7242. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 8. 7270 19150507 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7271 19150508 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7272 19150508 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 7273 19150510 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT N OF GROUP 7263. 7274 19150514 19150515 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS, A AND B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 15. 7275 19150516 A CLUSTER OF FAINT MARKINGS. 7276 19150518 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IN BRIGHT FACULAE. 7277 19150520 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7278 19150520 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7279 19150520 19150530 TWO SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER THAT SPEEDILY COMBINE TO FORM A RATHER FAINT AND INDEFINITE SPOT, A. AFTER MAY 24, HOWEVER, IT IS VERY DARK, BUT SMALL, BUT VARIES IN SIZE FROM DAY TO DAY. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON MAY 25. 7280 19150520 19150528 A LARGE SPOT, A, WITH TRIPLE UMBRA F GROUP 7279. IT BREAKS UP AFTER MAY 23. 7281 19150522 19150526 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A VERY SMALL CLUSTER. THE CLUSTER HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 24, EXCEPT FOR A VERY SMALL SPOT, B. 7282 19150522 19150603 RETURN OF GROUP 7266. A REMARKABLE GROUP, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH TWO REGULAR SPOTS CLOSE TO IT, O AND C; THE ONE SP AND THE OTHER SF. A GREAT NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR WITHIN A WIDE AREA ROUND THESE THREE CHIEF SPOTS. 7283 19150524 19150525 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7284 19150524 19150525 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7285 19150524 19150605 RETURN OF GROUP 7255. THIRD APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 29. 7285*19150529 A SMALL MARKING. 7286 19150524 19150601 A FEEBLE INTERMITTENT DISTURBANCE N OF GROUP 7285. ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT MARKINGS, NOT SEEN ON MAY 26, 27, 29, OR 31. 7287 19150528 19150530 A RING OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING A GOOD WAY IN ADVANCE OF GROUP 7279. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, HAS FORMED NP THE RING BY MAY 29, AND ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 30. 7288 19150529 19150530 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, N OF GROUP 7279. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR A ON MAY 29. 7289 19150529 19150530 A VERY SMALL SPOT N GROUP 7288. 7290 19150602 19150603 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM BETWEEN GROUPS 7282 AND 7285. NOTE.-GROUPS 7287, 7279, 7288, 7289, 7280, 7281, 7282, 7290, 7285, AND 7286, FORM A LONG IRREGULAR "PROCESSION" OF DISTURBANCES. 7291 19150602 19150603 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, APPEARING SUDDENLY IN THE REGION OF GROUP 7284. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE THE LARGEST. 7292 19150605 19150610 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, MOSTLY UNSTABLE, IN A SHORT STREAM. THE USUAL LEADER AND REAR SPOTS ARE REPRESENTED BY SMALL CLUSTERS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 9. THE MOST STABLE MEMBERS OF THE GROUP ARE A AND B; WHICH MAKE UP THE LEADING CLUSTER ON JUNE 7. 7293 19150609 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7294 19150610 19150611 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7295 19150612 VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7296 19150612 VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7297 19150612 VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7298 19150612 VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7299 19150612 19150624 A LARGE COMPLEX AND IRREGULAR CLUSTER UNDERGOING CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE GROUP ON JUNE 17 AND 18 CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF A STRAIGHT STREAM OF WHICH A, C, AND B ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. THESE PRINCIPAL SPOTS CHANGE QUICKLY BUT CAN BE IDENTIFIED UNTIL JUNE 20, AFTER WHICH THE CLUSTER DISSOLVES. 7300 19150613 19150624 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 7301 19150614 19150617 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, OR CLUSTERS OF SPOTS, A AND B. 7302 19150615 19150622 A REGULAR SPOT, A, FORMING P GROUP 7300. A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS FORMS IN THE REAR OF A, AND ATTAINS A CONSIDERABLE DEVELOPMENT BY JUNE 18, AFTER WHICH IT DISSOLVES. 7303 19150614 19150620 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JUNE 14, FOLLOWED JUNE 15-17 BY A SMALL TRAIN. ONLY THE TWO FIRST SPOTS, A AND B, ARE AT ALL STABLE, BUT THESE DISAPPEAR BEFORE JUNE 19, AND ONLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS REMAIN. 7304 19150615 19150627 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 7287. A GROUP FORMING F GROUP 7303. AT FIRST AN IRREGULAR STREAM IT RAPIDLY DEVELOPS INTO A VERY LARGE AND COMPLEX CLUSTER, OF WHICH TWO VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, FORM THE CHIEF MEMBERS ON JUNE 22. B HAS THROWN OFF TWO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS, C AND D, BY JUNE 23, WHICH ARE MEASURED AS ONE ON JUNE 25 AND 26. 7305 19150616 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7306 19150616 19150619 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 16. ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST. 7307 19150616 19150618 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT F GROUP 7304. 7308 19150617 19150624 AN ACTIVE STREAM FORMING SUDDENLY, S GROUP 7300. THE LEADER, A, SOON BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. A SECOND REGULAR SPOT, B, SOON DEVELOPS NEAR THE REAR OF THE GROUP, BUT DIMINISHES QUICKLY BY THROWING OFF FRAGMENTS ON ITS P SIDE. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, C AND D, BY JUNE 21. 7309 19150617 19150621 A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, F GROUP 7300. A IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 18, AND NEITHER A NOR B ON JUNE 19 AND 20. BUT FAINT MARKINGS ARE SEEN NEAR THE PLACES OF BOTH ON JUNE 21. 7310 19150619 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING BETWEEN GROUPS 7302 AND 7308. 7311 19150619 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING NF GROUP 7304. 7312 19150619 19150627 RETURN OF GROUP 7290. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 7313 19150619 19150701 RETURN OF GROUP 7291. A VERY LONG ACTIVE STREAM, OF THE NORMAL TYPE AT FIRST, WITH A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, LEADING THE STREAM, AND ANOTHER, B, ENDING IT. BUT BOTH OF THESE HAVE BROKEN UP BY JUNE 24, AND BY JUNE 26 THE GROUP IS ENTIRELY RECONSTRUCTED, THE P PORTION, ROUGHLY CORRESPONDING TO A, BEING NOW A NUMBER OF WIDELY SCATTERED SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, AND THE F PORTION, APPARENTLY B RE-FORMED, A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. B THEN BREAKS UP A SECOND TIME TO FORM THREE SPOTS, C, D, AND E, AND A REGULAR SPOT, F, TAKES SHAPE IN THE P PORTION OF THE STREAM. 7314 19150621 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7315 19150622 19150628 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A MOVES FORWARD WITH CONSIDERABLE SPEED, AND A SPARSE STREAM HAS FORMED BY JUNE 26, OF WHICH A IS THE LEADER. B IS NOT SEEN AFTER JUNE 23. 7316 19150622 19150624 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT F GROUP 7315. 7317 19150623 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING S GROUP 7316. 7318 19150623 19150625 A SMALL SPOT. 7319 19150624 19150701 A VERY SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 7319. TOW REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, ON JUNE 25. A SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH A IS LEADER, ON JUNE 28. ONLY A REMAINS AFTER JUNE 29. 7320 19150625 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 7312. 7321 19150626 A SMALL CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 7322 19150627 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7323 19150628 19150705 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. OF THESE TWO, A AND B, HAVE DEVELOPED GREATLY BY JULY 1, AND THE GROUP APPEARS AS TWO PARALLEL STREAMS. B HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 3, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP RAPIDLY DISAPPEARS. 7324 19150628 19150708 A REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH A SMALL TRAIN OF COMPANIONS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES QUICKLY AFTER JULY 2, AND IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 6, BUT A FEEBLE REVIVAL IS SEEN ON JULY 7 AND 8. 7325 19150629 19150630 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7326 19150629 A VERY SMALL FAINT MARKING. 7327 19150701 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT MARKINGS. 7327*19150702 A SMALL FAINT MARKING NF THE PLACE OF GROUP 7327. 7327#19150702 A SMALL FAINT MARKING NF GROUP 7327. 7328 19150702 A FAINT ELONGATED MARKING. 7329 19150705 19150707 TWO SPOTS, A AND B. THE LINE JOINING A AND B IS INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR AT AN ANGLE OF ABOUT 59 DEGREES ON JULY 5, OF ABOUT 45 DEGREES ON JULY 6, AND OF ABOUT 32 DEGREES ON JULY 7. A HAS A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 5. 7330 19150705 19150717 RETURN OF GROUP 7306. A FINE GROUP, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY, AND AT TIMES CONNECTED WITH, AN EXTENSIVE SHADED REGION DIVIDED INTO THREE MAIN AREAS, B, C, D. A AND B HAVE COALESCED TO FORM E, AND C AND D TO FORM F, BY JULY 8. SEVERAL NUCLEI FORM IN F, WHICH THROWS OFF SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS, AND DIMINISHES IN SIZE, AND HAS ALMOST VANISHED BY JULY 17. 7331 19150707 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS P GROUP 7330. 7332 19150708 TWO SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 7324. 7333 19150708 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 7334 19150708 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7335 19150708 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7336 19150709 19150713 A FEW SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. 7337 19150709 19150717 A DISTURBED REGION IN WHICH A NUMBER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE FORMED. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 16. 7338 19150710 A VERY SMALL SPOT P GROUP 7330. 7339 19150710 19150718 RETURN OF GROUP 7308. A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH A FEW UNSTABLE ATTENDANTS, MOSTLY ON THE F SIDE, EXCEPT ON JULY 14. 7340 19150711 19150712 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7341 19150711 19150723 RETURN OF GROUP 7304. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FREQUENTLY ACCOMPANIED BY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE, MOSTLY N OF A. 7342 19150712 19150713 A SMALL SPOT, A, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB, SP GROUP 7336. TWO FRESH SPOTS HAVE FORMED N AND NP OF A, BY JULY 13. 7343 19150712 19150725 RETURN OF GROUP 7315. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 7344 19150713 A VERY SMALL SPOT N OF GROUP 7337. 7345 19150714 TWO VERY SMALL MARKINGS F GROUP 7341. 7346 19150715 19150716 A VERY SMALL DIFFUSED MARKING P GROUP 7341, ON JULY 15; A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 16. 7347 19150716 A VERY SMALL MARKING NF GROUP 7330. 7348 19150716 19150727 RETURN OF GROUP 7325. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS WIDELY SCATTERED. A DIMINISHES RAPIDLY, AND A SMALL SPOT, B, HAS FORMED P IT BY JULY 22. B, NOW THE LEADER, INCREASES IN SIZE UP TO JULY 25, BUT DIMINISHES LATER. IN GENERAL THE GROUP HAS THE FORM OF A STRAIGHT SPARSE STREAM. 7349 19150717 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7350 19150718 19150723 A VERY SMALL SPOT BETWEEN GROUPS 7341 AND 7343; NOT SEEN ON JULY 21 AND 22. 7351 19150718 19150720 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON JULY 18. A THIRD IS SEEN ON JULY 19. ONLY B REMAINS ON JULY 20. 7352 19150718 19150719 A VERY SMALL SPOT F GROUP 7343. GROUPS 7346, 7341, 7345, 7350, 7343, AND 7352, FOLLOW ONE ANOTHER ON A PARALLEL OF LATITUDE. 7353 19150719 19150720 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7354 19150719 19150731 A MAGNIFICENT AND COMPLEX GROUP UNDERGOING MUCH CHANGE. FOUR SPOTS ON JULY 19, A, B, C, D, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST AND REGULAR IN FORM. THE GROUP BY JULY 24 HAS BECOME A VERY LONG, STRAIGHT, AND ALMOST CONTINUOUS STREAM, IN WHICH E, F, AND G REPRESENT RESPECTIVELY THE PRINCIPAL PARTS OF C, B, AND D. AN ACTIVE SPOT, H, FORMS S OF G ON JULY 25, AND ANOTHER, J, S OF A ON JULY 26, WHILE A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO, K AND L, BY JULY 27. AFTER THIS THE GROUP BREAKS UP. ONLY G REMAINS IN SIGHT ON JULY 31. 7355 19150720 19150723 SOME VERY SMALL MARKINGS BETWEEN GROUPS 7353 AND 7354, NOT SEEN ON JULY 21 AND 22. 7356 19150721 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7357 19150721 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7358 19150721 19150727 SEVERAL SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL, IN A SPARSE, LONG, STRAIGHT STREAM. A THE REAR SPOT, IS THE LARGEST, BUT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER JULY 24, AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 27. 7359 19150722 19150724 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 7360 19150723 19150730 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STRAIGHT STREAM. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 29. 7361 19150724 19150727 TWO SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 26. 7362 19150726 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7363 19150726 19150727 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7364 19150726 19150807 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, USUALLY WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS PRECEDING IT. 7365 19150727 19150805 AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, ARE THE LARGEST. A HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 29, C BEING ITS LARGEST AND MOST STABLE FRAGMENT. B, NOW A VERY SMALL SPOT, ALONE REMAINS OF THE ORIGINAL GROUP ON AUGUST 5. 7366 19150728 19150730 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. 7367 19150729 19150801 RETURN OF GROUP 7342. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. 7368 19150729 19150810 RETURN OF GROUP 7336. A VERY LARGE AND COMPLEX SPOT, A, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A NUMEROUS TRAIN, OF WHICH B,C,D,E, AND F ARE THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS. THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT INTO A VERY LONG STRAIGHT STREAM, AND A BREAKS UP INTO FOUR CHIEF SPOTS, G,H,J, AND K. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT L HAS FORMED AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM BY AUGUST 4, AND ANOTHER, M, NEAR ITS REAR BY AUGUST 6. AFTER THIS THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIMINISHES, AND CONSISTS OF THREE WIDELY SEPARATED DIVISIONS BY AUGUST 8, OF WHICH ONLY THE LAST REMAINS IN SIGHT ON AUGUST 10. 7369 19150730 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7370 19150730 19150801 RETURN OF GROUP 7340. A DISTURBED REGION F GROUP 7365, IN WHICH SOME VERY SMALL MARKINGS ARE SEEN. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JULY 31. 7371 19150731 A VERY SMALL MARKING NF GROUP 7365. 7372 19150731 A VERY SMALL MARKING SF GROUP 7365. 7373 19150731 A VERY SMALL MARKING SF GROUP 7367. 7374 19150801 19150805 A VERY SMALL MARKING SF GROUP 7365, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 2, 3, AND 4. 7375 19150801 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS P GROUP 7367. 7376 19150802 A VERY SMALL MARKING NP GROUP 7368. 7377 19150803 19150805 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS ON AUGUST 5. 7378 19150803 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7379 19150804 19150810 A SPARSE STRAIGHT STREAM SF GROUP 7368, AND NEARLY IN CONTACT WITH IT. THE PRINCIPAL SPOT, A, IS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE GROUP, AND IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS ON AUGUST 5. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP C, HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 9, AND THE PRECEDING PART, B BY AUGUST 10, LEAVING A ALONE. 7380 19150804 19150809 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 5, 6, 7, OR 8. 7381 19150804 19150806 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS, A AND B, ON AUGUST 4. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 5, BUT A IS VISIBLE ON AUGUST 6. 7382 19150807 19150809 A SMALL MARKING ON AUGUST 7. NOTHING IS SEEN ON AUGUST 8, BUT TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE VISIBLE ON AUGUST 9. 7383 19150807 19150808 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7384 19150807 19150819 RETURN OF GROUP 7341. THIRD APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES WITH ONE OR TWO DISTANT ATTENDANTS. 7385 19150809 19150811 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 10. 7386 19150809 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7387 19150809 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7388 19150810 19150814 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 11. 7389 19150810 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7390 19150810 19150816 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A. A SPOT IS SEEN ON AUGUST 16 WHICH APPEARS TO BE A NEW FORMATION NEAR THE PLACE OF A. 7391 19150811 19150815 A SMALL SPOT, A, MOVING FORWARD IN LONGITUDE, AND USUALLY ATTENDED BY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 7392 19150812 19150817 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, ON AUGUST 12. BOTH A AND B HAVE GREATLY INCREASED BY AUGUST 13, AND A SMALL SPOT HAS FORMED BETWEEN THEM. BOTH A AND B THEN DIMINISH RAPIDLY. SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS FORM IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD, AND ONE OF THESE LAST, C, ALONE REMAINS ON AUGUST 17. 7393 19150815 19150826 RETURN OF GROUP 7354. A COMPACT CLUSTER GRADUALLY CONDENSING INTO TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, ALMOST IN CONTACT WITH EACH OTHER, AND A FEW SMALLER BUT CLOSE COMPANIONS. 7394 19150816 19150820 A SMALL SPOT, A, SOMETIMES FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7395 19150816 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7396 19150816 19150817 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7397 19150816 19150826 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH A AND B SPEEDILY DEVELOP AND BECOME THE LEADER AND REARGUARD OF A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE CENTRE OF THE GROUP SOON DIES OUT, LEAVING A, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED AT A GREAT DISTANCE BY A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. A HAS PASSED OUT OF SIGHT AT THE WEST LIMB ON AUGUST 26. 7398 19150816 19150822 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO, C AND D, BY AUGUST 18, AND OTHER VERY SMALL SPOTS HAVING FORMED, THE GROUP HAS BECOME A SPARSE STREAM, OF WHICH ONLY C REMAINS ON AUGUST 21. A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS ARE SEEN ON AUGUST 22. 7399 19150819 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7400 19150819 19150821 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED ON AUGUST 20 BY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 7401 19150821 19150822 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7402 19150822 A SMALL SPOT NP GROUP 7401, SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 7403 19150822 19150823 A SMALL SPOT, A, PRECEDED ON AUGUST 22 BY TWO OTHERS. 7404 19150822 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7405 19150823 19150826 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 7406 19150823 19150903 A FINE STREAM, OF WHICH A, THE LEADER, IS THE LARGEST MEMBER. THE TWO LAST SPOTS, B AND C, ON AUGUST 24, ARE A CLOSE PAIR, WHICH HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A DOUBLE SPOT, D, BY AUGUST 26, BUT B AND C ARE AGAIN DISTINCT SPOTS BY AUGUST 27. ONLY C REMAINS IN SIGHT ON SEPTEMBER 3. 7407 19150824 19150905 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, OCCASIONALLY WITH SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 7408 19150826 19150828 A VERY SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 7406, ON AUGUST 26; A SMALL PAIR, A, FOLLOWED ON AUGUST 27 BY A SMALL SPOT, B, AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE. A SPARSE STREAM ON AUGUST 28. 7409 19150827 SOME VERY SMALL MARKINGS F GROUP 7408. 7410 19150828 A VERY SMALL MARKING, SP, GROUP 7407. 7411 19150828 19150910 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. A BREAKS UP AFTER SEPTEMBER 3, THE CHIEF PORTIONS BEING B, A REGULAR SPOT LEADING THE GROUP, AND C, A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT IN THE CENTRE. C AGAIN HAS BROKEN UP BY SEPTEMBER 5, ITS TWO CHIEF PORTIONS BEING D AND E. ONLY E IS IN SIGHT ON SEPTEMBER 10. 7412 19150829 19150902 A VERY SMALL MARKING SF GROUP 7407, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 30. 7413 19150829 19150901 AN AREA OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE. 7414 19150830 19150831 A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7415 19150830 19150902 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT, A, PRECEDED ON AUGUST 30 BY A VERY SMALL COMPANION; NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 1. 7416 19150830 19150901 A WIDE AREA OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE IN WHICH SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS APPEAR IRREGULARLY. NO MARKINGS ARE SEEN ON AUGUST 31. 7416*19150901 A SMALL SPOT. 7416#19150901 A SMALL SPOT. 7416@19150902 A SMALL SPOT. 7417 19150831 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7418 19150830 19150910 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, SOMETIMES PRECEDED BY A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 7419 19150831 A SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 7414, SEEN ONLY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 7420 19150901 19150912 PERHAPS CONNECTED WITH GROUP 7391. A REGULAR SPOT, A, DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AND DISAPPEARING BEFORE SEPTEMBER 5. A REVIVES AGAIN AFTER SEPTEMBER 6, WITH COMPANIONS TO THE NORTH, MAKING UP A FEEBLE STREAM, MOSTLY COLLECTED INTO TWO SMALL CLUSTERS, B AND C. B COALESCES TO FORM A REGULAR SPOT. 7421 19150902 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 7406, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7422 19150902 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7423 19150903 19150906 A WIDE AREA OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE IN WHICH SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS APPEAR IRREGULARLY. 7424 19150903 19150915 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, GRADUALLY BECOMING ELLIPTICAL. IT DEVELOPS QUICKLY AFTER SEPTEMBER 6, AND IS USUALLY FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS IN A LONG SPARSE TRAIN. 7425 19150904 19150906 A WIDE AREA OF DISTURBANCE NEAR THE WEST LIMB IN WHICH SOME SMALL SPOTS FORM, OF WHICH A, SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 5 AND 6, IS THE MOST STABLE. 7426 19150906 19150909 A VERY SMALL MARKING SP THE PLACE OF GROUP 7420; NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 7 AND 8. 7427 19150907 A VERY SMALL MARKING NF GROUP 7411. 7428 19150907 19150908 A VERY SMALL MARKING SF GROUP 7418. 7429 19150907 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7430 19150907 19150909 A SMALL MARKING, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 8. 7431 19150908 19150909 A VERY SMALL SPOT F GROUP 7424. 7432 19150908 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7433 19150909 A VERY SMALL MARKING NF GROUP 7420. 7434 19150909 A FEW VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 7435 19150910 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 7436 19150910 19150922 A WIDE AREA OF DISTURBANCE, IN WHICH A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS AND MARKINGS ARE SEEN. A PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE FORMED NEAR THE HEAD OF THE GROUP BY SEPTEMBER 17, AND THE GROUP DEVELOPS INTO A WELL-MARKED STREAM. 7437 19150912 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 7424. 7438 19150912 19150916 RETURN OF GROUP 7397. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 7436, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 13 AND 15. 7439 19150913 19150916 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON SEPTEMBER 13. A FEW SMALL MARKINGS APPEAR PRECEDING IT ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 7440 19150913 19150914 A SMALL SPOT WITH A FAINT COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 13. TWO VERY SMALL MARKINGS ON SEPTEMBER 14. 7441 19150914 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS P GROUP 7436. 7442 19150914 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 7443 19150914 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7444 19150917 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7445 19150917 19150926 RETURN OF GROUP 7406. A REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES RAPIDLY. ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN OCCASIONALLY. 7446 19150920 19151002 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, A AND B, ARE NEAR THE HEAD OF THE GROUP, AND SOON COALESCE TO FORM A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, D, THOUGH A AND B ARE GENERALLY MEASURED SEPARATELY UP TO SEPTEMBER 26. A LARGE, BUT FAINT, DOUBLE SPOT, C, FORMS THE REAR OF THE GROUP, AND A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS SURROUND THE CHIEF SPOTS ON ALL SIDES. 7447 19150922 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 7448 19150924 19150928 A WIDE AREA OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE IN WHICH SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN FROM TIME TO TIME. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 27. 7449 19150926 19150928 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. 7450 19150926 19151007 RETURN OF GROUP 7418. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 7451 19150927 19150930 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7452 19150928 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7453 19150928 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7454 19150928 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7455 19150929 19151001 A SMALL AREA OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE. NO MARKINGS ARE SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 30. 7456 19150929 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7457 19151001 19151002 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. 7458 19151002 19151003 A SMALL SPOT. 7459 19151002 TWO VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 7460 19151002 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7461 19151004 19151008 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 6. ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN FOR A SHORT TIME NEAR B. 7462 19151005 A SMALL MARKING. 7463 19151006 19151013 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH A NUMBER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSSTABLE, ARE LOOSELY SCATTERED. THE LEADER, A, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE ONLY STABLE MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 7463*19151012 A VERY SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 7463. 7464 19151006 19151012 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON OCTOBER 7. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 9, 10, OR 11, BUT A SMALL MARKING INDICATES ITS PLACE ON OCTOBER 12. 7465 19151007 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT N OF GROUP 7463. 7466 19151007 19151013 A SMALL SPOT N OF GROUP 7464, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 9, 11, OR 12. 7467 19151007 19151019 TOGETHER WITH GROUPS 7464 AND 7466, A RETURN OF GROUP 7436. A NUMBER OF SPOTS IN A LONG, STRAIGHT, NEARLY CONTINUOUS STREAM, THE LARGEST BEING A FINE COMPOSITE SPOT, A, IN THE REAR OF THE GROUP. A DOUBLE SPOT, B, WHICH EVENTUALLY BECOMES REGULAR, HAS FORMED AT THE HEAD OF THE GROUP BY OCTOBER 13. THE INTERMADIATE SPOTS THEN DIMINISH AND DISAPPEAR, AND ONLY B AND A REMAIN BY OCTOBER 18. 7468 19151011 A VERY SMALL MARKING SP GROUP 7467. 7469 19151011 19151018 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 7467. THE GROUP CHIEFLY APPEARS AS TWO CLUSTERS, THE ARRANGEMENT OF WHICH CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. 7470 19151013 A VERY SMALL MARKING SP GROUP 7467. 7471 19151013 A VERY SMALL MARKING SF GROUP 7467. 7472 19151013 A VERY SMALL MARKING N GROUP 7469. 7473 19151013 19151016 A VERY SMALL MARKING N GROUP 7470. THE MARKING IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 14 AND 15. 7474 19151014 A VERY SMALL MARKING NF GROUP 7469. 7475 19151014 19151025 A LARGE AND COMPLICATED CLUSTER. THE SPOTS COMPOSING IT ARE IN CONTINUAL CHANGE, BUT EVENTUALLY THREE BECOME STABLE. OF THESE A IS A REGULAR SPOT IN THE REAR OF THE GROUP, AND B AND C ARE COMPOSITE SPOTS ON THE SAME MERIDIAN IN THE FRONT OF THE GROUP. C, THE LAST OF THESE SPOTS TO FORM, IS THE FIRST TO BREAK UP. ONLY B REMAINS IN SIGHT ON OCTOBER 25. 7476 19151015 A VERY SMALL MARKING NP GROUP 7467. 7477 19151015 19151024 A SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 15. NUMEROUS SPOTS APPEAR IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE GROUP BECOMES AN IRREGULAR STREAM, THE MEMBERS OF WHICH ARE UNSTABLE AND BEGIN TO BREAK UP AND DISAPPEAR AFTER OCTOBER 18. 7478 19151015 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 7477. 7479 19151017 19151029 RETURN OF GROUP 7446. A FINE DOUBLE SPOT, A, WITH SOME CLOSE COMPANIONS OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE. A FRESH OUTBREAK OCCURS AFTER OCTOBER 26, AND ON OCTOBER 27 THE GROUP IS A FINE COMPACT CLUSTER, WHICH LATER CONDENSES INTO A PAIR OF LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS, B AND C. 7480 19151019 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION. 7481 19151020 19151021 A REGULAR SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY TWO FAINTER COMPANIONS, FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7482 19151020 A VERY SMALL MARKING SP GROUP 7475. 7483 19151020 19151022 A SMALL DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN. 7484 19151020 19151027 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 23, 24, OR 25. 7485 19151021 19151023 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7486 19151021 A VERY SMALL MARKING, PARTLY SURROUNDED BY A SMALL FACULOUS WALL, IN VERY HIGH LATITUDE. 7487 19151022 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7488 19151023 19151105 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE TRAIN SOMEWHAT FURTHER TOWARD THE NORTH. 7489 19151025 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7490 19151027 19151031 A SMALL SPOT, A, PRECEDED FROM OCTOBER 28 TO 30 BY A SIMILAR SMALL SPOT, B. 7491 19151029 A VERY SMALL SPOT IN BRIGHT FACULAE, SEEN ONLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7492 19151029 19151107 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON OCTOBER 29, FOLLOWED BY A VERY SMALL PAIR, OF WHICH ONLY THE PRECEDING MEMBER, B, IS SEEN ON OCTOBER 30. A MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE, AND INCREASES IN SIZE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND FRESH SPOTS FORMING BETWEEN A AND B, THE GROUP BECOMES A STRAIGHT STREAM BY NOVEMBER 2, WITH A, NOW A DOUBLE SPOT, AS LEADER. A HAS BROKEN UP BY NOVEMBER 6 INTO THREE SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, AND THE REAR SPOT HAS BECOME THE PRINCIPAL MEMBER OF THE GROUP. 7493 19151029 19151031 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. 7494 19151029 19151101 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED AFTER OCTOBER 29 BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT TRAIN. 7495 19151030 19151104 A SHORT STREAM FORMING NP OF GROUP 7494. OF THE TWO CHIEF SPOTS, A AND B, THE REAR SPOT, B, DEVELOPS MORE QUICKLY THAN A, THE LEADER. 7496 19151030 19151102 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7497 19151031 A VERY SMALL MARKING SP GROUP 7500. 7498 19151101 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7499 19151101 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7500 19151101 A SMALL MARKING. 7501 19151102 19151105 AVERY SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 3. 7502 19151103 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7503 19151104 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7504 19151104 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7505 19151104 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7506 19151104 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7507 19151105 19151112 A SMALL STRAIGHT SPARSE STREAM GRADUALLY DEVELOPING UNTIL NOVEMBER 8. THE REAR SPOT, A, IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. AFTER NOVEMBER 10 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A VERY WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER, B, IS A NEW FORMATION. 7508 19151105 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7509 19151105 19151112 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 5. NOTHING IS SEEN ON THE THREE SUCCEEDING DAYS, BUT TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, HAVE APPEARED BY NOVEMBER 9. ONLY B IS SEEN ON NOVEMBER 10. NOTHING IS SEEN ON NOVEMBER 11. TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON NOVEMBER 12. 7510 19151106 19151114 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, WHICH DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER NOVEMBER 8. 7511 19151107 19151110 A SMALL SPOT, QUICKLY DIMINISHING. 7512 19151109 19151117 SOME SMALL SPOTS RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE LARGEST MEMBER. A IS DOUBLE ON NOVEMBER 12 TO 14, AND HAS PASSED OUT OF SIGHT BY NOVEMBER 17. 7513 19151111 19151112 TWO SMALL SPOTS, A AND B, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 11. 7514 19151112 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7515 19151113 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7516 19151113 19151123 AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF DISTURBANCE IN WHICH A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR IRREGULARLY. THE GROUP IS DIVIDED INTO TWO CLUSTERS UP TO NOVEMBER 15, BUT IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 16 OR 17. AFTER ITS RE-APPEARANCE ON NOVEMBER 18 IT TENDS TO ASSUME THE FORM OF A CURVED STREAM. 7517 19151113 19151125 RETURN OF GROUP 7479. THIRD APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT, A, THAT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 17. A FRESH OUTBURST HAS TAKEN PLACE BY NOVEMBER 19, AND AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER HAS FORMED WHICH EVENTUALLY DEVELOPS INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER, B, AND REAR SPOT, C, ARE THEN BOTH LARGE AND COMPOSITE. 7518 19151114 19151118 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 14. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 15, BUT HAS REAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 16 AS A STRAIGHT STREAM, THE LEADER OF WHICH, A, SOON DEVELOPS INTO A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 7519 19151114 19151120 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS SF GROUP 7516. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 18 AND 19, BUT A VERY SMALL MARKING APPEARS ON NOVEMBER 20. 7520 19151117 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7521 19151117 19151118 A FEW SMALL SPOTS LOOSELY SCATTERED. THE LEADER, A, ALONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 18. 7522 19151117 19151121 A VERY SMALL MARKING NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 18, 19 AND 20. 7523 19151118 19151123 A VERY SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 7521, ON NOVEMBER 18. THE GROUP DEVELOPS INTO A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, BEING THE LARGEST MEMBERS. 7524 19151118 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7525 19151118 19151120 A SMALL SPOT, A, PRECEDED BY A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 18. 7526 19151118 19151130 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALLER SPOTS. 7527 19151118 19151127 THREE SPOTS, A, B, AND C, ARRANGED ALONG A MERIDIAN F GROUP 7526, ON NOVEMBER 19 AND 20. THE MOST SOUTHERN, A, MOVES BACKWARD IN LONGITUDE, AND BECOMES THE PRINCIPAL MEMBER OF THE GROUP BY NOVEMBER 22, BUT DECLINES AGAIN, AND IS VERY SMALL BY NOVEMBER 24. SOME SMALL FRESH SPOTS ARE SEEN PRECEDING ITS PLACE ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 7528 19151119 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7529 19151119 19151127 WITH GROUPS 7531, 7532, AND 7533, A RETURN OF GROUP 7495. A REGULAR SPOT, A, QUICKLY DIMINISHING. IT IS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 25, BUT A SLIGHT OUTBURST IS SEEN ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS. A HAS A SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 23. 7530 19151120 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 7531 19151120 19151123 A SMALL SPOT SP GROUP 7529. 7532 19151121 19151126 A SMALL SPOT SP GROUP 7531, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 23, 24, AND 25. 7533 19151121 19151127 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION, ON NOVEMBER 25. THE GROUP LIES S OF GROUP 7529, AND F OF GROUP 7531; THE THREE GROUPS TOGETHER WITH GROUP 7532 MARKING A WIDE AREA OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE. 7534 19151123 19151125 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, RAPIDLY INCREASING IN SIZE. IT IS FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 24, BUT HAS PASSED OUT OF SIGHT BY NOVEMBER 25, BUT A PAIR OF SMALL FOLLOWERS ARE STILL IN VIEW. 7535 19151124 A VERY SMALL SPOT, N OF GROUP 7529. 7536 19151124 A VERY SMALL MARKING SF GROUPS 7529 AND 7533. 7537 19151124 19151127 A SMALL SPOT, A, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 25 AND 26. 7538 19151126 19151203 A SMALL SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 26. A SECOND AND LARGER SPOT, B, HAS FORMED CLOSE BEHIND A, AND A MORE DISTANT COMPANION, C, BY NOVEMBER 29, BUT THESE HAVE BOTH DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 3. 7539 19151127 19151203 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM S GROUP 7538. THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS, A AND B, ON NOVEMBER 29, ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE. 7540 19151127 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7541 19151127 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7542 19151128 A VERY SMALL MARKING, SEEN N OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 7537, AFTER THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE LATTER. 7543 19151129 19151201 A VERY SMALL SPOT F GROUP 7539. A VERY SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON DECEMBER 1. GROUPS 7538, 7539, AND 7543 ARE PARTS OF A FEEBLE DISTURBANCE SPREAD OVER A WIDE AREA. 7544 19151129 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7544*19151202 A SMALL MARKING. 7545 19151201 A SMALL MARKING. 7546 19151201 19151208 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 1, NOT SEEN ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON DECEMBER 4, BUT NONE ON DECEMBER 5, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP APPEARS AS A SMALL UNSTABLE CLUSTER. 7547 19151202 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 7548 19151202 TWO VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 7549 19151202 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7550 19151202 19151213 RETURN OF GROUP 7512. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 2. A DIFFUSE SPOT, B, HAS FORMED SP A BY DECEMBER 8, AND BY DECEMBER 11 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF THREE SPOTS, C, B, D, IN A STRAIGHT LINE, SP THE PLACE OF A WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED. ONLY D REMAINS IN SIGHT ON DECEMBER 13. 7551 19151203 A SMALL DIFFUSED SPOT. 7552 19151203 19151209 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, GRADUALLY DIMINISHING. IT IS NOT SEEN AFTER DECEMBER 7, BUT A VERY SMALL MARKING IS NEAR ITS PLACE ON DECEMBER 9. 7553 19151203 19151212 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, A, OCCASIONALLY WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL ATTENDANTS. A HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 10, BUT SOME SMALL MARKINGS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON DECEMBER 11 AND 12. 7554 19151204 19151208 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 5 AND 6. 7555 19151205 19151208 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, A AND B. A HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLUSTER OF VERY FAINT MARKINGS-WHICH ARE STILL MEASURED AS ONE BY DECEMBER 7, AND HAVE DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 8. 7556 19151205 19151210 A REGION OF VERY FEEBLE DISTURBANCE F GROUP 7553. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON DECEMBER 8. 7557 19151208 A SMALL SPOT. 7558 19151208 19151221 RETURN OF GROUP 7516. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, GENERALLY FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 7559 19151209 19151216 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 9. OTHER SPOTS FORM P A ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND THE GROUP DEVELOPS INTO A THIN STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER, B, IS THE MOST STABLE MEMBER. 7560 19151209 19151210 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 9. A SECOND, B, IS ALSO SEEN ON DECEMBER 10. 7561 19151210 A SMALL DIFFUSED MARKING NF GROUP 7559. 7562 19151210 19151220 A COMPOSITE SPOT, A, ON DECEMBER 10, DIMINISHING ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE GROUP INCREASES IN SIZE AFTER DECEMBER 12, AND APPEARS AS A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, LOOSELY SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA. 7563 19151214 A VERY SMALL SPOT N OF THE PLACE OF GROUP 7560. 7564 19151214 19151222 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 14. NEW SPOTS FORM ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND BY DECEMBER 17, THE GROUP HAS BECOME A LONG STREAM. THE LEADER, A, IS THEN A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AND THE REAR SPOT, B, HAS ASSUMED THE SAME FORM BY DECEMBER 20. 7565 19151214 A VERY SMALL MARKING NF GROUP 7564. 7566 19151215 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7567 19151215 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7568 19151216 TWO VERY SMALL MARKINGS SF GROUP 7558. 7569 19151216 A VERY SMALL MARKING NF GROUP 7564. 7570 19151216 A VERY SMALL MARKING NF GROUP 7569. 7571 19151218 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS N OF GROUP 7564. 7572 19151218 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7573 19151219 19151226 A REGULAR SPOT, A, SLOWLY DIMINISHING. A IS FOLLOWED BY A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 26. 7574 19151224 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7575 19151225 19160101 A SPARSE UNSTABLE STREAM FORMING IN THE REAR OF GROUP 7573, AND GENERALLY ARRANGED IN TWO LOOSE CLUSTERS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING HAS GREATLY DIMINISHED BY DECEMBER 31. 7576 19151226 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7577 19151226 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7578 19151226 A VERY SMALL MARKING IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. 7579 19151226 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7580 19151226 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7581 19151226 19160108 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, A, FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS. 7582 19151227 19151230 A VERY SMALL SPOT, A, SF GROUP 7575, AND USUALLY FOLLOWED AT A DISTANCE BY A FEEBLE TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7583 19151229 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7584 19151229 19160108 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 29, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A FINE STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH A AND B, THE FIRST AND LAST MEMBERS, ARE LARGE REGULAR SPOTS. THE GROUP DECLINES RAPIDLY AFTER JANUARY 1. 7585 19151229 19151230 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 7584. 7586 19151230 19160107 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, S GROUP 7584. THE LEADER, A, IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 7587 19151230 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7588 19151230 19160101 A SMALL FAINT SPOT SF GROUP 7587. 7589 19151231 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7590 19151231 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7591 19160101 19160107 A VERY IRREGULAR STREAM IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT HAS FORMED AT THE HEAD OF THE GROUP BY JANUARY 5, BUT HAS PASSED OUT OF SIGHT AT THE WEST LIMB BY JANUARY 7. 7592 19160102 19160112 FOUR SMALL SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY ON JANUARY 2 AND DEVELOPING DURING THE SUCCEEDING DAYS INTO A LONG, BROAD, AND IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS, MOSTLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, AND GROUPED INTO THREE CLUSTERS. THE LEADER OF THE GROUP IS THE ONLY FULLY DEVELOPED AND STABLE SPOT, AND REMAINS ALONE AFTER JANUARY 9. 7593 19160104 19160105 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM FORMING SUDDENLY SP GROUP 7591. 7594 19160104 19160116 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, USUALLY WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS, AND SURROUNDED AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE BY A FEW ATTENDANTS, NONE OF WHICH PERSIST LONG. 7595 19160106 19160118 RETURN OF GROUP 7564. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, GENERALLY WITH TWO OR THREE COMPANIONS WHICH ARE MOSTLY VERY SMALL AND SHORT-LIVED. 7596 19160109 19160111 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON JANUARY 9, SMALLER BUT DARKER ON JANUARY 10, AND ACCOMPANIED BY TWO VERY SMALL ACOLYTES ON JANUARY 11. 7597 19160111 19160112 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 7594. THE GROUP IS CLUSTERED ON JANUARY 11, SCATTERED ON JANUARY 12. 7598 19160116 19160117 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 7599 19160116 19160117 A FAINT DIFFUSED MARKING. 7600 19160115 19160119 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 15; A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AND AFTER JANUARY 17. 7601 19160117 19160120 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 17; A CLOSE PAIR AFTERWARDS. 7602 19160118 19160119 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7603 19160118 19160122 A SMALL SPOT, OFTEN ILL-DEFINED AND FAINT. 7604 19160119 19160122 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL, FAINT, UNSTABLE MARKINGS F GROUP 7603. 7605 19160120 19160121 SOME SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT UNDULATING STREAM; FIRST SEEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 7606 19160117 19160123 INTERMITTENT. A CLUSTER OF THREE VERY SMALL MARKINGS ON JANUARY 17; A VERY SMALL MARKING ON JANUARY 20, WHICH HAS DEVELOPED INTO A LARGE CLUSTER BY JANUARY 21, THE MEMBERS OF WHICH TEND TO COALESCE AND TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. 7607 19160120 19160122 A SMALL SPOT. 7608 19160120 19160121 A VERY SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 7607. 7609 19160121 19160123 A VERY SMALL MARKING IN BRIGHT FACULAE ON JANUARY 21. IT CANNOT BE MADE OUT WITH CERTAINTY ON JANUARY 22, BUT IS SEEN AS A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT ON JANUARY 23. 7610 19160122 19160202 RETURN OF GROUP 7591. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 7611 19160123 19160201 A FINE GROUP ARISING SUDDENLY NF THE PLACE OF GROUP 7609, AND EVIDENTLY A FULLER DEVELOPMENT OF THE SAME DISTURBANCE. A RING OF SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 23, THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT AND BECOMES A STRAIGHT STREAM. THE LEADER IS THE LARGEST MEMBER OF THE GROUP AND BECOMES ELLIPTICAL IN SHAPE. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS SOON DIMINISH AND DISAPPEAR, THE LEADER ALONE REMAINING BY JANUARY 31. 7612 19160124 19160128 A SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 24 AND 25; A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS. ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 28. 7613 19160125 19160130 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 25. A CLUSTER OF THREE SMALL SPOTS ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS; ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 28, 29, AND 30. 7614 19160126 19160128 A SMALL SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON JANUARY 27. 7615 19160127 19160128 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 7616 19160127 19160129 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 7617 19160130 19160205 AN AREA OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE IN WHICH A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS ARE SEEN TO FORM AND DISAPPEAR. 7618 19160131 19160209 TWO VERY SMALL CLUSTERS ON JANUARY 31, WHICH BECOME BY FEBRUARY 1 A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF TWO LARGE SPOTS WITH A GREAT NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED BETWEEN THEM. THE STREAM DEVELOPS INTO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE, BUT THE FOLLOWING PORTION RAPIDLY DIMINISHES AFTER FEBRUARY 6; THE LEADER, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 9. 7619 19160201 19160204 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FORMING SUDDENLY. A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS FOLLOW IT CLOSELY. 7620 19160201 19160204 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OR SMALL CLUSTERS OF SPOTS. THE LEADER ONLY REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 3 AND 4. 7621 19160201 19160202 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 7622 19160202 19160214 RETURN OF GROUP 7595; THIRD APPARITION. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING FROM DAY TO DAY. 7623 19160203 19160205 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. ONLY ONE REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 5. 7624 19160205 19160212 AN IRREGULAR STREAM FORMING SUDDENLY, AND QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A VERY FINE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER AND REAR SPOT ARE BOTH COMPOSITE AND VERY LARGE. ONLY THE REAR SPOT REMAINS FULLY VISIBLE ON FEBRUARY 12. 7625 19160206 19160214 A SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM COMPOSED OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7626 19160206 19160216 A SMALL SPOT RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A LARGE REGULAR SPOT USUALLY FOLLOWED BY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. CONSIDERABLE MOTION IS SHOWN BOTH IN LONGITUDE AND LATITUDE. SEE NOTE TO GROUP 7628. 7627 19160207 19160210 A FEW VERY SMALL MARKINGS ON FEBRUARY 7 AND 8. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 9, BUT SOME FRESH MARKINGS HAVE APPEARED BY FEBRUARY 10, A LITTLE S OF THOSE SEEN AT FIRST. 7628 19160207 19160217 A SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 7626, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. IT IS USUALLY PRECEDED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. GROUPS 7626 AND 7628 MIGHT BE CONSIDERED AS A SINGLE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, IN WHICH THE TWO CHIEF SPOTS BECOME UNUSUALLY FAR APART AND THE SMALL INTERMEDIATE SPOTS ARE UNUSUALLY SMALL. 7629 19160209 19160210 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN TWO SMALL CLUSTERS. 7630 19160209 19160212 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 7631 19160209 19160219 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING DAY BY DAY, AND WITH PROPER MOTION POLEWARDS. 7632 19160210 19160213 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT NP GROUP 7634. 7633 19160211 19160212 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT S GROUP 7630 ON FEBRUARY 11; A PAIR OF SUCH SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 12. 7634 19160211 19160222 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM SF GROUP 7632. THE GROUP DEVELOPS INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM, WHICH CONSISTS CHIEFLY OF A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT FOLLOWED AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE BY A SMALL CLUSTER. THE CLUSTER HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEBRUARY 19, BUT SHOWS A REVIVAL ON FEBRUARY 20. 7635 19160212 19160213 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 7636 19160213 19160214 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7637 19160216 19160218 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS FORMING F GROUP 7628. 7638 19160216 19160225 TWO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 16. THE SPOTS INCREASE IN NUMBER AND THE GROUP DEVELOPS INTO A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM. 7639 19160215 19160221 A DISTURBED AREA S OF GROUP 7631, WHERIN ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN. INTERMITTENT GROUP. 7640 19160219 19160221 RETURN OF GROUP 7619. A REGULAR SPOT IN RAPID DECLINE. 7641 19160220 19160221 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER F GROUP 7638. 7642 19160224 19160225 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7643 19160224 19160226 AN AREA OF VERY SMALL SCATTERED MARKINGS F POSITION OF GROUP 7640. 7644 19160224 19160226 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 7645 19160224 19160229 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 24 AND 25, WHICH IS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 26, BUT HAS REVIVED BY FEBRUARY 27, AND IS FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION. 7646 19160224 19160305 RETURN OF GROUP 7618. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, USUALLY FOLLOWED CLOSELY BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS, AND DIMINISHING DAY BY DAY. 7647 19160226 19160227 A WIDE AREA OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE IN WHICH A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN ON FEBRUARY 26. ONLY TWO REMAIN BY FEBRUARY 27. 7648 19160226 19160229 A SMALL SPOT THAT DIVIDES INTO TWO ON FEBRUARY 28, AND SPEEDILY DISAPPEARS. 7649 19160226 19160309 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH SOME DISTANT FOLLOWERS ON FEBRUARY 28, WHICH SHOWS SIGNS OF BREAKING UP ON FEBRUARY 29. INSTEAD OF DISAPPEARING, HOWEVER, THE DISTURBANCE SPREADS OVER AN IMMENSE AREA, AND SEVERAL LARGE COMPLEX SPOTS, WITH MANY SMALL COMPANIONS, HAVE FORMED BY MARCH 4. THE GROUP THEN LENGTHENS OUT AND BECOMES A STRAGGLING STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER AND LAST SPOTS ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBERS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER MARCH 5. 7650 19160301 19160314 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, BISECTED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE AND PRECEDED BY A STREAM OF COMPANIONS OF MODERATE SIZE, MAKING UP A VERY FINE AND STRIKING GROUP. 7651 19160302 19160314 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 7625. A FEW SPOTS AT FIRST, MOSTLY SMALL. THESE MULTIPLY RAPIDLY, AND FORM A FINE IRREGULAR STREAM OF GREAT EXTENT. THE LEADING SPOTS ARE THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE, AND HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BY MARCH 8. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE DIED OUT BY MARCH 12, LEAVING THE LEADER, NOW A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE. 7652 19160302 19160306 A DISTURBED AREA F GROUP 7650, IN WHICH SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS AND FAINT MARKINGS ARE SEEN. 7653 19160304 19160305 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER OF FAINT MARKINGS SF GROUP 7649. 7654 19160305 19160307 A STREAM, APPARENTLY OF NORMAL TYPE, FORMING SUDDENLY S OF GROUP 7646 AND NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7655 19160305 19160306 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS ON MARCH 5; A WIDE PAIR ON MARCH 6. 7656 19160305 19160311 A DISTURBED AREA NF GROUP 7650 AND 7652, IN WHICH SOME SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS ARE SEEN. NOTHING IS VISIBLE ON MARCH 8 AND 9. 7656*19160310 19160313 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL MARKINGS S GROUP 7656. 7657 19160305 19160312 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS LOOSELY SCATTERED. THE GROUP HAS DIMINISHED BY MARCH ,, WHEN ONLY A WIDE PAIR REMAINS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING MEMBER HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 11. PROBABLY THE GROUP HAS FRESHLY FORMED ON MARCH 5, AND IS THEREFORE A REVIVAL, NOT A TRUE RETURN OF GROUP 7628. 7658 19160306 19160307 TWO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING HAS DISAPPEARED BY MARCH 7. 7659 19160306 19160307 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7660 19160306 19160313 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, SOME OF WHICH ARE FAIRLY STABLE. ONE SMALL SPOT ALONE REMAINS AFTER MARCH 10. PERHAPS A RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 7637. 7661 19160307 19160308 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON MARCH 8. 7662 19160307 19160308 A VERY SMALL SPOT, POSSIBLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 834R. 7663 19160310 19160315 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 10, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 11. A VERY SMALL SPOT, BUT PROBABLY A FRESH FORMATION, IS SEEN NEAR THE PLACE ON MARCH 12, 13, AND 15. 7664 19160310 19160320 A NUMBER OF SMALL, VERY UNSTABLE SPOTS DISTRIBUTED SPARSELY IN A VERY LONG LINE INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 14. 7665 19160315 19160320 A VERY SMALL MARKING ON MARCH 15. A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 16, OF WHICH TWO REMAIN ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. THE TWO SPOTS MOVE APART, AND ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS ON MARCH 19. 7666 19160316 19160321 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MARCH 19. 7667 19160317 19160319 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7668 19160317 19160327 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 17, GRADUALLY DEVELOPING ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT TRAIN. THE LEADER BREAKS UP AND REMAINS ALONE ON MARCH 26 AS A CLOSE PAIR. 7669 19160318 19160319 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7670 19160320 19160321 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 21, A SINGLE DIFFUSED MARKING ON MARCH 21. 7671 19160320 19160401 A VERY LARGE AND COMPLEX GROUP LED BY A LARGE WELL-DEFINED SPOT. THE GROUP APPEARS LIKE A FINE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH THE ADDITION OF TWO OR THREE MINOR STREAMS DIVERGING FROM THE MAIN ONE IN THE SP DIRECTION. 7672 19160319 19160324 A SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT ON MARCH 19; ON MARCH 21, A CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS SHOWING A TENDENCY TO MOVE APART. INTERMITTENT GROUP. 7673 19160321 19160325 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 23. THE GROUP HAS REVIVED BY MARCH 24 AS A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM. 7674 19160321 19160324 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 22. THE LEADING SPOT IS SEEN ALONE ON MARCH 21; THE FOLLOWING ON MARCH 23 AND 24. 7675 19160324 19160405 A REGULAR SPOT WITH SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP, AFTER SEVERAL CHANGES, HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 1, BUT HAS REVIVED AS A SPARSE STREAM BY APRIL 2. THE LEADER SPOT INCREASES GREATLY BEFORE IT REACHES THE WEST LIMB ON APRIL 5. 7676 19160326 19160406 A STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LAST IS THE LARGEST AND BEST DEFINED. THIS REAR SPOT BREAKS UP BY MARCH 30, BUT REFORMS AGAIN IMMEDIATELY AS A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, AND ON APRIL 3 IT INCLUDES ALMOST THE WHOLE OF THE GROUP. AFTER THIS IT DIMINISHES, AND SOME SMALL SPOTS FORM FOLLOWING IT. 7677 19160328 19160330 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT, WITH SOME VERY SMALL FAINT AND DISTANT FOLLOWERS, SEEN ONLY ON MARCH 29. 7678 19160328 19160403 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY SOME VERY FAINT MARKINGS ON MARCH 30 AND APRIL 1. 7679 19160329 19160408 PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 7651. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, USUALLY WITH A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE FOLLOWERS WIDELY SCATTERED. THE CHIEF SPOT BREAKS UP AFTER APRIL 3. 7680 19160330 19160403 PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 7650; EVIDENTLY CONNECTED WITH IT. A LARGE AREA OF DISTURBANCE IN WHICH SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR IRREGULARLY. 7681 19160331 19160411 A VERY LARGE WELL-DEVELOPED SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A VERY LONG TRAIN COMPOSED OF A GREAT NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN CONSTANT CHANGE. THE TRAIN HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 10, LEAVING THE CHIEF SPOT ALONE. 7682 19160402 19160408 A DISTURBED AREA, N OF GROUP 7680, IN WHICH SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR IRREGULARLY. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 3 AND 7. 7683 19160402 19160404 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB ON APRIL 2, AND DEVELOPING ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS INTO A STREAM. 7684 19160403 19160406 A FEW VERY SMALL MARKINGS ON APRIL 3, SP GROUP 7681. ALL BUT ONE HAVE DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 4, AND THIS DEVELOPS INTO A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT. 7685 19160404 19160408 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING SUDDENLY SF GROUP 7679. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS ON APRIL 7. 7686 19160404 19160412 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON APRIL 10, BUT SOME FAINT COMPANIONS HAVE FORMED NEAR IT BY APRIL 11. 7687 19160406 19160410 AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. ONLY ONE REMAINS ON APRIL 10. 7688 19160407 19160408 A STREAM OF SPOTS SUDDENLY APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7689 19160409 19160410 A SMALL STREAM OF SPOTS SUDDENLY APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7690 19160409 19160410 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS NF GROUP 7686. 7691 19160409 19160411 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER. 7692 19160409 19160419 TWO VERY SMALL CLUSTERS ON APRIL 9. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DEVELOPS INTO A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM OF NUMEROUS UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOST OF WHICH DIMINISH AND DISAPPEAR AFTER APRIL 15. 7693 19160410 19160413 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 10, DEVELOPING INTO A SERPENTINE STREAM BY APRIL 11 AND INTO TWO SMALL CLUSTERS BY APRIL 12, OF WHICH ONLY THE FOLLOWING REMAINS IN VIEW ON APRIL 13. 7694 19160410 19160421 A VERY SMALL SPOT AT FIRST PRECEDED BY A DISTANT COMPANION ON APRIL 12. THE GROUP HAS GREATLY INCREASED IN SIZE BY APRIL 14 AND BECOMES AN IRREGULAR STREAM MOSTLY COMPOSED OF SMALL AND VERY UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7695 19160411 19160417 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT STREAM ON APRIL 11. THE GROUP EXTENDS AND BREAKS UP ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS, AND ON APRIL 14 ONLY TWO VERY WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS REMAIN, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 15. 7696 19160413 19160420 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH A VERY FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR IRREGULARLY; NONE ARE SEEN ON APRIL 19. 7697 19160418 19160421 A SMALL SPOT SOMETIMES FOLLOWED BY A FAINT COMPANION. 7698 19160419 19160420 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 20. 7699 19160419 19160420 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON APRIL 19, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY APRIL 20. 7700 19160419 19160422 A VERY SMALL MARKING ON APRIL 19; A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL WELL-DEFINED SPOTS ON APRIL 20, OF WHICH ONE HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 22. 7701 19160420 19160501 PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 7683. TWO SPOTS WIDELY SEPARATED ON APRIL 20. THE LEADER, AND SMALLER OF THE TWO, SOON BREAKS UP AND HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 23. THE FOLLOWING SPOT HAS ALSO DIVIDED BY APRIL 27, AFTER WHICH IT SOON DIMINISHES. 7702 19160420 19160502 RETURN OF GROUP 7675. A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT DIMINISHING STEADILY AFTER APRIL 24; PROPER MOTION EQUATORWARDS. 7703 19160422 19160426 A SMALL SPOT. 7704 19160425 19160429 A SMALL DISTURBED AREA SF GROUP 7701, IN WHICH SEVERAL VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR IRREGULARLY. 7705 19160425 19160504 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 7688. A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER. THE SPOTS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE GROUP HAVE ALMOST DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 28, AND AFTER A SLIGHT REVIVAL ON APRIL 29, THEY SOON FADE AWAY. SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 2 REPRESENT THE LEADER SPOT, AND THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 3, THOUGH A VERY SMALL MARKING IS VISIBLE ON MAY 4. 7706 19160427 19160430 RETURN OF GROUP 7681. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 7707 19160429 19160506 AN IRREGULAR STREAM MOSTLY COMPOSED OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER MAY 2. 7708 19160429 19160511 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, SOMETIMES WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS. ON MAY 7, HOWEVER, THE FOLLOWERS FORM QUITE A LARGE CLUSTER. 7709 19160429 19160511 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONALLY SOME SMALL FOLLOWERS. 7710 19160430 19160504 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7711 19160430 19160512 A VERY LONG IRREGULAR STREAM MOSTLY COMPOSED OF NUMEROUS SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE SPOTS IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP TEND TO DIE OUT; THOSE IN THE PRECEDING PART TO COALESCE, FORMING A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BY MAY 5, WHICH BECOMES REGULAR BY MAY 10. 7712 19160501 19160503 A VERY SMALL MARKING ON MAY 1; ANOTHER SIMILAR MARKING IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON MAY 2 AND 3. 7713 19160503 19160506 A SMALL FEEBLY DISTURBED AREA CONTAINING A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7714 19160503 19160506 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 7715 19160504 19160506 A STRAIGHT SPARSE STREAM FORMING SUDDENLY NP GROUP 7708, AND F THE PLACE OF GROUP 7712. 7716 19160506 19160514 A REGULAR SPOT, USUALLY WITH SMALL COMPANIONS AROUND IT. THE CHIEF SPOT UNDERGOES A SUDDEN ENLARGEMENT ON MAY 12, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP SOON DISAPPEARS. NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 7692, BUT APPARENTLY A FRESH FORMATION. 7717 19160508 19160518 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 7694. A WIDE AREA OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE F GROUP 7716, CONTAINING A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL AND FAINT. THESE ARE GENERALLY GROUPED IN TWO CLUSTERS, OF WHICH ONLY THE MORE NORTHERN IS SEEN ON MAY 8 AND THE MORE SOUTHERN ON MAY 9 AND 13. 7718 19160510 19160512 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS NP GROUP 7714. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 11. 7719 19160510 19160514 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS P GROUP 7716. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 13. 7720 19160511 19160521 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH SEVERAL UNSTABLE ATTENDANTS RATHER WIDELY SCATTERED FROM MAY 11-14. AFTER MAY 14, THE MORE DISTANT AND UNSTABLE ATTENDANTS HAVE DISAPPEARED. 7721 19160513 19160524 A COMPOSITE SPOT ON MAY 13, WITH SOME SMALL FOLLOWERS ON MAY 14 AND 15. THE FOLLOWERS HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MAY 16, AND THE CHIEF SPOT IS SURROUNDED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWS THE CLUSTER AT A DISTANCE ON MAY 18, AND THE GROUP HAS EXPANDED INTO A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM BY MAY 19, OF WHICH ONLY THE FIRST AND LAST MEMBERS REMAIN BY MAY 22. 7722 19160516 19160518 A SMALL SPOT. 7723 19160517 19160520 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 7724 19160518 19160520 A SMALL SPOT. 7725 19160520 19160528 A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 20, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION ON MAY 21, 22, AND 23. THE SPOT HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL MARKINGS BY MAY 26, BUT IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 27. A SMALL SPOT IS NEAR ITS PLACE ON MAY 28. 7726 19160521 19160531 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE TRAIN IS NOT SEEN ON MAY 28, NOR AFTER MAY 29, ON WHICH DAY THE TRAIN SUDDENLY REAPPEARS TEMPORARILY. 7727 19160521 19160601 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 21. THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED IMMENSELY BY MAY 22, WHEN IT CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE SPOTS, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS BETWEEN THEM. THE TWO CHIEF SPOTS INCREASE ON MAY 23 AND 24, AND ON MAY 25 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY TWO STRAIGHT PARALLEL STREAMS. THE LEADER INCREASES BY ABSORBING THE NEAREST MEMBERS OF THE FOLLOWING STREAMS, AND BY MAY 29 THE STREAMS HAVE BECOME A COMPACT AND COMPLEX CLUSTER. THE GROUP DECLINES STEADILY AFTER MAY 27. NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 7705, BUT EVIDENTLY A NEW FORMATION. 7728 19160521 19160601 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE TRAIN HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 26, BUT REVIVED ON MAY 28 AND JUNE 1. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN PRECEDING THE CHIEF SPOT FROM MAY 26 TO 29. 7729 19160522 19160602 TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. THE FOLLOWER SHOWS A GREAT ENLARGEMENT ON MAY 28, BUT DIES DOWN QUICKLY AFTERWARDS. THE LEADER IS SURROUNDED BY SEVERAL NEW SPOTS ON JUNE 1 AND 2, FORMING A CONSIDERABLE CLUSTER. 7730 19160523 19160528 A DISTURBED AREA. ONE VERY SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT ON MAY 23; NOTHING ON MAY 24; A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 25-28, WITH A DISTINCT COMPANION NF ON MAY 26 AND 27. 7731 19160525 19160530 A CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS S GROUP 7730. 7732 19160524 19160527 A DISTURBED AREA, WITH A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7733 19160526 19160607 RETURN OF GROUP 7708. A LARGE, WELL-DEFINED, AND STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 7733*19160531 19160601 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 7734 19160527 19160531 A DISTURBED AREA F GROUP 7729, IN WHICH SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR IRREGULARLY. 7735 19160530 19160606 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS P GROUP 7733. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 3, BUT HAS REVIVED BY JUNE 4, AND INCREASES RAPIDLY AFTERWARDS. 7736 19160530 19160604 INTERMITTENT. A MINUTE SPOT ON MAY 30. A FEW VERY SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS ON JUNE 3; TWO SMALL COMPOSITE SPOTS ON JUNE 3; THREE ON JUNE 4. 7737 19160603 19160606 A SHORT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE APPEARING SUDDENLY ON JUNE 3. THE LEADING SPOTS DEVELOP RAPIDLY, BUT HAVE PASSED OUT OF SIGHT BY JUNE 6. 7738 19160603 19160608 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE FORMING JUST BEHIND GROUP 7733. THE STREAM INCREASES IN SIZE VERY RAPIDLY, AND ITS MEMBERS COALESCE TO FORM A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. GROUPS 7737, 7735, 7733, AND 7738 FORM AN ALMOST CONTINUOUS PROCESSION. 7739 19160607 19160608 A CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS SPREADING BUT GROWING FAINTER ON JUNE 8. 7740 19160608 19160620 A FINE STABLE REGULAR SPOT. IT IS FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS AFTER JUNE 8, AND THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE BY JUNE 13. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM SOON BREAKS UP, AND THE LEADER REMAINS ALONE AFTER JUNE 17. 7740*19160613 19160616 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 14. 7741 19160609 19160610 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; A REVIVAL OF ACTIVITY IN THE REGION OF 838H. 7742 19160610 19160611 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 7741 ON JUNE 10, OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY JUNE 11. 7743 19160609 19160615 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 11 AND 12. 7744 19160610 19160615 A VERY SMALL SPOT N GROUP 7743; NOT SEEN ON JUNE 11 AND 12. 7745 19160616 19160627 RETURN OF GROUP 7727. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT. IT IS INVADED BY BRIGHT FACULAE FROM THE F SIDE, AND BY JUNE 20 SEVERAL SMALL SPOTS HAVE BECOME DETACHED FROM THE MAIN BODY TO FORM A TRAIN. THE TRAIN HAS WHOLLY DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 25. 7746 19160617 19160622 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 17, DEVELOPING INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM BY JUNE 18. 7747 19160618 19160624 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 18, WHICH HAVE DEVELOPED BY JUNE 20 INTO TWO UNSTABLE CLUSTERS, OF WHICH THE PRECEDING HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 24. 7748 19160618 19160629 REVIVAL OR RETURN OF GROUP 7728. A DIFFUSE SPOT ON JUNE 18, WHICH HAS DEVELOPED BY JUNE 20 INTO A CLOSE PAIR OF DISTINCT SPOTS, FOLLOWED BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SPARSE TRAIN. THE DISTURBANCE THEN RAPIDLY INCREASES AND SPREADS OVER AN IMMENSE AREA. A REGULAR SPOT BEGINS TO FORM AT THE HEAD OF THE GROUP ON JUNE 22, AND HAS FULLY DEVELOPED BY JUNE 24. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER JUNE 25, THE LEADER BEING THE ONLY IMPORTANT SPOT REMAINING AFTER JUNE 27. 7749 19160620 19160629 PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 7736. A REGULAR SPOT, SOMETIMES WITH A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. THE LEADER DIMINISHES STEADILY IN SIZE, AND NOTHING IS SEEN ON JUNE 27, BUT A VERY SMALL MARKING IS NEAR ITS PLACE ON JUNE 28. 7750 19160621 19160626 SEVERAL SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS USUALLY GROUPED IN TWO SMALL CLUSTERS. 7751 19160621 19160703 RETURN OF GROUP 7737. TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS, OF WHICH THE ONE IN THE REAR IS THE SMALLER, AND A COMPOSITE SPOT BY JUNE 25. LATER IT BREAKS UP, AND THE LEADER REMAINS ALONE BY JULY 2. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS ARE SEEN OCCASIONALLY NEAR THE TWO CHIEF SPOTS. 7752 19160622 19160630 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 7750 ON JUNE 22, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JUNE 23. THIS HAS BROKEN UP INTO A SMALL CLUSTER BY JUNE 24, AND HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY THE NEXT DAY. A REVIVAL HAS TAKEN PLACE BY JUNE 26, AND THE GROUP BECOMES A CONTINUOUS STREAM, AT FIRST STRONGLY CURVED AND CONVEX TO THE EQUATOR, BUT STRAIGHT LATER. 7753 19160622 19160701 A REGULAR SPOT IN THE DECLINING STAGE, USUALLY WITH ONE SMALL COMPANION SF GROUP 7751. 7754 19160622 19160702 RETURN OF GROUP 7735. AN IRREGULAR STREAM FOLLOWING VERY CLOSELY GROUPS 7751 AND 7753. THE REAR SPOT IS MUCH THE LARGEST MEMBER, BUT THE ENTIRE GROUP IS UNSTABLE, AND BY JUNE 29 IT HAS SEPARATED INTO THREE DISTINCT CLUSTERS. 7755 19160622 19160629 A SPOT, ILL-DEFINED AT FIRST, BUT BECOMING REGULAR AS IT DIMINISHES. A VERY SMALL FAINT CLUSTER PRECEDES IT ON JUNE 28. 7756*19160622 19160625 RETURN OF GROUP 7733, THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL SPOT P GROUP 7756. 7756 19160623 19160703 RETURN OF GROUP 7738. TWO SPOTS NEARLY ON THE SAME MERIDIAN. THE LARGER AND MORE NORTHERN IS A DOUBLE SPOT; THE OTHER IS REGULAR. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE ATTENDANTS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN NEAR THEM. 7757 19160623 19160630 A SHORT STREAM DEVELOPING INTO A FINE DOUBLE SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE TRAIN. BY JUNE 26 THE LEADER HAS BECOME REGULAR, AND THE TRAIN IS A DISTANT AND FEEBLE CLUSTER. 7758 19160621 19160628 A SMALL DISTURBED AREA F GROUP 7757. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JUNE 23. 7759 19160625 19160629 A PAIR OF WIDELY SEPARATED CLUSTERS ON JUNE 25, BECOMING AN IRREGULAR STREAM BY JUNE 26. 7760 19160626 19160702 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 26 S OF GROUPS 7754 AND 7756. THE FIVE GROUPS, 7751, 7753, 7754, 7756, AND 7760, REALLY FORM PART OF A SINGLE DISTURBANCE OF IMMENSE EXTENT, AND THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE GROUPS IS TO A CERTAIN DEGREE ARBITRARY, AND IS MADE FOR CONVENIENCE IN MEASUREMENT AND REDUCTION. GROUP 7760 HAS BECOME A SPARSE STRAIGHT STREAM BY JUNE 28, AND THREE SMALL CLUSTERS BY JUNE 30. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT ALONE REMAINS BY JULY 2. 7761 19160628 19160709 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING IN SIZE. IT HAS DISOLVED INTO A VERY SMALL CLUSTER BY JULY 3, AND HAVING DISAPPEARED BY JULY 5, IT HAS REVIVED AS TWO SMALL CLUSTERS BY JULY 7. 7762 19160630 19160705 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE LEADER HAS BECOME THE LARGEST MEMBER BY JULY 2, AND THE GROUP IS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED BY JULY 4. ON JULY 5 THERE REMAIN ONLY THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER. 7763 19160702 19160705 A SMALL CLUSTER FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT ON JULY 2; LATER A SMALL SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM. 7764 19160702 19160703 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 7765 19160703 19160707 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER; ONE SMALL SPOT ON JULY 7. 7766 19160705 19160709 SOME SMALL MARKINGS DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM, OF WHICH ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON JULY 9. 7767 19160705 19160712 RETURN OF GROUP 7740. A DOUBLE SPOT, FOLLOWED ON JULY 9 AND 10 BY A TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS. THE DOUBLE SPOT REMAINS ALONE ON JULY 11 AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 12, BUT SOME VERY SMALL MARKINGS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE. 7768 19160707 19160708 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7769 19160707 19160719 RETURN OF GROUP 7746. A LARGE AND VERY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 7770 19160709 19160711 A FEW SMALL MARKINGS N GROUP 7767; NOT SEEN ON JULY 10. 7771 19160714 19160726 RETURN OF GROUP 7748. THIRD APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT, OCCASIONALLY WITH SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE ATTENDANTS. THESE ARE MOST NUMEROUS AND WIDELY SCATTERED ON JULY 20 AND 21. 7772 19160717 19160727 REVIVAL OF GROUP 7749. TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 17, OF WHICH THE LEADER HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 18. MANY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR BY JULY 19, AND BY JULY 20 THE GROUP HAS BECOME A VERY LONG AND NEARLY CONTINUOUS STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. AFTER THIS THE LEADER SPOT DEVELOPS AND BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, BUT THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIMINISH, AND THE LEADER REMAINS ALONE ON JULY 26. 7773 19160717 19160719 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7774 19160718 19160723 TWO SMALL BUT VERY DARK SPOTS ON JULY 18; A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 19; TWO CLUSTERS ON JULY 20, OF WHICH ONLY THE FOLLOWING ONE REMAINS BY JULY 21. 7775 19160720 19160721 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS N GROUP 7772. 7776 19160720 19160730 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 20, WIDELY SEPARATED. THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED BY JULY 22 INTO A VERY SPARSE STRAIGHT STREAM, COMPOSED OF THREE CLUSTERS WHICH INCREASE IN SIZE UP TO JULY 25. THE GROUP DIMINISHES LATER, AND ON JULY 28 ONLY ONE LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT REMAINS WITH A FEW SMALL ATTENDANTS. NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 7751, BUT APPARENTLY A NEW FORMATION. 7777 19160720 19160801 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH SEVERAL CLOSE COMPANIONS, USUALLY TO THE SOUTH AT FIRST AND FOLLOWING LATER. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER JULY 29. 7778 19160721 19160729 A COMPACT CLUSTER ON JULY 21, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO CLUSTERS BY JULY 22, AND IS STRETCHED OUT INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM BY JULY 24. ON JULY 26, THE GROUP AGAIN CONSISTS OF TWO WIDELY SEPARATED CLUSTERS, WHICH ARE REDUCED TO SINGLE SPOTS BY JULY 28. REVIVAL OF GROUP 7751. 7779 19160721 19160729 A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN IRREGULAR STREAM, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JULY 27. THOUGH VERY FAINT, IT SHOWS AN EXTENSION ON JULY 28, BUT HAS CONTRACTED AGAIN BY JULY 29. THE GROUPS 7778, 7776, 7777, AND 7779 FORM ONE VERY LONG, NEARLY CONTINUOUS PROCESSION. 7780 19160722 19160802 A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. 7781 19160724 19160726 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JULY 25. 7782 19160725 19160729 A REGION NF GROUP 7780, IN WHICH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS FORM AND DISAPPEAR IRREGULARLY. 7783 19160726 19160728 A COMPACT CLUSTER, SUDDENLY APPEARING NF GROUP 7772. IT HAS CONDENSED BY JULY 27 INTO A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 7784 19160728 19160801 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN THE MIDST OF A GREAT MASS OF BRIGHT FACULAE. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JULY 30 AND 31. 7785 19160731 19160803 A SMALL WELL-DEFINED SPOT IN A MASS OF BRIGHT FACULAE. A SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN NEAR IT ON AUGUST 3. 7786 19160801 19160802 TWO SMALL SPOTS SF THE PLACE OF GROUP 7779. 7787 19160801 19160803 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 1, FOLLOWED ON AUGUST 2 BY ANOTHER AT A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE; A VERY SPARSE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 3. 7788 19160802 19160804 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7789 19160803 19160815 RETURN OF GROUP 7769. THIRD APPARITION. A VERY STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH DARK WELL-DEFINED UMBRA, WHICH IS APPROXIMATELY CIRCULAR THROUGHOUT THE APPARITION. 7790 19160805 19160808 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 5 SP THE PLACE OF GROUP 7788. ONLY THE LEADER IS SEEN ON AUGUST 6, AND NO SPOTS ARE VISIBLE ON AUGUST 7. THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR ON AUGUST 8. 7791 19160805 19160809 A PAIR OF WELL-DEFINED SPOTS WHICH BREAK UP AFTER AUGUST 7. THE FOLLOWING SPOT ALONE REMAINS ON AUGUST 9. 7792 19160806 19160808 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS N OF GROUP 7791 AND NF GROUP 7790. 7793 19160806 19160809 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, THE PRECEDIN OF WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 9. 7794 19160807 19160813 A SMALL WELL-DEFINED SPOT, SOMETIMES ACCOMPANIED BY VERY SMALL SCATTERED UNSTABLE MARKINGS. 7794*19160808 19160809 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN AN AREA OF FACULAE. 7795 19160808 19160814 INTERMITTENT. SEVERAL VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STRAIGHT SPARSE STREAM WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 11. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS IS SEEN ON AUGUST 14. 7796 19160811 19160823 RETURN OF GROUP 7772. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONALLY A SMALL COMPANION. AN OUTBURST OF SMALL SPOTS TAKES PLACE SUDDENLY BEHIND THE GROUP ON AUGUST 21, BUT THE REGULAR SPOT REMAINS ALONE ON AUGUST 23. 7797 19160812 19160816 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 12, BOTH OF WHICH DEVELOP ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS; THE LEADER BECOMES AT FIRST A COMPACT CLUSTER AND THEN A COMPOSITE SPOT; THE FOLLOWER INCREASES BUT REMAINS SINGLE. 7798 19160813 19160816 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, THE LEADER OF WHICH IS UNSTABLE. 7799 19160814 19160818 A SMALL FEEBLY DISTURBED AREA SP GROUP 7796, IN WHICH A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR IRREGULARLY. 7800 19160816 19160822 A DOUBLE SPOT GENERALLY ACCOMPANIED BY SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS. 7801 19160816 19160823 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT OCCASIONALLY ACCOMPANIED BY SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS. 7802 19160816 19160818 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 7801. 7803 19160818 19160824 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS WIDELY SCATTERED ON AUGUST 18; A MAGNIFICENT COMPOSITE SPOT ON AUGUST 19, ROUGHLY IN THE SAPE OF THE LETTER F; ON AUGUST 20 IT IS STILL FURTHER ENLARGED. AFTER THIS IT BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SPOTS, MOSTLY COMPOSITE, AND DIMINISHES STEADLY. 7803*19160819 19160822 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON AUGUST 19 AND 22. 7803#19160819 19160824 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ON AUGUST 19 AND 24. 7804 19160819 19160820 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 7805 19160820 19160822 TWO SPOTS, THE LEADER OF WHICH IS THE LARGER. 7806 19160828 19160829 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SMALL GROUP OF BRIGHT FACULAE. 7807 19160828 19160831 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS; A REVIVAL OF GROUP 7794*. 7808 19160829 19160904 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 30, AND JUST VISIBLE ON AUGUST 31. IT IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 1 AND 2, BUT HAS REVIVED AS A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS ON SEPTEMBER 3. 7809 19160831 19160901 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 31, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON SEPTEMBER 1. 7810 19160901 19160910 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH SOME FAINT COMPANIONS ON SEPTEMBER 2. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 5, BUT HAS RE-APPEARED AS A WIDE PAIR BY SEPTEMBER 8. 7811 19160902 19160903 A SMALL SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION TO THE SOUTH, WHICH HAS BROKEN UP INTO A SMALL CLUSTER BY SEPTEMBER 3. 7812 19160903 19160909 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A SHORT STREAM, OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 8. 7813 19160903 19160905 A SMALL CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS NF GROUP 7808. 7814 19160904 19160908 A VERY SMALL SPOT THAT HAS BROKEN UP INTO A COMPACT CLUSTER BY SEPTEMBER 6, AND WHICH ULTIMATELY BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER. 7815 19160907 19160909 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 7; A THIRD FORMS IN ADVANCE OF THE GROUP ON SEPTEMBER 8, AND ALONE REMAINS ON SEPTEMBER 9. 7816 19160907 19160919 RETURN OF GROUP 7803. TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS NEARLY ON THE SAME MERIDIAN. A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SOMETIMES SEEN NEAR THEM. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS AFTER SEPTEMBER 17. 7817 19160908 19160913 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 7816 AND 7818. 7818 19160908 19160915 WITH GROUP 7816, A RETURN OF GROUP 7803. AN IRREGULAR STREAM RAPIDLY DIMINISHING. TWO SMALL REGULAR SPOTS AND TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ARE ALL THAT REMAIN BY SEPTEMBER 10. 7819 19160910 19160913 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED AT FIRST BY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS WHICH SOON DISAPPEAR. 7820 19160910 19160922 A LONG STREAM OF UNUSUAL SHAPE, BEING STRONGLY CURVED, ALMOST SEMICIRCULAR, AND CONVEX TO THE EQUATOR. IT GRADUALLY STRAIGHTENS OUT, BUT DIMINISHES QUICKLY AFTER THIS HAS BEEN ACCOMPLISHED, LEAVING ONLY THE LEADER BY SEPTEMBER 21. THIS SPOT IS THE LARGEST AND BEST-DEFINED MEMBER OF THE GROUP, AND IS USUALLY COMPOUND. 7821 19160912 19160913 SOME FAINT MARKINGS ON SEPTEMBER 12 SOUTH OF THE PLACE OF 842D. OF THESE MARKINGS, ONLY ONE REMAINS ON SEPTEMBER 13. 7822 19160912 19160917 A FEW VERY SMALL MARKINGS. NONE ARE SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 13 AND 14, AND ONLY ONE ON SEPTEMBER 17. 7823 19160912 19160915 SOME VERY FAINT DIFFUSED MARKINGS S OF GROUP 7822. 7824 19160912 19160915 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT SOMETIMES FOLLOWED BY SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. THE WHOLE REGION BETWEEN GROUPS 7816 AND 7820 IS FEEBLY AND IRREGULARLY DISTURBED, GROUPS 7817, 7818, 7822, 7823, AND 7824 BEING THE CHIEF FOCI OF DISTURBANCE. 7825 19160913 19160915 A SMALL SPOT. 7826 19160914 19160922 A DOUBLE SPOT, BECOMING REGULAR BY SEPTEMBER 16, AND FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE LEADER DIMINISHES GREATLY AFTER SEPTEMBER 21. 7827 19160914 19160921 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER ON SEPTEMBER 16. 7828 19160914 19160920 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 7826. OTHER SPOTS FORM NEAR IT, ESPECIALLY ON THE P SIDE, AND ON SEPTEMBER 18 THE GROUP IS A FEEBLE STREAM OVERLAPPING GROUP 7826 IN LONGITUDE BUT SLIGHTLY TO THE SOUTH OF IT. 7829 19160915 19160916 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WHICH ALONE SURVIVES ON SEPTEMBER 16. 7830 19160917 19160925 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT STEADILY DIMINISHING. 7831 19160918 19160921 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING IN THE DISTURBED 7816-7820 REGION, AND QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A FINE STREAM. 7832 19160918 19160921 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 18; A CLUSTER ON SEPTEMBER 19; A VERY SMALL SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 20, AND ANOTHER, DISTINCT FROM IT ON SEPTEMBER 21. 7832*19160919 19160920 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7833 19160919 19160924 A PAIR OF COMPOSITE SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY, AND QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM WHICH DECLINES, OR IS PARTLY HIDDEN BY FACULAE, ON REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 7834 19160920 19160921 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS AND MARKINGS IN AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 7835 19160922 19160923 A SMALL SPOT. 7836 19160925 19160929 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. ONLY ONE REMAINS ON SEPTEMBER 28 AND 29. 7837 19160926 19160929 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 7836; NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 28. 7838 19160926 19161003 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS F GROUP 7837. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 27, AND ONLY ONE VERY SMALL MARKING IS VISIBLE ON SEPTEMBER 29 AND 30; THE GROUP RE-APPEARS TEMPORARILY ON OCTOBER 3. 7839 19160926 19160930 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7840 19160928 19160929 A SMALL STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY, N OF GROUP 7836. 7841 19161003 19161004 A RING OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 3, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY OCTOBER 4. 7842 19161003 19161009 A REGULAR SPOT STEADILY DIMINISHING. 7843 19161003 19161016 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL TRAIN. A SMALL SPOT PRECEDES THE CHIEF SPOT FROM OCTOBER 7 TO 11. 7844 19161005 19161009 TWO SMALL CLUSTERS THAT COALESCE BY OCTOBER 7 TO FORM ONE SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM. 7845 19161006 19161019 RETURN OF GROUP 7831. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. A SHORT TRAIN IS SEEN TO THE N ON OCTOBER 13, OF WHICH ONE MEMBER REMAINS UNTIL OCTOBER 16. A NEW TRAIN HAS FORMED NF BY OCTOBER 17, AND, HAVING GREATLY INCREASED, BECOMES THE LARGEST PART OF THE GROUP BY OCTOBER 19. 7846 19161007 19161010 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7847 19161007 19161010 A COMPOSITE SPOT BREAKING UP TO FORM A CLOSE PAIR. ONLY A VERY SMALL MARKING REMAINS BY OCTOBER 10. 7848 19161007 19161017 AN IRREGULAR STREAM FORMING IMMEDIATELY BEHIND GROUP 7847. THREE SMALL SPOTS ARRANGED ALONG A MERIDIAN LEAD THE GROUP ON OCTOBER 7. THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED THE NEXT DAY INTO A FINE STREAM, QUITE OF THE NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER AND TERMINAL SPOTS ARE BOTH LARGE AND COMPOSITE AND CONTINUE TO INCREASE UNTIL OCTOBER 10, AFTER WHICH THE TERMINAL BEGINS TO BREAK UP, AND THE LEADER DIMINISHES AND BECOMES REGULAR. THE MIDDLE OF THE GROUP IS ACTIVE ON OCTOBER 14 AND 15. 7849 19161007 19161015 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 7, GRADUALLY DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL STRAIGHT STREAM BY OCTOBER 11. A FRESH OUTBREAK HAS OCCURRED BY OCTOBER 12, BUT SOON DIES DOWN, AND ONLY A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS REMAIN BY OCTOBER 14, OF WHICH ONE HAS DISAPPEARED BY THE NEXT DAY. 7850 19161008 19161009 A VERY SMALL SPOT P GROUP 7845. 7851 19161008 19161012 A VERY SMALL MARKING S GROUP 7850. IT HAS DEVELOPED INTO A SMALL CLUSTER BY OCTOBER 9, BUT IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 10. 7852 19161008 19161019 RETURN OF GROUP 7820. A SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 7845, WITH A VERY SMALL FAINT COMPANION ON OCTOBER 11, 16, AND 17. 7853 19161008 19161022 RETURN OF GROUP 7833. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BECOMING DOUBLE ON OCTOBER 10 AND FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN, WHICH DEVELOPS FROM OCTOBER 10 TO 12, BUT DECLINES LATER AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 20, LEAVING THE LEADER, NOW A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE. 7854 19161009 19161014 A SMALL SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 7852 ON OCTOBER 9. IT HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCTOBER 11, BUT SOME FAINT MARKINGS ARE SEEN IN ITS PLACE ON OCTOBER 12, 13, AND 14. 7855 19161011 19161012 A VERY SMALL FAINT CLUSTER NP GROUP 7845. 7856 19161012 19161015 A SMALL SPOT. 7857 19161014 19161019 A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS S OF GROUP 7845. THE TERMINAL SPOT DEVELOPS ON OCTOBER 17 AND BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 7858 19161016 19161022 A COMPOSITE SPOT SURROUNDED AND INVADED BY BRIGHT FACULAE WHEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB. THE SPOT DIMINISHES QUICKLY AFTER OCTOBER 20. 7859 19161021 19161024 A DIFFUSED SPOT DIMINISHING IN SIZE BUT BECOMING MORE DEFINITE AFTER OCTOBER 22. IN THE SAME AREA OF DISTURBANCE AS GROUP 7838. 7860 19161023 19161029 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY. SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS ARE SEEN NEAR IT ON OCTOBER 25 AND 26. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 27, BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT HAS APPEARED BY OCTOBER 28, AND A CLUSTER OF VERY FAINT MARKINGS BY OCTOBER 29. 7861 19161024 19161103 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 24; A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM COMPOSED OF MANY SMALL SPOTS SOON DEVELOPS, THE LEADER OF WHICH HAS BECOME A LARGE TRIPLE SPOT BY OCTOBER 29, BUT HAS BROKEN UP BY NOVEMBER 1. 7862 19161026 19161028 SOME VERY FAINT MARKINGS F GROUP 7860; NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 27. 7863 19161028 19161102 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH A FAINT COMPANION ON OCTOBER 28. OTHER FAINT MARKINGS ARE SEEN NEAR ON OCTOBER 29 AND 31, AND THE GROUP HAS DEVELOPED INTO A CLUSTER OF FIVE SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOTS BY NOVEMBER 1. 7864 19161029 19161107 A SMALL CLUSTER INCREASING IN SIZE UP TO OCTOBER 31, AND GRADUALLY LENGTHENING OUT INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM; IT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER NOVEMBER 4. 7865 19161031 19161105 A VERY SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT ON OCTOBER 31. SOME OTHERS HAVE FORMED BEHIND IT BY NOVEMBER 1, MAKING WITH IT A SHORT STRAIGHT STREAM, OF WHICH THE REAR SPOT BECOMES THE CHIEF. ACTIVITY IN THIS AREA DURING PREVIOUS ROTATION (SEE GROUP 7844). 7866 19161031 19161102 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH TWO FAINT COMPANIONS ON NOVEMBER 2. 7867 19161031 19161108 AN IRREGULAR STREAM COMPOSED OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 8. 7868 19161102 19161110 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 2 AND 3, DEVELOPING INTO A CLOSE PAIR BY NOVEMBER 4. THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS AFTER NOVEMBER 7. NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 7849. 7869 19161102 19161111 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS NF GROUP 7868 ON NOVEMBER 2. THE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN SIZE AND DEVELOPS INTO A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM COMPOSED MOSTLY OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER NOVEMBER 6, AND ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT, IN THE NP PART OF THE STREAM, REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 11. APPARENTLY A NEW OUTBURST NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 7849. 7870 19161102 19161114 TWO WIDELY SEPARATED REGULAR SPOTS, OCCASIONALLY WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS BETWEEN THEM. THE REAR SPOT, WHICH IS PROBABLY A RETURN OF A PORTION OF GROUP 7845, DOES NOT COME INTO VIEW UNTIL NOVEMBER 3, AND IT REMAINS ALONE AFTER NOVEMBER 12. 7871 19161103 19161114 SOME FAINT MARKINGS FORMING S OF GROUP 7870 AND QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A FINE STREAM. THE LEADER HAS BECOME A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BY NOVEMBER 5, AND REMAINS STABLE; THE FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE MOSTLY UNSTABLE AND HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 13. NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 7857, BUT A NEW FORMATION. 7872 19161103 19161111 A FEW FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS IRREGULARLY SCATTERED OVER A GREAT DISTANCE IN LONGITUDE; P THE PLACE OF GROUP 7852, BUT A NEW FORMATION. 7873 19161105 19161106 A SMALL CLUSTER OF FAINT MARKINGS. 7874 19161105 19161109 A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE SMALLER AND MORE SOUTHERN HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 8. 7875 19161107 19161108 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 7870. 7876 19161106 19161117 RETURN OF GROUP 7853; THIRD APPARITION. A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH A CLOSE COMPANION NF ON NOVEMBER 6-8. NUMEROUS SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM F THE ORIGINAL LEADER, WHICH DIMINISHES BUT BECOMES MORE DEFINITE. THE GROUP IS AN IRREGULAR STREAM NOVEMBER 9-15, AFTER WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS. 7877 19161107 19161109 A VERY SMALL MARKING N GROUP 7870. 7878 19161107 19161115 A DOUBLE SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SPARSE IRREGULAR TRAIN COMPOSED OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7879 19161110 19161112 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS SF GROUP 7871. 7880 19161110 19161112 TWO FAINT MARKINGS ON NOVEMBER 10. NOTHING IS SEEN THE NEXT DAY, BUT A VERY SMALL MARKING APPEARS ON NOVEMBER 12. 7881 19161110 19161118 TWO COMPACT CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING BY NOVEMBER 12 INTO A STRAIGHT STREAM. THIS HAS FORMED AGAIN INTO TWO CLUSTERS BY NOVEMBER 14, AND THESE BECOME SINGLE SPOTS BY NOVEMBER 16, OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 17. 7882 19161110 19161121 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING BY NOVEMBER 14 INTO A SPARSE IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE LEADER HAS BECOME LARGE AND DARK BY NOVEMBER 17, AND ALONE REMAINS AS A SMALL SPOT BY NOVEMBER 21. 7883 19161109 19161112 SOME VERY SMALL MARKINGS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 12: NONE IS SEEN ON NOVEMBER 10. 7884 19161112 19161113 THREE VERY SMALL AND WIDELY SEPARATED MARKINGS OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS THE SECOND DAY. 7885 19161113 19161115 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. ONLY TWO REMAIN BY NOVEMBER 14, AND ONLY ONE THE FOLLOWING DAY. 7886 19161113 19161117 A COMPACT CLUSTER ON NOVEMBER 13 AND 14; A FEW UNSTABLE AND SCATTERED MARKINGS LATER. 7887 19161116 19161119 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 16; AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER ON NOVEMBER 17; LATER A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 7888 19161118 19161119 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS IN TWO CLUSTERS NP GROUP 7887 ON NOVEMBER 18; A VERY SMALL MARKING THE NEXT DAY. 7889 19161120 19161201 SOME VERY SMALL DISTINCT SPOTS QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A WIDESPREAD DISTURBANCE, CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF SMALL SPOTS IN A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM, ACCOMPANIED BY ONE OR MORE CLUSTERS TO THE N. THE GROUP DECLINES QUICKLY AFTER NOVEMBER 26. 7890 19161121 19161127 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 21, DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE BY THE NEXT DAY. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 25, BUT THERE IS A SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 26. 7891 19161121 19161130 RETURN OF GROUP 7865. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY AN IRREGULAR TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE GROUP DECLINES RAPIDLY AFTER NOVEMBER 25. 7892 19161122 19161125 A SMALL DECLINING SPOT. 7893 19161125 19161204 A VERY SMALL SPOT, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 7894 19161129 19161210 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT ON NOVEMBER 29, THE TRAIN BY WHICH IT IS FOLLOWED NOT COMING INTO VIEW UNTIL NOVEMBER 30. ON AND AFTER DECEMBER 1, THE GROUP IS A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM OF SPOTS, ALL SMALL EXCEPT THE LEADER, WHICH HAS BROKEN UP BY DECEMBER 5. NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 7869, BUT A NEW FORMATION. 7895 19161130 19161207 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 30. ON AND AFTER DECEMBER 1, THE GROUP IS A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. A GREAT DEVELOPMENT HAS TAKEN PLACE BY DECEMBER 4, WHEN THE GROUP IS SEEN AS A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 7896 19161130 19161212 A REGULAR SPOT, OCCASIONALLY WITH A VERY SMALL DISTANT COMPANION. A FRESH OUTBURST TAKES PLACE ON DECEMBER 9, AND A REGULAR SPOT FORMS. ONE SMALL COMPANION FOLLOWS ON DECEMBER 10 TO 12. 7897 19161202 19161208 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FOLLOWER ON DECEMBER 4. 7898 19161202 19161214 A FINE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE NOT FULLY SEEN ON THE DISC UNTIL DECEMBER 3. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE GROUP BREAKS UP AFTER DECEMBER 9, AND ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY DECEMBER 12. 7899 19161205 19161210 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 5, WHICH HAVE DEVELOPED BY DECEMBER 7 INTO A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. THE GREATER PART OF THE GROUP HAS PASSED OFF THE DISC BY DECEMBER 10. 7900 19161206 19161211 A VERY SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 7896 ON DECEMBER 6 AND 7, DEVELOPING SUDDENLY INTO A COMPACT SHORT STREAM BY DECEMBER 8. THE SP PORTION OF THE STREAM DIMINISHES FIRST, AND ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY DECEMBER 11. 7901 19161207 19161208 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 7, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING ONE HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 8. 7902 19161208 19161212 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT ON DECEMBER 8, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON DECEMBER 9; ONE SMALL ISOLATED SPOT ON DECEMBER 10-12. THE GROUP LIES BETWEEN GROUPS 7896 AND 7900. 7903 19161208 19161211 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 8, SF GROUP 7896 AND S GROUP 7902. A PAIR OF VERY SMALL CLUSTERS ON DECEMBER 9, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 11. 7904 19161208 19161216 A NUMBER OF SMALL, WELL-DEFINED BUT UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A COMPACT STREAM. THE LEADER DOES NOT DEVELOP UNTIL DECEMBER 13, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP QUICKLY DECLINES. 7905 19161209 19161210 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 9; TWO SMALL CLUSTERS ON DECEMBER 10. 7906 19161210 19161215 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL STREAM ON DECEMBER 12. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 14, BUT ONE SPOT REAPPEARS ON DECEMBER 15. 7907 19161211 19161212 FOUR VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 11; ONE SMALL DOUBLE SPOT ON DECEMBER 12, NP GROUP 7898 AND NF GROUP 7900. 7908 19161212 19161215 A SMALL STREAM FORMING BEHIND GROUP 7898 AND INCREASING IN SIZE. 7909 19161212 19161215 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 12. ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON DECEMBER 15. 7910 19161213 19161214 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER WHICH HAS COALESCED TO FORM A SMALL SPOT BY DECEMBER 14. 7911 19161214 19161215 A VERY SMALL MARKING. 7912 19161215 19161227 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO SMALL AND DISTANT FOLLOWERS. 7913 19161216 19161221 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 16; A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. ONLY THREE OR FOUR VERY SMALL FAINT MARKINGS REMAIN ON DECEMBER 21. 7914 19161217 19161220 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT, WITH A VERY SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWER. THE DOUBLE SPOT HAS DIVIDED INTO A PAIR OF SPOTS BY DECEMBER 19, AND THESE HAVE MOVED APART BY DECEMBER 20. THE FOLLOWER HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 20. 7915 19161217 19161221 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 17 AND 18; A CLUSTER ON DECEMBER 19, OF WHICH ONLY ONE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT REMAINS ON DECEMBER 21. 7916 19161222 19161223 A FEW VERY SMALL SCATTERED MARKINGS ON DECEMBER 22. A FAINT TRIPLE SPOT ON DECEMBER 23. 7917 19161222 19161228 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS GREATLY DECLINED BY DECEMBER 27. ONLY ONE SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY DECEMBER 28. 7918 19161222 19170103 RETURN OF GROUP 7895. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, SLIGHTLY ELONGATED AND DEVELOPING A DOUBLE UMBRA BY DECEMBER 30. IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS BY JANUARY 3. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWERS ARE OCCASIONALLY SEEN. 7919 19161223 19161225 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS ON DECEMBER 23. A VERY SMALL DISTINCT SPOT ON DECEMBER 24, WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON DECEMBER 25. 7919*19161224 19161227 A DISTURBED AREA. NOTHING IS SEEN ON DECEMBER 25 AND 26. 7920 19161224 19170105 RETURN OF GROUP 7899. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONALLY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT FOLLOWERS. 7921 19161225 19161226 A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7922 19161225 19170101 A VERY SMALL SPOT N GROUP 7918 ON DECEMBER 25. TWO ARE SEEN ON DECEMBER 26, AND SEVERAL IN A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM ON DECEMBER 27, OF WHICH ONLY THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS REMAIN BY DECEMBER 28. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 30 AND 31, BUT TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD ON JANUARY 1. 7922 19161225 19170101 A VERY SMALL SPOT N GROUP 7918 ON DEC. IK. TWO ARE SEEN ON DEC. 26, AND SEVERAL IN AL LONG STRAIGHT STREAM ON DEC. 27, OF WHICH ONLY THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS REMAIN BY DEC. 28. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON DEC. 30 AND 31, BUT TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD ON JAN 1. 7923 19161226 19170103 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 26, WHICH HAVE DEVELOPED BY DECEMBER 28 INTO A SHORT COMPACT STREAM, OF WHICH THE CENTRAL PORTION IS THE MOST STABLE. THE GROUP DIMINISHES AFTER DECEMBER 29, AND ONLY ONE SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY JANUARY 1. 7924 19161227 19170102 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT ON DECEMBER 27, NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 7896, BUT MORE PROBABLY A NEW FORMATION. A DISTANT TRAIN OF SPOTS HAS COME INTO VIEW BY DECEMBER 28, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON DECEMBER 31. THIS IS ALSO SEEN ON JANUARY 1, WHEN THE ORIGINAL LEADER HAS DISAPPEARED, BUT ON JANUARY 2 A VERY SMALL MARKING IS VISIBLE NEAR THE ORIGINAL LEADER'S POSITION. 7925 19161227 19170103 RETURN OF GROUP 7905. A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE REAR HAS DISAPPEARED ON DECEMBER 31. 7926 19161228 19170109 A FINE STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WHICH BECOMES ELONGATED IN A DIRECTION PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR, AND FINALLY DIVIDES INTO TWO. PROBABLY A NEW OUTBURST NEAR GROUP 7903; NOT A RETURN. 7927 19161229 19161230 A VERY SMALL MARKING ON DECEMBER 29; A ROW OF THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 30. 7928 19161230 19170101 A SMALL SPOT IN BRIGHT FACULAE, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 31. 7929 19161230 19170111 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE F GROUP 7926. BOTH THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS ARE LARGE AND REGULAR AND CROSSED BY SEVERAL BRIGHT BRIDGES AFTER JANUARY 3. 7930 19161231 19170103 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 31, OF WHICH THE LEADER HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 1; A LOOSE CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS ON JANUARY 2 AND 3. 7931 19170101 19170103 A SMALL STREAM S GROUP 7923. GROUP 7932, JAN. 1-2. TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. GROUP 7933, JAN. 2-3. ONE OR TWO MINUTE SPOTS. 7934 19170105 19170111 AN UNSTABLE GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. 7935 19170106 19170111 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 7929. 7936 19170106 19170108 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JAN. 6 AND 7, BECOMING A SHORT STREAM ON JAN. 8. ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 7934. 7937 19170106 19170113 A DIMINISHING CLUSTER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 7938 19170108 19170110 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 7939 19170108 19170114 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JAN. 8, NOT SEEN ON JAN. 9, DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE LARGEST MEMBER. 7940 19170108 19170113 A STREAM OF IRREGULAR SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING SPOTS ALONE REMAIN ON JAN. 12 CONNECTED BY A RIDGE OF FACULAE. 7941 19170108 19170118 AN IRREGULAR STREAM WHICH IS LED BY AN UNSTABLE COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 18. 7942 19170108 19170118 AN UNSTABLE SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS, F GROUP 7941, AND IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE AS GROUP 7943. 7943 19170108 19170115 A SMALL SPOT BECOMING TEMPORARILY LARGER AND OF REGULAR TYPE, WITH SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 7944 19170109 19170111 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS N OF GROUP 7929 ON JAN. 9; A SMALL REGULAR SPOT BY JAN. 11. 7945 19170109 19170110 A MINUTE SPOT ON JAN. 9 WITH A SMALL CLUSTER ON JAN. 10. 7946 19170110 19170112 ONE VERY SMALL DISTINCT SPOT ON JAN. 10; A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JAN. 11-12. 7947 19170111 19170114 A SMALL GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE. 7948 19170111 19170114 TWO SMALL CLUSTERS WHICH HAVE CONDENSED TO TWO SPOTS BY JAN. 14. 7949 19170111 19170120 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS LED BY A REGULAR SPOT SOMETIMES WITH COMPOSITE UMBRAE. ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY JAN. 19. 7950 19170113 19170124 A DOUBLE SPOT, PASSING TO THE REGULAR TYPE BY JAN. 15 AND THEN BREAKING UP ON JAN. 18, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 23. 7951 19170114 19170115 TWO OR THREE SPOTS. 7952 19170116 19170122 A SMALL SPOT DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM ON JAN. 19. NOTHING IS SEEN ON JAN. 21. 7953 19170117 19170118 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 7954 19170118 19170120 A SMALL STREAM F GROUP 7949. 7955 19170118 19170129 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED AT SOME DISTANCE BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 7956 19170119 19170130 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS ALONE SEEN AS A SMALL SPOT BEFORE THE TRAIN APPEARS ON JAN. 21, AND AS A REGULAR SPOT AFTER JAN. 27 WHEN THE TRAIN HAS DIED OUT. 7957 19170119 19170130 A FEW SMALL SCATTERED UNSTABLE SPOTS UNTIL JAN. 27, WHEN A REGULAR SPOT FORMS, WHICH HOWEVER SOON DIMINISHES. 7958 19170120 19170121 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JAN. 20; ONE ONLY ON THE NEXT DAY. 7959 19170121 19170127 INTERMITTENT, NO SPOTS BEING SEEN ON JAN. 23-24. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS NP GROUP 7957 AND SF GROUP 7955. 7960 19170121 19170129 AN IRREGULAR TRAIN OF SHORT-LIVED SPOTS WITH ONE PROMINENT MEMBER ON JAN. 23-24 IN THE MIDDLE OF THE GROUP. 7961 19170125 19170128 A FEW SPOTS F GROUP 7960. 7962 19170125 19170203 A STREAM OF ABNORMAL DEVELOPMENT. A REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDING WHICH SPOTS DEVELOP AFTER JAN. 26 TO FORM A STREAM WITH ANOTHER REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER; THE LATTER ALONE SURVIVES ON FEB. 2. RETURN OF GROUP 7926. 7963 19170126 19170131 A FEW SCATTERED INDEFINITE UNSTABLE SPOTS; NON ARE SEEN ON JAN 29. GROUP 7972 DEVELOPS JUST SOUTHWARDS ON FEB. 1. 7964 19170126 19170202 TWO SPOTS WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS IN A LARGE MASS OF FACULAE GRADUALLY DIMINISHING. A MERE DOT REPRESENTS THE PRECEDING COMPONENT ON FEB. 2. 7965 19170127 19170129 A SINGLE SPOT. 7966 19170128 19170129 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 7960. 7967 19170128 19170131 A FEW SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 7964. 7968 19170128 19170131 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 7969 19170130 19170207 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT OF WHICH A SMALL PORTION HAS DETACHED ITSELF FROM THE P SIDE BY FEB. 2. BY FEB. 5, THE MAIN SPOT HAS DISINTEGRATED, AND THE GROUP IS A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPONENTS ALONE REMAIN ON FEB. 6-7. RETURN OF GROUP 7939. 7970 19170130 19170209 AN EQUATORIAL GROUP. A REGULAR SPOT WHICH DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER FEB. 6. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS APPEAR 7 DEGREES BEHIND THE LEADER. 7971 19170131 19170201 A SMALL CLUSTER OF SPOTS ON JAN. 31; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEB. 1; NP GROUP 7962. 7972 19170201 19170203 A SMALL GROUP FORMING S THE PLACE OF GROUP 7963. 7973 19170202 19170203 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 7974 19170202 19170203 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 2; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEB. 3. 7975 19170203 19170204 A SMALL SPOT FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 7976 19170203 19170208 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF ILL-FORMED SPOTS FORMING ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. AFTER FEB. 6, TWO SPOTS MARKING THE FRONT AND REAR OF THE STREAM ALONE REMAIN. 7977 19170203 19170216 A MAGNIFICENT GROUP OF THE STREAM TYPE OF WHICH BOTH THE EARLY FORMATION AND MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT APPEAR WITHIN THE VISIBLE HEMISPHERE. THE GROUP IS NATURALLY DIVIDED INTO THREE PORTIONS-THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS AND A MUCH SMALLER INTERMEDIATE PORTION. THE LEADER, WHICH DEVELOPS FROM A SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 3, SOON APPEARS AS A GIGANTIC ONE OF REGULAR TYPE. THE REAR SPOT IS ELONGATED AND MORE COMPLEX, AND BEFORE FEB. 11 IS THE LARGEST MEMBER. ITS MAJOR AXIS, WHICH IN THE EARLY STAGE IS AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR, BECOMES PARALLEL TO IT BY FEB. 8 BY THE FORMATION SPREADING TOWARDS THE CENTRE OF THE STREAM. THE INTERMEDIATE PORTION CONSISTS OF AN IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SPOTS WHICH CONDENSES AFTER FEB. 9 AND PRACTICALLY CONNECTS THE LEADER AND REAR SPOT TOGETHER. ONLY THE LAST PORTION OF THE GROUP REMAINS IN VIEW ON THE WEST LIMB ON FEB. 16. GROUPS 7981, 7982, AND 7984 ARE SMALL SUBORDINATE GROUPS. 7978 19170204 19170212 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF ILL-FORMED SPOTS. THE LEADING SPOT, A DOUBLE, ALONE REMAINS ON FEB. 11. 7979 19170204 19170215 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DIMINISHING. A VERY SMALL FOLLOWER APPEARS 5 DEGREES AWAY ON FEB. 9. 7980 19170205 19170214 A SMALL BUT STABLE SPOT. 7981 19170206 19170210 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 7977. 7982 19170208 19170211 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 7977. 7983 19170209 19170213 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL CLUSTER OF FOLLOWERS ON FEB. 9-11. 7984 19170209 19170210 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 7977. 7985 19170210 19170214 A SMALL FEEBLE STREAM OF SPOTS. 7986 19170211 19170221 AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS. BY FEB. 15 FRESH SPOTS HAVE FORMED TO THE N, AND THE GROUP APPEARS AS A BROAD IRREGULAR STREAM OF ILL-DEFINED SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 7987 19170212 19170213 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE AS GROUP 7980 BUT NP. 7988 19170213 19170215 A FEW SCATTERED SPOTS. 7989 19170213 19170215 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON FEB. 14. 7990 19170213 19170222 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 13, DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. THE TRAIN, WHICH IS NEVER PROMINENT, HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 20. 7991 19170214 19170218 A SMALL STREAM NP GROUP 7988. 7992 19170214 19170220 A SMALL SPOT WITH FOLLOWERS FEB. 15-18; NF GROUP 7990 AND NP GROUP 7986. 7993 19170216 19170225 A GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE BUT WITH A PAIR OF SPOTS LEADING AFTER FEB. 19. THE ORIGINAL LEADER ONLY IS LEFT ON FEB. 25 AS A MERE DOT. 7994 19170218 19170224 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON FEB. 20-23. THE ACCOMPANYING FACULAE IS SEEN LATER ON THE WEST LIMB. 7995 19170219 19170225 A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING SF GROUP 7993. THE LEADER REMAINS UNTIL FEB. 23, BUT VERY SMALL SPOTS REVIVE TO MARK THE POSITION OF THE TRAIN WHICH HAD PREVIOUSLY DISAPPEARED. 7996 19170220 19170221 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS N GROUP 7986. 7997 19170220 19170227 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A WIDE AREA OF DISTURBANCE. 7998 19170221 19170222 A SINGLE FAINT SPOT THE FIRST DAY; A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON THE NEXT. 7999 19170224 19170305 A REGULAR SPOT, IMPERFECTLY FORMED AND GRADUALLY DIMINISHING. A VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWS BY 6 DEGREES ON FEB. 27. GROUP 8009 APPEARS IMMEDIATELY BEHIND ON MARCH 3. 8000 19170225 19170303 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 8001 19170226 19170228 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN AN ISOLATED MASS OF FACULAE. 8002 19170227 19170310 A STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE LEADER, AT FIRST COMPOSITE, ASSUMES THE REGULAR FORM BY MAR. 7. THE REAR PORTION HAS DIED OUT BY MAR. 9 BUT IS REPRESENTED BY CONSPICUOUS FACULAE. 8003 19170227 19170302 A SMALL BUT STABLE SPOT. 8004 19170228 19170302 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8000 AND PROBABLY CONNECTED WITH IT. 8005 19170301 19170303 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON MAR. 3. 8006 19170301 19170310 A GROUP IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING GROUP 8008 AND IN THE SAME LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN ILL-DEFINED CLUSTER. 8007 19170302 19170305 A SHORT STREAM OF WHICH THE REAR SPOT IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT. 8008 19170302 19170314 RETURN OF GROUP 7977. A LARGE STREAM CONSISTING OF A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER, A COMPOSITE SPOT IN THE REAR, AND SOME UNSTABLE SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. THE GROUP SHOWS SIGNS OF DYING OUT AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 8009 19170303 19170308 TWO ILL-FORMED SPOTS ON MAR. 3, THE LEADER DEVELOPING TO ONE OF REGULAR TYPE, THE FOLLOWER INCREASING BUT REMAINING OF INDEFINITE FORM. 8010 19170303 19170311 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A FEW FAINT SPOTS ON MAR. 3. 8011 19170304 19170305 A SMALL STREAM NP GROUPS 7999 AND 8009. 8012 19170305 19170317 AT FIRST, A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN APPENDAGE SF, FOLLOWED CLOSELY BY A COMPOSITE COMPANION. LATER, THE APPENDAGE AND THE COMPANION DISSOLVE INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MAR. 16. 8013 19170307 19170317 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MAR. 8 AND MAR. 10. ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN A SHORT STREAM DEVELOPS, THE LEADER BEING A REGULAR SPOT. 8014 19170308 19170310 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NP GROUP 8006. 8015 19170310 19170311 A SMALL SPOT. 8016 19170311 19170317 A SHORT STREAM FIRST VISIBLE ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 8017 19170311 19170317 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. THREE EPHEMERAL SPOTS APPEAR ON MAR. 14 N OF THE MAIN STREAM BUT IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA. 8018 19170311 19170313 A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE IS LEFT BY MAR. 13. 8019 19170311 19170315 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT. 8020 19170312 19170314 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT WITH TWO FOLLOWERS DISTANT 5 ON MAR. 13. 8021 19170313 19170320 A SMALL SPOT SP GROUP 8024. 8022 19170314 19170315 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8023 19170314 19170322 A CONTRACTING REGULAR SPOT. 8024 19170315 19170325 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH RAPID DEVELOPMENT; THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS AFTER MAR. 21. 8025 19170316 19170319 TWO SPOTS ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8017. THE REAR SPOT ALONE REMAINS IN VIEW ON THE WEST LIMB ON MAR. 19. 8026 19170316 19170324 A STRAGGLING STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 8027 19170317 19170328 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL STREAM, WHICH HAVING NEARLY DISAPPEARED ON MAR. 24, SHOWS A SLIGHT REVIVAL BY MAR. 26. 8028 19170318 19170319 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8029 19170319 19170331 RETURN OF 848K OR MORE PROBABLY A REVIVAL IN THAT REGION. AN IRREGULAR STREAM, AT FIRST OF SMALL SPOTS FROM WHICH EMERGES A MODERATE SIZED COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH UNDERGOES MANY CHANGES AS THE REAR OF THE STREAM DISAPPEARS. 8030 19170319 19170331 TWO ILL-SHAPED SPOTS OF WHICH THE LARGER AND MORE SOUTHERN BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT, WHILST THE OTHER DIMINISHES AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAR. 27. 8031 19170320 19170324 TWO RAPIDLY DIMINISHING SPOTS WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THIS GROUP IS IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA AS GROUP 8030, AND THE TWO GROUPS MIGHT PERHAPS BE CONSIDERED AS ONE. 8032 19170322 19170326 A SMALL GROUP S GROUP 8030. NOTHING IS SEEN ON MAR. 25. 8033 19170323 19170328 A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 23; A SHORT STREAM ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS; AFTERWARDS A SINGLE SPOT. 8034 19170323 19170403 A REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS BEFORE APR. 1, BECOMING TEMPORARILY DOUBLE ON MAR. 27. 8035 19170323 19170404 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT PRECEDED BY A CLOSE CLUSTER. THIS CONDENSES AND JOINS TO THE MAIN SPOT AFTER MAR. 28, THUS MAKING A LONG IRREGULAR SPOT, WHICH DECLINES, HOWEVER, AFTER APR. 2. THIS GROUP CLOSELY FOLLOWS GROUP 8034 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 8036 19170324 19170401 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 8034. THE LEADER SPOT ALONE REMAINS AFTER MAR. 29. 8037 19170324 19170328 RETURN OF GROUP 8009. A SMALL CONTRACTING REGULAR SPOT. 8038 19170326 19170402 RETURN OF GROUP 8002. A COMPOSITE SPOT DIMINISHING AND DIVIDING INTO TWO PORTIONS ON APR. 1. A COMPANION TO THE S IS SEEN ON MAR. 26-27. 8039 19170326 19170403 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDING WHICH SPOTS FORM TO CONSTITUTE A STREAM 7 DEGREES IN LENGTH BY MAR. 30. ON APR. 1, THE GROUP IS RAPIDLY DISAPPEARING. 8040 19170330 19170403 TWO SMALL SPOTS, ONE OF WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY APR. 1. NONE IS SEEN ON APR. 2, BUT A SPOT HAS FORMED IN THE SAME AREA BY APR. 3. 8041 19170402 19170407 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A LARGE DISTURBED AREA, WHICH ORIGINALLY CONTAINED THE LARGE GROUPS NOS. 7977 AND 8008. NO. SPOTS ARE SEEN ON APR. 4. 8042 19170402 19170408 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8025. A SMALL SPOT NOT VISIBLE ON APR. 5. A FEW SMALL SPOTS OCCUPY ITS PLACE ON APR. 6-8. 8043 19170404 19170406 INTERMITTENT. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON APR. 4; A PAIR ON APR. 6. 8044 19170405 19170406 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8045 19170406 19170410 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SPOTS NOT SEEN ON APR. 7-8. 8046 19170409 19170419 RETURN OF GROUP 8024. A STABLE BUT STEADILY CONTRACTING REGULAR SPOT. 8047 19170404 19170411 A LARGE GROUP OF RAPID AND ABNORMAL DEVELOPMENT. TWO PAIRS OF SMALL SPOTS ON APR. 11; FOUR REGULAR SPOTS IN A TRAIN BY APR. 13, THE LEADER OF WHICH ENLARGES AND PERSISTS AS THE OTHERS SOON BREAK UP AND DISAPPEAR. 8048 19170411 19170419 A STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS ARISING FROM TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 8046. 8049 19170411 19170422 REVIVAL OF ACTIVITY NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 8023. A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER INCREASES TO A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WHILST A COMPOSITE SPOT AT THE REAR OF THE STREAM IS BREAKING UP AND DISAPPEARING. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS ARE SMALL AND ARE GENERALLY ARRANGED IN TWO CLUSTERS, WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED AFTER APR. 18. 8050 19170412 19170422 A GROUP FORMING AT THE EAST LIMB COMPOSED OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM. 8051 19170412 19170415 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8027. TWO SMALL SPOTS 5 DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE. 8052 19170413 19170423 A WIDE AND IRREGULAR STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SPOTS SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB. THE SPOTS DISAPPEAR AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 8053 19170414 19170419 A SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY APR. 19. 8054 19170414 19170426 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, NEAR WHICH OTHER SPOTS FORM WHILST IT ITSELF IS DISAPPEARING ON APR. 20. THE NEW GROUP APPEARS AS A STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LAST IS THE ONLY COMPONENT WHICH BECOMES CONSPICUOUS. 8055 19170416 19170428 A GROUP OF ABNORMAL DEVELOPMENT F THE POSITION OF GROUP 8029. AT FIRST, A LARGE SPOT WITH A FEW VERY SMALL ATTENDANTS. ON APR. 23, SPOTS FORM SOUTHWARDS, THUS MAKING A STREAM NEARLY AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE EQUATOR. BY APR. 26 THESE NEW SPOTS HAVE COALESCED TO MAKE A LONG AND VERY IRREGULAR SPOT, WHILST THE ORIGINAL SPOT, WHICH HAD BECOME QUITE SMALL BY APR. 25, SHOWS AN ENLARGEMENT AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 8056 19170418 19170426 REVIVAL IN REGION OF GROUP 8029. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS UNTIL APR. 22, WHEN A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS APPEAR FOR A FEW DAYS. 8057 19170418 19170421 A SMALL SPOT. 8058 19170419 19170430 RETURN OF GROUP 8034. TWO CLOSE SPOTS WHEN FIRST SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER REMAINS REGULAR; THE FOLLOWER WHICH IS COMPOSITE IS BREAKING UP ON APR. 22 WHEN OTHER SPOTS ARE FORMING BEHIND IT. THE GROUP THUS APPEARS AS A STREAM 12 DEGREES IN LENGTH, BUT THE TRAIN IS UNSTABLE AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY APR. 29. 8059 19170423 19170504 ON APR. 23 A VERY SMALL SPOT FROM WHICH DEVELOPS A LARGE SPOT, OF REGULAR TYPE UNTIL APR. 29, AFTER WHICH IT IS COMPOSITE AND DIMINISHING RAPIDLY. THERE IS ONE LARGE COMPANION SPOT WHICH HAS FULLY FORMED BY APR. 25; IT THEN BREAKS UP AND DISAPPEARS. 8060 19170424 19170426 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8061 19170425 19170427 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS; ONE ONLY IS SEEN ON APR. 27. 8062 19170426 19170507 TWO SMALL SPOTS SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB, WHICH ENLARGE CONSIDERABLY AND BECOME REGULAR; SEVERAL LITTLE SPOTS FORM BETWEEN THEM, THUS MAKING A LARGE STREAM. THE LEADER ESPECIALLY IS VERY UNSTABLE IN SHAPE AFTER MAY 2, AND ALTHOUGH SEVERAL LARGER INTERMEDIATE SPOTS APPEAR, THE GROUP DECLINES GENERALLY. 8063 19170426 19170506 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT F GROUP 8062. IT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER MAY 2. 8064 19170427 19170501 A FEW SMALL SPOTS NP GROUP 8062. 8065 19170429 19170507 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SOME IMPORTANCE, WHICH IS CLOSELY CONNECTED WITH GROUP 8062. IT IS DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER MAY 5. 8066 19170429 19170505 A FEW SPOTS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, NONE OF WHICH PERSIST LONG. 8067 19170429 19170511 A LARGE SPOT, USUALLY OF REGULAR TYPE, BEHIND WHICH SMALL IRREGULAR SPOTS FORM AS A TRAIN WHICH HAS DIED OUT BY MAY 10. 8068 19170430 19170503 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY THE REAR IS SEEN ON MAY 3. 8069 19170430 19170511 AN ILL-FORMED REGULAR SPOT F GROUP 8067 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE. OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR NEAR THE SPOT. 8070 19170501 19170507 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8069. 8071 19170503 19170508 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS DEVELOPING CONSIDERABLY AFTER MAY 5 INTO A STREAM WITH THE LARGEST COMPONENT, A COMPOSITE SPOT, IN THE REAR. 8072 19170503 19170506 A SMALL SPOT WITH THREE COMPANIONS ON MAY 6. 8073 19170505 19170517 RETURN OF GROUP 8047. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING AFTER MAY 12. A FEW SMALL ATTENDANTS APPEAR MAY 8-14. 8074 19170506 19170508 A SMALL GROUP OF SPOTS SF GROUP 8072. 8075 19170507 19170515 TWO MINUTE SPOTS ON MAY 7 DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES THE PROMINENT MEMBER AS A REGULAR SPOT. THE GROUP QUICKLY DECLINES AFTER MAY 11, THE LEADER BREAKING UP AFTER MAY 12, WHILST THE REMNANTS OF THE TRAIN ARE DISAPPEARING. 8076 19170507 19170519 RETURN OF GROUP 8049. A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN EXTENDED MASS OF FACULAE. A FEW FOLLOWERS, MOSTLY VERY SMALL, ARE SEEN NEAR IT FROM MAY 10-15. 8077 19170507 19170510 A FEW SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 8076. 8078 19170509 19170520 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8050. TWO SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT BY MAY 13, WHILST THE REAR MOST SPOT IS COMPOSITE ON MAY 14 AND 15 AND IS REPRESENTED IN ITS EARLY AND FINAL STAGES BY A CLUSTER. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON MAY 18. 8079 19170510 19170520 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 10. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL MAY 14, WHEN SPOTS BEGIN TO MULTIPLY AND FORM A VERY EXTENDED CLUSTER OR BROAD STREAM OF IRREGULAR SPOTS. THIS GROUP IS CLOSELY RELATED TO GROUP 8078, WITH WHICH IT PRACTICALLY MERGES ON AND AFTER MAY 16. 8080 19170511 19170519 RETURN OF GROUP 8054. A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT WHICH APPARENTLY IS DISAPPEARING ON MAY 13. OTHER SPOTS FORM, HOWEVER, AND THE GROUP APPEARS ON MAY 15 AS A LONG NARROW STREAM, WHICH IS RAPIDLY DIMINISHING ON MAY 17. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ALONE REMAINS ON MAY 19 TO MARK THE HEAD OF THE STREAM. 8081 19170513 19170520 A SMALL STREAM F GROUP 8076. THE LEADER SPOT WHICH BECOMES REGULAR IS THE CHIEF COMPONENT. 8082 19170513 19170519 RETURN OF GROUP 8056. A SMALL SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS, MAKING UP A SHORT STREAM AFTER MAY 14. 8083 19170513 19170522 ONE OR TWO SPOTS P GROUP 8084. THE GROUP HAS PRACTICALLY DIED OUT BY MAY 19, BUT REVIVES AS A FEW SCATTERED SPOTS SOMEWHAT PRECEDING IN LONGITUDE THE ORIGINAL POSITION. GROUPS 8083 AND 8084 REPRESENT PERHAPS A RETURN OF GROUP 8055. 8084 19170515 19170520 A FAINT SPOT ON MAY 15 WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED THE NEXT DAY. A PAIR OF SMALL COMPOSITE SPOTS APPEAR ON MAY 17 OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS ON MAY 20. 8085 19170515 19170524 TWO SPOTS ON MAY 15 RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A LONG STREAM SOME 11 DEGREES IN LENGTH. THE LEADER SPOT IS REGULAR UNTIL MAY 21, AFTER WHICH IT DISAPPEARS SUDDENLY; THE REAR SPOT TENDS TO THE REGULAR TYPE, BUT IT HAS BROKEN UP BY MAY 20. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS ON MAY 24 TO MARK THE CENTRE OF THE STREAM. 8086 19170517 19170525 A STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE, APPROXIMATING TO THE NORMAL TYPE ON MAY 23, BUT DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTERWARDS. 8087 19170517 19170527 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8058. AT FIRST A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT WITH RAPID GROWTH, PRECEDED BY A SMALLER BUT REGULAR COMPANION AND FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER. THE LARGE SPOT IS QUICKLY DISAPPEARING ON MAY 20 WITH THE EXCEPTION OF A PORTION ON ITS F SIDE WHICH LASTS UNTIL MAY 25. MEANWHILE OTHER SPOTS FORM IN THE MIDDLE AND FRONT OF THE GROUP, WHICH NOW APPEARS AS AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF CONSIDERABLE EXTENT, THOUGH IT DIMINISHES AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 8088 19170518 19170525 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8055. SOME FAINT SPOTS ON MAY 18 WHICH, HAVING ENLARGED GREATLY BY MAY 19, APPEAR AS TWO LARGE AND NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS WITH ATTENDANTS. THE GROUP IS DISAPPEARING AFTER MAY 21: THE LEADER SPOT RAPIDLY DIMINISHES, THE REAR SPOT LESS QUICKLY. 8089 19170522 19170603 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUPS 8062 AND 8065. A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER PERSISTS AS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT; THE REAR SPOTS MAKE UP A COMPLEX BUT UNSTABLE CLUSTER WHICH HAS DIED OUT BY JUNE 2. 8090 19170523 19170524 A GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE FORMING AT THE WEST LIMB. 8091 19170523 19170525 A SHORT STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS NP GROUP 8089. 8092 19170523 19170601 A CLUSTER OF IRREGULAR SPOTS, WHICH APPEAR AS A SHORT STREAM AFTER MAY 25 WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. THE WHOLE GROUP DISPERSES QUICKLY AFTER MAY 27. 8093 19170523 19170604 RETURN OF GROUP 8071. A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS 8 DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE AND SLOWLY CONTRACTING. ONE OR TWO SMALL ATTENDANTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THEM ON MAY 28 AND 31. THE LEADER IS ALONE IN VIEW ON MAY 23. 8094 19170524 19170530 A STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS SUDDENLY APPEARING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE HEAD OF THE STREAM IS ALONE REPRESENTED BY SPOTS ON MAY 29 AND 30. 8095 19170524 19170605 AN ACTIVE GROUP WITH REMARKABLE CHANGES AFTER MAY 27. AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS AS A TRAIN. BY MAY 28 THE SPOT HAS SUDDENLY CHANGED TO A LARGE DOUBLE COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH IS BREAKING UP AND SEPARATING INTO THREE CHIEF COMPONENTS. BY MAY 31 ONE OF THESE HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWING WHICH THE OTHER TWO COMPONENTS HAVE COALESCED TO FORM A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT. A FEW OTHER SPOTS FORM, CHIEFLY AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM, AS THE OLDER COMPONENTS ARE DIMINISHING RAPIDLY. 8096 19170525 19170526 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT ON MAY 25 WITH TWO SMALL COMPANIONS; TWO MINUTE SPOTS ON MAY 26. 8097 19170525 19170606 RETURN OF GROUP 8097. A PAIR OF LARGE REGULAR SPOTS. BEFORE JUNE 2, THE FOLLOWING MEMBER TENDS TO BECOME COMPOSITE BY THE ADDITION OF AN IRREGULAR COMPONENT JUST NORTH OF IT. THE OTHER COMPONENT HOWEVER REMAINS VERY STABLE. 8098 19170526 19170529 A SMALL SPOT F GROUPS 8087 AND 8096. 8099 19170526 19170606 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS UNTIL JUNE 2. ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8097. 8100 19170527 19170601 A FEW SMALL SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 8101 19170527 19170607 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8069. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPOSITE COMPANION 7 DEGREES f IN LONGITUDE. THE LATTER BREAKS UP AFTER MAY 28, AND SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS FORM NEAR TO MAKE A FAINT UNSTABLE TRAIN. THE REGULAR SPOT IS DISAPPEARING AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. 8102 19170531 19170602 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SPOTS N GROUP 8100. 8103 19170531 19170612 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 8104 19170603 19170615 RETURN OF GROUP 8076; THIRD APPARITION. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 8105 19170604 19170611 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8075. AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL JUNE 7, AFTER WHICH A COMPOSITE SPOT FORMS AT THE HEAD, WHILST A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS REMAIN AT THE REAR OF THE STREAM. 8106 19170604 19170615 A SPOT, APPROXIMATELY REGULAR, WITH SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS FORMING A TRAIN AFTER JUNE 6. ON JUNE 11, A LARGER COMPANION APPEARS CLOSELY FOLLOWING THE LEADER WHICH GRADUALLY DIMINISHES. 8107 19170607 19170618 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8080. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A NEAR AND A DISTANT COMPANION. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 15, AFTER WHICH A FEW SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN. 8108 19170608 19170620 REVIVAL IN REGION OF GROUPS 8082 AND 8083. A REMARKABLE GROUP CONSISTING AT FIRST OF BOTH REGULAR AND ILL-FORMED SPOTS IN A BROAD STREAM SOME 10 DEGREES IN LENGTH IN A DENSE AREA OF FACULAE. THE GROUP APPEARS TO BE QUICKLY DYING OUT BY JUNE 15, BUT A LARGE INDEFINITE SPOT HAS FORMED THE NEXT DAY IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM. ONE OR TWO SMALLER MEMBERS APPEAR IN THE f PORTION OF THE STREAM, BUT THE GROUP DECLINES RAPIDLY. 8109 19170609 19170614 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION. THE GROUP DEVELOPS FROM A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ON JUNE 9. 8110 19170609 19170610 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8111 19170609 19170621 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN UNSTABLE TRAIN. BY JUNE 16 THE SPOT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS, OF WHICH THE LARGER REGAINS A REGULAR FORM, WHILST THE OTHER IS DISAPPEARING. 8112 19170609 19170620 REVIVAL IN REGION OF GROUP 8085. A REGULAR SPOT, NEAR WHICH SMALL ILL-FORMED COMPANIONS APPEAR IN A SPARSE STREAM. THE GROUP HAS NEARLY DIED OUT BY JUNE 16, BUT THE FORE PORTION PERSISTS TO THE WEST LIMB WHERE TWO LARGER SPOTS APPEAR. 8113 19170610 19170611 A PAIR OF SPOTS FORMING AT THE WEST LIMB. 8114 19170611 19170622 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE BUT APPARENTLY FORMING A SINGLE DISTURBANCE. A FEW COMPANION SPOTS ARE SEEN UNTIL JUNE 18. 8115 19170613 19170615 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS P GROUP 8108. 8116 19170613 19170614 SOME VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS SP GROUP 8108. 8117 19170614 19170620 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADING SPOTS REMAIN ON JUNE 19 AND 20. 8118 19170614 19170615 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8119 19170614 19170625 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER JUNE 22. OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS FORM NEAR THE SPOT, IN PARTICULAR ON JUNE 20, 21, AND 24. 8120 19170615 19170625 A LARGE STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING AT THE EAST LIMB NP GROUP 8119. THE LEADER, REGULAR UNTIL JUNE 18, BECOMES COMPOSITE AFTER COALESCING WITH A LARGE COMPONENT WHICH HAS FORMED IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING IT. THE REAR SPOT IS GENERALLY COMPOSITE, AND THOUGH THE LARGEST MEMBER OF THE STREAM ON JUNE 18, IT HAS BROKEN UP BY JUNE 24. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS ARE MOSTLY SMALL BUT NUMEROUS AT TIMES. 8121 19170615 19170618 A SMALL SPOT WITH TWO FOLLOWERS ON JUNE 17; F GROUP 8119. 8122 19170616 19170618 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 8123 19170616 19170624 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. N GROUP 8120, ON JUNE 16 DEVELOPING INTO A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER WHICH SOON DISAPPEARS. 8124 19170617 19170629 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 8125 19170619 19170701 RETURN OF GROUP 8089. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL FOLLOWER ON JUNE 24. 8126 19170619 19170701 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FROM JUNE 23-26. 8127 19170621 19170702 A LONG STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING FROM TWO SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER, WHICH BECOMES REGULAR, BREAKS UP AFTER JUNE 28: THE LAST SPOT, COMPOSITE AT FIRST BUT REGULAR BY JUNE 29, REMAINS ALONE ON JULY 2. 8128 19170621 19170625 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JUNE 21, 22, AND 25. 8129 19170623 19170705 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT WITH TRIPLE UMBRA WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO THREE CLOSE REGULAR SPOTS BY JUNE 26. AN INDEFINITE CLUSTER FOLLOWS THE THREE SPOTS UNTIL THEY COMMENCE TO BREAK UP ON JULY 2. THE AXIS OF THE TRIPLE GROUP, WHICH AT FIRST IS INCLINED SOME 80 DEGREES TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR, TURNS GRADUALLY UNTIL ITS INCLINATION IS ABOUT 20 DEGREES. 8130 19170624 19170625 A SMALL SPOT. 8131 19170624 19170630 INTERMITTENT. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. NOTHING IS SEEN FROM JUNE 27 UNTIL JUNE 30, WHEN A SMALL SPOT APPEARS. REVIVAL OF GROUP 8099. 8132 19170625 19170701 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE, IN WHICH GROUP 8137 APPEARS LATER IN THE N PORTION. 8133 19170626 19170701 A MINUTE SPOT ON JUNE 26 NOT SEEN ON 27TH. ON JUNE 28 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT HAS APPEARED WITH A SMALL CLUSTER SF. THE REGULAR SPOT HAS BROKEN UP BY JUNE 30 BUT HAS REFORMED THE NEXT DAY. 8134 19170626 19170627 A SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 8127. 8135 19170626 19170706 A SMALL SPOT WITH AN EPHEMERAL COMPANION ON JUNE 26 APPEARING SF GROUP 8129. OTHER SPOTS FORM ON JULY 4, AND THE GROUP HAS ENLARGED CONSIDERABLY WHEN LAST SEEN AT THE WEST LIMB. 8136 19170627 19170704 A SPARSE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 8137 19170628 19170630 A SHORT STREAM FORMING N GROUP 8132. 8138 19170628 19170629 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE ALONE REMAINS ON JUNE 29. 8139 19170628 19170707 A LONG SPARSE STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS WHICH GRADUALLY DIE OUT. 8140 19170630 19170712 RETURN OF GROUP 8104; FOURTH APPARITION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT NEAR WHICH OTHERS FORM TO MAKE A CLUSTER; FROM THIS A COMPOSITE SPOT EMERGES ON JUNE 11, AND THE REMAINDER OF THE SPOTS DISAPPEAR. 8141 19170630 19170711 A REGULAR SPOT S OF WHICH SPOTS DEVELOP RAPIDLY AFTER JULY 1 TO MAKE A COMPLEX AND VERY COMPACT STREAM 10 DEGREES IN LENGTH. THE ORIGINAL SPOT LASTS UNTIL JULY 10, WHEN THE GROUP IS RAPIDLY DYING OUT. 8142 19170702 19170711 A REGULAR SPOT APPEARING IN FRONT OF GROUP 8141. A TRAIN OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS FOLLOWS FROM JULY 3-6. 8143 19170705 19170709 A SMALL SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO FOLLOWERS UNTIL JULY 7. 8144 19170705 19170714 A WIDE AREA OF DISTURBANCE WITH A FEW SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 8148. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JULY 10. 8145 19170705 19170707 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 8144. 8146 19170706 19170713 A CLUSTER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8147 19170706 19170712 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS; NONE ARE SEEN ON JULY 11. 8148 19170707 19170717 A LONG STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE MOST PROMINENT MEMBER AND REMAINS ALONE AFTER JULY 15. 8149 19170707 19170719 A VERY LARGE AND COMPLEX STREAM. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT AT THE FRONT OF THE STREAM JOINS WITH THE PRECEDING PORTION OF A LONG IRREGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWING IT, AND IS OF REGULAR FORM AGAIN BY JULY 16; MEANWHILE THE REMAINING PORTION OF THE IRREGULAR SPOT IS DISAPPEARING. A SUBSIDIARY STREAM DEVELOPS SOUTHWARDS AFTER JULY 9 AND MERGES INTO THE MAIN STREAM. 8150 19170708 19170719 A GROUP FORMING AT THE EAST LIMB CONSISTING OF AN IMPERFECTLY FORMED REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS WHICH DISAPPEAR AFTER JULY 15. 8151 19170708 19170720 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, THE NF PORTION OF WHICH BREAKS AWAY AND THEN GRADUALLY DISAPPEARS, WHILST THE MAIN SPOT IS CONTRACTING QUICKLY. THIS GROUP IS CLOSELY ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 8149. 8152 19170710 19170716 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS N GROUP 8156. 8153 19170710 19170715 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM; A REVIVAL OR RETURN OF GROUP 8120. 8154 19170711 19170712 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8155 19170711 19170712 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 8156 19170712 19170720 TWO SMALL CLUSTERS ON JULY 12; A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL JULY 16; AFTERWARDS, TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 8157 19170713 19170717 A SHORT STREAM WITH A REGULAR SPOT IN THE REAR WHICH ALONE REMAINS ON JULY 17. 8158 19170713 19170718 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 8159 19170713 19170719 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JULY 13 AND 14; TWO OR THREE ON JULY 18 AND 19. 8160 19170713 19170720 A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP ON JULY 19. A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ARE SEEN TO THE S. 8161 19170714 19170726 RETURN OF GROUP 8124. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING. 8162 19170716 19170728 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING QUICKLY AFTER JULY 26; THERE ARE USUALLY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANION SPOTS. 8163 19170717 19170728 RETURN OF GROUP 8125; THIRD APPARITION. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING. 8164 19170719 19170722 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 8165 19170720 19170722 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 8166 19170721 19170722 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 21; A SMALL REGULAR SPOT ON JULY 22. 8167 19170721 19170801 A REVIVAL OR A RETURN OF GROUP 8135. A CLUSTER OF ILL-FORMED SPOTS WHICH HAVE NEARLY DIED OUT BY JULY 29. A REGULAR SPOT THE APPEARS PRECEDED BY A SMALL COMPANION. 8168 19170721 19170802 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF ILL-FORMED SPOTS. BY JULY 29, A PAIR OF NEARLY REGULAR SPOT ARE THE ONLY IMPORTANT MEMBERS OF THE STREAM REMAINING. 8169 19170723 19170804 ON JULY 24 A SMALL STREAM APPARENTLY OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER SPOT HOWEVER BECOMES VERY COMPOSITE-AT TIMES DOUBLE- AND THE FOLLOWER, WHICH IS NEVER LARGE, HAS BROKEN UP BY JULY 30. 8170 19170725 19170805 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS, WHICH DIVIDES INTO TWO BY JULY 30 BEFORE DISAPPEARING. A FEW SMALL SPOTS CONTINUE TO MARK THE AREA UNTIL AUG. 5. 8171 19170726 19170803 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS F GROUP 8168. THE CHIEF MEMBER IS A REGULAR SPOT NEAR THE HEAD OF THE STREAM; THE REAR SPOT IS OF SECONDARY IMPORTANCE AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 3. 8172 19170727 19170803 A FEW SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8169; NONE ARE SEEN ON AUG. 2. 8173 19170728 19170805 A PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS 3 DEGREES APART IN LATITUDE. THE MORE SOUTHERN ALONE REMAINS AFTER AUG. 3. 8174 19170729 19170805 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 8169 AND S GROUP 8172. THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS ENLARGE AFTER AUG. 2. 8175 19170729 19170805 AN UNSTABLE GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8176 19170730 19170801 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8177 19170731 19170811 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY CONTRACTING. ON AUG. 6 OTHER SPOTS FORM S OF IT, BUT THESE HAVE DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 11. 8178 19170803 19170805 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, WHICH PROBABLY DEVELOP AS GROUP 8215 IN THE FOLLOWING ROTATION. 8179 19170803 19170807 A SMALL STREAM. 8180 19170803 19170815 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH PROPER MOTION IN LONGITUDE. 8181 19170803 19170816 A MAGNIFICENT COMPLEX GROUP. AT FIRST A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, SF WHICH IS A LARGER SPOT WITH DOUBLE NUCLEI. THE LATTER GROWS CONSIDERABLY, AND FROM AUG. 6 THE GROUP IS BEST CONSIDERED AS ONE IMMENSE IRREGULAR COMPOSITE SPOT WITH THREE CHIEF NUCLEI. THE REGULAR SPOT, WHICH IS ONE OF THESE THREE, PRESERVES ITS INDIVIDUALITY UNTIL AUG. 11; THE REAR NUCLEUS BECOMES SEPARATED FROM THE MAIN PORTION AFTER AUG. 13; OTHERWISE THE DIVISION OF THE SPOT IS SOMEWHAT ARBITRARY. RETURN OF GROUP 8149. 8182 19170804 19170809 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS INCREASING AT THE WEST LIMB. 8183 19170804 19170812 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS P GROUP 8181. 8184 19170804 19170816 A REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL FOLLOWERS AUG. 6-11. 8185 19170804 19170807 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 8181. 8186 19170805 19170808 A SMALL GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8187 19170805 19170811 A SHORT LIVED REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW FOLLOWERS. 8188 19170805 19170814 A COMPOSITE SPOT, WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS, BECOMING VERY SMALL BY AUG. 12. 8189 19170806 19170810 A SMALL EQUATORIAL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 8190 19170806 19170809 A SMALL SPOT. 8191 19170806 19170812 A SHORT STREAM NF GROUP 8181. THE SPOTS ARE VERY SMALL AFTER AUG. 9. 8192 19170806 19170808 A REGULAR SPOT JUST DISAPPEARING. 8193 19170806 19170816 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8166. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN AFTER AUG. 7. THE GROUP HAS CONSIDERABLY DIMINISHED BY AUG. 12. 8194 19170806 19170817 A REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY A SMALL CLUSTER WHICH CONDENSES INTO A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT BY AUG. 12, WHILST OTHER SPOTS FORM IN FRONT. THE IRREGULAR SPOT IS BREAKING UP ON AUG. 16, AND THE COMPANION SPOTS HAVE NEARLY DISAPPEARED. UNTIL AUG. 11, GROUPS 8193 AND 8194 MIGHT BE CONSIDERED AS ONE LONG STREAM OF SPOTS, AND IN THIS RESPECT THE PROPER MOTION IN LONGITUDE OF GROUP 8193 SHOULD BE NOTED. 8195 19170807 19170814 ON AUG. 7 A SMALL STREAM OF SPOTS NF GROUP 8180. THE LEADER, A COMPOSITE SPOT, DEVELOPS CONSIDERABLY IN A FEW DAYS, BUT THE TRAIN IS NEVER PROMINENT. 8196 19170807 19170812 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON AUG. 9 AND 10; NF GROUP 8181. 8197 19170807 19170810 A FEW SPOTS N GROUP 8194. 8198 19170808 19170810 A SMALL SPOT ON AUG. 8 AND 9; A PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS ON AUG. 10. 8199 19170808 19170820 THE GROUP CONSISTS AT THE EAST LIMB OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS. THE PRECEDING SPOT IS LARGE AND STABLE; THE FOLLOWING ONE HAS BROKEN UP BY AUG. 13, WHEN ONE OR TWO OTHER SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS HAVE APPEARED FOLLOWING IT. ONLY THE LEADING REGULAR SPOT REMAINS ON AUG. 18. 8200 19170809 19170814 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON AUG. 10. 8201 19170810 19170818 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, EXCEPTING THAT THE LEADER SPOT BECOMES COMPOSITE AND DIVIDES INTO TWO ON AUG. 16, AND THE REAR SPOT-AT FIRST COMPOSITE-BECOMES REGULAR. SEE GROUP 854K FOR FIRST SIGNS OF ACTIVITY. 8202 19170810 19170821 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT WITH A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. THE GROUP DIES OUT BY AUG. 18, BUT THE NEXT DAY A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IS FORMING NEAR ITS PLACE. 8203 19170810 19170823 RETURN OF GROUP 8161; THIRD APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON AUG. 18. 8204 19170811 19170813 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8205 19170812 19170824 A VERY LARGE SPOT APPROXIMATELY REGULAR AROUND WHICH SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS APPEAR. THE LARGEST OF THESE IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH REMARKABLE PROPER MOTION IN LONGITUDE. 8206 19170813 19170815 A SMALL GROUP F GROUP 8199. 8207 19170813 19170825 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8163. A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY A BROAD TRAIN OF SPOTS, OF WHICH ONE ONLY IS LARGE AND OF ANY PERMANENCE. THE COMPOSITE SPOT INCREASES CONSIDERABLY BETWEEN AUG. 14 AND 15. ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8205. 8208 19170813 19170823 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH HAS BROKEN UP BY AUG. 21. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS OCCASIONALLY APPEAR NEAR IT. 8209 19170814 19170816 AN INDEFINITE SPOT SP GROUP 8181 IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE. 8210 19170815 19170823 A PAIR OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8211 19170817 19170819 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 8212 19170817 19170820 A MINUTE SPOT N GROUP 8205; NOT SEEN ON AUG. 18. 8213 19170817 19170829 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES ELONGATED AND THEN DOUBLE AS IT IS DIMINISHING RAPIDLY. AT FIRST IT IS FOLLOWED BY A LONG TRAIN OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, BUT THESE HAVE DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 24, WHEN FOR THREE DAYS IT IS PRECEDED BY A SMALL CLUSTER. 8214 19170819 19170821 RETURN OF GROUP 8169. A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8215 19170821 19170902 A STREAM LED BY A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, APPROXIMATELY REGULAR BY AUG. 26 BUT BEGINNING TO CONTRACT. THE TRAIN HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 31. 8216 19170821 19170901 REVIVAL IN REGION OF GROUP 8170. AT FIRST A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; LATER, AN INDEFINITE SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 8217 19170822 19170823 A SMALL SPOT ON AUG. 22; A PAIR ON THE NEXT DAY. 8218 19170823 19170826 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON AUG. 23 AND 26. 8219 19170825 19170830 A WIDE AREA OF DISTURBANCE SHOWN BY FACULAE AND A FEW SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. 8220 19170825 19170826 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 8182. A VERY SMALL SPOT IN FACULAE F GROUP 8219. 8221 19170825 19170905 RETURN OF GROUP 8189. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT ON THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 8222 19170826 19170901 REVIVAL IN AREA OF GROUP 8172. A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY WHEN ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, AND BEGINNING TO DISAPPEAR ALMOST AS QUICKLY. A REVIVAL HAS TAKEN PLACE, HOWEVER, ON AUG. 31. THE AXIS OF THE STREAM IS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. 8223 19170826 19170827 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 8224 19170826 19170903 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8186. GENERALLY A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR ON AUG. 30 AND SEPT. 2. 8225 19170827 19170906 A GROUP CONSISTING OF A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. IT APPEARS AS A SHORT STREAM AFTER SEPT. 1. 8226 19170827 19170903 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8227 19170829 19170830 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8228 19170830 19170910 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FOLLOWING SPOT HAS COMPLETELY BROKEN UP BY SEPT. 6. 8229 19170831 19170905 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A LONG SINUOUS STREAM. AFTER SEPT. 2, TWO OF THE COMPONENTS GROW CONSIDERABLY. 8230 19170831 19170912 RETURN OF GROUP 8184. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING. 8231 19170831 19170909 RETURN OF GROUP 8181. AN ILL-FORMED SPOT FOLLOWED BY SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS WHICH HAVE MULTIPLIED BY SEPT. 5. THE GROUP HOWEVER, IS UNSTABLE AND IS DISAPPEARING BY THE FOLLOWING DAY. EXTENSIVE AREAS OF FACULAE ACCOMPANY THE GROUP. 8232 19170901 19170902 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8233 19170902 19170906 A FEW SCATTERED UNSTABLE SPOTS P GROUP 8231. NONE ARE SEEN ON SEPT. 3. 8234 19170902 19170903 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 8230 AND 8235. 8235 19170902 19170908 REVIVAL IN REGION OF GROUP 8192. AN UNSTABLE GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS, FIRST AS A CLUSTER AND THEN AS A STREAM. THE FRONT PART IS ALONE REPRESENTED ON SEPT. 8. 8236 19170903 19170905 A PAIR OF SPOTS N GROUP 8221. 8237 19170903 19170908 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SP GROUP 8231. NONE ARE SEEN ON SEPT. 4. 8238 19170903 19170913 A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 8201. 8239 19170905 19170914 RETURN OF GROUP 8199. A REGULAR SPOT, STABLE IN POSITION BUT DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER SEPT. 12. 8240 19170906 19170907 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON SEPT. 6; TWO ON SEPT. 7. 8241 19170906 19170907 A SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 6; A PAIR ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 8242 19170906 19170915 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 8. THE GROUP THEN REAPPEARS AS TWO SMALL CLUSTERS UNTIL SEPT. 14, WHEN A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT MARKS THE LEADING CLUSTER, WHILST THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER IS REPRESENTED BY A TINY SPOT ON SEPT. 15. 8243 19170907 19170918 A STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 8244 19170908 19170918 RETURN OF GROUP 8205. A REGULAR SPOT RAPIDLY DISAPPEARING AFTER SEPT. 16. A FEW SMALL DISTANT COMPANIONS APPEAR FROM SEPT. 10-14. 8245 19170909 19170910 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED THE NEXT DAY. 8246 19170910 19170911 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8247 19170910 19170913 RETURN OF GROUP 8207. A SMALL SPOT PRECEDED BY ANOTHER ON SEPT. 13. 8248 19170911 19170912 A SMALL SPOT SHOWING A REVIVAL IN REGION OF GROUP 8241. 8249 19170912 19170915 A STREAM OF SPOTS QUICKLY DISPERSING ON SEPT. 15, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE LEADING AND REAR SPOTS. 8250 19170912 19170924 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH DIVIDES AFTER SEPT. 16; THE FORE PORTION DISAPPEARS, LEAVING THE BACK PORTION AS A SPOT APPROXIMATELY OF REGULAR OUTLINE. A CLUSTER OF SMALL COMPANIONS APPEARS S FROM SEPT. 15-18. 8251 19170914 19170916 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 8252 19170914 19170921 A LARGE CLUSTER OF SPOTS, THE CENTRE OF WHICH CONDENSES INTO A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT ON SEPT. 17. AFTER THIS, HOWEVER, THE GROUP QUICKLY DECLINES AS GROUP 8264 IS FORMING JUST SOUTHWARDS. 8253 19170915 19170917 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 8244. 8254 19170915 19170921 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 8250; NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 16. 8255 19170915 19170918 A FEW SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8252 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE AS GROUP 8252. 8256 19170916 19170928 AT FIRST A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM LED BY A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. LATER, THE LEADER BECOMES REGULAR, AND A CLUSTER OF SPOTS AT THE REAR OF THE STREAM CHANGES INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT; THE STREAM THUS BECOMES ONE OF NORMAL TYPE. 8257 19170916 19170929 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8222. A VERY LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, BUT IN WHICH THE LEADER IS EXCEPTIONALLY LARGE IF NOT QUITE OF REGULAR FORMATION. THE TRAIN HAS DISAPPEARED WHEN THE GROUP HAS REACHED THE WEST LIMB. 8258 19170917 19170920 INTERMITTENT. A MINUTE SPOT SEEN ONLY ON SEPT. 17 AND 20. 8259 19170917 19170926 AN INSIGNIFICANT STREAM UNTIL SEPT. 25, WHEN THE COMPONENT SPOTS ARE GROWING CONSIDERABLY. 8260 19170917 19170929 RETURN OF GROUP 8215. A REGULAR SPOT CROSSED BY THREE NARROW BRIGHT MARKINGS ON SEPT. 25, AFTER WHICH THE SPOT DIVIDES. 8261 19170918 19170922 A CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8262 19170918 19170927 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS UNTIL SEPT. 21, WHEN A PAIR OF SPOTS APPEAR, OF WHICH THE PRECEDING ONE ALONE REMAINS ON SEPT. 26. 8263 19170919 19170930 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8232. A STREAM OF SPOTS APPARENTLY DEVELOPING AT THE LIMB; PERHAPS A RETURN OF GROUP 8232. THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS ARE BOTH VERY COMPOSITE. THE LATTER SOON BREAKS UP, BUT IS REPRESENTED BY A SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 30. THE COMPANION SPOTS ARE FEW AND VERY SMALL. 8264 19170920 19170924 A SMALL STREAM; ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON SEPT. 23 AND 24. 8265 19170922 19170923 SOME VERY FAINT SPOTS N GROUP 8257. 8266 19170922 19170930 A SMALL SPOT BEHIND WHICH A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE FORMS IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE, WHILST IT ITSELF DISAPPEARS AFTER SEPT. 24. THE CHANGES IN THE NEW GROUP ARE RAPID, AND BY SEPT. 29 THE LEADER SPOT OF THE STREAM ALONE REMAINS. 8267 19170923 19170925 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 8256 AND 8262. 8268 19170923 19171001 A LONG SPARSE STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS UNTIL SEPT. 29, WHEN MORE DEFINITE SPOTS APPEAR. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT HAS DEVELOPED AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM ON OCTOBER 1. 8269 19170925 19170930 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER. 8270 19170925 19171007 A LARGE SPOT OF REGULAR TYPE BUT WITH COMPOSITE UMBRA. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS USUALLY FOLLOW; TWO OF THESE ON OCT. 5 GROW VERY CONSIDERABLY ON THE TWO SUCCEEDING DAYS, AT THE SAME TIME THAT GROUP 8272 IS ALSO SHOWING INCREASED ACTIVITY. 8271 19170929 19170930 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 29; ONE ONLY ON SEPT. 30. 8272 19170930 19171008 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8270. TWO LARGER SPOTS APPEAR ON OCT. 5, BUT THEY APPEAR TO BE UNSTABLE. 8273 19171001 19171002 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8274 19171001 19171003 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8275 19171001 19171003 A SMALL CLUSTER ON OCT. 1; ONE SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 2 AND 3. 8276 19171001 19171007 RETURN OF GROUP 8249. A SMALL SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS. 8277 19171003 19171004 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 3; TWO ON THE NEXT DAY. 8277 19171003 19171004 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 3; TWO ON THE NEXT DAY. 8278 19171005 19171013 A STREAM SOME 12 DEGREES IN LENGTH, OF WHICH THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT IS A REGULAR SPOT AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM. 8279 19171006 19171010 ON OCT. 6, A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN THE FOLLOWING DAY; AFTERWARDS, A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM. 8280 19171006 19171008 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 8281 19171009 19171010 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 8282 19171011 19171013 ONE OR TWO SCATTERED SPOTS; REVIVAL OF GROUP 8277. 8283 19171011 19171021 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING ONE IS LEFT ON OCT. 17. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL OCT. 21, WHEN THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN IN AN AREA OF FACULAE. 8284 19171011 19171016 A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 8264. A REGULAR SPOT ON OCT. 11 BREAKING UP ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 8285 19171011 19171014 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 8259. TWO SMALL SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 8283. 8286 19171012 19171015 A SHORT LIVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. REVIVAL OF GROUP 8243. 8287 19171013 19171014 AN EVANESCENT GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, APPEARING S OF GROUP 8286 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 8288 19171013 19171019 INTERMITTENT. ON OCT. 13 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY THE NEXT DAY. ON OCT. 16, A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED; THESE ARE SUPERSEDED BY TWO CLUSTERS ON OCT. 17 AND A PAIR OF INDEFINITE SPOTS ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS. 8289 19171013 19171025 RETURN OF GROUP 8256. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT WHICH IS BREAKING INTO TWO PORTIONS ON OCT. 21; THE SF AND SMALLER PORTION RAPIDLY DISAPPEARS WHILST THE OTHER REGAINS A REGULAR OUTLINE. 8290 19171014 19171026 RETURN OF GROUP 8257. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THERE ARE A FEW COMPANION SPOTS, BUT THESE ARE INSIGNIFICANT UNTIL OCT. 22 WHEN SOME LARGER ONES FORM NORTHWARDS. 8291 19171016 19171026 A DISTURBED AREA, NF GROUP 8290, IN WHICH ONE OR TWO SMALL AND UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR. BY OCT. 20, A REGULAR SPOT HAS FORMED PRECEDED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 8292 19171016 19171027 AN IRREGULAR STREAM IN CONTINUAL CHANGE, DEVELOPING FROM A SMALL SPOT AT THE EAST LIMB. 8293 19171017 19171018 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 8294 19171018 19171021 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 8293. 8295 19171019 19171027 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8268. A GROUP APPEARING SUDDENLY F GROUP 8292. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT IS THE CHIEF MEMBER, BUT IT HAS CHANGED TO A CLUSTER BY OCT. 25. 8296 19171021 19171030 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, BUT IN WHICH THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS BETWEEN THE LEADER AND LAST MEMBERS ARE VERY FEW AND EVANESCENT. THE LEADER, MOREOVER, SHOWS DEVIATIONS FROM THE "REGULAR" TYPE. 8297 19171022 19171031 RETURN OF GROUP 8270. A COMPOSITE SPOT BECOMING A CLUSTER ON OCT. 26, WHICH IS SOON DISAPPEARING. 8298 19171023 19171028 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 8299 19171023 19171102 A GROUP IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE AS GROUP 8297. PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 8272. A CLUSTER WHICH DEVELOPS FROM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT AT THE EAST LIMB. THE CHARACTERISTIC FEATURE OF THE CLUSTER IS THE THREE SMALL REGULAR SPOTS ARRANGED AS THE APICES OF AN EQUILATERAL TRIANGLE. 8300 19171025 19171028 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8301 19171027 19171030 MORE PROBABLY A REVIVAL THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 8279. A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER HAS DISAPPEARED ON OCT. 30. 8302 19171028 19171102 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH SOME COMPANIONS TO THE SOUTH. 8303 19171029 19171103 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, 5 DEGREES APART WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS, DEVELOPING FROM A TINY DOUBLE SPOT ON OCT. 29. 8304 19171029 19171102 A SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT NOT SEEN ON OCT. 30. 8305 19171030 19171104 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 30, AFTERWARDS AN IRREGULAR STREAM. 8306 19171030 19171106 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8278. A BROAD BUT SPARSE STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8307 19171101 19171111 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8286. INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ON NOV. 1 AND 3. ON NOV. 5 A STREAM DEVELOPS RAPIDLY WHICH IS APPROXIMATELY OF NORMAL TYPE. BY NOV. 9, HOWEVER, IT HAS CHANGED CONSIDERABLY, THOUGH IT IS APPARENTLY REVERTING TO THE NORMAL TYPE ON NOV. 11. THE ORIGINAL LEADER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, IS THE ONLY COMPONENT WHICH CAN BE TRACED THROUGHOUT. 8308 19171102 19171105 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 8309 19171102 19171112 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, THE SMALLER ONE LEADING AND REMAINING STABLE WHILST THE FOLLOWING SPOT BECOMES VERY COMPOSITE. TWO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS APPEAR; ONE MIDWAY IN THE GROUP; THE OTHER FOLLOWING THE COMPOSITE SPOT. THUS FOR SOME DAYS THE GROUP APPEARS AS AN IRREGULAR STREAM 14 DEGREES IN LENGTH, WHICH IS RAPIDLY DISAPPEARING AT THE WEST LIMB. 8310 19171102 19171104 TWO SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8309 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 8311 19171105 19171106 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8312 19171106 19171115 REVIVAL IN REGION OF GROUP 8283. A GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE WHICH GRADUALLY DIES OUT. THE TWO CHIEF MEMBERS, THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS, ARE IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 8313 19171107 19171112 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8307 ON NOV. 7 AND 8. OTHERS FORM ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS, BUT THE LEADER ONLY IS CONSPICUOUS AS A REGULAR SPOT ON NOV. 11 AND 12. 8314 19171109 19171119 A SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 9; A PAIR ON NOV. 10 WHICH SEPARATE CONSIDERABLY IN A FEW DAYS. BY NOV. 13 THE REAR SPOT HAS BROKEN UP, AND A FEW FAINT SPOTS HAVE FORMED BETWEEN THE PAIR. THE LEADER APPEARS ALONE AFTER NOV. 16. 8315 19171109 19171121 RETURN OF GROUP 8289; 3RD APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT WHICH IS VERY STABLE UNTIL NOV. 19 WHEN IT BEGINS TO DISAPPEAR RAPIDLY. THREE VERY SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR S ON NOV. 15. 8316 19171109 19171122 RETURN OF GROUP 8290. THIS REGION HAS BEEN ACTIVE SINCE JULY 27-SEE GROUPS 8172, 8222, 8257, AND 8290. A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE REAR SPOT HAS BROKEN UP BY NOV. 12 INTO A CLUSTER WHICH LASTS UNTIL NOV. 17; THE LEADER PERSISTS AS A REGULAR SPOT. 8317 19171113 19171120 A STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING FROM TWO SMALL FAINT MARKINGS ON NOV. 13. THE ONLY IMPORTANT MEMBER IS THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, WHICH HAS FORMED BY NOV. 16. 8318 19171113 19171114 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 8316 AND 8319. 8319 19171113 19171122 A SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 13 WHICH HAS INCREASED AND BECOME REGULAR BY THE NEXT DAY. IT IS UNSTABLE, HOWEVER, AND SOON BREAKS UP, BEING REPRESENTED LATTERLY BY A SMALL CLUSTER. SOUTH PRECEDING IT THERE IS AN UNSTABLE COMPANION FROM NOV. 14 TO 19. 8320 19171115 19171125 A SHORT STREAM WITH A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE STREAM IS INTERMITTENT IN ACTIVITY, NONE OF THE SPOTS PERSISTING LONG. 8321 19171118 19171120 A SPOT APPEARING SF GROUP 8315 AND SOON DISAPPEARING. 8322 19171118 19171119 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8323 19171118 19171125 A REVIVAL OR A RETURN OF GROUP 8302. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED AT SOME DISTANCE BY SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS WHICH DIE OUT BY NOV. 25. 8324 19171119 19171128 A GROUP IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE AS GROUP 8323. THE SPOTS, EXCEPTING THE LEADER, ARE VERY SMALL, AND ARE ARRANGED IN A SPARSE STREAM. 8325 19171120 19171125 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM FORMING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 8326 19171121 19171126 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP OF FEW SPOTS. 8327 19171122 19171202 AT FIRST A PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADING ONE HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 26, WHILST A CLUSTER HAS TAKEN THE PLACE OF THE OTHER. 8328 19171123 19171205 A SMALL IRREGULAR STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY AFTER NOV. 25, WHEN A LARGE SPOT APPEARS AT THE HEAD. BY NOV. 29 ANOTHER LARGE SPOT HAS FORMED WHICH IS REPRESENTED EARLIER BY A CLUSTER OF INDEFINITE SPOTS. THE STREAM IS NOW ROUGHLY OF NORMAL TYPE, THOUGH THE ATTENDANT SPOTS ARE FEW AND VERY SMALL. GROUPS 8327, 8328, AND 8333 CONSTITUTE A PROCESSION OF ACTIVITY. 8329 19171124 19171126 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON NOV. 25. 8330 19171124 19171130 A GROUP OF PARTIALLY FORMED SPOTS OF UNSTABLE CHARACTER. 8331 19171124 19171129 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL NOV. 26, AFTER WHICH ONLY ONE IS SEEN. 8332 19171126 19171129 A FEW SPOTS APPEARING IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE AS GROUP 8326 WHEN THAT GROUP IS DISAPPEARING. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT HAS DEVELOPED NEAR THE WEST LIMB ON NOV. 29. 8333 19171126 19171205 A STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE UNTIL DEC. 1, WHEN A REGULAR SPOT HAS APPEARED WHICH ALONE REMAINS ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 8334 19171126 19171206 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 8307. A LARGE SPOT WHICH HAS DIVIDED ON NOV. 28 AND SO GRADUALLY DIES OUT. 8335 19171126 19171208 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8308. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING WHICH OTHERS FORM THE NEXT DAY. ONE OF THESE BECOMES NEARLY OF REGULAR TYPE AND, ALTHOUGH SLOWLY DISAPPEARING, IT PERSISTS AS THE SPOTS PRECEDING IT DIE OUT. 8336 19171128 19171130 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8337 19171128 19171204 TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS OF RAPID GROWTH FROM SEVERAL MINUTE SPOTS ON NOV. 28; N GROUP 8327. 8338 19171128 19171130 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8339 19171128 19171130 A SMALL SPOT. 8340 19171128 19171209 A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 8313. A SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 28 WHICH GROWS AND BECOMES OF REGULAR TYPE. MEANWHILE A COMPANION SPOT HAS DEVELOPED 7 DEGREES FROM IT IN LONGITUDE, BUT IT IS UNSTABLE AND AFTER BREAKING UP, IT SLOWLY DISAPPEARS. SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR ON NOV. 30, WHEN THE GROUP HAS BECOME A SHORT STREAM. 8341 19171130 19171202 TWO SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOTS, OF WHICH THE PRECEDING ONE GROWS AND BECOMES OF REGULAR TYPE. 8342 19171130 19171203 A PAIR OF SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS ON NOV. 30; A SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 3. 8343 19171130 19171204 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL DEC. 2; ONE SMALL SPOT AFTERWARDS. 8344 19171201 19171203 A SMALL STREAM OF FAINT SPOTS. 8345 19171201 19171208 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL DEC. 4, WHEN A REGULAR SPOT HAS FORMED IN FRONT AND THE REMAINING SPOTS ARE DISAPPEARING. 8346 19171201 19171208 A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADER IS THE ONLY SIGNIFICANT MEMBER AND ALONE REMAINS ON DEC. 6. 8347 19171204 19171209 A FEW MINUTE SPOTS S GROUP 8346 UNIT DEC. 7, AFTER WHICH A SMALL REGULAR SPOT APPEARS FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER. 8348 19171205 19171217 RETURN OF GROUP 8317. A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. 8349 19171207 19171217 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL FOLLOWERS WHICH ARE NOT SEEN ON DEC. 13 AND AFTER DEC. 15, WHEN THE LEADER IS ALSO DISAPPEARING. IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA AS GROUP 8316. 8350 19171208 19171213 TWO SPOTS ON DEC. 8 WHICH HAVE ENLARGED BY DEC. 9. OTHER SPOTS FORM THE NEXT DAY TO MAKE AN IRREGULAR STREAM WHICH, HOWEVER, IS SHORT LIVED. NP GROUP 8348. 8351 19171209 19171210 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8352 19171210 19171222 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A BROAD TRAIN OF NUMEROUS ILL-FORMED SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 8353 19171211 19171220 A PAIR OF WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS DEVELOPING FROM TWO VERY SMALL NUCLEI ON DEC. 11. THE LEADING SPOT IS OF REGULAR TYPE AND OUTLASTS ITS COMPANION WHICH HAS DWINDLED TO A MERE DOT BY DEC. 19. A FEW SMALL ATTENDANTS ARE SEEN BETWEEN THE PAIR ON DEC. 13 AND 14. 8354 19171212 19171218 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, WITH RAPID DEVELOPMENT, APPEARING ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN BETWEEN GROUPS 8348 AND 8349, THEREBY MAKING A LONG PROCESSION, WITH GROUP 8353 IN THE REAR. BOTH THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE LARGE AND ARE FULLY FORMED BY DEC. 15. 8355 19171212 19171224 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8320. A LARGE SPOT NEARLY OF REGULAR FORMATION WHICH SHOWS SIGNS OF BREAKING UP ON DEC. 19, ALTHOUGH THE ACTUAL SEPARTION DOES NOT TAKE PLACE UNTIL DEC. 22. THE TWO PORTIONS THEN RAPIDLY DISAPPEAR. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS, THOSE FROM DEC. 18-21 BEING AT SOME DISTANCE. 8356 19171213 19171216 A SMALL FAINT STREAM SF GROUP 8352. 8357 19171213 19171224 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8358 19171214 19171215 A SHORT EVANESCENT STREAM, THE LEADER SPOT ALONE REMAINING ON DEC. 15. 8359 19171214 19171220 A SMALL GROUP IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE AS GROUP 8355, AND SHOWING FEEBLE BUT SUSTAINED ACTIVITY. 8360 19171214 19171222 RETURN OF GROUP 8332. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING AFTER DEC. 19 ON WHICH DAY TWO SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR F IT. 8361 19171215 19171219 REVIVAL IN REGION OF GROUP 8319. A FEW SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 8362 19171216 19171222 A PAIR OF SHOTS WHICH GRADUALLY DIE AWAY. 8363 19171216 19171219 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON DECEMBER 19. 8364 19171216 19171227 TWO SPOTS SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER GROWS AND BECOMES COMPOSITE AND THE OTHER THE CENTRE OF A SMALL CLUSTER WHICH DISAPPEARS AFTER DEC. 24. MEANWHILE THE LEADER IS BREAKING UP, AND A FEW SMALL SPOTS ALONE REPRESENT THE GROUP ON DEC. 27. 8365 19171218 19171226 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8324. A SINGLE SPOT ON DEC. 18; A SHORT STREAM OF NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 19, MOST OF WHICH SOON DISAPPEAR. 8366 19171218 19171230 RETURN OF GROUP 8337. A STABLE CIRCULAR SPOT. 8367 19171219 19171224 A PAIR OF COMPOSITE SPOTS, QUICKLY DEVELOPING AND SOON DISAPPEARING. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS REPRESENT THE FOLLOWING ONE ON DEC. 24. 8368 19171219 19171228 TWO SPOTS WITH MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THEY HAVE EVOLVED FROM TWO SMALL NUCLEI ON DEC. 19 AND 20. THE LEADER IS REGULAR FOR A FEW DAYS. 8369 19171219 19171231 A FEW SCATTERED UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM WHICH DEVELOPS CONSIDERABLY BETWEEN DEC. 23 AND 24. TWO VERY LARGE SPOTS THEN APPEAR AS THE LEADER AND TERMINAL SPOTS RESPECTIVELY. A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS SITUATED BETWEEN THEM DIES OUT BY DEC. 28. 8370 19171219 19171231 RETURN OF GROUP 8328. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DIMINISHING. A SMALL CLUSTER APPEARS S OF IT ON DEC. 29. GROUPS 8372 AND 8376 ARE EVIDENTLY CLOSELY ASSOCIATED WITH THIS GROUP. 8371 19171220 19171229 A GROUP OF FEW FAINT SPOTS UNTIL TWO REGULAR SPOTS APPEAR ON DEC. 23 AS THE LEADER AND REAR SPOTS OF A STREAM. THESE REMAIN AS THE SMALLER MEMBERS DIE OUT. 8372 19171220 19171231 PERHAPS RELATED TO GROUP 8333; IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE AS GROUP 8370. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DISAPPEARING. A FEW TINY COMPANIONS APPEAR ON DEC. 26-27. 8373 19171221 19171223 A FEW SMALL SPOTS P THE PLACE OF GROUP 8359. 8374 19171221 19180102 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL REGULAR COMPANION TO THE S. FROM DEC. 24-28, A NEBULOUS CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWS THE PRINCIPAL SPOT. 8375 19171221 19180102 A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB WHICH COALESCE TO FORM A REGULAR SPOT BY DEC. 23. A FEW VERY SMALL MARKINGS FOLLOW IT ON DEC. 27. 8376 19171222 19171225 A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 8370 AND IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE. 8377 19171224 19180105 REVIVAL IN REGION OF GROUP 8344. A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, BUT IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES EXCEPTIONALLY LARGE AND THE REAR SPOT CORRESPONDINGLY SMALL. THE UMBRA OF THE LEADING SPOT IS CROSSED BY "BRIDGES" FROM DEC. 27-31. 8378 19171224 19180105 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8340; ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8377. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING. THERE ARE A FEW COMPANIONS FROM DEC. 29-JAN. 3. 8378 19171224 19180105 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8340; ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8377. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING. THERE ARE A FEW COMPANIONS FROM DEC. 29-JAN. 3. 8379 19171226 19171230 A GROUP OF A FEW SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 8371. 8380 19171226 19171227 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 8371. 8381 19171226 19171231 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 27; NOTHING ON DEC. 28; AFTERWARDS A SMALL CLUSTER. 8382 19171227 19180102 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, N GROUP 8374, OF WHICH THE LAST BECOMES PROMINENT ON DEC. 29 BUT IS SOON DISAPPEARING. 8382 19171227 19180102 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, N GROUP 8374, OF WHICH THE LAST BECOMES PROMINENT ON DEC. 29, BUT IS SOON DISAPPEARING. 8383 19171227 19180108 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL FOLLOWERS UNTIL JAN. 5. 8383 19171227 19180108 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL FOLLOWERS UNTIL JAN. 5. 8384 19171228 19180102 A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING IS ALONE VISIABLE AFTER DEC. 31. 8384 19171228 19180102 A WIDE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING IS ALONE VISIBLE AFTER DEC. 31. 8385 19171229 19171231 A VERY SMALL DOUBLE SPOT P GROUP 8377. 8386 19180101 19180106 A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8387 19180101 19180113 RETURN OF GROUP 8354. TWO LARGE REGULAR SPOTS. THE PRECEDING ONE IS THE SMALLER AND IS GRADUALLY DISAPPEARING WHILST ITS UMBRA BECOMES COMPOSITE. 8388 19180104 19180107 A SMALL SHORT LIVED STREAM. 8389 19180104 19180113 RETURN OF GROUP 8353. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH TWO VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS ON JAN. 10. 8390 19180105 19180118 AN ACTIVE AND A VERY LONG STREAM OF SPOTS WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER, WHICH AT FIRST IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT. BY JAN. 13 A LARGER SPOT HAS DEVELOPED IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM, WHILST A SMALL CLUSTER AT THE REAR HAS CONDENSED TO A SINGLE SPOT BY JAN. 15. 8391 19180106 19180108 A TINY SPOT NOT SEEN ON JAN. 7; TWO ARE SEEN ON JAN. 8. 8392 19180107 19180118 A LARGE CLUSTER OF PARTIALLY FORMED SPOTS, FOLLOWED BY A SPOT WHICH HAS BECOME OF REGULAR TYPE BY JAN. 12. THE GROUP IS DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER JAN. 14, ONE COMPONENT OF THE CLUSTER ALONE REMAINING ON JAN. 18. 8393 19180110 19180112 TWO SMALL AND WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS, OF WHICH ONE ONLY REMAINS ON JAN. 12. 8394 19180110 19180111 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8395 19180111 19180114 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 8392; NONE ARE SEEN ON JAN. 13. 8396 19180112 19180113 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IN ISOLATED FACULAE. 8397 19180113 19180118 A GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8398 19180113 19180115 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 13; ONE ONLY ON THE FOLLOWING TWO DAYS. 8399 19180114 19180122 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8360. A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 14, WHICH RAPIDLY DEVELOP AND BECOME A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. EXCEPTING THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, THE STREAM SOON DIES OUT, BUT IT IS REPRESENTED BY CONSPICUOUS FACULAE AT THE WEST LIMB. 8400 19180114 19180126 RETURN OF GROUP 8379. A VERY LARGE GROUP CONSISTING OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE COMPONENTS, WHICH AT FIRST PRACTICALLY FORM A SINGLE SPOT OF GREAT EXTENT. THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT IS, HOWEVER, SOON DISAPPEARING, WHILST THE LEADING SPOT, HAVING ALSO DIMINISHED, IS LAST SEEN AT THE WEST LIMB AS A SPOT NEARLY OF REGULAR TYPE. 8401 19180114 19180126 RETURN OF GROUP 8366. A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER UNTIL JAN. 20, AND THEN BY A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL JAN. 23. ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 8400, 8402, AND 8404. 8402 19180115 19180127 RETURN OF GROUP 8369. A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED AT SOME DISTANCE BY A SMALL COMPANION UNTIL JAN. 21, WHEN FOR TWO DAYS A SMALL CLUSTER TAKES ITS PLACE. ANOTHER COMPANION HAS APPEARED ON JAN. 26. 8403 19180116 19180117 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8404 19180117 19180118 A VERY SMALL SPOT S GROUP 8400. 8405 19180117 19180118 A VERY SMALL SPOT F GROUP 8401. 8406 19180117 19180123 RETURN OF GROUP 8374. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT RAPIDLY DISAPPEARING AFTER JAN. 21. 8407 19180118 19180125 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE CONSIDERABLY. THE FOLLOWING SPOT REMAINS ON JAN. 22, BUT HAS DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 23. A SPOT NEAR THE LEADER'S POSITION APPEARS ON JAN. 24 AND 25. 8408 19180120 19180123 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, S GROUP 8400, NOT SEEN ON JAN. 22. 8409 19180120 19180201 RETURN OF GROUP 8377. A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A MERE DOT AT THE WEST LIMB. 8410 19180121 19180129 SOME SMALL SPOTS GENERALLY ARRANGED IN A STREAM. 8411 19180122 19180125 A SMALL STREAM OF SPOTS OF SHORT DURATION. 8412 19180122 19180129 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8372. ON JAN. 21 SOME FAINT SPOTS, WHICH DEVELOP VERY CONSIDERABLY WITHIN A FEW DAYS TO FORM A LARGE GROUP. THE LEADER SPOT IS REGULAR AND IS FOLLOWED BY A LARGE CLUSTER UNDERGOING MUCH CHANGE. 8413 19180123 19180202 RETURN OF GROUP 8383. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DIMINISHING. TWO SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR ON JAN. 29 AND 30. 8414 19180124 19180126 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 8415 19180125 19180203 A SHORT STREAM OF INSIGNIFICANT SPOTS UNTIL JAN. 28, WHEN THE GROUP BECOMES PROMINENT AS A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, BUT IN WHICH THE REAR COMPONENT ATTAINS LITTLE IMPORTANCE. 8416 19180126 19180127 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 8417 19180126 19180204 A STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE ONLY IMPORTANT MEMBER IS THE LEADER. 8418 19180127 19180201 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT P GROUP 8413; NOT SEEN JAN. 28-30. 8419 19180128 19180209 RETURN OF GROUP 8387. THIRD APPARITION. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 8420 19180129 19180131 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A PAIR OF SMALL FOLLOWERS. 8421 19180129 19180202 A SHORT STREAM OF WHICH THE LAST COMPONENT IS A REGULAR SPOT. 8422 19180129 19180207 RETURN OF GROUP 8396. TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS GRADUALLY DYING AWAY. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 8423 19180201 19180209 RETURN OF GROUP 8390. A SPOT WITH COMPOSITE UMBRA; AFTER DIVIDING ON FEB. 7 IT SOON DISAPPEARS. 8424 19180202 19180204 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 2; NOTHING ON FEB. 3; A SMALL PAIR ON FEB. 4. 8425 19180203 19180205 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8426 19180204 19180207 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 8423. 8427 19180206 19180217 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SPOTS WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 9. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT THEN APPEARS FOLLOWED FOR A FEW DAYS BY SMALL COMPANIONS. 8428 19180207 19180218 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS SEEN TO DEVELOP FROM A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 7. THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM IS NOTICEABLE ON FEB. 11-12, BUT LATER THE LEADER, NOW A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, IS THE ONLY IMPORTANT COMPONENT. 8429 19180209 19180210 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8430 19180210 19180222 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8400. A DISTURBED AREA, CONTAINING A FEW SMALL SPOTS GENERALLY ARRANGED AS A SHORT STREAM. 8431 19180211 19180215 TWO VERY SMALL CLUSTERS OF SPOTS, THE LEADING ONE ALONE REMAINING ON FEB. 15. 8432 19180211 19180218 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 11-12; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL FEB. 16, WHEN ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS APPEAR. 8433 19180211 19180223 A LARGE AND IRREGULAR STREAM. THE COMPONENTS, EXCEPTING THE LEADER WHICH BECOMES REGULAR, ARE OF INDEFINITE FORM AND UNSTABLE IN CHARACTER. 8434 19180213 19180221 RETURN OF GROUP 8412. A PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS WHICH DISSOLVE INTO A CLUSTER AFTER FEB. 17. 8435 19180214 19180217 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8436 19180215 19180221 INTERMITTENT. A DISTURBED AREA SHOWN BY FACULAE AND A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS. NONE ARE SEEN ON FEB. 19. 8437 19180216 19180217 ONE OR TWO MINUTE SPOTS. 8438 19180217 19180223 INTERMITTENT. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS NOT SEEN ON FEB. 21. 8439 19180217 19180301 RETURN OF GROUP 8421. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING. OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FORM AND DISAPPEAR NEAR IT. 8440 19180221 19180305 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, WIDELY SEPARATED, BUT IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE. THE FOLLOWING ONE HAS BROKEN UP BY MAR. 1. 8441 19180222 19180223 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 8442 19180223 19180224 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 8439. 8443 19180225 19180227 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF SHORT DURATION. 8444 19180225 19180309 RETURN OF GROUP 8419; FOURTH APPARITION. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 8445 19180226 19180301 A FEW VERY SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. 8446 19180226 19180309 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS WHICH HAVE COALESCED BY MAR. 3. THE RESULTANT SPOT DIMINISHES RAPIDLY. 8447 19180303 19180305 A SMALL GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8448 19180303 19180304 A VERY SMALL SPOT. SEE 861C IN PREVIOUS ROTATION. 8449 19180305 19180307 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8450 19180306 19180312 REVIVAL NEAR GROUP 8428. A SMALL SPOT WITH A FAINT COMPANION ON MAR. 12. 8451 19180307 19180308 A STREAM, APPARENTLY OF NORMAL TYPE, FORMING AT THE WEST LIMB. 8452 19180308 19180312 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 8453 19180308 19180320 A LARGE IRREGULAR STREAM, COMPOSED AT FIRST OF A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY TWO COMPANIONS. THESE LATTER COALESCE TO FORM A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH GROWS CONSIDERABLY, AND AFTER BECOMING MORE IRREGULAR IN SHAPE, FINALLY SPLITS INTO TWO COMPONENTS BY MAR. 19. A SPOT, OF REGULAR TYPE AT ITS MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT, FORMS THE END OF THE STREAM FROM MAR. 11-18. 8454 19180309 19180315 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8455 19180310 19180316 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS WHICH HAVE NEARLY DIED OUT BY MAR. 14. 8456 19180310 19180315 RETURN OF GROUP 8433. A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAR. 14. 8457 19180311 19180312 A MINUTE SPOT. 8458 19180311 19180312 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8459 19180311 19180312 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SP GROUP 8454. 8460 19180311 19180321 A SMALL STREAM OF FEEBLE BUT SUSTAINED ACTIVITY. 8461 19180312 19180317 A SHORT STREAM, ALMOST DISAPPEARING ON MAR. 14 BUT RE-FORMING ON MAR. 16 WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. 8462 19180312 19180318 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 12 DEVELOPING RAPIDLY INTO A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL COMPANIONS WHICH DIE OUT AT THE WEST LIMB. 8463 19180314 19180320 A DISTURBED AREA, F GROUP 8460, CONTAINING A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8464 19180315 19180323 TWO SPOTS ON MAR. 15, WHICH MULTIPLY AND FORM A STREAM OF UNSTABLE CHARACTER. 8465 19180318 19180321 A SMALL GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8466 19180319 19180320 A SMALL STREAM N GROUP 8464. 8467 19180319 19180323 A SPOT, AT THE EAST LIMB ON MAR. 19, WHICH IS DISAPPEARING ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 8468 19180319 19180331 A GROUP CONSISTING OF A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, N OF WHICH NUMEROUS SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR ARRANGED AS A STREAM. THESE HAVE DIED OUT BY MAR. 29, AT THE SAME TIME THAT THE REGULAR SPOT IS ALSO DISAPPEARING. 8469 19180320 19180324 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAR 20, NOT SEEN THE NEXT DAY; A PAIR OF SPOTS AFTERWARDS. 8470 19180320 19180331 RETURN OF GROUP 8447. A REGULAR SPOT F GROUP 8468, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS UNTIL MAR. 23. 8471 19180321 19180323 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON MAR. 22. 8472 19180323 19180331 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB; THE LEADER BECOMES A CLUSTER AND THEN A COMPOSITE SPOT; THE FOLLOWER SHOWS A MORE EXTENSIVE DEVELOPMENT AS A REGULAR SPOT. BOTH DISAPPEAR RATHER RAPIDLY. 8473 19180323 19180404 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 8451. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS AFTER MAR. 27. 8474 19180324 19180329 A SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT SP GROUP 8472. 8475 19180325 19180329 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 8444; FIFTH APPARITION. PERHAPS A REVIVAL ONLY. TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 8476 19180328 19180408 A SMALL SPOT F WHICH A STREAM IS DEVELOPING ON MAR. 31 IN THE SAME FACULOUS AREA. THE COMPONENT SPOTS, HOWEVER, ARE SMALL AND ALSO UNSTABLE, AND THE GROUP, THOUGH PERSISTENT, IS GENERALLY INSIGNIFICANT. 8477 19180329 19180403 A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER WHICH DISAPPEARS ON APR. 1. 8478 19180331 19180407 A SMALL STREAM OF LITTLE IMPORTANCE UNTIL APR. 4, WHEN A WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT IS FORMING AS THE LEADER. 8479 19180331 19180411 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER BECOMES VERY LARGE AND ELONGATED BY APR. 6, AFTER WHICH A PORTION SEPARATES FROM THE F SIDE. MEANWHILE THE REAR COMPONENT OF THE STREAM, AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT, IS DISAPPEARING AS A CLUSTER. 8480 19180331 19180405 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT FADING OUT. A SMALL COMPANION FOLLOWS ON APR. 4. 8481 19180401 19180408 A FEEBLE STREAM OF SPOTS NP GROUP 8476. 8482 19180402 19180411 A STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE F GROUP 8479. THE END PORTION OF THE GROUP HAS DISPERSED BY APR. 9. 8483 19180402 19180414 RETURN OF GROUP 8462. A REGULAR SPOT RAPIDLY DISAPPEARING AFTER APR. 10. THERE ARE A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS ON APR. 8-10. 8484 19180404 19180409 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF MINUTE SPOTS ON APR. 4. ON APR. 6, A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IS DEVELOPING IN THEIR PLACE. 8485 19180404 19180406 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON APR. 4 AND 6. 8486 19180404 19180415 WITH GROUP 8488, A RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8453. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL SCATTERED FOLLOWERS. THE GROUP IS FOLLOWED BY EXTENSIVE AREAS OF FACULAE, IN WHICH GROUP 8488 APPEAR. 8487 19180405 19180407 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8488 19180406 19180415 A REVIVAL IN THE REGION OF GROUP 8453. A SPOT AT THE EAST LIMB DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER APR. 13, EXCEPTING AN EPHEMERAL COMPANION ON APR. 15. 8489 19180408 19180419 AN EQUATORIAL STREAM, CONSISTING AT FIRST OF A COMPOSITE SPOT AS LEADER, AND AN UNSTABLE TRAIN WHICH SOON DIES OUT. THE LEADER, WHICH REMAINS ALONE ON APR. 15, PASSES TO THE REGULAR TYPE OF SPOT AND THEN DIMINISHES RAPIDLY. 8490 19180409 19180418 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON APR. 10. A STREAM THEN FORMS IN THEIR PLACE ON APR. 11, BUT THE COMPONENT SPOTS ARE VERY UNSTABLE. 8491 19180411 19180412 A SMALL SPOT. 8492 19180412 19180420 A GROUP OF SMALL AND VERY FAINT SPOTS UNTIL APR. 17, WHEN LARGER COMPONENTS ARE APPEARING. 8493 19180412 19180420 A SMALL SPOT ON APR. 12 DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN. THE GROUP IS VERY UNSTABLE, HOWEVER, AND IS REPRESENTED LATTERLY BY A CLUSTER OF A FEW SPOTS. 8494 19180413 19180415 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 8495 19180413 19180414 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 8489 AND 8490. 8496 19180415 19180416 THREE SMALL SPOTS. 8497 19180415 19180418 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 8498 19180419 19180424 TWO SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE CONSIDERABLY IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER IS LEFT ON APR. 24. 8499 19180419 19180426 A REGULAR SPOT, FORMING A CLUSTER ON APR. 19 AND FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL APR. 24. 8500 19180419 19180430 RETURN OF GROUP 8473; THIRD APPARITION. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING. 8501 19180422 19180504 RETURN OF GROUP 8478. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT P BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. THESE GROW AND OTHERS APPEAR, ONE IN PARTICULAR TO THE S BECOMING CONSPICUOUS FOR A FEW DAYS. THE GROUP IS NOW AN EXTENDED CLUSTER. THE SPOTS ARE VERY SMALL AND FAINT ON APR. 30, BUT RENEWED ACTIVITY IS SHOWN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8502 19180423 19180505 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWER ON APR. 26 AND A SMALL CLOSE COMPANION CLUSTER ON APR. 27 AND 29. 8503 19180424 19180427 A WIDE AREA OF DISTURBANCE, SP GROUP 8501, IN WHICH THREE SMALL SPOTS APPEAR SUCCESSIVELY IN INCREASING LATITUDE. NOTHING IS SEEN ON APR. 26. 8504 19180425 19180428 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 8502 IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA. 8505 19180425 19180430 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON APR. 26. 8506 19180425 19180427 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8507 19180425 19180505 RETURN OF GROUP 8484. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT JUST DISAPPEARING. A SMALL CLUSTER OCCUPIES ITS PLACE AFTER MAY 1. 8508 19180426 19180507 RETURN OF GROUP 8479. A REGULAR SPOT N OF WHICH A CLUSTER FORMS AND BECOMES OF CONSIDERABLE EXTENT BY MAY 2. MEANWHILE THE PRIMARY SPOT HAS DEVELOPED A TRIPLE UMBRA, AFTER WHICH IT SOON BREAKS UP AND DISAPPEARS WITH THE CLUSTER. 8509 19180427 19180501 TWO SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 8508 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. ONE ALONE REMAINS AFTER APR. 29. 8510 19180428 19180501 TWO SMALL CENTRES OF ACTIVITY, REPRESENTED ON APR. 28 AND MAY 1 BY SPOTS, AND ON APR. 29 AND 30 BY SMALL CLUSTERS. 8511 19180430 19180503 A GROUP OF A FEW SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8502. 8512 19180430 19180512 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING TO A MERE DOT. FROM MAY 3-8 IT IS FOLLOWED BY SMALL EVANESCENT COMPANIONS. 8513 19180501 19180506 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING IN THE USUAL MANNER FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS SEEN ON MAY 1. 8514 19180502 19180510 TWO SPOTS GRADUALLY MOVING APART AND BECOMING SMALLER. ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS AFTER MAY 7. 8515 19180502 19180513 REVIVAL NEAR GROUP 8488. AN ILL-FORMED REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING VERY RAPIDLY AFTER MAY 10. NUMEROUS SMALL ATTENDANTS APPEAR FROM MAY 6-11. 8516 19180503 19180515 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A LONG AND SPARSE TRAIN WHICH GRADUALLY DISAPPEARS. 8517 19180503 19180505 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 8515 AND 8516. 8518 19180504 19180506 A SMALL SPOT JUST DISAPPEARING. 8519 19180505 19180514 REVIVAL NEAR GROUP 8489. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING QUICKLY AFTER MAY 10. A FEW SMALL SPOTS FORM AN OCCASIONAL TRAIN. 8520 19180506 19180516 REVIVAL NEAR GROUP 8493. TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING LATER INTO A SHORT STREAM WHICH GRADUALLY DISPERSES. 8521 19180506 19180509 A SMALL SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF FACULAE. 8522 19180507 19180509 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAY 8. 8523 19180508 19180510 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING HAS DISPERSED BY MAY 10. 8524 19180510 19180513 A FEW VERY FAINT SPOTS NF GROUP 8519; NONE ARE SEEN ON MAY 11. 8525 19180510 19180511 TWO SPOTS ON MAY 10; ONE ONLY ON MAY 11. 8526 19180510 19180511 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8497. A SMALL SPOT. 8527 19180512 19180517 A STREAM OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 8528 19180512 19180521 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE SEEN DEVELOPING FROM THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER SPOT IS THE ONLY MEMBER LEFT AFTER MAY 18, BUT TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS APPEAR PRECEDING IT ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 8529 19180514 19180523 A SMALL SPOT NEAR WHICH COMPANIONS APPEAR, FIRST TO MAKE A SHORT STREAM AND THEN A CLUSTER. 8530 19180514 19180519 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT WITH AN ATTENDANT ON MAY 15. 8531 19180519 19180520 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 8529. 8532 19180520 19180601 RETURN OF GROUP 8502. A CIRCULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING. 8533 19180521 19180601 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8504. AN INSIGNIFICANT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL MAY 27, WHEN IT SHOWS GREAT AND SUDDEN ACTIVITY. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AS THE MOST STABLE MEMBER FORMS FROM AN IRREGULAR SPOT AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM; THE OTHER COMPONENTS ARE IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE GROUP IS SITUATED IMMEDIATELY SF GROUP 8532. 8534 19180522 19180523 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 8535 19180522 19180525 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 22; ONE ONLY ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 8536 19180524 19180525 A SMALL SPOT. 8537 19180524 19180526 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 8533. 8538 19180525 19180526 A SMALL CLUSTER. 8539 19180525 19180601 INTERMITTENT. A DISTURBED AREA, F GROUP 8533, IN WHICH A FEW SMALL SPOTS APPEAR OCCASIONALLY. 8540 19180525 19180528 A SMALL ISOLATED GROUP OF A FEW SCATTERED SPOTS. 8541 19180525 19180603 A VERY SMALL FAINT BUT PERSISTENT GROUP OF A FEW SPOTS. 8542 19180526 19180529 ONE OR TWO EVANESCENT SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 28. 8543 19180527 19180528 A SMALL SPOT SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8544 19180529 19180603 TWO SMALL CENTRES OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY, AT WHICH TWO LARGER SPOTS APPEAR NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8545 19180529 19180607 TWO VERY SMALL CLUSTERS ON MAY 29, WHICH BECOME A STREAM WITH A LEADER AS THE ONLY IMPORTANT COMPONENT. THIS AT FIRST IS REGULAR, BUT AFTER DEVELOPING A COMPOSITE UMBRA, IT BREAKS IN TWO PORTIONS WHILST DYING OUT. 8546 19180529 19180604 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8547 19180529 19180607 A WIDE AREA CONTAINING VERY UNSTABLE AND SCATTERED SPOTS. 8548 19180530 19180606 A SMALL GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 8549 19180530 19180612 RETURN OF GROUP 8516. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION. NORTHWARDS THERE IS ALSO A SMALL SPOT WHICH GRADUALLY DISAPPEARS. 8550 19180531 19180602 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8551 19180531 19180607 A SMALL STREAM PASSING RAPIDLY THROUGH ITS DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADING SPOT IS ALONE REPRESENTED ON JUNE 5 AND 7, NOTHING BEING VISIBLE ON JUNE 6. 8552 19180531 19180609 A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE FORMING NEAR THE EAST LIMB. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS AT FIRST CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. 8553 19180531 19180609 A SHORT STREAM DEVELOPING AT THE EAST LIMB. NONE OF THE SPOTS ARE STABLE, AND THE CHARACTER OF THE STREAM CONTINUALLY CHANGES. 8554 19180531 19180608 A SMALL SPOT, F GROUP 8553, WHICH GROWS AND BECOMES REGULAR FOR TWO DAYS BEFORE BREAKING UP. 8555 19180601 19180608 A VERY SMALL STREAM ON JUNE 1 AND 2; ONLY THE LEADER IS LEFT ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. NOTHING IS SEEN ON JUNE 7. 8556 19180602 19180603 TWO OR THREE MINUTE SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 8545 AND 48. 8557 19180602 19180603 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8558 19180602 19180611 A GROUP DEVELOPING FROM A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 2, IMMEDIATELY P GROUP 8549. A REGULAR SPOT, GENERALLY WITH COMPOSITE UMBRA, IS THE CHIEF MEMBER. THERE ARE A FEW FOLLOWERS, BUT THESE SOON DISAPPEAR. 8559 19180602 19180610 INTERMITTENT. A FEW VERY SMALL, FAINT, BUT PERSISTENT SPOTS; NONE ARE SEEN ON JUNE 8 AND 9. 8560 19180605 19180608 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JUNE 5 AND 8. 8561 19180605 19180607 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8562 19180606 19180615 A SMALL GROUP SHOWING LITTLE ACTIVITY UNTIL JUNE 10, WHEN AN EXTENDED STREAM SUDDENLY APPEARS. THE COMPONENT SPOTS, HOWEVER, ARE SMALL AND SOON BEGIN TO DISAPPEAR. 8563 19180613 19180620 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DISAPPEARING. A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS APPEAR ON JUNE 18. 8564 19180616 19180619 RETURN OF GROUP 8533. A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 17, IN A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. 8565 19180617 19180626 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM P GROUP 8564 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE. 8566 19180619 19180620 A VERY SMALL EVANESCENT GROUP. 8567 19180619 19180620 TWO SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 8568 19180619 19180626 A SMALL STREAM FORMING NEAR THE EAST LIMB WITH ONLY ONE COMPONENT, THE LEADER, OF ANY IMPORTANCE. 8569 19180620 19180623 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 8570 19180621 19180622 ONE SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 2; A PAIR ON THE NEXT DAY. 8571 19180623 19180626 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT NOT SEEN ON JUNE 24. A SMALL CLUSTER THEN APPEARS. 8572 19180626 19180705 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT SLOWLY DISAPPEARING. TWO DISTANT FOLLOWERS APPEAR ON JUNE 30. 8573 19180627 19180709 RETURN OF GROUP 8549; THIRD APPARITION. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 8574 19180627 19180708 A SPOT, APPROXIMATELY OF REGULAR FORMATION, ACCOMPANIED BY A SMALL CLUSTER SF UNTIL JULY 4. 8575 19180628 19180707 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8552. A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING IN THE USUAL MANNER SP GROUP 8574. 8576 19180628 19180701 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. 8577 19180629 19180702 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 8574 IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE. 8578 19180630 19180701 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8579 19180630 19180707 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JUNE 30 AND JULY 1; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL JULY 6, WHEN TWO LARGER SPOTS APPEAR. 8580 19180630 19180707 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JULY 3 TO 5. 8581 19180630 19180710 A GROUP, FORMING AT THE EAST LIMB, SEEN GENERALLY AS TWO EXTENSIVE CLUSTERS OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8582 19180701 19180713 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, IS ALWAYS THE MOST CONSPICUOUS PART OF THE STREAM, BUT THE FOLLOWING PORTION IS A CLUSTER OF SOME EXTENT FOR A FEW DAYS AFTER JULY 4. 8583 19180702 19180710 A SMALL IRREGULAR CLUSTER WHICH LENGTHENS TO A STREAM. THE LEADING SPOT ALONE SHOWS STABILITY. 8584 19180703 19180705 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE MORE NORTHERN REMAINS ON JULY 5. 8585 19180703 19180714 A LARGE SPOT OF REGULAR TYPE IN A DENSE AREA OF FACULAE, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS UNTIL JULY 9. 8586 19180703 19180714 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS,THOSE ON JULY 9-11 BEING DISTANT. ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8585. 8587 19180707 19180709 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8588 19180708 19180711 A SMALL GROUP FORMING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 8589 19180709 19180713 A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A MINUTE SPOT SEEN ON JULY 9. 8590 19180709 19180710 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8591 19180709 19180716 A FEW SMALL SPOTS BECOMING A STREAM, ROUGHLY OF NORMAL TYPE. THE GROUP QUICKLY PASSES THROUGH THE USUAL PHASES OF DEVELOPMENT. 8592 19180709 19180716 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8566. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT JUST DISAPPEARING. 8593 19180710 19180718 A DISTURBED AREA SHOWN AT FIRST BY ONE OR TWO SCATTERED EVANESCENT SPOTS. ON JULY 15, A GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE HAS SUDDENLY APPEARED, BUT IT IS APPARENTLY DISPERSING WHEN LAST SEEN AT THE WEST LIMB. 8594 19180711 19180716 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8567. A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON JULY 13. A SPOT HAS APPEARED THE FOLLOWING DAY PRECEDED BY A COMPANION WHICH REMAINS ALONE ON JULY 17. 8595 19180712 19180719 AN UNSTABLE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY JULY 18. A SMALL SPOT REAPPEARS TEMPORARILY ON JULY 19. 8596 19180713 19180716 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JULY 14. 8597 19180713 19180720 A LARGE IRREGULAR STREAM, RAPIDLY APPEARING FROM TWO SMALL NUCLEI ON JULY 13, NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE TWO LEADING SPOTS COALESCE TO MAKE A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WHILST AT THE REAR OF THE STREAM A LARGE COMPOSITE COMPONENT, WHICH HAS FORMED FROM A CLUSTER, IS DIMINISHING. 8598 19180713 19180716 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8565. AN AREA OF DISTURBANCE SHOWN BY FACULAE AND A FEW SCATTERED UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8599 19180715 19180727 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. FROM JULY 21-24, A SMALL PORTION OF THE LARGE SPOT BECOMES SEPARATED AND APPEARS AS A CLOSE COMPANION TO IT. 8600 19180715 19180725 A SMALL, FAINT, BUT PERSISTENT CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8599. THESE TWO GROUPS ARE PROBABLY RELATED TO EACH OTHER, ALTHOUGH THERE IS A DEFINITE SEPARATION OF THE FACULAE SURROUNDING EACH OF THEM. 8601 19180717 19180728 A GROUP IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. AT FIRST, TWO SMALL REGULAR SPOTS WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS. THESE MULTIPLY, AS THE REGULAR SPOTS ARE DISAPPEARING, AND FORM A VERY EXTENSIVE AND IRREGULAR STREAM OF TINY COMPONENTS. TWO OR THREE LARGER SPOTS THEN APPEAR, WHILST THE MINOR MEMBERS OF THE STREAM DIE OUT. 8602 19180719 19180721 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS. 8603 19180719 19180730 A SMALL STREAM FORMING AT THE EAST LIMB AND SHOWING CONSIDERABLE EXTENSION AFTER JULY 23. THOUGH LARGER SPOTS APPEAR, THEY ARE VERY UNSTABLE AND CHANGE RAPIDLY. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER, AND A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT AS THE REAR COMPONENT OF THE STREAM CAN BE IDENTIFIED HOWEVER FOR SEVERAL DAYS. 8604 19180721 19180724 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 8605 19180721 19180726 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS WHICH ARE THE NUCLEI FOR TWO SMALL CLUSTERS. THE F CLUSTER DISAPPEARS AFTER JULY 24. 8606 19180722 19180801 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT F WHICH A TRAIN OF VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEARS. ON JULY 28, GROUP 8616 DEVELOPS JUST SOUTHWARDS IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 8607 19180723 19180730 A SMALL GROUP, GENERALLY AS A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 8608 19180724 19180725 TWO OR THREE VERY FAINT SPOTS. 8609 19180724 19180728 TWO SMALL SPOTS, THE F ONE ALONE REMAINING ON JULY 28. 8610 19180724 19180802 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8574. AN AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN. 8611 19180726 19180728 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8612 19180727 19180806 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8573. A LONG STREAM GROWING FROM TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SEEN ON JULY 27. IT IS COMPOSED OF A REGULAR SPOT AND A BROAD TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE FOLLOWERS. ON AUG. 1 ANOTHER REGULAR SPOT HAS APPEARED IMMEDIATELY F THE LEADER WITH WHICH IT COALESCES BY AUG. 2. MEANWHILE, A SPOT AT THE REAR OF THE STREAM IS BECOMING MORE CONSPICUOUS. 8613 19180727 19180807 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8588. A SMALL CLUSTER FOR A FEW DAYS WITH CONSIDERABLE DEVELOPMENT NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, WHEN THE GROUP BECOMES AN IRREGULAR STREAM. A LARGE IRREGULAR SPOT IS THE CHIEF COMPONENT, AND THIS HAS FORMED FROM THE ORIGINAL CLUSTER, THE P COMPONENTS BEING ENTIRELY OF NEW FORMATION. 8614 19180727 19180731 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8613. 8615 19180727 19180809 RETURN OF GROUP 8582. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 8616 19180728 19180802 TWO SPOT CENTRES, REPRESENTED GENERALLY BY SMALL CLUSTERS, APPEARING JUST S OF GROUP 8606 IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE. THE PRECEDING ONE IS ALONE LEFT AFTER JULY 31. 8617 19180728 19180731 A SMALL GROUP NP GROUP 8612. 8618 19180730 19180802 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER NOT SEEN ON AUG. 1. 8619 19180801 19180813 A LARGE STREAM, DIFFERING FROM THE NORMAL TYPE IN THAT THE COMPOSITE SPOT AT THE REAR DIES OUT BEFORE THE IRREGULAR CLUSTER OF SPOTS INTERMEDIATE BETWEEN IT AND THE LEADER. ONE MEMBER OF THE CLUSTER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, REMAINS WITH THE LEADER, WHILST THE OTHER COMPONENTS OF THE STREAM DISAPPEAR. 8620 19180802 19180803 TWO OR THREE SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS N GROUP 8615. 8621 19180802 19180813 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8593. A GROUP F GROUP 8619, IN A CONSPICUOUS AREA OF FACULAE COTERMINOUS WITH THAT SURROUNDING THE LATTER GROUP. TWO PARIALLY FORMED REGULAR SPOTS, COALEASCING TO MAKE AN INDEFINITE AND UNSTABLE SPOT, WHICH SOON BREAKS UP AND SO DIES OUT. THERE IS A SMALL FOLLOWER FROM AUG. 4 TO AUG. 7. 8622 19180803 19180804 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8623 19180803 19180809 RETURN OF GROUP 8597. A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT, BREAKING INTO TWO PORTIONS ON AUG. 9 AND THEN DISAPPEARING. 8624 19180805 19180812 RETURN OF GROUP 8602. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 8625 19180808 19180809 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8626 19180808 19180817 A REGULAR SPOT BREAKIN UP SUDDENLY AFTER AUG. 13. 8627 19180808 19180810 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8598. A VERY SMALL CLUSTER. 8628 19180809 19180815 A VERY SMALL SPOT F GROUP 8626 WITH WHICH IT IS PROBABLY RELATED. A TINY EPHEMERAL STREAM APPEARS ON AUG 15. 8629 19180810 19180812 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8622. A SMALL GROUP APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8630 19180810 19180819 A DISTURBED AREA SHOWN AT FIRST BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS AND LATER BY A SPARSE STREAM, WITH MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. NOTHING IS SEEN ON AUG. 17 AND ONLY ONE SMALL SPOT ON AUG. 18-19. 8631 19180810 19180823 RETURN OF GROUP 8599 SHOWING A GREAT REVIVAL OF ACTIVITY. A VERY LARGE STREAM, SOME 15 IN LENGTH, COMPOSED OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS AND NUMEROUS SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. THE LEADER SHOWS THE GREATER DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO, AND BECOMES FIRSTLY DOUBLE AND THEN COMPOSITE. THE FOLLOWER AT THE SAME TIME SHOWS A DOUBLE NUCLEUS AND IS GRADUALLY DIMINISHING. LARGER ATTENDANT SPOTS TEND TO FORM, BUT THEY BREAK UP WITHIN A FEW DAYS. 8632 19180811 19180812 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION PRECEDING IT ON AUG 11. 8633 19180812 19180814 A CLUSTER OF MINUTE SPOTS ON AUG. 12; A VERY SMALL SPOT ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS. 8634 19180812 19180816 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 12 AND 13. A SINGLE SPOT ON AUG. 14 AND 16. 8635 19180812 19180823 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8601. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT F WHICH TWO OTHERS DEVELOP TOGETHER WITH SMALLER COMPANIONS TO MAKE A CLOSE CLUSTER. 8636 19180813 19180814 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER ON AUG. 13; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 8637 19180813 19180817 A VERY SMALL OUTLYING SPOT TO GROUP 8631, NOT SEEN ON AUG. 16. 8638 19180813 19180816 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON AUG. 13 AND 16. 8639 19180813 19180822 WITH GROUP 8635, A RETURN OF GROUP 8601. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, WHICH INCREASE FOR A FEW DAYS AND FORM AN INDEFINITE STREAM. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON AUG. 21. THIS GROUP CLOSELY FOLLOWS GROUP 8635 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE, AND THE SEPARATION INTO TWO GROUPS IS SOMEWHAT ARBITRARY. GROUP 8640, AUG. 13-21. RETURN OF GROUP 8603. A SMALL INDEFINITE GROUP. 8641 19180816 19180821 ONE SMALL SPOT ON AUG. 16 AND 17; TWO ON AUG. 18, THE LEADER BEING OF REGULAR TYPE AND ALONE REMAINING ON AUG. 21. 8642 19180816 19180817 A VERY SMALL GROUP NF GROUP 8631. 8643 19180817 19180829 A RETURN OR MORE PROBABLY A REVIVAL OF GROUPS 8606 AND 8616. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL AND IMPERFECTLY-FORMED COMPANION NF. AFTER AUG. 22, THE LARGER SPOT SHOWS SIGNS OF DISRUPTION, AND BY AUG. 26 IT HAS SEPARATED INTO TWO CLOSE REGULAR COMPONENTS. 8644 19180818 19180823 AT FIRST A FAINT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARING BEHIND GROUP 8631. A SMALL SPOT AT THE REAR DEVELOPS CONSIDERABLY AFTER AUG. 20, WHILST THE P SPOTS DISAPPEAR. 8645 19180818 19180820 A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 8646 19180818 19180825 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS. GROUPS 8643 AND 8646 ARE SITUATED IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE OF CONSIDERABLE EXTENT. 8647 19180819 19180827 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 8648 19180819 19180824 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8610. A SMALL SPOT. 8649 19180820 19180823 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8650 19180820 19180821 A VERY SMALL SPOT IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA AS GROUP 8648. 8651 19180820 19180902 RETURN OF GROUP 8612. A VERY LARGE AND NEARLY REGULAR SPOT WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS. A DIVISION OF THE SPOT TENDS TO TAKE PLACE NEAR THE MORE NORTHERN AND SMALLER NUCLEUS, BUT THE ACTUAL SEPARATION INTO TWO COMPONENTS DOES NOT OCCUR UNTIL SEPT. 1. NUMEROUS ILL-DEFINED COMPANIONS USUALLY SURROUND THE SPOT. 8652 19180820 19180901 TWO REGULAR SPOTS. THE MORE NORTHERN IS ORIGINALLY PART OF A COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH LATER DISSOLVES INTO A CLUSTER BEFORE DISAPPEARING. 8653 19180822 19180826 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM OF FEW SPOTS. 8654 19180822 19180828 A SMALL EQUATORIAL GROUP, SEEN FIRSTLY AS A PAIR OF SPOTS AND LATTERLY AS A SMALL STREAM. 8655 19180823 19180824 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY. 8656 19180823 19180825 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON AUG. 24. 8657 19180824 19180830 RETURN OF GROUP 8615; THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT. 8658 19180826 19180829 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8652; NOTHING IS SEEN ON AUG. 27. 8659 19180828 19180830 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. 8660 19180829 19180903 RETURN OF GROUP 8619. A SMALL SPOT DISSOLVING INTO A CLUSTER ON SEPT. 2. 8661 19180831 19180903 A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 8662 19180831 19180902 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8663 19180831 19180905 A SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8664 19180901 19180902 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 1; ONE ONLY ON SEPT. 2. 8665 19180901 19180912 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FROM SEPT. 5-8. 8666 19180902 19180903 A MINUTE SPOT. 8667 19180904 19180910 A SMALL CLUSTER. 8668 19180905 19180914 TWO SMALL SPOTS WHICH LATER ARE THE NUCLEI FOR SMALL CLUSTERS. 8669 19180906 19180914 WITH GROUP 8670, A RETURN OF GROUP 8631. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DYING OUT. A NEAR COMPANION IS SEEN TO THE N UNTIL SEPT. 8. 8670 19180907 19180914 WITH GROUP 8669, A RETURN OF GROUP 8631. TWO SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8669. ON SEPT. 11 TWO LARGER SPOTS APPEAR FOR A FEW DAYS. 8671 19180908 19180909 A SMALL ISOLATED GROUP SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8672 19180908 19180914 RETURN OF GROUP 8644. AN UNSTABLE GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS GENERALLY ARRANGED AS A STREAM. THIS GROUP IS IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE AS GROUP 8670. NOTE THAT THESE TWO GROUPS WITH GROUP 8669 DISAPPEAR SIMULTANEOUSLY. 8673 19180909 19180910 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8674 19180909 19180915 TWO DIMINUTIVE CLUSTERS, THE FOLLOWING ONE BECOMING A SHORT-LIVED REGULAR SPOT, WHILST THE OTHER SOON DISAPPEARS. 8675 19180910 19180918 AN AREA OF FACULAE, IN WHICH A FEW SMALL AND USUALLY VERY FAINT SPOTS FORM AND DISAPPEAR. 8676 19180910 19180921 REVIVAL OF GROUPS 8635 AND 8639. A REMARKABLE GROUP. A SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 10, IN THE NORTHERN PORTION OF A FACULOUS AREA, DEVELOPING INTO A LARGE IRREGULAR CLUSTER. JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, THE NORTHERN PORTION CONDENSES TO A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH LATER BECOMES OF NEARLY REGULAR FORMATION. MEANWHILE A NUCLEUS IN THE SF PART OF THE CLUSTER IS BECOMING A REGULAR SPOT, AND THE GROUP BECOMES OF THE "STREAM" TYPE, WITH AN AXIS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 8677 19180913 19180916 TWO REGULAR SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8678 19180913 19180914 TWO OR THREE MINUTE SPOTS. 8679 19180915 19180922 A SMALL REGUALR SPOT BREAKING UP ON SEPT. 19. 8680 19180917 19180929 RETURN OF GROUP 8651; THIRD APPARITION. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING. AFTER SEPT. 20, SEVERAL ILL-DEFINED AND UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR JUST NORTH AND WEST OF IT, ATTAINING A MAXIMUM ON SEPT. 22. 8681 19180917 19180926 A REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL ATTENDANTS. 8682 19180918 19180930 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, F WHICH A TRAIN OF SMALL ATTENDANTS APPEARS AFTER SEPT. 22. 8683 19180920 19180930 A LARGE GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY. THE LEADER IS LARGE AND REGULAR. THE REAR PORTION OF THE STREAM IS USUALLY REPRESENTED BY A CLUSTER. TWO COMPANION SPOTS FORM CLOSE TO THE LEADER NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8684 19180922 19180926 A SMALL SPOT. 8685 19180923 19180926 A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 8682. 8686 19180926 19181003 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8661. ONE SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 26, DEVELOPING ON THE SUCCEEDING DAYS INTO A SHORT-LIVED STREAM, THE FOLLOWING SPOT BEING LAST SEEN. 8687 19180926 19181005 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8663. A VERY LARGE STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING RAPIDLY. THE LEADER, THOUGH AT FIRST COMPOSITE, IS THE MOST STABLE MEMBER. THE REAR PORTION OF THE STREAM IS REPRESENTED BY A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT IN RAPID CHANGE. FOLLOWING THIS A FEW OTHER SPOTS FORM TO MAKE AN EXTENDED STREAM 11 IN LENGTH, WHICH IS SEEN TO BE DIMINISHING AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS INCLINED TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 8688 19180927 19181001 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER. 8689 19180927 19181001 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 30. IT REAPPEARS TEMPORARILY WITH A COMPANION ON OCT. 1. 8690 19180927 19181003 A LONG STREAM OF SPOTS JUST DYING OUT. 8691 19180928 19181001 A CLUSTER OF THREE SPOTS WITH VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE MIDDLE SPOTS DISAPPEAR SUDDENLY AFTER SEPT. 29. 8692 19180929 19181004 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. NONE ARE SEEN ON OCT. 3. 8693 19181001 19181010 RETURN OF GROUP 8677. A SMALL SPOT AT FIRST; LATER A VERY SMALL CLUSTER WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 7. A VERY SMALL SPOT AGAIN APPEARS FROM OCT. 8-10. 8694 19181002 19181010 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS AT FIRST; LATER, A SHORT STREAM. 8695 19181003 19181004 A GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE APPEARING SUDDENLY AT THE WEST LIMB. 8696 19181003 19181007 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY A VERY SMALL CLUSTER FOR THE FIRST TWO DAYS. 8697 19181004 19181011 REVIVAL IN REGION OF GROUPS 8670 AND 8672. A REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DISAPPEARING, FOLLOWED BY AN EXTENDED AREA OF FACULAE. 8698 19181005 19181006 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 8699 19181005 19181009 A SHORT-LIVED DIMINUTIVE STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8700 19181005 19181012 RETURN OF GROUP 8676. A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 8701 19181006 19181013 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8702 19181008 19181011 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS SP GROUP 8703. 8703 19181008 19181013 A GROUP OF SPOTS, FORMING SP GROUP 8701, PASSING IN A FEW DAYS THROUGH THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NORMAL TYPE OF "STREAM." 8704 19181008 19181011 A VERY SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 8705 19181008 19181011 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8706 19181011 19181012 AN EPHEMERAL STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 8707 19181011 19181013 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8708 19181011 19181012 ONE SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 11; THREE ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 8709 19181011 19181023 A VERY COMPOSITE SPOT SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB PRECEDED BY A COMPANION. BOTH GROW, THE COMPOSITE SPOT IN PARTICULAR, AND THE GROUP LENGTHENS OUT INTO A LARGE STREAM. THE LEADER BECOMES OF REGULAR TYPE, WHILST THE COMPOSITE SPOT SPLITS UP INTO UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. THE WHOLE GROUP IS SEEN TO BE DIMINISHING RAPIDLY TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 8710 19181012 19181021 INTERMITTENT. A DISTURBED AREA SHOWN BY FACULAE AND A SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 12. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL THE APPEARANCE OF A SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 16. ON OCT. 18, A VERY SMALL STREAM HAS FORMED, SOMEWHAT PRECEDING IT IN LONGITUDE, BUT OF THIS ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS AFTER OCT. 19. 8711 19181013 19181018 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON OCT. 14, 16, AND 17. 8712 19181013 19181015 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 8713 19181013 19181014 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 8714 19181014 19181019 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON OCT. 18. 8715 19181015 19181024 RETURN OF GROUP 8683. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 8716 19181016 19181020 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON OCT. 16, 18 AND 20. 8717 19181016 19181027 RETURN OF GROUP 8691. A REGULAR SPOT, STABLE UNTIL OCT. 23, AFTER WHICH IT DIVIDES INTO THREE PORTIONS. THERE ARE GENERALLY SOME VERY SMALL ATTENDANT SPOTS. 8718 19181016 19181024 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SCATTERED AND UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 8719 19181018 19181029 A LARGE EXTENDED CLUSTER OF SPOTS WITH MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT IN FRONT. 8720 19181019 19181028 RETURN OF GROUP 8695. A SPOT WITH COMPOSITE UMBRA BEHIND WHICH AN UNSTABLE TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS APPEARS AFTER OCT. 20. 8721 19181019 19181031 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED ON SOME DAYS BY ONE OR TWO ISOLATED SPOTS AND AT TIMES BY A SMALL CLUSTER. 8722 19181021 19181030 RETURN OF GROUP 8687. INTERMITTENT. A DISTURBED AREA SHOWN BY FACULAE AND A VERY SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON OCT. 25, 26 AND 29. 8723 19181023 19181026 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, ONE ONLY BEING SEEN ON OCT. 26. 8724 19181023 19181104 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION WHICH OUTLIVES IT BY A FEW DAYS. 8725 19181023 19181105 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 8726 19181026 19181106 TWO INDEFINITE SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER TENDS TO THE REGULAR TYPE AND REMAINS STABLE; THE FOLLOWER SOON BREAKS UP AND DISAPPEARS, AT THE SAME TIME THAT A FEW SPOTS ARE FORMING BETWEEN THEM. THESE IN TURN DIE OUT, LEAVING THE LEADER ALONE ON NOV. 4. 8727 19181028 19181109 RETURN OF GROUP 8703. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DISAPPEARING. 8728 19181028 19181108 RETURN OF GROUP 8701. A REGULAR SPOT WHICH HAS DISSOLVED INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL COMPONENTS BY NOV. 5. 8729 19181031 19181101 A SMALL CLUSTER. 8730 19181105 19181109 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 8731 19181106 19181109 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 8732 19181108 19181112 A SMALL STREAM, QUICKLY FORMING AND SOON DISPERSING. 8733 19181109 19181113 A SMALL GROUP SEEN FIRST AS A CLUSTER AND LATER AS A SHORT STREAM, OF WHICH ONLY THE PRECEDING MEMBER IS LEFT ON NOV. 13. 8734 19181109 19181114 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON NOV. 12. BOTH HAVE DISAPPEARED ON NOV. 13, BUT A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS HAS TAKEN THEIR PLACE ON NOV. 14. 8735 19181111 19181112 A SPOT FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB S OF GROUP 8732. 8736 19181111 19181114 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON NOV. 11 AND 14. 8737 19181111 19181117 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8709. A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE, SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB AND LATER AT THE WEST LIMB, IN WHICH A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR. NOTHING IS SEEN ON NOV. 12, 13, AND 15. 8738 19181111 19181122 AT FIRST, A FEW EPHEMERAL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON NOV. 14. AFTER NOV. 16, A STREAM DEVELOPS WITH SLIGHT DIFFERENCES FROM THE NORMAL TYPE. 8739 19181111 19181123 TWO SPOTS DEVELOPING NEAR THE EAST LIMB WITH NUMEROUS VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE LEADER BECOMES VERY LARGE AND IS OF COMPOSITE FORMATION. AFTER NOV. 17 IT PRACTICALLY SEPARATES INTO TWO PORTIONS. THE FOLLOWER, THOUGH TENDING TO THE REGULAR TYPE OF SPOT, SOON BEGINS TO DIMINISH AND IS LAST SEEN AS A TINY SPOT ON NOV. 21. 8740 19181113 19181116 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 13 AND 14; NOTHING ON NOV. 15; ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 16. 8741 19181113 19181116 A VERY SMALL SPOT P GROUP 8742, NOT SEEN ON NOV. 15. TWO SMALL SPOTS APPEAR NEAR ITS POSITION ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 8742 19181113 19181125 A RETURN OR MORE PROBABLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 8719. A LARGE SPOT, AT FIRST OF REGULAR FORMATION, FOLLOWED BY AN EVANESCENT CLUSTER OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. BOTH THE PENUMBRA AND THE UMBRA OF THE LARGE SPOT SHOW INSTABILITY, AND AFTER NOV. 20 IT DIVIDES INTO TWO, THE FOREMOST PORTION IMMEDIATELY ASSUMING A REGULAR OUTLINE, WHILST THE OTHER PART RAPIDLY DISAPPEARS. 8743 19181114 19181122 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH TWO VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS, ONE OF WHICH HAS BECOME LARGER AND OF REGULAR TYPE BY NOV. 17. 8744 19181115 19181121 A REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DISAPPEARING. 8745 19181115 19181127 RETURN OF GROUP 8721. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING; ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8744. 8746 19181115 19181123 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, GRADUALLY DISAPPEARING. 8747 19181116 19181117 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8748 19181116 19181123 A SMALL STREAM OF SPOTS F GROUP 8743. 8749 19181116 19181123 A SMALL SPOT ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8744. 8750 19181116 19181126 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS DIMINISHING FROM THE EAST LIMB. 8751 19181117 19181120 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 8752 19181118 19181123 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT VISIBLE ON NOV. 20. A SMALL EVANESCENT STREAM APPEARS ON NOV. 21. 8753 19181119 19181123 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 8754 19181120 19181121 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8755 19181120 19181127 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON NOV. 21 AND 23. 8756 19181120 19181202 A REMARKABLE GROUP CONSISTING AT FIRST OF A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN TWO GROUPS. OF THESE THE LATTER GROWS VERY CONSIDERABLY, WHILST THE OTHER DISAPPEARS AND BY NOV 25 A VERY LONG SPOT HAS FORMED, THE AXIS OF WHICH IS INCLINED ABOUT 80 TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. THE SPOT IS MADE UP OF TWO CHIEF NUCLEI AT OPPOSITE EXTREMITIES, CONNECTED BY A LARGE MASS OF PENUMBRA OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE. 8757 19181121 19181123 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ARRANGED IN A STREAM. 8758 19181121 19181122 RETURN OF GROUP 8725. A SMALL SPOT. 8759 19181122 19181201 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT, INCREASING FOR A TIME AND BECOMING REGULAR, WITH A FEW UNSTABLE FOLLOWERS. THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 28, BUT NEAR THE WEST LIMB ON DEC. 1, ONE VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN IN THE P PORTION OF AN AREA OF FACULAE. 8760 19181125 19181202 RETURN OF GROUP 8731. AN EXTENDED MASS OF FACULAE WITH A FEW SPOTS IN A VERY LONG AND SPARSE STREAM. THE LEADER IS THE LARGEST AND BEST-DEFINED COMPONENT AND APPEARS FOR SEVERAL DAYS AS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. ONLY ONE VERY SMALL SPOT REMAINS ON DEC. 2. 8761 19181128 19181203 A SMALL, SHORT STREAM ON NOV. 28. A REGULAR SPOT HAS FULLY FORMED AT THE HEAD ON NOV. 29, BUT IT RAPIDLY DIMINISHES AS THE SMALLER SPOTS DISAPPEAR. 8762 19181201 19181210 A SMALL GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE. 8763 19181202 19181208 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8764 19181203 19181204 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8765 19181204 19181210 A STREAM OF FEW UNIMPORTANT SPOTS UNTIL DEC. 9, WHEN TWO SPOTS OF SOME EXTENT DEVELOP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8766 19181206 19181218 RETURN OF GROUP 8738. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, GENERALLY WITH SOME VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FOLLOWING IT. 8767 19181208 19181218 A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP ON DEC. 14. TWO VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS ARE SEEN IN THE ACCOMPANYING FACULAE ON DEC. 10. 8768 19181210 19181211 RETURN OF GROUP 8742. A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8769 19181211 19181215 A PAIR OF IMPERFECTLY-FORMED SPOTS DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8770 19181213 19181216 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON DEC. 13 AND 16. 8771 19181213 19181215 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8745. A SMALL SPOT. 8772 19181217 19181220 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8743. A PAIR OF SPOTS FIRST APPEARING ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 8773 19181217 19181227 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN IN A SMALL AREA OF FACULAE ON DEC. 17. THE LEADER SHOWS MINOR DEVIATIONS FROM THE REGULAR TYPE, BUT CONSIDERABLE CHANGES TAKE PLACE IN THE FOLLOWER WHICH BREAKS UP BETWEEN DEC. 22 AND 24. 8774 19181217 19181229 A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING. VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS APPEAR ON DEC. 22-24. 8775 19181217 19181229 A GROUP IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE AS GROUP 8774, SHOWN BY A VERY LARGE EXTENT OF FACULAE. RETURN OF GROUP 8756. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. AFTER DEC. 21, CONSIDERABLE CHANGES TAKE PLACE; A MASS OF PENUMBRA FORMS JUST NORTHWARDS, WHILST LATER THE REGULAR SPOT BECOMES ELONGATED, DEVELOPS A DOUBLE UMBRA AND THEN DIVIDES. MEANWHILE A SMALL CLUSTER HAS APPEARED PRECEDING THIS COMPOSITE FORMATION. THE WHOLE GROUP SHRINKS RAPIDLY AFTER DEC. 25. 8776 19181219 19181227 TWO SMALL SPOTS BECOMING A SHORT STREAM OF LITTLE IMPORTANCE AFTER DEC. 22. ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 8774 AND 8775. 8777 19181220 19181221 A SMALL GROUP APPEARING AT THE WEST LIMB. 8778 19181220 19181222 A VERY SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT. 8779 19181221 19181231 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL AREA OF DISTURBANCE, NP GROUP 8780, SHOWN BY FACULAE AND ONE OR TWO EVANESCENT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON DEC. 24, 27 AND 29. 8780 19181222 19181231 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE CHIEF COMPONENT IS THE LEADER SEEN ON DEC. 26 AS A SPOT OF REGULAR TYPE, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY. 8781 19181224 19181227 A PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARING ON DEC.24 AS THE CHIEF COMPONENT OF A SMALL STREAM. 8782 19181225 19181230 RETURN OF GROUP 8765. A SMALL SPOT GRADUALLY FADING OUT, WITH A FEW COMPANIONS. 8783 19181225 19190103 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING IN A FEW DAYS, WHEN ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR NEAR ITS PLACE. PART OF A LARGE GENERAL DISTURBANCE WITH GROUPS 8782 AND 8788. 8783 19181225 19190103 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DISAPPEARING. PART OF A LARGE GENERAL DISTURBANCE WITH GROUPS 8782 AND 8788. 8784 19181225 19190101 A RETURN POSSIBLY OF GROUP 8762. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN EXTENDED AREA OF FACULAE. 8784 19181225 19190101 A POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 8762. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN EXTENDED AREA OF FACULAE. 8785 19181226 19181228 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER ON DEC. 26; A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS. 8786 19181226 19181229 A FEW VERY SMALL EVANESCENT SPOTS. 8787 19181226 19181227 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 8788 19181226 19180103 A SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 8782, IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE, FROM WHICH DEVELOPS A SMALL STREAM. THE ONLY IMPORTANT COMPONENT IS THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT. 8788 19181226 19190103 A SMALL SPOT, NP GROUP 8782 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE, FROM WHICH DEVELOPS A SMALL STREAM. THE ONLY IMPORTANT COMPONENT IS THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT. 8789 19181227 19181229 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON DEC. 28. 8790 19190101 19190103 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 8791 19190102 19190112 RETURN OF GROUP 8766; THIRD APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER JAN. 10. 8792 19190103 19190108 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 8793 19190104 19190109 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JAN. 4; ONE OR TWO ILL-FORMED SPOTS ON JAN. 8 AND 9. 8794 19190105 19190116 A LARGE GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE, WHOSE COMPONENTS ARE VERY COMPLEX FOR SEVERAL DAYS. THE GROUP ORIGINATES IN THE USUAL WAY FROM TWO SPOT NUCLEI AT THE EAST LIMB, BUT ITS EARLY STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT ARE NOT SO CLEARLY MARKED AS IN A TYPICAL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 8795 19190108 19190117 A STREAM OF SPOTS F GROUP 8794. THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT IS A PARTIALLY FORMED REGULAR SPOT AT THE REAR, BUT THIS BREAKS UP INTO TWO PORTIONS AFTER JAN. 13. 8796 19190109 19190115 A REGULAR SPOT QUICKLY DYING OUT. NUMEROUS VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR NEAR ITS POSITION ON JAN. 14 AND 15. 8797 19190111 19190112 A SMALL STREAM APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8798 19190111 19190122 RETURN OF GROUP 8773. A REGULAR SPOT, DIVIDING INTO TWO PORTIONS ON JAN. 17. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 8799 19190112 19190113 ONE SMALL SPOT ON JAN. 12; A VERY SMALL CLUSTER ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 8800 19190113 19190122 A SPARSE STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS ON JAN. 22. 8801 19190114 19190117 RETURN OF GROUP 8774; A SMALL SPOT. 8802 19190114 19190121 A SMALL SPOT WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED ON JAN. 18. A VERY SMALL SPOT APPEARS NEAR ITS POSITION ON JAN. 19, AND TWO ON JAN. 21. 8803 19190115 19190119 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8804 19190116 19190118 A VERY SMALL SPOT, APPEARING DOUBLE ON JAN. 17. 8805 19190117 19190120 A DOT NOT SEEN ON THE FOLLOWING DAY; A SMALL GROUP HAS FORMED IN ITS PLACE ON JAN. 19. 8806 19190117 19190118 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8807 19190117 19190118 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JAN. 17; A PAIR ON JAN. 18. 8808 19190118 19190119 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 8809 19190119 19190121 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON JAN. 20. 8810 19190119 19190126 A SMALL SPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL FAINT COMPANION. 8811 19190121 19190201 REVIVAL OF GROUP 8788. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 8812 19190123 19190125 A MINUTE SPOT. 8813 19190125 19190127 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8814 19190126 19190130 A SMALL GROUP, S GROUP 8815, CONSISTING AT FIRST OF ONE AND THEN OF TWO SMALL SPOTS. 8815 19190126 19190201 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE PASSING RAPIDLY THROUGH ITS FIRST PHASES. 8816 19190129 19190130 A SMALL SPOT. 8817 19190130 19190204 TWO SPOTS ON JAN. 30 WHICH SEPARATE CONSIDERABLY ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS AND FORM A STREAM WITH OTHER SPOTS WHICH APPEAR AFTER JAN. 31. 8818 19190131 19190208 A VERY LONG AND SPARSE STREAM OF IMPERFECTLY FORMED SPOTS. THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT IS THE LEADER, GENERALLY SEEN AS A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. 8819 19190131 19190211 RETURN OF GROUP 8794. A VERY LONG STREAM CONTAINING AT FIRST FOUR WELL-MARKED COMPONENTS. CHANGES TAKE PLACE, HOWEVER, AFTER FEB. 2, AND THE STREAM BECOMES COMPLEX. THE FORE PORTION IS THE FIRST TO DISAPPEAR. ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8818. 8820 19190201 19190212 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER FEB. 9. AN EPHEMERAL COMPANION APPEARS F ON FEB. 3. 8821 19190201 19190211 A REVIVAL OF GROUP 8795. A VERY COMPOSITE SPOT BREAKING UP ON FEB. 8. IT IS PRECEDED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS FROM FEB. 4 TO 8. 8822 19190202 19190205 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 8823 19190202 19190213 A FEW SMALL SPOTS WHICH DEVELOP INTO A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF PENUMBRAL MARKINGS. THE TWO COALESCE ON FEB. 6 TO MAKE AN EXTENDED AND VERY COMPOSITE SPOT, PRACTICALLY JOINING THAT OF GROUP 8821. THE GROUP DISPERSES RAPIDLY AFTER FEB. 10. 8824 19190202 19190213 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER PRACTICALLY MERGE INTO EACH OTHER. THE FOLLOWER THEN DISAPPEARS WHILST THE LEADER BECOMES DOUBLE. GROUPS 8821, 8823 AND 8824 ARE CLOSELY CONNECTED IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA. 8825 19190204 19190207 A PAIR OF SMALL NUCLEI ON FEB. 4 OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 8826 19190204 19190205 A MINUTE SPOT NF GROUP 8819. 8827 19190204 19190208 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON FEB. 7. 8828 19190205 19190212 AN INSIGNIFICANT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS UNTIL FEB. 9, WHEN FOR TWO DAYS IT BECOMES PROMINENT N GROUP 8824. 8829 19190206 19190217 A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER, BOTH BREAKING UP AFTER FEB. 8 INTO SMALL BUT PERSISTENT COMPONENTS. 8830 19190207 19190210 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER OF FAINT MARKINGS NOT SEEN ON FEB. 9. 8831 19190207 19190208 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 8832 19190207 19190208 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8833 19190208 19190220 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER INCREASES VERY CONSIDERABLY, BUT AFTER FEB. 14 IT COMMENCES TO SPLIT INTO TWO PORTIONS. THE FOLLOWER, AS USUAL, IS COMPOSITE AND IS SMALLER THAN THE LEADER. THE COMPANION SPOTS ARE FEW AND SMALL. 8834 19190215 19190227 RETURN OF GROUP 8815. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 8835 19190216 19190223 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON FEB. 19, 21 AND 22. 8836 19190216 19190217 A FEW VERY SMALL AND FAINT SPOTS. 8837 19190216 19190225 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS WHICH DISAPPEAR AFTER FEB. 21. 8838 19190219 19190221 SOME TINY SPOTS. 8839 19190222 19190306 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 8825. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW CLOSE COMPANIONS NF ON MAR. 2-4. 8840 19190224 19190301 A FEEBLE STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8841 19190224 19190225 A PAIR OF FAINT SPOTS IN HIGH LATITUDE. 8842 19190225 19190308 A GROUP SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB AS A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. BY MAR. 3, THE TRAIN OF SPOTS FOLLOWING THE LEADER HAS DISAPPEARED. 8843 19190225 19190306 A SPARSE STREAM OF SPOTS WITH THE LEADER AS THE ONLY IMPORTANT MEMBER. A SMALL SPOT APPEARS NEAR ITS POSITION ON MAR. 6. 8844 19190226 19190303 RETURN OF GROUP 8819. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 8845 19190228 19190303 A PAIR OF SMALL CLUSTERS. 8846 19190302 19190306 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON MAR. 3. 8847 19190303 19190304 A SMALL CLUSTER OF FAINT MARKINGS. 8848 19190303 19190304 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 3; ONE ALONE ON MAR. 4. 8849 19190304 19190306 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON MAR. 5. 8850 19190304 19190315 A LARGE STREAM WITH A LARGE AND NEARLY REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER AND A COMPLEX TRAIN WHICH HAS PRACTICALLY DIED OUT BY 14TH. 8851 19190306 19190307 A MINIATURE STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8852 19190307 19190308 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8853 19190307 19190319 RETURN OF GROUP 8833. A LARGE STREAM CONSISTING OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS, AN IMPERFECTLY FORMED SPOT BETWEEN THEM, AND A FEW VERY SMALL ATTENDANTS. 8854 19190310 19190312 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 8855 19190310 19190321 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8835. TWO LARGE SPOTS SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB, BOTH OF WHICH ARE UNSTABLE AND BREAK UP AFTER MAR. 13. THE LEADER IS THEN REPRESENTED BY ONE AND THE FOLLOWER BY TWO PARTIALLY FORMED REGULAR SPOTS, WHILST A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS HAVE ALSO APPEARED. 8856 19190310 19190322 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION OF COMPOSITE TYPE WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAR. 20. THIS GROUP IS PROBABLY A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN ITS LATTER STAGES. 8857 19190313 19190315 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8858 19190314 19190325 RETURN OF GROUP 8834; THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT AT THE WEST LIMB. 8859 19190317 19190320 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL CLUSTERS. ONE SPOT ONLY IS LEFT ON MAR. 20. 8860 19190321 19190401 INTERMITTENT. AN AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS APPEAR. AFTER MAR. 26, NOTHING IS SEEN UNTIL MAR. 29, WHEN A FEW SMALL SPOTS ARE AGAIN VISIBLE. 8861 19190322 19190328 RETURN OF GROUP 8839; THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A MINUTE SPOT BEFORE DISAPPEARING. 8862 19190323 19190404 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED AT FIRST BY A DISTANT COMPANION WHICH DISAPPEARS AS A SMALL CLUSTER, AND THEN BY A TRAIN OF NUMEROUS VERY SMALL SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 8863 19190323 19190331 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT NF GROUP 8862 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. TWO COMPANION SPOTS APPEAR ON MAR. 26. 8864 19190324 19190327 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 8865 19190325 19190327 EVIDENTLY CONNECTED WITH GROUP 8860. A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAR. 26. 8866 19190325 19190405 A SMALL SPOT WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAR. 27. ON MAR. 30 A SMALL STREAM HAS APPEARED NEAR ITS PLACE. 8867 19190326 19190331 INTERMITTENT. A TINY CLUSTER ON MAR. 26; THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 31. 8868 19190327 19190331 A SMALL SPOT WITH TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS ON MAR. 28. 8869 19190327 19190405 A REGULAR SPOT DYING AWAY RAPIDLY AFTER APR. 1. 8870 19190329 19190330 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 8871 19190330 19190411 RETURN OF GROUP 8850. A REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY VARIABLE SMALL COMPANIONS USUALLY ARRANGED IN THREE CLUSTERS. 8872 19190401 19190406 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE AND BECOME THE CENTRES OF TWO SMALL CLUSTERS. 8873 19190402 19190405 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8853. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS WHICH MULTIPLY AND MAKE A SHORT STREAM ON APR. 5. 8874 19190402 19190404 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA AS GROUP 8873. 8875 19190403 19190410 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS FORMING ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 8871 AND 8872. 8876 19190405 19190407 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8877 19190405 19190411 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS APPEARING NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUPS 8873 AND 8874. 8878 19190407 19190415 AN INTERESTING GROUP. A STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY AS ONE OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER, AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT, DIVIDES INTO TWO PORTIONS ON APR. 11. 8879 19190407 19190408 A SMALL SPOT. 8880 19190409 19190415 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON APR. 9. A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IS SEEN IN THEIR PLACE ON APR. 12. 8881 19190413 19190422 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APR. 13; AN ELONGATED CLUSTER ON APR. 14; AFTERWARDS A REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL FOLLOWERS. ON APR. 18 THE REGULAR SPOT DIVIDES INTO TWO PORTIONS WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. 8882 19190415 19190417 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 8881. 8883 19190416 19190424 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON APR. 16 AND 24. 8884 19190419 19190502 RETURN OF GROUP 8862. A REGULAR SPOT WITH VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON APR. 21 AND 23. 8885 19190421 19190429 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF ILL-FORMED SPOTS. AFTER APR. 25 THE REAR PORTION SOON DIES OUT, AND THE LEADER BECOMES A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 8886 19190423 19190428 A TINY SPOT ON APR. 23 WHICH, BY THE FOLLOWING DAY, HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES RAPIDLY AFTER APR. 26. 8887 19190424 19190430 A SMALL STREAM APPEARING IN FRONT OF GROUP 8884. 8888 19190424 19190506 A GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE, MADE UP OF A DOUBLE SPOT AS LEADER, A PARTIALLY FORMED REGULAR SPOT AS THE REAR COMPONENT AND NUMEROUS SPORADIC COMPANIONS BETWEEN THEM. 8889 19190427 19190509 RETURN OF GROUP 8871; THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 8890 19190428 19190509 TWO SMALL SPOTS, SEEN ON APR. 28 AT THE EAST LIMB, WHICH HAVE DEVELOPED CONSIDERABLY BY THE FOLLOWING DAY. THE LEADER BECOMES OF REGULAR FORMATION BY MAY 3; THE FOLLOWER, THOUGH A REGULAR SPOT BY APR. 30, IS UNSTABLE AND SOON BEGINS TO CHANGE FORM AND DISAPPEAR. A FEW SMALL COMPANION SPOTS ARE SEEN UNTIL MAY 7. 8891 19190429 19190430 A MINUTE SPOT. 8892 19190501 19190503 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8893 19190502 19190514 A REGULAR SPOT WITH MINOR CHANGES IN STRUCTURE BETWEEN MAY 6 AND 9. 8894 19190503 19190504 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 3; ONE ALONE ON MAY 4. 8895 19190503 19190515 A VERY LARGE SPOT FOLLOWED BY A BROAD TRAIN OF UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH ARE FAINT AND SCATTERED AFTER MAY 9. THE LEADER SPOT IS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE AND EXHIBITS FOR SEVERAL DAYS A TRIPLE UMBRA AND LATER A DOUBLE ONE. 8896 19190504 19190514 A GROUP N GROUP 8895 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE. TWO SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT; THE FOLLOWER USUALLY SHOWS A DOUBLE NUCLEUS. THERE ARE SMALL COMPANIONS APPEARING BETWEEN THEM. 8897 19190506 19190518 A SPOT NEARLY OF REGULAR FORMATION. THERE ARE TWO SMALL BUT PERSISTENT NUCLEI JUST NORTH OF THE MAIN UMBRA OF THE SPOT. 8898 19190507 19190515 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT, GROWING FROM A SMALL MARKING IN FACULAE, FOLLOWED BY SMALL COMPANIONS. 8899 19190510 19190517 INTERMITTENT. A FEW SPOTS SEEN FOLLOWING GROUP 8898 UNTIL MAY 13. THE GROUP THEN REVIVES FOR TWO DAYS ON MAY 16 AND 17. 8900 19190513 19190525 A LARGE SPOT AT THE EAST LIMB, WHICH DEVELOPS CONSIDERABLY DURING THE FOLLOWING DAYS AND BECOMES OF VERY COMPOSITE FORMATION WITH NUMEROUS UMBRAE. A CLUSTER OF IRREGULARLY FORMED SPOTS APPEARS IN FRONT, AND NEAR ITS MAXIMUM PHASE, WHEN IT IS OF CONSIDERABLE EXTENSION, ITS DIVISION FROM THE MAIN SPOT IS SOMEWHAT ARBITRARY. 8901 19190515 19190525 A STREAM OF SPOTS WITH THE LEADER, AS THE LARGEST COMPONENT. THIS IS A SPOT OF REGULAR TYPE UNTIL MAY 20, WHEN IT BECOMES ELONGATED AND DIVIDES ON MAY 22. THE TRAIN IS MADE UP OF SMALL SPOTS, ONE OF WHICH CAN BE TRACED FOR SEVERAL DAYS. 8902 19190516 19190526 ON MAY 16, A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS, S GROUP 8901, WHICH DEVELOP INTO A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 8903 19190517 19190525 RETURN OF GROUP 8884; THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. GROUP 8910 ARISES F ITS POSITION ON MAY 26. 8904 19190518 19190519 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 18; ONE ONLY IS SEEN ON MAY 19. 8905 19190518 19190525 A GROUP OF SPOTS, UNSTABLE IN CHARACTER, EXCEPT THE LEADER, WHICH IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 8906 19190519 19190523 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NP GROUP 8903. 8907 19190523 19190528 A STREAM OF SPOTS P GROUP 8906. A REGULAR SPOT HAS FORMED AS THE LEADER BY MAY 27, BUT THE TRAIN IS FAST DISAPPEARING. 8908 19190524 19190529 A SMALL GROUP WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON MAY 27 WHEN A SMALL REGULAR SPOT HAS APPEARED. 8909 19190524 19190604 RETURN OF GROUP 8889, FOURTH APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 8910 19190526 19190529 A PAIR OF SPOTS PRECEDING THE PLACE OF GROUP 8903. 8911 19190526 19190527 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN EACH DAY. 8912 19190527 19190529 A SHORT-LIVED GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE. 8913 19190527 19190528 A SMALL SPOT. 8914 19190529 19190606 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL JUNE 2, WHEN THREE OR FOUR LARGER COMPONENTS HAVE APPEARED. THE FOLLOWING SPOT BECOMES OF REGULAR TYPE. 8915 19190529 19190605 A SPARSE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 8916 19190530 19190605 A SMALL STREAM IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 8917 19190530 19190611 RETURN OF GROUP 8895. A STABLE CIRCULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN AREA OF FACULAE, IN WHICH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR. 8918 19190530 19190610 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION, N GROUP 8917. 8919 19190601 19190611 A STREAM APPROXIMATELY OF NORMAL TYPE, DEVELOPING IN THE USUAL WAY FROM TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 1. 8920 19190602 19190608 A PAIR OF ILL-FORMED SPOTS; THE LEADER CAN BE TRECED FOR SEVERAL DAYS, BUT THE FOLLOWER SOON BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER. 8921 19190602 19190610 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL JUNE 4; A SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS THEN APPEARS. 8922 19190604 19190608 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER OF SPOTS ON JUNE 4; TWO PROMINENT SPOTS HAVE APPEARED BY THE FOLLOWING DAY OF WHICH THE LEADER PRESERVES ITS REGULAR FORMATION AND THE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP INTO THREE COMPONENTS ON JUNE 7. 8923 19190604 19190605 A SMALL SPOT. 8924 19190605 19190607 A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. 8925 19190605 19190610 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 8926 19190607 19190613 INTERMITTENT. A MINUTE SPOT ON JUNE 7; A SHORT STREAM FROM JUNE 10-13. 8927 19190609 19190613 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A DISTURBED AREA P GROUP 8928. 8928 19190609 19190621 RETURN OF GROUP 8900. A LARGE SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION OF REGULAR TYPE, AND A SMALL CLUSTER AT THE REAR. THE LEADER IS AT FIRST OF REGULAR TYPE, BUT AFTER JUNE 14 IT BECOMES LARGER AND AT THE SAME TIME ELONGATED WITH VERY COMPOSITE UMBRA. IT SHRINKS RAPIDLY AFTER JUNE 16. 8929 19190610 19190614 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 8930 19190610 19190618 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JUNE 10 AND 18. 8931 19190610 19190620 A COMPOSITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL JUNE 17. 8932 19190610 19190619 RETURN OF GROUP 8902. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS ON JUNE 15 AND 16. 8933 19190612 19190613 A SMALL GROUP AT THE WEST LIMB. 8934 19190612 19190615 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON JUNE 13. 8935 19190612 19190624 RETURN OF GROUP 8907. AN EXTREMELY LARGE SPOT VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. WHEN SEEN FORESHORTENED NEAR THE EAST LIMB, IT APPEARS NEARLY OF REGULAR FORMATION, BUT LATER ITS UMBRA IS SEEN TO BE COMPOSITE, AND ITS GENERAL OUTLINE BECOMES SOMEWHAT IRREGULAR. THE SPOT SHOWS SIGNS OF BREAKING UP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. SMALL COMPANION SPOTS APPEAR AFTER JUNE 14. 8936 19190613 19190614 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 8937 19190613 19190620 A SMALL, FAINT, BUT PERSISTENT STREAM OF INSIGNIFICANT SPOTS. 8938 19190614 19190618 ONE SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON JUNE 14, P GROUP 8928. 8939 19190614 19190622 A SMALL CLUSTER OF FAINT SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 20, F GROUP 8935 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 8940 19190616 19190626 A STREAM CONSISTING OF A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS, BARELY DISCERNIBLE AFTER JUNE 22. 8941 19190617 19190618 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 8942 19190617 19190627 A VERY SMALL SPOT UNTIL JUNE 20; ON JUNE 21, A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPS WHICH SOON PASSES THROUGH THE USUAL PHASES. 8943 19190618 19190624 TWO SPOTS 5 APART APPEARING JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. NEITHER IS STABLE, BUT THE FOLLOWING ONE IS THE LARGER AND LONGER LIVED. 8944 19190618 19190622 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8940. 8945 19190621 19190626 A SMALL SPOT, WHICH BECOMES REGULAR ON JUNE 24, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 8946 19190621 19190627 INTERMITTENT. ONE SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 21 AND 27; A PAIR ON JUNE 24. 8947 19190621 19190630 AT FIRST A VERY SMALL CLUSTER NOT SEEN ON JUNE 22. ON JUNE 25, A STREAM BEGINS TO DEVELOP, THE LEADER OF WHICH BREAKS UP ON JUNE 27 BUT HAS REFORMED THE NEXT DAY. 8948 19190621 19190630 A STREAM OF SPOTS SUDDENLY BECOMING CONSPICUOUS ON JUNE 25 ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 8947, 8950 AND 8955. IT IS THEN OF NORMAL TYPE, WITH A WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER AND A COMPOSITE BUT SHORTER-LIVED SPOT AS THE FOLLOWING MEMBER. 8949 19190621 19190703 RETURN OF GROUP 8914. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL FOLLOWERS GROUPED USUALLY ABOUT TWO CENTRES. ONE OF THESE COMPANIONS IS SEEN AS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT ON JULY 2. 8950 19190622 19190629 A STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 8951 19190622 19190623 A MINIATURE STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONE MEMBER ALONE REMAINS ON JUNE 23. 8952 19190622 19190704 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 8922. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 8953 19190623 19190624 A PAIR OF MINUTE SPOTS ON JUNE 23; ONE SPOT ON JUNE 24. 8954 19190624 19190625 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 8955 19190624 19190629 A GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE COMPOSED OF A PARTIALLY FORMED REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION WHICH HAS BECOME A CLUSTER BY JUNE 27. THE GROUP IS PRECEDED BY A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN S OF GROUP 8950 ON JUNE 24. 8956 19190626 19190630 INTERMITTENT. A FEW VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS, F GROUP 8949, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 27 AND 28. 8957 19190626 19190705 A DISTURBED AREA SHOWN FOR SEVERAL DAYS BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. AFTER JULY 1, THESE MULTIPLY AND A REGULAR SPOT APPEARS FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 8958 19190626 19190703 RETURN OF GROUP 8917; THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION FROM JUNE 28-JULY 2. 8959 19190628 19190703 SOME SMALL SPOTS (NOT SEEN ON JULY 1) IN A FACULOUS AREA JUST N OF GROUP 8949. 8960 19190628 19190703 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT ON JUNE 28. ANOTHER ON JULY 1-3, WITH SEVERAL COMPANIONS ON JULY 2. 8961 19190628 19190630 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 29. 8962 19190629 19190708 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 8933, BUT PERHAPS ONLY A REVIVAL. A SMALL GROUP OF UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH ARE VERY FAINT AFTER JULY 4. 8963 19190701 19190705 A MINUTE SPOT ON JULY 1; A SMALL CLUSTER ON JULY 2; A PAIR OF SMALL BUT WELL-DEFINED SPOTS ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 8964 19190702 19190713 A VERY SMALL SPOT IN FACULAE AT THE EAST LIMB DEVELOPING INTO A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION. THE LATTER QUICKLY DIMINISHES, WHILST OTHER VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FORM TO MAKE A SMALL CLUSTER FOR A FEW DAYS. 8965 19190702 19190713 TWO SMALL ILL-FORMED REGULAR SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE FROM EACH OTHER IN LONGITUDE WHILST A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS APPEAR BETWEEN THEM. THE FOLLOWER IS ALONE VISIBLE ON JULY 11, AND NOTHING IS SEEN THE FOLLOWING DAY, BUT A SMALL SPOT APPEARS IN THE REGION ON JULY 13. 8966 19190709 19190720 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 9; OTHERS APPEAR ON THE FOLLOWING DAY, AND BY JULY 12 AN EXTENSIVE STREAM HAS DEVELOPED. THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING MEMBERS RESPECTIVELY ARE PROMINENT SPOTS OF REGULAR TYPE. A COMPACT CLUSTER SITUATED BETWEEN THEM ON JULY 12 SOON DISPERSES, AND THE OTHER FEW COMPANION SPOTS, APPEARING FROM TIME TO TIME, ARE OF LITTLE IMPORTANCE. 8967 19190711 19190717 A SMALL STREAM OF ILL-FORMED SPOTS IN THE DISTURBED AREA WITH GROUPS 8968 AND 8974. 8968 19190711 19190717 A SMALL STREAM OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 8969 19190711 19190718 RETURN OF GROUP 8940. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 17. THE FOLLOWING DAY A VERY SMALL SPOT APPEARS TEMPORARILY ITS PLACE. 8970 19190712 19190716 A SMALL GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE. 8971 19190714 19190726 RETURN OF GROUP 8955. A REGULAR SPOT. 8972 19190715 19190723 RETURN OF GROUP 8947. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS GENERALLY ARRANGED IN A CLUSTER. 8973 19190715 19190727 RETURN OF GROUP 8948. A WELL DEFINED REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW FOLLOWERS, AFTER JULY 18. THESE ARE SMALL AND EPHEMERAL, EXCEPT A LARGER ONE, WHICH APPEARS ON JULY 24 AND 25. 8974 19190716 19190720 A TINY STREAM ON JULY 16; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS, EXCEPT ON JULY 19, WHEN NOTHING IS VISIBLE. 8975 19190717 19190718 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS. 8976 19190718 19190720 RETURN OF GROUP 8949; THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT JUST DISAPPEARING. 8977 19190718 19190729 PROBABLY A NEW FORMATION F GROUP 8949, AND NOT ACTUALLY A RETURN. A REGULAR SPOT. 8978 19190719 19190728 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL CLUSTER OF SPOTS ON JULY 19. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL JULY 26, WHEN A SMALL STREAM MAKES ITS APPEARANCE. 8979 19190720 19190729 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH DIMINISHES TO A VERY SMALL SPOT. TWO SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS ACCOMPANY IT ON JULY 28, AND ONE ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 8980 19190721 19190723 A VERY SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JULY 22, F GROUP 8973. 8981 19190721 19190801 RETURN OF GROUP 8957. A SPOT SHOWING AT FIRST A SLIGHT DEVIATION FROM THE REGULAR TYPE WITH USUALLY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 8982 19190722 19190729 A SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 8983 19190724 19190726 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8984 19190724 19190727 INTERMITTENT. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON JULY 24; A PAIR NEAR ITS POSITION ON JULY 27. 8985 19190725 19190727 ONE SMALL SPOT S GROUP 8981 ON JULY 25; A SHORT STREAM OF MINUTE SPOTS ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS. 8986 19190725 19190728 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 8987 19190727 19190807 A DISTURBED AREA CONTAINING AT FIRST A SINGLE SPOT, THEN A CLUSTER ON JULY 30 AND 31, AND LASTLY A PAIR OF FAINT SPOTS WHICH BECOME MORE DEFINITE ON AUG. 6. 8988 19190728 19190805 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 8964. A SMALL CLUSTER OF SPOTS, WHICH ARE WELL-DEFINED UNTIL AUG. 1 AND FAINT AFTERWARDS. 8989 19190729 19190731 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 8981. 8990 19190730 19190731 A MINUTE SPOT. 8991 19190730 19190805 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 8970. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT BECOMING A CLUSTER ON AUG. 3. 8992 19190802 19190803 A SMALL FAINT SPOT S GROUP 8988. 8993 19190803 19190807 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 8994 19190803 19190815 WITH GROUP 8996, A RETURN OF GROUP 8966. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT SHOWING SLIGHT INSTABILITY FROM AUG. 6-9, WHEN A SMALL PORTION DETACHES ITSELF FROM THE NP PART OF THE PENUMBRA. FOR A FEW DAYS AFTER AUG. 8, NUMEROUS SMALL COMPANIONS MAKE THEIR APPEARANCE NORTHWARDS. 8995 19190804 19190811 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON AUG. 4 AND 11 ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 8994, BUT N OF THE EQUATOR. 8996 19190804 19190815 RETURN OF GROUP 8966. A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT. ON AUG. 5 AND AFTER AUG. 6 SEVERAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR, AND ONE OF THESE DEVELOPS CONSIDERABLY BETWEEN AUG. 10 AND 11. IT SOON DIMINISHES, HOWEVER, AND BY AUG. 15 IT AND THE ORIGINAL MEMBER REMAIN AS A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 8997 19190805 19190806 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 8998 19190805 19190816 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8974. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT BY AUG. 13. A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON AUG. 15 AND 16. 8999 19190806 19190807 A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9000 19190807 19190818 A LARGE SPOT WITH SOME DEPARTURE FROM THE REGULAR TYPE. THERE ARE SMALL COMPANIONS SOUTHWARDS FROM AUG. 8-14. 9001 19190808 19190809 A SINGLE SPOT ON AUG. 8; A CLOSE PAIR ON AUG. 9. 9002 19190811 19190823 RETURN OF GROUP 8973. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, STABLE UNTIL AUG. 18 AND THEN COMMENCING TO DISAPPEAR. 9003 19190812 19190814 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 12; ONE ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9004 19190812 19190814 A SMALL SPOT. 9005 19190813 19190825 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 8978. A VERY LARGE AND LONG STREAM SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB AS ONE OF NORMAL TYPE NEAR MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER IS VERY LARGE, SHOWING A COMPLEX UMBRA FOR SEVERAL DAYS BUT BECOMING REGULAR BY AUG. 22; THE FOLLOWER IS SMALLER AND IN TWO PORTIONS, WHICH CHANGE CONTINUALLY AND DIE OUT AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. THE SPOTS INTERMEDIATE IN THE STREAM ARE, AS USUAL, OF LITTLE IMPORTANCE. 9006 19190814 19190818 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 14; A WIDE PAIR ON AUG. 17, AND A SINGLE SPOT THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9007 19190814 19190825 AT FIRST A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE WHILST A CLUSTER APPEARS BETWEEN THEM. THE FOLLOWER THEN DIMINISHES, BUT THE LEADER INCREASES IN SIZE VERY CONSIDERABLY AFTER JOINING WITH A SPOT IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING IT. MEANWHILE, THE CLUSTER HAS CONDENSED TO A SPOT OF SOME EXTENT AND REMAINS WITH THE LEADER TO THE WEST LIMB. THIS GROUP IS ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 9005, 9011 AND 9014, AND THE LEADER OF THE TWO LARGE STREAMS COMPRISING GROUPS 9005 AND 9007 ARE IN CLOSE JUXTAPOSITION BUT ON OPPOSITE SIDES OF THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 9008 19190815 19190827 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING. IT IS SURROUNDED BY SMALL COMPANIONS ON AUG. 23 AND 24. 9009 19190816 19190818 A SINGLE WELL-DEFINED SPOT ON AUG. 16; A SHORT STREAM ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS. 9010 19190817 19190826 INTERMITTENT. TWO SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 17, ONE OF WHICH REMAINS UNTIL AUG. 20. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL AUG. 25, WHEN A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS APPEAR. 9011 19190819 19190825 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 9005 AND 9007. THE STREAM QUICKLY PASSES THROUGH ITS PHASES, LEAVING THE LEADER ALONE ON AUG. 25. 9012 19190820 19190821 A SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 9008. 9013 19190821 19190822 A SMALL GROUP. 9014 19190821 19190823 A SMALL STREAM ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 9005, 9007 AND 9011. 9015 19190821 19190829 A REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DISAPPEARING. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL ONE OR TWO FOLLOWERS. 9016 19190822 19190829 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 8987. A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT NOT SEEN ON AUG. 28. 9017 19190823 19190831 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 23 DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 9018 19190825 19190826 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9019 19190827 19190830 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 9020 19190830 19190908 AN ACTIVE GROUP. A SMALL CLUSTER OF SPOTS ON AUG. 30 DEVELOPING INTO TWO CHIEF SPOTS WITH SMALL COMPANIONS. ON SEPT. 5, A SMALL CLUSTER JUST SF THE STREAM HAS BECOME AN ELONGATED SPOT COMPARABLE WITH THE ORIGINAL COMPONENTS. THIS BREAKS INTO TWO PORTIONS, ONE OF WHICH IS SOON DISAPPEARING, WHILST THE S PORTION HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT. 9021 19190830 19190908 RETURN OF GROUP 8994. A SMALL SPOT WITH A NEAR COMPANION ON SEPT. 1 AND A MORE DISTANT ONE ON SEPT. 3 AND 5. 9022 19190831 19190903 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 1. 9023 19190831 19190901 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON AUG. 31. 9024 19190903 19190907 A SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 3, DEVELOPING INTO A SHORT STREAM BY SEPT. 5, AFTER WHICH DATE ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS. 9025 19190903 19190908 RETURN OF GROUP 9000. A SMALL SPOT WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPT. 6. ITS PLACE, HOWEVER, IS MARKED BY A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 7 AND A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 8. 9026 19190905 19190906 A VERY SMALL SPOT S GROUP 9021. 9027 19190906 19190918 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. WITHIN A FEW DAYS A TRAIN OF SMALL FOLLOWERS HAS APPEARED, AND BETWEEN SEPT. 11 AND 12 A COMPANION REGULAR SPOT HAS SUDDENLY DEVELOPED SP THE ORIGINAL ONE. THE TRAIN GRADUALLY DIES OUT, LEAVING THE PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS ALONE ON SEPT. 17. 9028 19190907 19190910 A SMALL PARTIALLY FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS ON SEPT. 7 AND 8. 9029 19190908 19190915 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 9. OTHERS APPEAR LATER AND MAKE UP A SMALL STREAM. 9030 19190908 19190920 RETURN OF GROUP 9007. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP RAPIDLY ON SEPT. 18. 9031 19190908 19190920 RETURN OF GROUP 9005; THIRD APPARITION. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL TINY COMPANIONS. THIS SPOT AND THAT OF GROUP 9007 PRESENT A STRIKING FEATURE ON THE SUN'S DISC OF A CLOSE PAIR OF LARGE REGULAR SPOTS BUT ON OPPOSITE SIDES OF THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 9032 19190909 19190914 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9033 19190913 19190916 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9007. A VERY SMALL CLUSTER OF SPOTS F GROUPS 9030 AND 9031. 9034 19190915 19190921 ONE OR TWO SCATTERED SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 20. 9035 19190917 19190918 A MINUTE SPOT. 9036 19190918 19190927 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF UNSTABLE CHARACTER WHICH HAS FORMED FROM A DOUBLE SPOT AND A COMPANION SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB. 9037 19190920 19190929 A STREAM OF NORMAL BUT OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT NP GROUP 9036. 9038 19190920 19191002 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS, AND AT A GREATER DISTANCE BY TWO OR THREE ILL-FORMED SPOTS, WHICH DISSOLVE INTO AN ELONGATED CLUSTER AFTER SEPT. 24. ON SEPT. 26, THE REGULAR SPOT SHOWS A DOUBLE UMBRA, AND BY SEPT. 30 THE SPOT HAS COMPLETELY SEPARATED INTO TWO COMPONENTS. 9039 19190922 19190930 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLUSTER OF SMALL FOLLOWERS CLOSELY PRECEDING GROUP 9040 IN THE SAME LARGE GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 9040 19190923 19191005 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 9020; A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS TO THE SOUTH, WHICH HAVE DIED OUT BY SEPT. 30. A CLOSE COMPANION TO IT HAS APPEARED NEAR THE WEST LIMB. THIS GROUP IS CLOSELY ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 9039. 9041 19190925 19191007 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9021. A LARGE SPOT, WITH COMPOSITE UMBRA, DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER OCT. 3. 9042 19190927 19190928 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 27; ONE ON SEPT. 28. 9043 19190928 19191008 A LONG STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE LONGEST LIVED. 9044 19190929 19191002 A SMALL CLUSTER OF SPOTS. 9045 19190929 19190930 A MINUTE DOUBLE SPOT. 9046 19191001 19191004 INTERMITTENT. ONE SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 1 AND TWO ON OCT. 4 SEEN S GROUP 9040 IN THE SAME GENERAL DISTURBED AREA. 9047 19191005 19191017 RETURN OF GROUP 9031; FOURTH APPARITION. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FROM OCT. 11-14. 9048 19191007 19191018 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF NUMEROUS UNSTABLE SPOTS. 9049 19191007 19191018 A FEW SPOTS IN A STREAM OF INDEFINITE CHARACTER. 9050 19191008 19191015 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT IS CONSPICUOUS ON OCT. 11. 9051 19191009 19191013 A SHORT STREAM; THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS LEFT ALONE ON OCT. 13. 9052 19191009 19191015 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 9053 19191010 19191011 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9054 19191012 19191014 A VERY SMALL SPOT CLOSELY F GROUP 9048. 9055 19191015 19191021 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 15 WHICH GROW AND SEPARATE WIDELY IN LONGITUDE. ON OCT. 18, THE FOLLOWING MEMBER HAS BROKEN INTO A CLUSTER, AND THE LEADER LIKE WISE, BY OCT. 20. 9056 19191020 19191101 RETURN OF GROUP 9040. A SMALL BUT WELL-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS UNTIL OCT. 25. 9057 19191021 19191022 THREE VERY SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS IN FACULAE ON OCT. 21; ONE ONLY ON OCT. 22. 9058 19191023 19191025 A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9059 19191024 19191105 RETURN OF GROUP 9043. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON OCT. 25. 9060 19191025 19191101 AN INCONSPICUOUS GROUP OF A FEW SPOTS UNTIL OCT. 29, WHEN MORE DEFINITE COMPONENTS APPEAR ARRANGED AS A STREAM. 9061 19191026 19191107 A LARGE AND ACTIVE GROUP. A SPOT, APPROXIMATELY OF REGULAR FORMATION, SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB PRECEDED BY A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. THESE COMPANIONS MULTIPLY AND FORM THE NUCLEUS OF A LARGE, ELONGATED, UNSTABLE, SOPOT WHICH HAS DEVELOPED BY OCT. 31. MEANWHILE A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS HAS ALSO APPEARED, TOGETHER WITH A MORE STABLE SPOT OF NEARLY REGFULAR FORMATION. THE GROUP WHEN ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN IS A LARGE COMPACT STREAM WITH THE ORIGINAL REGULAR SPOT AS THE MOST PROMINENT FEATURE. 9062 19191027 19191106 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. AN INCREASE IN THE GROUP TAKES PLACE ON OCT. 31, BUT THE ACTIVITY SOON WANES. ON NOV. 5, A FURTHER REVIVAL OCCURS IN THE FORE PLORTION OF THE STREAM. 9063 19191027 19191101 TWO SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 9063. ONE ONLY IS SEEN ON OCT. 30 AND NOV 1, AND NOTHING IS VISIBLE ON OCT. 31. 9064 19191101 19191111 A STREAM WITH THE EARLY DEVELOPMENT OF ONE OF NORMAL TYPE BUT IN WHICH THE REAR COMPONENT IS NEVER PROMINENT. 9065 19191102 19191114 RETURN OF GROUP 9047; FIFTH APPARITION. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 9066 19191107 19191113 A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE WIDELY IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER ALONE SURVIVES AFTER NOV. 10, BUT A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT APPEARS NEAR THE FOLLOWER'S POSITION ON NOV 12. 9067 19191108 19191115 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM TWO SMALL SPOTS SEEN ON NOV. 8. FOR SEVERAL DAYS THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGER AND BETTER- FORMED, BUT THE LEADER IS ULTIMATELY THE LONGER LIVED. 9068 19191114 19191117 A SINGLE SPOT ON NOV. 14-15; ONE SMALL CLUSTER ON NOV. 16 AND TWO THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9069 19191118 19191121 ONE SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 18; A PAIR SEPARATED BY 5 IN LONGITUDE ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 9070 19191120 19191126 A SMALL GROUP OF A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS. 9071 19191122 19191204 RETURN OF GROUP 9061. TWO REGULAR SPOTS, THE PRECEDING ONE BEING THE LARGER, WHICH COALESCE TO MAKE AN ELONGATED SPOT BY NOV. 27. THE TWO UMBRAE APPEAR DISTINCT, HOWEVER, AND THE SEPARATION AGAIN INTO TWO COMPONENTS TAKES PLACE AFTER NOV. 29. A CLUSTER OF SMALL FOLLOWERS HAS CONDENSED TO FORM AN APPENDAGE TO THE COMPOSITE SPOT ON NOV. 27. 9072 19191123 19191127 A FEW SPOTS ARRANGED IN STREAM FORMATION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, MARKING THE HEAD OF THE STREAM, ALONE REMAINS ON NOV. 26. 9073 19191123 19191202 SOME SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS USUALLY IN TWO CLUSTERS, CLOSELY F GROUP 9071. 9074 19191124 19191125 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. 9075 19191126 19191207 RETURN OF GROUP 9064. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT STABLE UNTIL DEC. 3 OR 4, WHEN IT BEGINS TO DISAPPEAR RAPIDLY. 9076 19191127 19191206 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON NOV. 28. THE FOLLOWING DAY, A STREAM OF TINY SPOTS HAS DEVELOPED, IN WHICH LARGER COMPONENTS APPEAR AS THE GROUP NEARS THE WEST LIMB. 9077 19191129 19191207 RETURN OF GROUP 9065; SIXTH APPARITION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DISAPPEARING. 9078 19191129 19191211 A PAIR OF INDEFINITE SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB. THE FIRST BECOMES NEARLY OF REGULAR TYPE BUT BREAKS UP IN TWO UNEQUAL PORTIONS AFTER DEC. 7; THE OTHER BECOMES A CLUSTER BY DEC. 2, WHICH DISAPPEARS BY DEC. 8. 9079 19191203 19191210 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING NF GROUP 9078. IT HAS COMPLETELY DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 7, BUT ON THE FOLLOWING DAY A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS IS SEEN IN THE SAME REGION. 9080 19191208 19191211 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9081 19191208 19191213 A FEW SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE ALONE SURVIVES AFTER DEC. 9. 9082 19191208 19191219 SOME UNSTABLE SPOTS USUALLY ARRANGED AS A STREAM. 9083 19191209 19191219 A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH INCREASE AND COALESCE TO FORM A SPOT NEARLY OF REGULAR FORMATION, AROUND WHICH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR. AFTER DEC. 17, THE SPOT DIVIDES, AND THE TWO PORTIONS DIE OUT RAPIDLY. GROUPS 9082 AND 9083 ARE EVIDENTLY CLOSELY RELATED TO EACH OTHER. 9084 19191212 19191215 A SMALL SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER ON DEC. 13 AND 14. 9085 19191212 19191213 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS IN HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE. THE LEADER IS LEFT ON DEC. 13. 9086 19191212 19191221 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON DEC. 15. BOTH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 16, BUT ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS A STREAM OF SMALL AND FAINT SPOTS APPEARS IN THE REGION. 9087 19191216 19191219 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 16, ONE OF WHICH ALONE REMAINS ON DEC. 18-19. 9088 19191219 19191227 INTERMITTENT. RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 9071. A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT ON DEC. 19. ON DEC. 23 AND THE FOLLOWING DAYS, A SMALL STREAM. 9089 19191221 19191224 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADING COMPONENT REMAINS ON DEC. 23. 9090 19191221 19191224 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9091 19191222 19191224 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 9092 19191222 19200101 A SMALL SPOT FROM WHICH DEVELOPS A STREAM OF SMALL AND UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. 9092 19191222 19200101 A SMALL SPOT FROM WHICH DEVELOPS A STREAM OF SMALL AND UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. 9093 19191226 19191227 ONE SMALL SPOT. 9094 19191228 19191229 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9095 19191230 19200107 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9079. A VERY LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 30. THE LEADER, AT FIRST OF REGULAR TYPE, BECOMES LARGE AND COMPOSITE-NOTICEABLY SO ON JAN. 3-WHILST THE FOLLOWER, THOUGH OF REGULAR TYPE ON JAN. 3, IS UNSTABLE AND RAPIDLY BREAKS UP AND DISAPPEARS. A SPOT, REPRESENTING A CLUSTER, WHICH CLOSELY FOLLOWS THE LEADER ON JAN. 4, REMAINS WITH IT AT THE WEST LIMB. 9095 19191230 19200107 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9079. A VERY LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 30. THE LEADER, AT FIRST OF REGULAR TYPE, BECOMES LARGE AND COMPOSITE-NOTICEABLY SO ON JAN.3-WHILST THE FOLLOWER, THOUGH OF REGULAR TYPE ON JAN. 3, IS UNSTABLE AND RAPIDLY BREAKS UP AND DISAPPEARS. A SPOT, REPRESENTING A CLUSTER WHICH CLOSELY FOLLOWS THE LEADER ON JAN. 4, REMAINS WITH IT AT THE WEST LIMB. 9096 19200101 19200104 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 9097 19200108 19200117 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS FROM JAN. 12-15. 9098 19200108 19200119 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT F GROUP 9097. 9099 19200108 19200121 RETURN OF GROUP 9091. A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL ATTENDANTS. 9100 19200110 19200112 ONE SMALL SPOT F GROUP 9098 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 9101 19200110 19200113 A SMALL SPOT F GROUP 9099 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 9102 19200111 19200123 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH IS UNSTABLE AFTER JAN. 18. A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FOLLOWS UNTIL THAT DATE. 9103 19200111 19200112 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 11; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 9104 19200114 19200116 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 9099. 9105 19200118 19200130 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT FOR THREE DAYS. ON JAN. 21 A LARGE STREAM COMMENCES TO DEVELOP WHICH IS FULLY FORMED BY JANUARY 25. THE LEADER IS A WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT BY JANUARY 25; THE REAR OF THE STREAM IS MADE UP OF THE ORIGINAL SMALL FOLLOWER AND A LARGE SPOT WHICH HAS GROWN FROM THE MID-PORTION OF THE GROUP. 9106 19200118 19200121 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9107 19200121 19200122 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 9102. 9108 19200121 19200203 RETURN OF GROUP 9095. A VERY LONG AND COMPLEX STREAM ICLINED ABOUT 25 TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. TWO VERY LARGE AND COMPLEX SPOTS AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM ARE A PROMINENT FEATURE OF THE GROUP FOR SEVERAL DAYS, BUT LATER THEY ARE COMPARABLE WITH THE SMALLER BUT MORE STABLE COMPONENTS OF THE STREAM. A VERY EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE SURROUNDS THE GROUP. 9109 19200122 19200126 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL STREAM OF FEW SPOTS ON JAN. 22 AND 23. ONE SMALL SPOT ON JAN. 26. 9110 19200123 19200124 A MINUTE SPOT. 9111 19200123 19200124 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9112 19200124 19200201 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT P GROUP 9108 AND JUST WITHIN THE LARGE AREA OF FACULAE WHICH SURROUNDS IT. 9113 19200131 19200201 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 9114 19200203 19200204 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 9115 19200203 19200212 A STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS EXCEPT THE LEADER WHICH SHOWS MODERATE STABILITY AS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 9116 19200205 19200206 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 9117 19200208 19200211 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL DOUBLE SPOTS. 9118 19200210 19200219 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FOLLOWER HAS BROKEN UP INTO SEVERAL COMPONENTS BY FEB. 13, BUT THE LEADER PERSISTS AS A REGULAR SPOT AND IS THE LAST TO DISAPPEAR. 9119 19200211 19200219 A STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 11. THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT IS THE REAR SPOT WHICH IS ROUGHLY OF REGULAR FORMATION. 9120 19200211 19200218 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT ON FEB. 11; A PAIR OF SPOTS UNTIL FEB. 14; A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS EXCEPT FEB. 17 WHEN NOTHING IS VISIBLE. 9121 19200212 19200223 A REGULAR SPOT CONTRACTING TO A DOT; A VERY SMALL FOLLOWER IS SEEN ON FEB. 19. 9122 19200213 19200222 RETURN OF GROUP 9105. A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA; SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR NORTHWARDS, USUALLY IN TWO CLUSTERS. 9123 19200214 19200216 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS, S GROUP 9124. 9124 19200214 19200223 A SMALL IRREGULAR STREAM. 9125 19200214 19200225 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DIMINISHING. TWO CLUSTERS OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR ON FEB. 20, AND TWO OR THREE DISTANT SPOTS ON FEB. 23. 9126 19200217 19200225 A FEW FAINT SPOTS IN A SPARSE STREAM UNTIL FEB. 22, WHEN TWO BETTER DEFINED SPOTS HAVE APPEARED. 9127 19200217 19200224 RETURN OF GROUP 9108. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY FADING OUT. A VERY EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE FOLLOWS IT. GROUP 9132 DEVELOPS JUST SOUTHWARDS ON FEB. 22. 9128 19200218 19200228 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SPOTS ON FEB. 18. NONE OF THE COMPONENTS ARE CONSPICUOU EXCEPT THE LEADER. 9129 19200221 19200224 A SPARSE STREAM OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 9130 19200221 19200229 A SMALL SPOT BECOMING A CLUSTER ON FEB. 23 WITH ONE OR TWO DISTANT COMPANIONS. AFTER FEB. 25, ONE VERY SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT REMAINS. 9131 19200222 19200223 A SMALL GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9132 19200222 19200226 A DISTURBED REGION, S GROUP 9127, IN WHICH SMALL SPORADIC SPOTS APPEAR. 9133 19200223 19200306 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, EXCEPT THAT THE LEADER IS THE COMPOSITE AND SHORTER-LIVED COMPONENT, AND THE FOLLOWER IS THE STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 9134 19200224 19200226 ONE OR TWO MINUTE SCATTERED SPOTS REPRESENTING A DISTURBED REGION S GROUP 9127. 9135 19200228 19200301 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9136 19200303 19200313 A GROUP OF SMALL ILL-FORMED SPOTS LENGTHENING OUT INTO A STREAM, THE COMPONENTS OF WHICH BECOME MORE DEFINITE TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 9137 19200303 19200314 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. AFTER MAR. 11, TWO MORE STABLE COMPONENTS HAVE FORMED AT THE FRONT AND REAR RESPECTIVELY OF THE STREAM. THIS GROUP IS CLOSELY ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 9140 WITH WHICH IT PRACTICALLY MERGES AFTER MAR. 10. 9138 19200304 19200305 A SMALL SPOT P GROUP 9136. 9139 19200307 19200314 A SPOT AT THE EAST LIMB WHICH BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER BY MAR. 9, WHILST A SHORT TRAIN MAKES ITS APPEARANCE. 9140 19200308 19200315 AN IRREGULAR STREAM SHOWING FREQUENT CHANGE, CLOSELY ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 9137 OF SIMILAR CHARACTER. A REGULAR SPOT HAS FORMED AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM ON MAR. 12. 9141 19200309 19200316 A SMALL BUT WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT WITH A LONG TRAIN OF VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS WHICH DIE OUT BY MAR. 15. 9142 19200315 19200324 THREE SMALL SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB WHICH GROW AND COALESCE TO MAKE A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH THEN DIMINISHES. 9143 19200315 19200327 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9127. A MAGNIFICENT STREAM. AT FIRST, TWO LARGE AND COMPOSITE SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB. CONSIDERABLE DEVELOPMENT TAKES PLACE WITHIN A FEW DAYS, ESPECIALLY WITH REGARD TO A SMALL SPOT APPEARING ON MAR. 19 AT THE FRONT OF THE GROUP. THIS SPOT GROWS VERY RAPIDLY AND BY MAR. 22 IT IS THE DOMINATING FEATURE OF THE STREAM. THE TRAIN OF SPOTS FOLLOWING IT IS NOW VERY COMPACT IN CHARACTER, AND ALTHOUGH CHANGES ARE CONSTANTLY EVIDENT, SEVERAL OF THE COMPONENTS CAN BE IDENTIFIED FROM DAY TO DAY. TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB, THE STREAM SIMPLIFIES TO THREE CHIEF COMPONENTS WHICH FOLLOW THE LEADER SPOT. 9144 19200316 19200329 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT F GROUP 9143. A FEW VERY SMALL CLOSE FOLLOWERS APPEAR ON MAR. 21-23. 9145 19200317 19200326 A SMALL STREAM S GROUP 9143. 9146 19200319 19200323 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS ON MAR. 23. 9147 19200320 19200323 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 9148 19200320 19200321 A SMALL CLUSTER OF MINUTE SPOTS. 9149 19200321 19200324 A FEW TINY SPOTS F GROUP 9145. 9150 19200324 19200404 A REGULAR SPOT SHOWING MINOR CHANGES. A SMALL CLUSTER OF COMPANIONS APPEARS TO THE S ON APR. 2. 9151 19200324 19200329 A SMALL SPOT. 9152 19200329 19200331 RETURN OF GROUP 9137. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN EXTENSIVE MASS OF FACULAE. 9153 19200331 19200403 RETURN OF GROUP 9141. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9154 19200401 19200409 A DISTURBED REGION SHOWN BY FACULAE AND A FEW VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 9155 19200406 19200408 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON APR. 6; A PAIR ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS. 9156 19200406 19200412 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON APR. 8, 10, AND 11. 9157 19200410 19200423 RETURN OF GROUP 9143. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. VERY SMALL COMPANIONS SURROUND THE SPOT ON APR. 15, 16, AND 18. 9158 19200413 19200419 RETURN OF GROUP 9144. A SMALL SPOT DYING OUT. 9159 19200420 19200423 INTERMITTENT. A MINUTE SPOT ON APR. 20; A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APR. 22 AND 23. 9160 19200423 19200429 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON APR. 23 AND 29. 9161 19200425 19200507 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9152. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY THREE VERY SMALL COMPANIONS ON APR. 30. AN EXTENDED AREA OF FACULAE FOLLOWS THE GROUP, BUT IT IS LESS CONSPICUOUS THAN DURING THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. 9162 19200427 19200501 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 9163 19200429 19200501 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH A FAINT FOLLOWER ON MAY 1. 9164 19200430 19200505 INTERMITTENT. AN APHEMERAL SPOT ON APR. 30; ON MAY 2 A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPS, BUT ONLY ONE SMALL SPOT IS LEFT BY MAY 5. 9165 19200501 19200504 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT EACH DAY IN THE DISTURBED AREA F GROUP 9161. 9166 19200501 19200504 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9167 19200502 19200503 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9168 19200502 19200506 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 9169 19200503 19200506 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9170 19200503 19200514 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SHOWING INSTABILITY ON MAY 5 AND AGAIN ON MAY 11, AFTER WHICH IT SPLITS INTO TWO PORTIONS AND THEN DISAPPEARS. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 9171 19200504 19200508 A VERY SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS FOLLOWING ON MAY 4 AND 5. 9172 19200504 19200508 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT. TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR NEAR IT ON MAY 7. 9173 19200507 19200512 A SMALL STREAM OF SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 9070 AND 9071. THE FOLLOWING MEMBER OF THE STREAM BECOMES TEMPORARILY CONSPICUOUS ON MAY 9. 9174 19200508 19200515 RETURN OF GROUP 9157; THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT WITH TWO OR THREE FAINT COMPANIONS AFTER MAY 10. 9175 19200510 19200511 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9176 19200510 19200520 A SMALL CLUSTER OF WHICH ONE SPOT REMAINS AFTER MAY 15. A TEMPORARY REVIVAL IS SHOWN ON MAY 19. 9177 19200510 19200518 A SMALL CLUSTER F GROUP 9175. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MAY 16. 9178 19200513 19200515 A GROUP FORMING AT THE WEST LIMB. 9179 19200514 19200516 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAY 15. 9181 19200517 19200524 A PAIR OF SPOTS, THE LEADER ALONE REMAINING AFTER MAY 20. 9182 19200522 19200602 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 9161. A SPOT, NEARLY OF REGULAR FORMATION, CHANGING SUDDENLY DETWEEN MAY 25 AND 26 INTO A TRIPLE SPOT WITH COMPANIONS. IT IS VERY UNSTABLE AND ON MAY 27 IT DIVIDES INTO TWO CHIEF COMPONENTS WHICH UNITE AGAIN BY MAY 30. 9183 19200525 19200527 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 9184 19200525 19200530 A FEW FAINT SPOTS F GROUP 9182. 9185 19200526 19200528 A SMALL GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE. 9186 19200526 19200602 A STREAM OF FEW SPOTS WITH THE LEADER AS THE CHIEF COMPONENT. 9187 19200527 19200601 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAY 27 NOT SEEN ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. ON MAY 29 A SMALL GROUP BEGINS TO DEVELOP IN ITS PLACE. 9188 19200528 19200531 AN INSIGNIFICANT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 9189 19200530 19200610 RETURN OF GROUP 9178. A COMPOSITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS. THE TRAIN DIES OUT, BUT THE LEADER INCREASES IN SIZE AND BECOMES OF REGULAR TYPE. 9190 19200531 19200606 TWO SMALL CLUSTERS OF SPOTS WHICH HAVE PRACTICALLY DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 5. TWO SPOTS HAVE APPEARED ON JUNE 6 NEAR THE POSITION OF THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER. 9191 19200601 19200605 FIRST A SINGLE SPOT; THEN A PAIR, OF WHICH ONE SPOT REMAINS ON JUNE 5. 9192 19200604 19200606 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9193 19200607 19200618 A SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 7 DEVELOPING INTO A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY TWO CLUSTERS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THESE CONDENSE TO A NEBULOUS MASS ON JUNE 13 AND THEN DISAPPEAR. 9194 19200608 19200609 TWO SMALL SPOTS SEPARATED 4O IN LONGITUDE. THE FOLLOWING ONE ALONE REMAINS ON JUNE 9. 9195 19200609 19200611 A DISTURBED AREA SHOWN BY AN ELONGATED MASS OF FACULAE IN WHICH A FEW EPHEMERAL SPOTS APPEAR. 9196 19200611 19200617 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 9193. 9197 19200611 19200612 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9198 19200615 19200625 RETURN OF GROUP 9188. A SMALL BUT PERFECTLY FORMED REGULAR SPOT WHICH GRADUALLY DIMINISHES. 9199 19200617 19200627 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT USUALLY WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS. 9200 19200620 19200621 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9201 19200621 19200702 RETURN OF GROUP 9190. THREE SMALL BUT WELL-FORMED REGULAR SPOTS ARRANGED AS THE APICES OF AN EQUILATERAL TRIANGLE. BY JUNE 28, HOWEVER, SMALL PROPER MOTIONS OF THE SPOTS HAVE CHANGED THE APPEARANCE OF THE GROUP. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 9202 19200622 19200627 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 9201, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 26. 9203 19200623 19200628 A STREAM PASSING RAPIDLY THROUGH ITS PHASES OF DEVELOPMENT. 9204 19200625 19200708 RETURN OF GROUP 9189; THIRD APPARITION. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY COMPANIONS ON JULY 2 AND 7. 9205 19200628 19200630 TWO FAINT SPOTS ON JUNE 28 P GROUP 9201; NONE ON JUNE 29; A VERY SMALL ONE ON JUNE 30. 9206 19200628 19200630 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS IN HIGH LATITUDE. 9207 19200628 19200710 A STREAM OF NORMAL DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER, SHOWING SOME DEPARTURE FROM THE REGULAR TYPE, IS ELONGATED WITH COMPOSITE UMBRA. 9208 19200704 19200715 MORE PROBABLY A REVIVAL THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 9196. A GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE WITH FEW COMPONENTS BUT IN FREQUENT CHANGE. 9209 19200708 19200719 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION. THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED ON JULY 15, BUT OTHER SPOTS ARE FORMING IN ITS PLACE ON JULY 17. 9210 19200709 19200710 A SINGLE SPOT SEEN EACH DAY, PROBABLY CONNECTED WITH EACH OTHER. 9211 19200714 19200721 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 14; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL JULY 19 WHEN ANOTHER PAIR MAKES ITS APPEARANCE. 9212 19200715 19200720 A SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FROM JULY 18-20. 9213 19200717 19200729 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRAE FROM JULY 20-26. A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS USUALLY APPEAR WITH IT. 9214 19200722 19200728 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY JULY 26. A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT APPEARS IN THE REGION ON JULY 28. 9215 19200723 19200803 RETURN OF GROUP 9204; FOURTH APPARITION. A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER JULY 31. ON AUG. 3, ANOTHER SMALL REGULAR SPOT HAS APPEARED PRECEDING IT IN LONGITUDE. 9216 19200725 19200805 RETURN OF GROUP 9207. A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER AUG. 4. 9217 19200727 19200730 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, THE FOLLOWING ONE ALONE REMAINING ON JULY 30. 9218 19200801 19200803 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9219 19200806 19200807 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9220 19200806 19200808 A PAIR OF SPOTS 4 APART IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER IS ALONE LEFT ON AUG. 7 AND 8. 9221 19200809 19200817 TWO SPOTS, THE LARGER ONE FOLLOWING AND BREAKING UP INTO A SMALL CLUSTER ON AUG. 14. THE GROUP THEN APPEARS AS A SHORT STREAM OF WHICH TWO SPOTS REMAIN ON AUG. 17. 9222 19200812 19200823 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL VARIABLE COMPONENTS WHICH ARE NEVER VERY CONSPICUOUS. 9223 19200812 19200814 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON AUG. 13. 9224 19200812 19200815 A SINGLE SPOT DEVELOPING INTO A VERY SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 9225 19200813 19200822 RETURN OF GROUP 9213. A VERY SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DIMINISHING TO A MERE DOT NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9226 19200822 19200830 INTERMITTENT. A SPOT DIVIDING BY AUG. 24 INTO TWO PORTIONS WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 28. A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT APPEARS ON AUG. 30. 9227 19200829 19200909 FOUR SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 29 DEVELOPING RAPIDLY INTO A VERY LARGE IRREGULAR STREAM. THE LEADER IS FOR A SHORT TIME ONE OF REGULAR TYPE, BUT BY SEPT. 1 IT IS SHOWING A COMPOSITE UMBRA AND BY THE FOLLOWING DAY A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT HAS FORMED. THIS DIVIDES COMPLETELY INTO TWO PARTS WHICH SEPARATE CONSIDERABLY IN LONGITUDE. THE REAR OF THE STREAM IS AT FIRST REPRESENTED BY A SMALL CLUSTER WHICH BECOMES A LARGE AND VERY COMPOSITE SPOT. THE REMAINING SPOTS OF THE GROUP ARE SMALL AND UNSTABLE. 9228 19200830 19200831 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9229 19200901 19200902 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9230 19200904 19200907 A SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT WITH A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. 9231 19200908 19200915 A LONG SPARSE STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. THE WHOLE GROUP DISAPPEARS SOMEWHAT SUDDENLY BETWEEN SEPT. 15 AND 16. 9232 19200912 19200917 A SMALL CLUSTER OF FAINT SPOTS DEVELOPING RAPIDLY INTO A LARGE STREAM CONTAINING TWO CHIEF COMPONENTS AND TWO CLUSTERS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9233 19200921 19201001 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 9234 19200922 19200927 INTERMITTENT. TWO SMALL SPOTS, BOTH DISAPPEARING BY SEPT. 25. A VERY SMALL SPOT APPEARS TEMPORARILY ON SEPT. 27. 9235 19200922 19201004 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES ELONGATED. AFTER SEPT. 25 IT DIVIDES INTO TWO PORTIONS WHICH PERSIST TO THE WEST LIMB AS A PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS. SEVERAL CLUSTERS OF SMALL COMPANIONS ACCOMPANY THE MAIN SPOT, AND INDICATE A DISTURBED AREA OF CONSIDERABLE EXTENT SHOWN ALSO BY CONSPICUOUS FACULAE. 9236 19200924 19201005 RETURN OF GROUP 9227. PART OF THE SAME GENERAL DISTURBANCE WITH GROUP 9235. A SMALL BUT WELL-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS, AFTER SEPT. 26, AND ONE OR TWO MORE DISTANT COMPANIONS ON OCT. 3 AND 4. 9237 19200925 19200930 A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, WHOSE LEADING COMPONENT INCREASES CONSIDERABLY TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 9238 19200927 19200928 A FEW MINUTE SPOTS BETWEEN GROUPS 9233 AND 9235. 9239 19200927 19201005 A SMALL STREAM OF SPOTS ON SEPT. 27 DEVELOPING INTO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE BY SEPT. 30. THE REAR PORTION THEN DISAPPEARS RAPIDLY, LEAVING THE LEADER AS A REGULAR SPOT. 9240 19200927 19200928 A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9241 19201001 19201010 RETURN OF GROUP 9232. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 9. 9242 19201002 19201006 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARRANGED IN A STREAM. 9243 19201004 19201016 A PAIR OF SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB WHICH AT FIRST GROW RAPIDLY. THE REAR SPOT BREAKS INTO TWO PORTIONS ON OCT. 9, ONE OF WHICH REMAINS WITH THE LEADER AS A TINY COMPANION. FROM OCT. 7 TO 10, THERE ARE ONE OR TWO SMALL ATTENDANTS. 9244 19201007 19201013 A SMALL STREAM N GROUP 9243. 9245 19201007 19201017 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT PRECEDED BY A CLUSTER OF UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. 9246 19201007 19201017 A GROUP CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 9245 AND EVIDENTLY CONNECTED WITH IT. A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9247 19201010 19201017 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 10 DEVELOPING WITH GREAT RAPIDITY INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE REAR COMPONENT IS NEVER PROMINENT AND SOON DISAPPEARS. 9248 19201014 19201022 A SMALL SPOT SEEN ON OCT. 14 DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH BRIEF MAXIMUM. NONE OF THE SPOTS ARE WELL-FORMED. 9249 19201015 19201022 RETURN OF GROUP 9237. A SMALL DECREASING REGULAR SPOT. SOME VERY SMALL FAINT COMPANIONS APPEAR TO THE S ON OCT. 19. 9250 19201018 19201022 A SMALL STREAM IMMEDIATELY F GROUP 9248. 9251 19201018 19201030 A LONG STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS LED BY ONE OF REGULAR TYPE AFTER OCT. 24. THE TRAIN HAS DIED OUT BY OCT. 28 LEAVING THE REGULAR SPOT. 9252 19201021 19201022 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE WITH GROUP 9253. 9253 19201021 19201030 RETURN OF GROUP 9236. A SPOT ROUGHLY OF REGULAR TYPE, PRECEDING WHICH A BROAD STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS DEVELOPS. THE GROUP DIMINISHES WITHIN A FEW DAYS, THE NUCLEUS OF THE REGULAR SPOT BEING LAST SEEN WITH A NEAR CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9254 19201022 19201028 A PAIR OF SMALL CLUSTERS. THE FOLLOWING ONE IS ALONE REPRESENTED BY A SMALL COMPONENT ON OCT. 27, BUT A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN THE NEXT DAY IN THE POSITION OF THE LEADING CLUSTER. 9255 19201026 19201031 A GROUP LINKING UP THE DISTURBANCES OF GROUPS 9253 AND 9254. A PAIR OF SPOT CENTRES AT WHICH A REGULAR SPOT AND A SMALL COMPOSITE FOLLOWER RESPECTIVELY APPEAR. 9256 19201026 19201028 AN EXTENDED CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. ONE COMPONENT ALONE REMAINS ON OCT. 28. 9257 19201030 19201109 A VERY SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY UNSTABLE COMPANIONS WHICH TOGETHER MAKE UP A STREAM. 9258 19201031 19201111 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WHICH DEVELOPS RAPIDLY. THE LEADER IS VERY LARGE AND SHOWS SEVERAL BRIGHT FILAMENTS ACROSS THE UMBRA. THE FOLLOWER IS A LARGE COMPACT CLUSTER OF SPOTS RATHER THAN A SINGLE COMPOSITE COMPONENT. A SMALL UNSTABLE CLUSTER IS SITUATED BETWEEN IT AND THE LEADER. 9259 19201101 19201102 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9260 19201102 19201103 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT SEEN EACH DAY NP GROUP 9257. 9261 19201106 19201110 A SMALL STREAM ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 9258 BUT N OF THE EQUATOR. 9262 19201112 19201115 A SMALL SPOT INCREASING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB WITH SMALL FOLLOWERS AND A COMPANION PRECEDING IT ON NOV. 14. 9263 19201114 19201127 RETURN OF GROUP 9251. A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING, WITH VERY SMALL ATTENDANTS ON NOV. 20 AND 23. 9264 19201116 19201117 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 16; A PAIR ON NOV. 17. 9265 19201120 19201121 ONE SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 20; A PAIR ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9266 19201122 19201202 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH REMAINS ALONE AFTER NOV. 29. 9267 19201123 19201130 A REGULAR SPOT WITH SOME SMALL ATTENDANTS. 9268 19201124 19201126 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 9269 19201124 19201125 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NP GROUP 9267 IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE. 9270 19201126 19201208 RETURN OF GROUP 9258. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WHICH TENDS TOWARDS COMPOSITE FORMATION AFTER NOV. 29. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS USUALLY APPEAR WITH IT. A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE FOLLOWS. 9271 19201129 19201203 INTERMITTENT. THREE SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS ON NOV. 29 AND TWO ON DEC. 3. 9272 19201202 19201205 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 9273 19201207 19201218 INTERMITTENT. A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING ONE HAS DISAPPEARED AFTER DEC. 13. A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS ARE SEEN ON AND AFTER DEC. 10. THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 16, BUT A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARS TEMPORARILY ON DEC. 18. 9274 19201212 19201216 A SMALL AND QUICKLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION AFTER DEC 13. 9275 19201217 19201226 TWO REGULAR SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER BREAKS UP ON DEC. 20 INTO A SMALL CLUSTER AND SO DIES OUT, WHILST ITS COMPANION PERSISTS AS A VERY SMALL SPOT. 9276 19201218 19201223 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 18 DEVELOPING INTO TWO WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOTS WITH A SMALL CLUSTER BETWEEN THEM. THE FOLLOWER IS, AS USUAL, THE FIRST TO BREAK UP AND DISAPPEAR. 9277 19201218 19201228 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS (NOT SEEN ON DEC. 20) DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL STREAM OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 9278 19201220 19210101 A LARGE SPOT APPARENTLY BREAKING UP ON DEC. 24, BUT ASSUMING WITHIN A FEW DAYS THE STABLE APPEARANCE OF A REGULAR SPOT. 9278 19201220 19210101 A LARGE SPOT APPARENTLY BREAKING UP ON DEC. 24, BUT ASSUMING WITHIN A FEW DAYS THE STABLE APPEARANCE OF A REGULAR SPOT. 9279 19201224 19201228 A SMALL SPOT P GROUP 9280 IN THE SAME GENERAL DISTURBED AREA. 9280 19201224 19210105 A STREAM DEVELOPING SOMEWHAT IRREGULARITY INTO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE BY DEC. 28. THE LEADER, HOWEVER, IS UNSTABLE AND DIVIDES INTO TWO PORTIONS AFTER DEC. 31, WHILST THE REMNANT OF THE GROUP IS FAST DISAPPEARING. 9280 19201224 19210105 A STREAM DEVELOPING SOMEWHAT IRREGULARLY INTO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE BY DEC. 28. THE LEADER, HOWEVER, IS UNSTABLE AND DIVIDES INTO TWO PORTIONS AFTER DEC. 31, WHILST THE REMNANT OF THE GROUP IS FAST DISAPPEARING. 9281 19201225 19210121 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF GENERALLY UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 9281 19201225 19210101 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF GENERALLY UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 9282 19201221 19210110 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A LONG TRAIN OF NUMEROUS COMPONENTS WHICH HAVE DIED OUT BY JAN. 9. 9282 19201231 19210110 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A LONG TRAIN OF NUMEROUS COMPONENTS WHICH HAVE DIED OUT BY JAN. 9. 9283 19210108 19210120 AN ACTIVE STREAM WHICH CONTAINS THREE WELL-DEFINED COMPONENTS BY JAN. 11, TWO OF THEM BEING LEADERS OF THE GROUP. BY JAN. 13, THE FOLLOWER HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS, AND SMALL COMPANION SPOTS HAVE INCREASED WHICH GIVE A COMPLEX APPEARANCE TO THE STREAM AS IT PASSES THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE TRAIN THEN DIES AWAY RATHER RAPIDLY LEAVING THE ORIGINAL LEADER BY ITSELF ON JAN. 19. 9284 19210110 19210116 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS SEEN ON JAN. 10. 9285 19210111 19210116 A SMALL STREAM. 9286 19210112 19210124 AT FIRST A SMALL STREAM LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. BETWEEN JANUARY 16 AND 17, A MODERATELY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT SUDDENLY APPEARS IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM WHOSE OTHER COMPONENTS DISAPPEAR WITHIN A FEW DAYS. 9287 19210116 19210124 A DISTURBED AREA OF SOME EXTENT SHOWING FEEBLE BUT SUSTAINED ACTIVITY. 9288 19210119 19210125 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT IN THE PRECEDING PORTION OF EXTENSIVE FACULAE IN WHICH GROUPS 9289 AND 9290 ARE SITUATED. A PAIR OF FAINT MARKINGS FOLLOWS ON JAN. 24 AND 25. 9289 19210120 19210131 A SMALL BUT LONG-LIVED SPOT F GROUP 9288. A SMALL COMPANION FOLLOWS ON JANUARY 20. 9290 19210120 19210126 RETURN OF GROUP 9280. A SMALL SPOT, WITH TWO OR THREE COMPANION ON JAN. 20, 21, AND 22, F GROUP 9289. 9291 19210124 19210202 INTERMITTENT. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON JAN. 27-28. NOTHING IS SEEN AFTER JAN. 28 UNTIL FEB. 2, WHEN A MINUTE SPOT MAKES ITS APPEARANCE. 9292 19210128 19210201 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 9289, NOT SEEN ON JAN. 30-31. 9293 19210128 19210129 THREE FAINT SPOTS IN FACULAE ON JAN. 28, ONE ALONE IS VISIBLE THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9294 19210130 19210212 RETURN OF GROUP 9284. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLIGHTLY DIMINISHING WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL FEB. 6. 9295 19210131 19210207 A SMALL STREAM SEEN TO DEVELOP AND DIE OUT SP GROUP 9294 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 9296 19210201 19210204 A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT WITH TWO CLOSE COMPANIONS ON FEB. 3. 9297 19210205 19210215 RETURN OF GROUP 9283. A SMALL STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. EXCEPTING THIS SPOT, THE COMPONENTS ARE VERY SMALL AND FAINT AND HAVE DIED OUT COMPLETELY BY FEB. 14. 9298 19210207 19210208 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT SEEN ON EACH DAY SP GROUP 9297. 9299 19210208 19210211 A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9300 19210210 19210213 TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON FEB. 11. 9301 19210211 19210212 A SINGLE SPOT SEEN EACH DAY, NOT IDENTICAL WITH EACH OTHER BUT IN THE SAME SMALL DISTURBED AREA. 9302 19210212 19210218 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS AFTER FEB. 14. 9303 19210212 19210224 AT FIRST A SMALL SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON FEB. 16 AND 17. ON FEB. 18 A LARGE STREAM IS QUICKLY DEVELOPING. THE SPOTS COMPOSING IT ARE IN CONTINUAL CHANGE, THOUGH THE LEADER BECOMES APPARENTLY STABLE BY FEB. 22. 9304 19210222 19210226 A SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. 9305 19210227 19210304 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 9301. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS PRECEDING IT. 9306 19210227 19210301 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FAST DISAPPEARING. A COMPANION CLOSELY FOLLOWS IT ON FEB. 28. 9307 19210303 19210305 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT ON MAR. 3. ANOTHER HAS APPEARED NEAR ITS POSITION ON MAR. 5. 9308 19210308 19210317 A STREAM OF SPOTS SEEN TO DEVELOP FROM TWO SMALL COMPONENTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON MAR. 8. THE TRAIN IS NEVER PROMINENT AND THE LEADER, THOUGH TENDING FOR A FEW DAYS TO THE "REGULAR" TYPE, IS UNSTABLE. 9309 19210310 19210312 A FEW MINUTE SPOTS. 9310 19210310 19210318 RETURN OF GROUP 9303. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY EXTENSIVE FACULAE. ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR AFTER MAR. 12. 9311 19210312 19210321 A REGULAR SPOT WITH TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWERS AFTER MAR. 14. 9312 19210313 19210318 SOME VERY SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOTS P GROUP 9310. 9313 19210317 19210320 A SMALL STREAM APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB BUT APPARENTLY OF BRIEF ACTIVITY. 9314 19210321 19210323 A REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 9315 19210321 19210402 A LONG STREAM, ABOUT 15 IN LENGTH, OF NORMAL TYPE BUT IN WHICH THE TRAIN IS OF MINOR IMPORTANCE AND ONLY VISIBLE AFTER MAR. 27 AS A FAINT CLUSTER. THE LEADER OF THE STREAM IS A LARGE WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT. 9316 19210324 19210404 A STREAM SHOWING THE USUAL DEVELOPMENT BUT WITH A RAPID DECREASE IN THE FOLLOWING COMPONENTS. A MINUTE SPOT ON APR. 2 TEMPORARILY MARKS THE POSITION OF THE REAR COMPONENT. 9317 19210327 19210330 A VERY SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SPOTS. 9318 19210329 19210331 A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9319 19210330 19210401 A SMALL SPOT. 9320 19210401 19210403 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 9321 19210403 19210405 ONE OR TWO VERY FAINT SPOTS. 9322 19210403 19210408 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER FORMING FROM A TINY SPOT ON APR. 3. 9323 19210405 19210416 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 9313. A REGULAR SPOT SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB PRECEDED BY A COMPANION. THE FORMER BECOMES COMPOSITE AND BREAKS UP WITHIN A FEW DAYS INTO A CLUSTER. THE COMPANION GROWS AND SHOWS THE SAME INSTABILITY. BY APR. 14 THREE SMALL SPOTS REPRESENT THE EXTENT OF THE DISTURBANCES, AND OF THESE THE PRECEDING ONE ALONE REMAINS BY THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9324 19210410 19210421 A SPOT FOLLOWED BY BRIGHT FACULAE, WHICH, WHEN SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB IS NEARLY OF REGULAR TYPE, BUT IN A FEW DAYS BECOMING ELONGATED AND DIMINISHING AT THE SAME TIME. THERE ARE A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANION SPOTS UNTIL APR. 20. 9325 19210412 19210416 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL VERY FAINT EPHEMERAL SPOT ON APR. 12; A TINY CLUSTER ON APR. 15, AND THREE SCATTERED SPOTS IN FACULAE ON APR. 16. 9326 19210416 19210420 NOT A PARTICULARLY LARGE BUT A VERY ACTIVE STREAM OF SPOTS APPEARING WITHIN 24 HOURS. 9327 19210416 19210417 A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9328 19210416 19210428 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 9319. A STREAM OF FEW SPOTS WITH A PROMINENT REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. A REVIVAL OF ACTIVITY IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP TAKES PLACE AFTER APR. 24. 9329 19210417 19210429 RETURN OF GROUP 9315. A WELL-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS FOLLOWING IT. 9330 19210419 19210426 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL STREAM DISAPPEARING ON APR. 23. ON APR. 25 A SMALL CLUSTER HAS FORMED IN THE POSITION OF THE PRECEDING PORTION OF THE ORIGINAL GROUP. 9331 19210427 19210428 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9332 19210519 19210502 A MINUTE SPOT ON MAY 1; A PAIR ON MAY 2. 9333 19210502 19210504 A REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY TWO COMPANIONS DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9334 19210508 19210521 A FIRST AN EXTREMELY LARGE AND COMPOSITE SPOT 11 1/I IN LENGTH WITH SEVERAL UMBRAE. BY MAY 12, IT IS DIVIDING INTO TWO LARGE COMPONENTS WITH A SMALL CLUSTER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE LEADING COMPONENT IS DUPLEX AND APPARENTLY TENDS TO BREAK INTO TWO PORTIONS; THE FOLLOWER IS MORE STABLE AND TENDS TO THE REGULAR TYPE. A COMPARISON OF THE GROUP WHEN NEAR THE EAST AND WEST LIMBS OF THE SUN SHOWS THE SURROUNDING FACULAE TO BE INCREASING CONSIDERABLY BOTH IN EXTENT, NORTH AND SOUTHWARDS, AND IN BRIGHTNESS. THIS IS THE LARGEST GROUP AS YET PHOTOGRAPHED AT GREENWICH ON THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 9335 19210509 19210513 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT ON MAY 9; A CLOSE PAIR ON MAY 13. 9336 19210513 19210514 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 13, ONE OF WHICH REMAINS ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9337 19210518 19210519 A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS ON MAY 18; ONE ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9338 19210518 19210519 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9339 19210518 19210528 RETURN OF GROUP 9333. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DYING OUT. A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS APPEAR OCCASIONALLY IN THE FACULAE WHICH FOLLOW. 9340 19210521 19210522 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 21; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9341 19210527 19210530 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9342 19210527 19210603 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING TEMPORARILY ON MAY 31. ON JUNE 3, THREE TINY COMPANIONS ARE ALSO SEEN. 9343 19210531 19210602 A SMALL GROUP APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9344 19210601 19210610 A STREAM OF SMALL AND UNSTABLE COMPONENTS GROUPED ABOUT TWO CENTRES. 9345 19210604 19210615 RETURN OF GROUP 9334. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. GROUP 9346 DEVELOPS LATER JUST NORTHWARDS. 9346 19210605 19210615 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS ON JUNE 5 AND 6, N GROUP 9345. ON JUNE 8 THESE COMMENCE TO MULTIPLY AND INCREASE IN SIZE. THE GROUP IS UNSTABLE, HOWEVER, AND SHRINKS TO A SMALL CLUSTER BY JUNE 14. 9347 19210607 19210609 A SMALL SPOT INCREASING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9348 19210608 19210611 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP OF FEW SPOTS. 9349 19210608 19210609 A DIMINUTIVE SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 9350 19210611 19210612 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9351 19210611 19210614 A VERY SMALL STREAM OF SPOTS. 9352 19210613 19210614 A WIDELY SEPARATED PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9353 19210616 19210628 RETURN OF GROUP 9343. A REGULAR SPOT. 9354 19210623 19210627 A SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT WITH AN EPHEMERAL FOLLOWER ON JUNE 24. 9355 19210624 19210704 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT, DIVIDING COMPLETELY ON JULY 1. THE PRECEDING PORTION LASTS FOR A FEW DAYS. 9356 19210625 19210706 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A SMALL SPOT SEEN IN FACULAE NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON JUNE 25. THE LEADER IS NEVER QUITE OF REGULAR FORMATION AND APPEARS AT TIMES ELONGATED WITH A SMALL SUBSIDIARY UMBRA. 9357 19210626 19210705 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9344. A SHORT LIVED BUT FAIRLY CONSPICUOUS STREAM OF SPOTS IN WHICH BOTH THE PRECEDING AND FOLLOWING COMPONENTS ARE DOUBLE SPOTS FOR SEVERAL DAYS. GROUP 9355 CLOSELY PRECEDES THIS GROUP. 9358 19210630 19210703 A SMALL GROUP OF "STREAM" FORMATION OF WHICH THE LEADING COMPONENT ALONE REMAINS ON JULY 3. 9359 19210630 19210704 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 9346. A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT JUST DISAPPEARING. 9360 19210630 19210712 RETURN OF GROUP 9345; THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT (THE ACTUAL RETURN OF THE REGULAR SPOT OF GROUP 9345) NORTH-PRECEDES BY A LARGER SPOT OF THE SAME TYPE. THESE MIGHT HAVE BEEN TAKEN AS TWO SEPARATE DISTURBANCES, BUT WITHIN A FEW DAYS OTHER SPOTS MAKE THEIR APPEARANCE AND CONSTITUTE A DUPLEX STREAM WHICH APPARENTLY IS AN ENTITY. 9361 19210701 19210713 A LARGE SPOT WITH TWO UMBRAE WHICH BECOME THE CENTRES OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS WHICH THEN SEPARATE COMPLETELY AND MOVE APART IN LATITUDE. MEANWHILE AN ELONGATED PORTION OF THE ORIGINAL SPOT ALSO SEPARATES AND DIES OUT AS A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS. 9362 19210702 19210704 TWO OR THREE EXTREMELY SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 9359. 9363 19210703 19210706 A SMALL STREAM SITUATED BETWEEN GROUPS 9360 AND 9361. ONLY THE PRECEDING COMPONENT IS REPRESENTED ON JULY 6. 9364 19210703 19210710 TWO VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS IN THE FACULAE FOLLOWING GROUP 9361. ON JULY 5 A SMALL CLUSTER AND ONE OR TWO SINGLE SPOTS APPEAR ON SUCCESSIVE DAYS. 9365 19210704 19210705 TWO OR THREE SPOTLETS NP GROUP 9360. 9366 19210705 19210709 INTERMITTENT. A DIMINUTIVE CLUSTER ON JULY 5; A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT ON JULY 6, AND A SINGLE ONE ON JULY 9. 9367 19210705 19210708 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT SEEN ON EACH DAY EXCEPT JULY 7. 9368 19210708 19210714 A SMALL GROUP OF THE STREAM TYPE. GROUP 9370 DEVELOPS JUST NORTHWARDS. 9369 19210708 19210715 A STREAM WITH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT OF REGULAR TYPE AND THE FORE PORTION DISAPPEARING FIRST. 9370 19210712 19210714 A SMALL GROUP OF THE STREAM TYPE APPEARING N OF GROUP 9368. 9371 19210711 19210721 AN ISOLATED DISTURBANCE, THE WHOLE DEVELOPMENT OF WHICH IS SEEN. A RING OF FACULAE CONTAINING THREE SPOTS WHICH BECOME A STREAM. THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT IS THE LARGEST, BUT IT IS ULTIMATELY SHORTER LIVED THAN THE LEADER WHICH SURVIVES ON JULY 19, AS A SMALL AND RAPIDLY DYING SPOT. 9372 19210719 19210721 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9373 19210721 19210724 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON JULY 22 AND 23. 9374 19210724 19210726 A SMALL STREAM OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 9375 19210725 19210730 A SMALL STREAM. 9376 19210725 19210805 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB WHICH ARE THE NUCLEI OF A "STREAM." THE LEADING SPOT BECOMES LARGE AND IS OF REGULAR TYPE UNTIL JULY 29, AFTER WHICH IT BECOMES VERY ELONGATED AND IS BREAKING UP ON AUG. 1. MEANWHILE THE FOLLOWING SPOT HAS BECOME A CLUSTER AND WITH OTHER SMALL SPOTS WHICH DEVELOP, IT BECOMES THE "TRAIN" TO THE LEADER. 9377 19210811 19210818 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER LAST REPRESENTED BY A TINY SPOT ON AUG. 15. 9378 19210813 19210814 A SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT. 9379 19210816 19210825 A SPOT DEVELOPING A DOUBLE UMBRA AND TENDING TO DIVIDE INTO TWO PARTS. PARTIAL SEPARATION TAKES PLACE ON AUG. 23, AFTER WHICH THE COMPONENTS SOON DISAPPEAR. 9380 19210818 19210822 A STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING QUICKLY. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE ONLY IMPORTANT MEMBER. 9381 19210821 19210826 ONE OR TWO SMALL INDEFINITE SPOTS. NOTHING IS SEEN ON AUG. 25. 9382 19210822 19210902 TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS IN STREAM FORMATION DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM TWO SMALL NUCLEI NEAR THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER BECOMES OF REGULAR TYPE BY AUG. 29, AND THEN DISAPPEARS IN A FEW DAYS AFTER DIVIDING INTO TWO PARTS. THE OTHER SPOT SPLITS INTO TWO IRREGULAR PORTIONS ON AUG. 28, WHICH DIMINISH RAPIDLY. 9383 19210823 19210825 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL ILL-FORMED SPOTS. 9384 19210823 19210829 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT ON AUG 23. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL AUG. 26 WHEN A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE BEGINS TO DEVELOP. 9385 19210831 19210903 A VERY SMALL STREAM. 9386 19210903 19210904 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9387 19210907 19210915 A MINUTE SPOT DISCERNIBLE 1 1/2 HRS. LATER ON THE CAPE PHOTOGRAPHS. NOTHING IS THEN VISIBLE UNTIL SEPT. 10, WHEN A STREAM MAKES ITS APPEARANCE AND QUICKLY PASSES THROUGH ITS PHASES. 9388 19210912 19210925 RETURN OF GROUP 9384. A VERY LARGE AND STABLE REGULAR SPOT USUALLY WITH A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. 9389 19210915 19210924 A SMALL SPOT AND A CLUSTER WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. AFTER SEPT. 20 THE SPOT DIES OUT AND THE CLUSTER IS REPRESENTED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AND TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. 9390 19210918 19210919 A SMALL SHORT LIVED STREAM. 9391 19210924 19210930 A STREAM OF SPOTS COMPOSED, WHEN FULLY FORMED ON SEPT. 28, OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS FOLLOWED BY ONE COMPOSITE SPOT. 9392 19211008 19211015 A SMALL STREAM OF FEEBLY SUSTAINED ACTIVITY, NOT VISIBLE ON OCT 10. 9393 19211010 19211019 RETURN OF GROUP 9388, THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL REGULARSPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT BEFORE DYING OUT COMPLETELY. A MINUTE CLUSTER OF SPOTS APPEARS NEAR ITS POSITION ON OCT 16. 9394 19211011 19211013 TWO OR THREE MINUTE SPOTS. 9395 19211014 19211025 RETURN OF GROUP 9391. A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER OCT. 22. 9396 19211020 19211028 ONE VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT ON OCT. 20, APPEARING IN A SMALL AREA OF FACULAE PREVIOUSLY SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB. ON OCT. 23 A SMALL CLUSTER MAKES ITS APPEARANCE WHICH EVOLVES WITHIN TWO DAYS INTO A STREAM DIFFERING IN DETAIL FROM ONE OF THE NORMAL TYPE BUT OF THE SAME GENERAL DEVELOPMENT. 9397 19211022 19211102 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE ABOUT 10 IN LENGTH WHEN FULLY DEVELOPED. ITS GROWTH IS RAPID FROM A SMALL SPOT SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON OCT. 22, AND ITS DECLINE IS RELATIVELY OF SHORT DURATION FOR SO LARGE A GROUP. THE LEADER SPOT, HOWEVER, PASSES OVER THE WEST LIMB AND IS SEEN AGAIN AS GROUP 9400. 9398 19211027 19211029 A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 27; A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS. 9399 19211112 19211124 RETURN OF GROUP 9396. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT USUALLY ACCOMPANIED BY A FEW VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 9400 19211117 19211129 RETURN OF GROUP 9397. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING TO A VERY SMALL DARK NUCLEUS ON NOV. 29, WHEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 9401 19211119 19211130 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH AN UNSTABLE CLUSTER 10 FOLLOWING IN LONGITUDE. ANOTHER SMALL CLUSTER APPEARS FOR TWO DAYS ON NOV. 23 AND 24, CLOSELY FOLLOWING THE REGULAR SPOT. 9402 19211201 19211203 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 9403 19211202 19211203 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 2; TWO ON DEC. 3. 9404 19211209 19211221 RETURN OF GROUP 9399; THIRD APPARITION. AN ACTIVE GROUP. TWO SMALL REGULAR SPOTS SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB SEPARATED BY 4 1/2 IN LATITUDE, BUT IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE. WITHIN A FEW DAYS A COMPOSITE SPOT BEGINS TO DEVELOP, AND BY DEC. 15 THE GROUP IS A LARGE CONDENSED CLUSTER OF IRREGULAR SPOTS. THE GROUP IS VERY UNSTABLE AND IS FAST DISAPPEARING AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 9405 19211211 19211214 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9406 19211212 19211220 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING GROUP 9404. 9407 19211215 19211227 RETURN OF GROUP 9401. A LARGE SPOT WITH DOUBLE AND LATER WITH TRIPLE UMBRA. ON DEC. 22 THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF THE SPOT SEPARATES FROM THE MAIN PART. A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ARE USUALLY VISIBLE. 9408 19211217 19211224 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 9409 19211226 19211227 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 26; A SINGLE SPOT ON DEC. 27. 9410 19211227 19211229 A SMALL STREAM. 9411 19211228 19220108 INTERMITTENT. A SINGLE SPOT DISAPPEARING BY DEC. 31. ON JAN. 3, A STREAM OF A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS HAS APPEARED IN ITS PLACE. 9411 19211228 19220108 INTERMITTENT. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT DISAPPEARING BY DEC.31. ON JAN.3,A STREAM OF A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEARS IN ITS PLACE. 9412 19220105 19220115 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN STREAM FORMATION WHICH CHANGE FREQUENTLY. NOTHING IS SEEN ON JAN. 13. 9413 19220107 19220110 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS SEEN ON JAN. 7 AND 9; TWO TINY CLUSTERS ON JAN. 10. 9414 19220108 19220112 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 9408. A SMALL SPOT FADING OUT IN A FEW DAYS. 9415 19220111 19220123 RETURN OF GROUP 9407; THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 9416 19220201 19220204 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ARRANGED IN A STREAM. 9417 19220205 19220206 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 5,IN A SMALL AREA OF FACULAE; TWO ON FEB.6. 9418 19220206 19220209 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON FEB.8. 9419 19220206 19220207 A SMALL BUT VERY DISTINCT SPOT. 9420 19220206 19220214 AN IRREGULAR STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A MINUTE SPOT ON FEB.6. BY FEB.12,THE STREAM HAS SIMPLIFIED TO TWO LARGE AND NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS,WHICH APPARENTLY ARE STILL INCREASING AS THEY PASS ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 9421 19220207 19220219 RETURN OF GROUP 9415 FOURTH APPARITION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DIMINISHING. GROUP 9422 DEVELOPS IMMEDIATELY SOUTHWARDS IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE. 9422 19220210 19220219 A GROUP SHOWING THE CONTINUED ACTIVITY IN THE PLACE OCCUPIED BY GROUP 9421 AND ITS PREVIOUS APPEARANCES SINCE 1921,NOV.19. A FEW SMALL SPOTS SEEN ON FEB. 10 GROWING RAPIDLY TO A VERY LARGE SPOT WITH A COMPOSITE AND SMALLER FOLLOWER. AFTER RISING TO A MAXIMUM ON FEB. 13, THE GROUP RAPIDLY DECLINES. THE AMOUNT OF THE SURROUNDING FACULAE IS RELATIVELY SMALL FOR SO LARGE AND ACTIVE A GROUP OF SPOTS. 9423 19220218 19220303 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 9424 19220224 19220307 TWO OR THREE SPOTS SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB WHICH BECOME A STREAM OF INCREASING IMPORTANCE. BY MAR.2,THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER,A CLUSTER,AND A LARGE SPOT IN CLOSE JUXTAPOSITION TO THE LEADER OF GROUP 9426,WITH WHICH IT COALESCES ON MARCH 4. ON THIS DATE, THE TWO GROUPS MIGHT HAVE BEEN CONSIDERED AS ONE VERY EXTENDED DISTURBANCE, AND THE DIVISION OF THE COMPOUND SPOT IS SOMEWHAT ARBITRARY,BUT THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO GROUPS AND THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE SURROUNDING FACULAE INDICATE TWO DISTINCT CENTRES OF ACTIVITY. 9425 19220224 19220302 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT,JUST NORTH OF GROUP 9424,DIVIDING INTO TWO PORTIONS ON FEB.28 WHICH QUICKLY DISAPPEAR. 9426 19220225 19220309 A VERY LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING FROM TWO SMALL SPOTS IN A SMALL AREA OF FACULAE SEEN CLOSE TO THE EAST LIMB ON FEB.25. ON FEB.28 AND MARCH 1,IT APPEARS AS A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE,BUT RAPID CHANGES IN THE COMPONENT SPOTS AND ITS PROXIMITY TO GROUP 9424 GIVE IT A MORE COMPOSITE CHARACTER AT ITS FULLEST DEVELOPMENT ABOUT MARCH 3. THE SURROUNDING FACULAE IS NOT EXTENSIVE FOR SO LARGE AND ACTIVE A GROUP OF SPOTS. 9427 19220226 19220304 A SMALL GROUP OF THE STREAM TYPE. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 3,BUT A FAINT SPOT,WHICH MARKS THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT,APPEARS LAST ON MARCH 4. 9428 19220227 19220301 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON FEB.27; A PAIR ON THE FOLLOWING TWO DAYS. 9429 19220301 19220312 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT PRECEDED BY A COMPANION WHICH BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER ON MARCH 4. THE CHIEF UMBRA IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE COMPOSITE SPOT BECOMES THE NUCLEUS OF A SMALL REGULAR SPOT,WHICH REMAINS WHILE THE REMAINDER OF THE PARENT SPOT DISAPPEARS RAPIDLY AS A CLUSTER. THIS GROUP IS CLOSELY ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 9430. 9430 19220301 19220313 RETURN OF GROUP 9420. A LARGE SPOT OF NEARLY REGULAR FORMATION,JUST NORHT OF GROUP 9429 WITH WHICH IT IS EVIDENTLY CONNECTED. 9431 19220304 19220310 AN EXTENDED AREA OF DISTURBANCE F GROUPS 9429 AND 9430, SHOWN BY FACULAE AT THE SUN'S LIMB AND LATER BY SMALL EVANESCENT CLUSTERS OF SPOTS. 9432 19220306 19220317 REVIVAL OR RETURN OF GROUP 9422. A LARGE COMPLEX SPOT BECOMING A CLUSTER OF NUMEROUS INDEFINITE COMPONENTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE AND SHRINKING RAPIDLY AFTER MARCH 13. 9433 19220308 19220310 TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 9. 9434 19220309 19220318 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A SMALL CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS ON MARCH 9. THE FORMATION OF THE REGULAR SPOT IS FROM A LARGER COMPOUND SPOT, WHICH DEVELOPS FROM THE SMALL CLUSTER WITHIN 24 HOURS. 9435 19220311 19220314 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL COMPONENTS. 9436 19220312 19220315 SMALL UNSTABLE MARKINGS F GROUP 9432. 9437 19220318 19220320 A STREAM IN MINIATURE. 9438 19220321 19220325 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 24. 9439 19220323 19220403 RETURN OF GROUPS 9424 AND 9426. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH SEVERAL SMALLER FOLLOWERS UNTIL MARCH 30. 9440 19220324 19220331 A SMALL STREAM P GROUP 9439. 9441 19220324 19220402 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, GRADUALLY DIMINISHING, WHICH IS PROBABLY THE RETURN OF THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT OF GROUP 9426. 9442 19220327 19220328 A SINGLE MINUTE BUT DISTINCT SPOT. 9443 19220327 19220328 A VERY SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. 9444 19220328 19220408 RETURN OF GROUP 9430. A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 9445 19220329 19220330 A VERY SMALL SPOT NF GROUP 9441. 9446 19220401 19220402 A VERY SMALL SPOT F GROUP 9444. 9447 19220401 19220407 A SPARSE STREAM OF GENERALLY UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 9448 19220410 19220411 TWO VERY SMALL BUT WELL-DEFINED SPOTS. 9449 19220422 19220430 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. THE LEADER HAS DISAPPEARED ON APRIL 26. 9450 19220424 19220501 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH TWO OR THREE COMPANIONS FOLLOWING. 9451 19220430 19220509 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING VERY RAPIDLY FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS SEEN ON APRIL 30. AT FIRST, THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT, BUT IT IS SHORTER-LIVED THAN THE LEADER WHICH PERSISTS TO THE WEST LIMB. 9452 19220524 19220601 RETURN OF GROUP 9451. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT WHILST A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR, MAKING A SMALL CLUSTER ON MAY 31. 9453 19220529 19220530 A FAINT SPOT F GROUP 9452. 9454 19220607 19220615 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL AREA OF DISTURBANCE, SHOWN BY A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS AND ACCOMPANYING FACULAE. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 9 AND 10. 9455 19220609 19220612 A PAIR OF SMALL DOUBLE SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 10. 9456 19220611 19220614 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS IN FACULAE. 9457 19220615 19220617 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL BUT DARK SPOTS. 9458 19220621 19220625 A VERY SMALL STREAM ON JUNE 21 OF WHICH A REPRESENTATIVE SPOT APPEARS ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 9459 19220704 19220709 A SMALL STREAM OF FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 9460 19220705 19220710 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 9461 19220707 19220712 TWO SMALL SPOTS, 6 APART IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON JULY 12. 9462 19220719 19220728 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY IN THE FIRST 24 HOURS OF ITS APPEARANCE. ON JULY 26, THE LEADER SPOT, WHICH IS THE ONLY SIGNIFICANT SURVIVOR OF THE STREAM, DIVIDES INTO TWO UNEQUAL PORTIONS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING ONE RAPIDLY DISAPPEARS. 9463 19220723 19220725 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9464 19220802 19220806 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT AS A DOT. 9465 19220821 19220828 A VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT ON AUGUST 21. TWO PAIRS OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON AUGUST 23. THESE MULTIPLY AND BECOME A STREAM IN WHICH THE CHANGES ARE RAPID AND CONSIDERABLE. 9466 19220827 19220831 A SMALL GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE, CONSISTING GENERALLY OF TWO SPOTS. GROUP 9467 APPEARS NF IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA. 9467 19220830 19220831 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 30; ONE ONLY ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9468 19220830 19220901 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 30; ONE ONLY ON SEPTEMBER 1, NOTHING BEING SEEN ON THE INTERMEDIATE DAY. 9469 19220913 19220924 RETURN OF GROUP 9465. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ON SEPTEMBER 13-15. 9470 19220929 19221005 A SMALL SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 29 AND 30,BECOMING A STREAM OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. 9471 19221009 19221016 A SMALL STREAM OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT IS THE LARGEST AND LONGEST LIVED. 9472 19221010 19221013 RETURN OF GROUP 9469; THIRD APPARITION. A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9473 19221016 19221020 A SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. 9474 19221018 19221019 ONE SMALL SPOT. 9475 19221019 19221021 TWO LARGE DOUBLE SPOTS APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9476 19221029 19221103 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ARRANGED AS A STREAM. THE LEADER APPEARS FIRST AND IS LESS UNSTABLE THAN THE OTHER SPOTS. 9477 19221105 19221117 RETURN OF GROUP 9475. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. 9478 19221113 19221115 A SMALL SPOT. 9479 19221114 19221115 A VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL BUT DISTINCT AREA OF FACULAE IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. 9480 19221120 19221122 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 9481 19221125 19221127 A MINUTE SPOT NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 26. 9482 19221128 19221210 EVIDENTLY A STREAM IN ITS LATER PHASES. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION 10 F IN LONGITUDE. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR SPORADICALLY ON DECEMBER 2-4. 9483 19221202 19221211 RETURN OF GROUP 9477; THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING AS A DOT. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR NEAR IT AFTER DECEMBER 8. 9484 19221222 19230104 A VERY LARGE SPOT GROUP, OF "BIPOLAR" TYPE OF THE MT. WILSON CLASSIFICATION AND CORRESPONDING GENERALLY TO THE STREAM OF "NORMAL TYPE" IN THESE PUBLICATIONS. THE LEADER SPOT AT MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT IS, HOWEVER, UNUSUALLY LARGE COMPARED WITH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT, AND ITS STRUCTURE IS MORE COMPLEX THAN IN THE TYPICAL "STREAM". IT IS REMARKABLE THAT SO LARGE A GROUP DOES NOT RETURN IN THE FOLLOWING ROTATION, ALTHOUGH THE RELATED FACULAE REMAINS VISIBLE UNTIL 1923 MAY. 9484 19221222 19230104 A VERY LARGE SPOT GROUP, OF "BIPOLAR" TYPE OF THE MT. WILSON CLASSIFICATION AND CORRESPONDING GENERALLY TO THE STREAM OF "NORMAL TYPE" IN THESE PUBLICATIONS. THE LEADER SPOT AT MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT IS, HOWEVER, UNUSUALLY LARGE COMPARED WITH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT, AND ITS STRUCTURE IS MORE COMPLEX THAN IN THE TYPICAL "STREAM." IT IS REMARKABLE THAT SO LARGE A GROUP DOES NOT RETURN IN THE FOLLOWING ROTATION, ALTHOUGH THE RELATED FACULAE REMAINS VISIBLE UNTIL 1923, MAY. 9485 19221225 19230104 A SMALL DECREASING REGULAR SPOT. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR FOLLOWING IT ON DECEMBER 28, AND THE GROUP REMAINS AS AN UNSTABLE CLUSTER UNTIL JANUARY 1. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL JANUARY 4, WHEN A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT IS VISIBLE. 9485 19221225 19230104 A SMALL DECREASING REGULAR SPOT. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR FOLLOWING IT ON DEC. 28, AND THE GROUP REMAINS AS AN UNSTABLE CLUSTER UNTIL JAN. 1. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL JAN. 4, WHEN A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT IS VISIBLE. 9486 19221225 19230104 RETURN OF GROUP 9482. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT TRACED TO ITS EXTINCTION AS A DOT ON JANUARY 3 AND 4. ITS POSITION ON DEC. 25 IS UNCERTAIN, OWING TO POOR DEFINITION. 9486 19221225 19230104 RETURN OF GROUP 9482. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT TRACED TO ITS EXTINCTION AS A MERE DOT ON JAN. 3 AND 4. 9487 19221227 19221228 A MINUTE SPOT ON DECEMBER 27 AND A PAIR ON DECEMBER 28 IN A TINY AREA OF FACULAE. 9488 19230121 19230122 REVIVAL NEAR GROUP 8486. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9489 19230128 19230131 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. 9490 19230212 19230216 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOTS. 9491 19230315 19230316 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9492 19230322 19230326 A PAIR OF DIMINUTIVE COMPOSITE SPOTS. 9493 19230329 19230403 A MODERATE SIZED STREAM SHOWING THE USUAL SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE OF THE PRECEDING AND FOLLOWING COMPONENTS. THE LATTER IS THE MORE STABLE AND APPEARS ALONE AS A DOT ON APR. 3. 9494 19230414 19230415 A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS. 9495 19230417 19230419 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS SOON DISAPPEARING. 9496 19230419 19230429 A SMALL STREAM SHOWING CONTINUED ACTIVITY. THE LEADER ONLY IS STABLE AND CAN BE FOLLOWED ON SUCCESSIVE DAYS. 9497 19230511 19230514 A SINGLE MINUTE SPOT ON MAY 11; TWO ON MAY 12 WHICH HAVE SEPARATED CONSIDERABLY BY THE FOLLOWING DAY. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON MAY. 14. 9498 19230520 19230521 ONE VERY SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 9499 19230523 19230525 A SHORT STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 9500 19230527 19230602 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 9501 19230601 19230604 A SMALL STREAM. 9502 19230618 19230625 A PAIR FOF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER JUNE 22. 9503 19230625 19230626 A SMALL GROUP APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9504 19230625 19230703 AN ACTIVE GROUP FIRST SEEN AS A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. ON JUNE 29, THIS TRAIN DEVELOPS CONSIDERABLY, AND A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH SEVERAL NUCLEI IS FORMED. THIS DIES AWAY, HOWEVER, AS RAPIDLY AD IT APPEARED AND IS REPRESENTED ONLY BY A SMALL SPOT AT THE WEST LIMB AS A COMPANION TO THE ORIGINAL LEADER, WHICH MEANWHILE HAS BEEN SLOWLY DIMINISHING. 9505 19230722 19230726 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER ON JULY 22. 9506 19230727 19230731 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 9507 19230730 19230804 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUG. 2, IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF A DISTINCTIVE ARE OF FACULAE IN WHICH GROUP 934A IS SEEN ON AUG. 7. THIS IS THE LONGEST LIVED HIGH LATITUDE SPOT OBSERVED SINCE THE YEAR 1919, AND EVIDENTLY BELONGS TO THE NEW CYCLE. 9508 19230901 19230909 A STREAM MADE UP OF A REGULAR SPOT AND A TRAIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. 9509 19230907 19230918 AT FIRST, A FEW SPOT NUCLEI CLUSTERING ABOUT TWO CENTRES. THE LEADING CLUSTER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT BY SEPT. 11, WHILST THE FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE BARELY VISIBLE AFTER SEPT. 10. 9510 19230918 19230919 A SINGLE SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 9511 19230924 19231006 A WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL CLUSTER OF SPOTS FOLLOWING UNTIL SEPT. 28, AND REAPPEARING TEMPORARILY ON SEPT. 30. 9512 19230928 19230929 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9508. TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9513 19231009 19231020 A REGULAR SPOT, SOMEWHAT IMPERFECTLY FORMED, WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS AFTER OCT. 14. A FAINT SPOT-937B-APPEARS IN THE FACULAE FOLLOWING THIS GROUP. 9514 19231021 19231101 RETURN OF GROUP 9511. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DISAPPEARING AND SHOWING RETROGRADE MOVEMENT IN LONGITUDE. 9515 19231022 19231029 A STREAM WITH RAPID FORMATION AND DISSOLUTION. CONSIDERABLE CHANGES ARE ALSO SHOWN BY INDIVIDUAL COMPONENTS. WHEN FULLY DEVELOPED NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, THE LEADER IS BY FAR THE MOST IMPORTANT SPOT. 9516 19231031 19231106 TWO SMALL CLUSTERS OF SPOTS, EACH BECOMING TEMPORARILY AN UNSTABLE WHOLE SPOT. THE REAR CLUSTER HAS DIED OUT BY NOV.6, BUT ITS POSITION IS MARKED BY CONSPICUOUS FACULAE. 9517 19231104 19231116 A SPOT OF SOME IMPORTANCE SHOWING CHANGE OF STRUCTURE BOTH IN UMBRA AND PENUMBRA. THERE ARE USUALLY SMALL SPORADIC FOLLOWERS. 9518 19231124 19231129 AN OUTBREAK NEAR GROUP 9516 SEEN IN THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT SEEN LAST AS A WELL-DEFINED DOT ON NOV.29. A MINUTE COMPANION FOLLOWS ON NOV.27, AND ANOTHER (SPOT 939A) APPEARS AFTER THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE REGULAR SPOT. 9519 19231218 19231228 A GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE ORIGINATING FROM A SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 18. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE DISTURBANCE IS BUT SLIGHTLY REPRESENTED BY A SMALL UNSTABLE CLUSTER LASTING UNTIL DEC. 23. TWO SPOTS ON DEC. 20 COALESCE TO MAKE A REGULAR SPOT AS THE LEADER, BUT THIS SPOT, CONTRARY TO THE BEHAVIOUR OF ITS TYPE, RAPIDLY DISAPPEARS. 9520 19231225 19231227 THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 25; ONE ONLY IS VISIBLE ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS. 9521 19240105 19240106 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9522 19240215 19240216 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9523 19240225 19240304 AN ACTIVE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, RAPID IN GROWTH AND DISSOLUTION. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE SURVIVES TO THE WEST LIMB. 9524 19240322 19240323 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9525 19240322 19240324 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 22 AND 23; A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 24. 9526 19240410 19240414 INTERMITTENT. ONE VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT ON APR. 10; A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APR. 14. 9527 19240416 19240422 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9525. A STREAM OF UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 9528 19240418 19240426 A SHORT COMPACT STREAM APPEARING NEAR ITS MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT ALMOST AS A SINGLE COMPOUND SPOT. THIS GROUP CLOSELY FOLLOWS GROUP 9529 WITH WHICH IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN ASSOCIATED AS THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT OF A LARGE COMPLEX STREAM. A CLEAR SEPARATION, HOWEVER, IS USUALLY SEEN BETWEEN THE TWO GROUPS, AND THEIR RESPECTIVE DEVELOPMENTS APPEAR, MOREOVER, TO BE LARGELY INDEPENDENT. 9529 19240419 19240427 A SHORT STREAM IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING GROUP 9528. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT LEADING THE STREAM IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT UNTIL THE APPEARANCE OF A SIMILAR SPOT AT THE REAR ON APR. 24. 9530 19240507 19240514 A SHORT STREAM SHOWING A BRIEF CONFORMITY TO THE NORMAL TYPE AND THEN RAPIDLY DISSIPATING. 9531 19240511 19240521 TWO SPOTS 5 APART IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER SURVIVES AFTER CHANGES OF STRUCTURE BETWEEN MAY 14 AND 17. THE FOLLOWER, HOWEVER, IS MORE UNSTABLE AND IS SUCCEEDED BY A CLUSTER REPRESENTED LATTERLY BY AN INDEFINITELY FORMED SPOT. 9532 19240512 19240524 RETURN OF GROUP 9529. INTERMITTENT. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT ON MAY 18. NOTHING IS THEN VISIBLE UNTIL MAY 22, WHEN A FEW SMALL SPOTS MAKE THEIR APPEARANCE IN THE FACULAE MARKING THE DISTURBED REGION. 9533 19240514 19240516 REVIVAL NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 9528. A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9534 19240517 19240527 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DYING OUT. A SMALL FOLLOWER IS SEEN ON MAY 23 AND 24. 9535 19240518 19240528 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT, IN HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE, FOLLOWED BY FACULAE IN WHICH SMALL SPOTS APPEAR ON MAY 21. THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 25, BUT THREE EPHEMERAL SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MAY 28. 9536 19240527 19240529 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS. 9537 19240529 19240611 A VERY LARGE STREAM, 14 IN LENGTH, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE PREDOMINATING SPOT. THE OTHER COMPONENTS ARE MOSTLY UNSTABLE AGGREGATIONS OF INDEFINITE MARKINGS, SHOWING A TENDENCY ON SOME DAYS TO CONDENSE TO DEFINITE SPOTS. 9538 19240531 19240602 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ON MAY 31 AND JUNE 2. 9539 19240601 19240602 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 9540 19240607 19240611 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JUNE 7 AND 11, REPRESENTING A FEEBLE REVIVAL IN THE FACULAE ACCOMPANYING GROUP 9531 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. 9541 19240610 19240618 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 10-13, BECOMING A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 9542 19240613 19240619 AT FIRST A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM, WHICH LATER SHOWS A TENDENCY TO NORMAL TYPE NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9543 19240619 19240628 A GROUP OF "STREAM" TYPE, IN HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE, CONSISTING OF A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TINY CLUSTER WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 24. 9544 19240620 19240626 A SMALL GROUP OF INSIGNIFICANT SPOTS; NONE ARE SEEN ON JUNE 23. 9545 19240627 19240709 RETURN OF GROUP 9537. A PAIR OF NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS ABOUT 2 1/2 APART IN LONGITUDE, WITH OCCASIONAL VERY SMALL COMPANIONS. THE FOLLOWING SPOT SHOWS INSTABILITY FROM JULY 1-3, BUT IT REGAINS ITS NORMAL APPEARANCE BEFORE FINALLY DISAPPEARING AS A TINY SPOT AFTER JULY 7. THE TWO SPOTS PARTAKE OF A COMMON RETROGRADE MOTION IN LONGITUDE. THE POSITION GIVEN ON JULY 9 IS THAT OF AN EPHEMERAL COMPANION SPOT. 9546 19240701 19240711 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM FROM WHICH A SMALL REGULAR SPOT EMERGES AS THE LEADER ON JULY 6. 9547 19240701 19240705 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 9546. 9548 19240705 19240708 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS IN THE NORTHERN PART OF A REGION OF DISPERSING FACULAE. 9549 19240706 19240719 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, BUT IN WHICH THE LEADER SHOWS SIGNS OF BEING SOMEWHAT UNSTABLE, AND THE FOLLOWER, WHICH, ALTHOUGH SMALL, IS UNUSUALLY PERSISTENT. 9550 19240707 19240712 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9542. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS IN CONSPICUOUS FACULAE. 9551 19240709 19240710 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN FACULAE P GROUP 9550. 9552 19240709 19240717 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN LOW LATITUDE, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A FEW SPOTS SEEN ON JULY 9 IN A POSITION LIGHTLY MARKED BY FACULAE AT THE EAST LIMB ON JULY 6 AND 7. THE LEADER, WHEN COMPLETELY DEVELOPED, IS A WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT; THE FOLLOWER, AS USUAL, IS COMPOSITE AND IS VERY SHORT-LIVED. THE APPEARANCE OF SO LARGE A GROUP IN EQUATORIAL LATITUDES WITHIN A YEAR OF THE MINIMUM IS ABNORMAL. 9553 19240720 19240724 A VERY SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 9554 19240721 19240723 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9544 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. TWO SMALL SPOTS IN THE PRECEDING PART OF A FACULOUS AREA. THERE IS ALSO A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 21 IN THE REAR OF THE DISTURBED AREA. 9555 19240721 19240729 A STREAM OF GENERALLY INSIGNIFICANT SPOTS. 9555a19240723 A VERY SMALL DISTINCT SPOT IN HIGH LATITUDE, VISIBLE ALSO ON THE CAPE PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN 30 MINUTES EARLIER. 9556 19240725 19240806 A STREAM PERTAINING TO THE NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT IS NEVER CONSPICUOUS. THIS GROUP, WHICH IS AN ENTIRELY NEW FORMATION, PRECEDES A WELL-DEFINED AREA OF FACULAE, WHICH REPRESENTS THE PLACE OF GROUP 9545. 9557 19240730 19240804 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL COMPONENTS, OF WHICH ONE AT THE REAR ALONE REMAINS ON AUG. 4. 9558 19240801 19240813 RETURN OF GROUP 9552. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS ON AUG. 7, 8, AND 11. 9559 19240803 19240806 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON AUG. 3. 9560 19240803 19240811 RETURN OF GROUP 9549. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, DECREASING TO A TINY MARKING BEFORE EXTINCTION. 9561 19240807 19240810 A RELATED PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS IN FACULAE, SHOWING NO DEVELOPMENT. 9562 19240812 19240814 A SMALL GROUP, DEVELOPING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB, NEAR THE PLACE OCCUPIED IN THE PREVIOUS ROTATION BY GROUP 9550. 9563 19240815 19240827 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, OF WHICH THE FIRST STAGES OF ITS DEVELOPMENT HAVE TAKEN PLACE WHEN IT COMES INTO VIEW AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER PRESERVES ITS REGULAR FORM UNTIL IT REACHES THE WEST LIMB, WHEN IT HAS APPARENTLY DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS. THIS DIVISION IS PRECEDED BY THE APPEARANCE OF A "BRIGHT" BRIDGE, SEEN FIRST ON AUG. 22. THE FOLLOWER, 12 BEHIND THE LEADER, HAS DIMINISHED TO A DOT ON AUG. 21; IT HAS DISAPPEARED ON AUG. 22, BUT REAPPEARS TEMPORARILY ON AUG. 23 AND 24. 9564 19240828 19240906 A VERY LARGE GROUP OF THE "STREAM" TYPE, DEVELOPING WITH EXTREME RAPIDITY FROM TWO SPOTS OR CLOSE CLUSTERS OF SPOTS PHOTOGRAPHED ON AUG. 28. BOTH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE VERY LARGE AND SOMEWHAT COMPOSITE IN CHARACTER; THE LEADER BECOMES INCREASINGLY UNSTABLE, AND HAS BROKEN UP INTO SEVERAL COMPONENTS TY SEPT. 4. A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS IS PROMINENT ON AUG. 30, AND, ALTHOUGH THIS PRACTICALLY DISAPPEARS, A CHAIN OF SPOTS IS FOMED LATER IN ITS PLACE FROM DISINTEGRATED PORTIONS OF THE TWO LARGE SPOTS. 9565 19240828 19240909 RETURN OF GROUP 9558, THIRD APPARITION. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 9566 19240905 19240910 A SMALL STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER IS SEEN ON SEPT. 9. 9567 19240910 19240919 A GROUP OF THE STREAM TYPE, DEVELOPING FROM TWO SPOT CENTRES SEEN ON SEPT. 10 IN A POSITION LIGHTLY MARKED BY FACULAE ON THE PREVIOUS DAY. A QUASI-REGULAR SPOT HAS APPEARED AS THE LEADER BY SEPT. 12, AFTER WHICH THE FOLLOWING MEMBERS DECREASE. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 9568 19240918 19240927 TWO SMALL SPOTS, APPEARING FROM A COMPACT MASS OF FACULAE AT THE SUN'S SOUTH-EAST LIMB. THESE FAIL TO DEVELOP, BUT SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS OR CLUSTERS OF SPOTS CONTINUE TO MARK THEIR PLACE AT THE TWO EXTREMITIES OF THE DISTURBANCE WHICH LENGTHENS OUT CONSIDERABLY AS SHOWN BY A COMPARISON OF THEFACULAE ON SEPT. 18 AND 27. 9569 19240920 19240925 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL DISTURBED AREA CONTAINING TWO OR THREE EPHEMERAL SPOTS; NONE ARE SEEN ON SEPT. 23. 9570 19240924 19241004 RETURN OF GROUP 9565; FOURTH AND LAST APPARITION. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING APPRECIABLY AFTER SEPT. 29. AFTER SEPT. 26, SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR IN CLOSE PROXIMITY FOLLOWING THE SPOT, AND ONE, WHICH IS RATHER MORE PERSISTENT, IS SEEN SOME DISTANCE NP IT FROM SEPT. 28-OCT. 1. THE REGION IS REPRESENTED BUT SPARSELY BY FACULAE AT THE WEST LIMB. 9571 19240925 19240930 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 25. ON SEPT. 28-30 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 9572 19240928 19240930 A SLIGHT, SHORT-LIVED DISTURBANCE SHOWN BY TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS; NO REPRESENTATIVE FACULAE IS SEEN AT THE WEST LIMB. 9573 19240928 19241010 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, SLOWLY DIMINISHING WITH TWO DISTANT FOLLOWERS ON OCT. 2 AND 3. 9574 19241001 19241008 A REGULAR SPOT, DIMINISHING TO A VERY SMALL MARKING BEFORE DISAPPEARING AFTER OCT. 8. THERE IS A SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWER ON OCT. 5 AND A FEW CLOSE ONES ON OCT. 7 AND 8. THE GROUP EVIDENTLY REPRESENTS THE LAST PHASES OF A STREAM WHICH COMPLETED ITS FIRST PHASES ON THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE. 9575 19241003 19241015 A STREAM OF ROUGHLY NORMAL TYPE, BUT OF REMARKABLE LENGTH, THE GREATEST DISTANCE BETWEEN THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING SPOTS BEING 17. THE GROUPP IS A FEW DAYS OLD WHEN FIRST SEEN AT THE SUN'S EAST LIMB. THE LEADER APPEARS THROUGHOUT AS A SMALL CONTRACTING REGULAR SPOT; THE LAS DEFINITE TRACE OF THE FOLLOWER IS VISIBLE ON OCT. 11, ALTHOUGH ONE OR TWO OF THE SMALL SPOTS, WHICH HAVE HITHERTO PRECEDED IT, CONTINUE UNTIL OCT. 14. 9576 19241013 19241026 REVIVAL NEAR GROUP 9569 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT, SHOWING MINOR CHANGES BOTH OF UMBRA AND PENUMBRA. A FOLLOWING SPOT SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB DIVIDES INTO TWO BY OCT. 16, AND SO DISAPPEARS, BUT A NUMBER OF VERY SMALL MARKINGS ARE EVIDENCE OF CONTINUED ACTIVITY IN THE FACULAE FOLLOWING THE LEADER. 9577 19241023 19241025 A VERY SMALL GROUP FORMING IN FRONT OF GROUP 9576. 9578 19241025 19241102 A GROUP OF THE STREAM TYPE, ARISING FROM TWO CLOSE PAIRS OF TINY SPOTS SEEN ON OCT. 25. THE RAPID SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE OF THE TWO SPOT CENTRES IS VERY MARKED. 9579 19241025 19241030 RETURN OF GROUP 9573. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, DISAPPEARING SUDDENLY. 9580 19241031 19241101 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9575. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9581 19241111 19241116 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9577. A SMALL STREAM NOT SEEN ON NOV. 13. ONLY THE REAR SPOT REMAINS ON NOV. 16. 9582 19241114 19241123 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY ON NOV. 14, 17, AND 23. 9583 19241115 19241120 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE, COMPOSED GENERALLY OF TWO SMALL CLUSTERS OF SPOTS AT THE FRONT AND REAR RESPECTIVELY. 9584 19241115 19241128 A LARGE ACTIVE STREAM OF SPOTS. AT FIRST A SIMPLE GROUPING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT AND A SMALLER DOUBLE SPOT 7 FOLLOWING IN LONGITUDE. SMALL UNSTABLE FOLLOWERS THEN APPEAR AFTER NOV. 17 IN INCREASING NUMBERS, WHICH GIVE THE STREAM A COMPLEX APPEARANCE, ESPECIALLY ON NOV. 23, WHEN IT HAS NEARLY DOUBLED ITS ORIGINAL LENGTH. ON NOV. 26, A LARGE SPOT HAS DEVELOPED NEAR THE PLACE OF THE ORIGINAL FOLLOWER AND ANOTHER, OF A MORE COMPOSITE CHARACTER, AT THE REAR OF THE STREAM; MEANWHILE, THE ORIGINAL LEADER HAS DECREASED CONSIDERABLY. 9585 19241118 19241201 A LARGE AND SOMEWHAT IRREGULARLY SHAPED SPOT IN THE FOLLOWING PORTION OF AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. IT IS PRECEDED BY A SMALL COMPANION SUGGESTIVE OF A LARGER SPOT WHEN ON THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE. OTHER SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR FROM TIME TO TIME, IN GENERAL PRECEDING THE CHIEF SPOT. RETROGRADE MOTION IN LONGITUDE IS VERY MARKED. 9586 19241122 19241123 A VERY SMALL SPOT IN THE PRECEDING PART OF A CONSPICUOUS AREA OF FACULAE. THE ONE-DAY SPOTS, 952D AND 952E ALSO OCCUR IN THE SAME REGION. 9587 19241203 19241205 A PAIR OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS ALONE ON DEC. 5. 9588 19241207 19241216 REVIVAL NEAR THE PLACE OF GROUP 9581. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO COMPONENTS ON DEC. 8-9. THE LEADING SPOT REMAINS ON DEC. 15 AS A SMALL BUT PERFECTLY DEFINED UMBRAL SPOT. THERE IS A TINY DISTANT FOLLOWER ON DEC. 12. 9589 19241209 19241215 A SMALL STREAM NF GROUP 9588. 9590 19241212 19241223 RETURN OF GROUP 9584. TWO REGULAR SPOTS, ABOUT 9 APART IN LONGITUDE. THE PRECEDING ONE DISAPPEARS AS A DOT ON DEC. 21, TWO DAYS BEFORE THE EXTINCTION OF THE FOLLOWER. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS, CHIEFLY NEAR THE FOLLOWER ON DEC. 19 AND 20. 9591 19241215 19241222 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 15 AND 16; ON DEC. 19 A DOUBLE SPOT WHICH BREAKS UP INTO A FAINT CLUSTER BY DEC. 21. 9592 19241217 19241224 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN THE EXTREME SOUTHERN PORTION OF A LARGE FACULOUS AREA IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING GROUP 9590, IN WHICH GROUPS 9591 AND 953A ARE ALSO CONTAINED. 9593 19241218 19241228 INTERMITTENT. REVIVAL OF GROUP 9585. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT IN A DISTURBED AREA ON EACH OF THE DAYS, DEC. 18, 19, 24, AND 28. 9594 19241221 19241227 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, DEVELOPING WITH GREAT RAPIDITY AND BREAKING UP PREMATURELY. 9595 19241222 19241224 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. 9596 19250102 19250108 A SMALL SPOT IN THE PRECEDING PART OF AN AREA OF WELL-DEFINED FACULAE. ON JAN. 5, 6 AND 8 ONLY A VERY SMALL SPOT IS SEEN IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE DISTURBED AREA. 9597 19250111 19250112 A FEW TINY SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 9598 19250116 19250125 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9593. TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY JAN. 18. ON THE NEXT DAY A NUMBER OF IMPERFECTLY FORMED SPOTS HAVE APPEARED IN A STREAM WHICH GAINS IN DISTINCTNESS ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 9599 19250118 19250120 TWO OR THREE SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOTS. 9600 19250120 19250121 A MINOR SPOT DISTURBANCE OCCURRING NF GROUP 9598. 9601 19250131 19250201 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9602 19250201 19250203 A PAIR OF SMALL DISTINCT SPOTS; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON FEB. 3. 9603 19250202 19250206 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS; THE REAR COMPONENT ALONE APPEARS AFTER FEB. 3. 9604 19250203 19250205 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON FEB. 3; ONLY THE PRECEDING SPOT IS LEFT ON FEB. 4 AND 5. 9605 19250205 19250208 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM. 9606 19250207 19250214 A STREAM, ROUGHLY OF NORMAL TYPE, IN EQUATORIAL ZONES. THE LEADER HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT BY FEB. 9 AND IS THE SOLE SURVIVOR ON FEB. 14. 9607 19250207 19250219 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE IN WHICH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS SUBSEQUENTLY APPEAR. AFTER FEB. 11 SEVERAL "BRIDGES" BEGIN TO INTERSECT FIRST THE UMBRA AND THEN THE PENUMBRA. THE SPOT IS DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER FEB. 17. 9608 19250209 19250214 A CONSIDERABLE AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE SEEN, USUALLY IN THE PRECEDING PORTION. 9609 19250211 19250216 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT IN THE SOUTHERN EXTREMITY OF AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. THE SPOT IS NOT SEEN ON FEB. 14, BUT A SMALL TRANSIENT STREAM COMES IN ITS PLACE ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS. 9610 19250211 19250217 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON FEB. 14 AND 16, IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA AS GROUP 9609. 9611 19250212 19250218 AN UNSTABLE STREAM ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 9607 AND 9608. 9612 19250219 19250223 A CLUSTER OF A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS OF SOME IMPORTANCE ON FEB. 19 AND 20. 9613 19250220 19250221 ONE OR TWO EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 9614 19250228 19250305 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN MINIATURE AND OF BRIEF DURATION. 9615 19250311 19250323 A CONSPICUOUS STREAM OF SPOTS JUST FORMING WHEN PHOTOGRAPHED AT THE EAST LIMB ON MAR. 11. THE LEADER FIRST DEVELOPS AS A REGULAR SPOT AND IS FULLY FORMED BY MAR. 13. ON THE NEXT DAY, A PENUMBRAL SPOT OF HALF THE SIZE HAS APPEARED CLOSELY FOLLOWING IT, AND THE TWO HAVE COALESCED BY MAR. 16. AFTER REGAINING NEARLY A REGULAR OUTLINE, A SMALL PORTION OF THE JOINT SPOT DETACHES ITSELF FROM THE F SIDE ON MAR. 20, AFTER WHICH IT AGAIN ASSUMES A REGULAR APPEARANCE. THE OTHER SPOTS OF THE STREAM ARE RELATIVELY INSIGNIFICANT AND HAVE ALL DIED OUT BY MAR. 20. THE AXIS OF THE STREAM IS INCLINED ABOUT 16 TO THE EQUATOR, THE LEADER HAVING THE HIGHER LATITUDE, WHIC IS CONTRARY TO THE USUAL DIRECTION. 9616 19250317 19250319 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9617 19250318 19250322 A STREAM OF TINY SPOTS APPEARING NEARLY ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 9615. THE STREAM IS REPRESENTED ONLY BY ONE SMALL SPOT ON MAR. 21, BUT APPARENTLY A NEW GROUP IS DEVELOPING AS THE DISTURBED AREA PASSES FROM SIGHT ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 9618 19250323 19250401 A STREAM OF SOME IMPORTANCE WHICH DEVELOPS FROM ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS SEEN FIRST ON MAR. 23 AND 24. THE COMPONENTS OF THE STREAM ARE IN CONTINUAL CHANGE AND ARE NOT SUITABLE FOR INDIVIDUAL MEASUREMENT. 9619 19250323 19250330 A VERY SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT WITH A COMPANION FOLLOWING UNTIL MAR. 25. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MAR. 29. 9619a19250326 THIS GROUP, FORMING CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB, CONSISTS OF TWO SPOTS, WHICH SUGGEST A DISTURBANCE OF MORE THAN EPHEMERAL CHARACTER. THE REGION IS MARKED IN THE FOLLOWING ROTATION BY CONSPICUOUS FACULAE, IN WHICH GROUP 9629 AFTERWARDS IS SEEN. 9620 19250402 19250406 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT RAPIDLY DIMINISHING TO EXTINCTION. 9621 19250404 19250411 A STREAM OF SMALL, FAINT, UNSTABLE SPOTS. NONE ARE VISIBLE ON APRIL 10. 9622 19250407 19250413 A REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT. 9623 19250407 19250415 RETURN OF GROUP 9615. INTERMITTENT. A REGULAR SPOT WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 12. A VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT IS NEAR ITS PLACE ON APRIL 15. 9624 19250409 19250410 ONE OR TWO SMALL SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 9625 19250409 19250417 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 9 DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM WITH COMPOSITE LEADER SPOT AND INSIGNIFICANT TRAIN. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS INCLINED NEARLY 25 TO THE EQUATOR. 9626 19250410 19250413 A SMALL STREAM OF BRIEF DURATION. 9627 19250410 19250418 TWO TINY SPOTS ON APRIL 10. THE LEADER SUDDENLY ENLARGES TO A REGULAR SPOT WHICH, AFTER REACHING A MAXIMUM ON APRIL 12, DECLINES TO A DOT BY APRIL 18. THE FOLLOWING SPOT FAILS TO DEVELOP. 9628 19250412 19250417 A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE IN WHICH A FEW SMALL COMPANION SPOTS APPEAR ON APRIL 16 AND 17. 9629 19250415 19250420 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS WITH SMALL ATTENDANTS ON APRIL 19 AND 20. REVIVAL OF A SPOT 956C SEEN CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB ON MAR. 26. 9630 19250417 19250421 POSSIBLY A RETURN OF GROUP 9618, BUT MORE PROBABLY A NEW OUTBURST AS EVIDENCED BY THE FACULAE WHICH FOLLOWS THE SPOT. 9631 19250417 19250427 A MODERATE-SIZED GROUP CONSISTING OF TWO CLUSTERS OF RAPIDLY CHANGING SPOTS. THE PRECEDING CLUSTER IS ALONE REPRESENTED AFTER APRIL 22 BY FAINT SPOTS IN DIMINISHING NUMBERS. 9632 19250419 19250426 A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9633 19250419 19250424 A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT, WITH A CLOSE COMPANION ON APRIL 22, LEADING A SMALL TRACT OF FACULAE. 9634 19250421 19250428 A REVIVAL OF SPOT ACTIVITY IN THE NORTHERN PART OF A CONSPICUOUS AREA OF FACULAE SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB FROM APRIL 17 TO 19, AND EVIDENTLY ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 9618 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. A STREAM OF SPOTS WITH THE CHIEF DEVELOPMENT IN THE FOLLOWING COMPINENTS. ON APRIL 23 THE STREAM CONTAINS THREE REGULAR SPOTS IN A LINE; THE PRECEDING TWO SPOTS ARE ONLY PARTIALLY DEVELOPED. 9635 19250425 19250428 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9636 19250429 19250430 A STREAM IN MINIATURE ON APRIL 29 OF WHICH ONLY ONE OF THE SPOTS REMAINS ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9637 19250430 19250512 AN IMPORTANT GROUP (VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE), WHICH CONSISTS OF A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A RELATIVELY INSIGNIFICANT TRAIN, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT CAN BE TRACED UNTIL MAY 9. 9638 19250503 19250511 RETURN OF GROUP 9625. A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 5, 8 AND 9. 9639 19250504 19250505 A FEEBLE DISTURBANCE SHOWN BY A TINY SPOT AND SMALL ACCOMPANYING FACULAE. 9640 19250508 19250519 A STREAM IN WHICH THE COMPONENTS SHOW LITTLE STABILITY UNTIL MAY 15, WHEN TWO PARTIALLY DEVELOPED REGULAR SPOTS CONTINUE FOR A FEW DAYS TO REPRESENT THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING PARTS OF THE DISTURBANCE. 9641 19250509 19250512 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 9642 19250512 19250523 A STREAM OF SPOTS WITH ABNORMAL CHANGES IN THE LEADER, EVIDENTLY OF RECENT ORIGIN WHEN FIRST SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB. ON MAY 14 THE LEADER SPOT SHOWS A SMALL SECONDARY UMBRA; ON THE FOLLOWING DAY THE SPOT WITH ITS DOUBLE UMBRA HAS LENGTHENED IN THE DIRECTION OF LONGITUDE, WHILST A COMPLETE DIVISION INTO TWO COMPONENTS HAS TAKEN PLACE ON MAY 16. THESE SEPARATE, BUT THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT RAPIDLY DWINDLES, AND THE PRECEDING ONE SUBSEQUENTLY SHOWS A SUDDEN DECREASE BETWEEN MAY 22 AND 23. 9643 19250514 19250522 AN UNSTABLE STREAM OF SMALL AND GENERALLY FAINT SPOTS NF GROUP 9642. THE AXIS OF THE STREAM IS INCLINED 30 TO THE EQUATOR. 9644 19250516 19250517 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9645 19250516 19250522 A STREAM IN HIGH LATITUDE OF NORMAL DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER ON MAY 18 APPEARS TO BE ALMOST DIVIDED INTO TWO EQUAL PORTIONS BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" TRAVERSING THE SPOT IN AN EASTERLY AND WESTERLY DIRECTION. 9646 19250516 19250517 A VERY SMALL OUTLYING SPOT N GROUP 9642. 9647 19250516 19250521 ONE OR TWO SPOTS MARKING A DISTURBED REGION. 9648 19250517 19250527 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALLISH SPOTS OF WHICH THE MOST IMPORTANT IS THE LEADER. THIS SPOT, WHICH IS OF COMPOSITE NATURE FROM THE BEGINNING, IS CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY ANOTHER AFTER MAY 19, AND THE TWO TEND TO APPROACH EACH OTHER. THEY ARE MEASURED TOGETHER AS ONE FROM MAY 20. 9649 19250517 19250529 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS UNDERGOING MUCH CHANGE. THE EARLY DEVELOPMENT IS ALONG NORMAL LINES, ALTHOUGH THE FOLLOWER OF THE STREAM IS AT FIRST THE LARGEST COMPONENT. SOME SMALL SPOTS IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING THE LEADER THEN INCREASE AND, COALESCING WITH IT ON MAY 22, FROM AN ELONGATED SPOT WITH MULITPLE UMBRAE. ONE OF THESE NUCLEI BREAKS AWAY ON MAY 26. MEANWHILE THE FOLLOWER IS BECOMING RAPIDLY SMALLER, AND IS A MERE DOT ON MAY 24. ON THE NEXT DAY, HOWEVER, A CLUSTER OF SPOTS HAS APPEARED NEAR ITS PLACE, AND CONDENSES LATER TO A FAIRLY LARGE SPOT, SEEN VERY CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB ON MAY 29. A CLUSTER OF INDEFINITE SPOTS IN THE MID-PART OF THE STREAM INCREASES TO SOME IMPORTANCE ON MAY 23. 9650 19250520 19250521 A SMALL FAINT SPOT ON MAY 20 WITH A COMPANION ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9651 19250520 19250524 A PAIR OF SPOTS BECOMING A SMALL STREAM OF TINY COMPONENTS. 9652 19250527 19250529 A SMALL NUCLEAR SPOT WITH TWO FAINT FOLLOWERS ON MAY 27. 9653 19250527 19250603 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH THE PRECEDING COMPONENT ALONE REMAINS ON JUNE 1. BY THE FOLLOWING DAY A FRESH GROUP OF SPOTS IS COMMENCING. 9654 19250527 19250607 RETURN OF GROUP 9637. A SPOT OF ALMOST REGULAR OUTLINE, USUALLY INTERSECTED BY ONE OR TWO "BRIDGES." 9655 19250530 19250531 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT. 9656 19250601 19250609 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE SHOWING RAPID DEVELOPMENT BETWEEN JUNE 1 AND 2. 9657 19250601 19250612 A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT. 9658 19250601 19250614 A DISTURBED REGION ACTIVELY PRODUCING FAINT SPOTS. AFTER JUNE 11 ONE OR TWO LARGER SPOTS BEGIN TO APPEAR. GROUP 9659 IS A SMALL ALLIED DISTURBANCE TO THE SOUTH. 9659 19250601 19250613 A FEW SPOTS IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE AS GROUP 9658. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JUNE 7. 9660 19250603 19250615 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWER ON JUNE 10, 12, 13 AND 14. 9661 19250604 19250606 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS IN THE NP BOUNDARY OF AN AREA OF WIDELY SPREAD FACULAE, WHICH IS PROBABLY RELATED TO GROUP 9640 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. 9662 19250605 19250607 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT PRECEDED BY TWO COMPANIONS ON JUNE 5. 9663 19250605 19250616 A WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT GROWING FROM A SMALL NUCLEUS IN THE P PART OF FACULAE NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON JUNE 6. AT FIRST THERE ARE ALSO VARIOUS SMALL FOLLOWERS IN THE FACULAE. 9664 19250607 19250609 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 9665 19250607 19250615 A SPOT OF REGULAR OUTLINE FOLLOWED BY A SHORTER-LIVED COMPANION OF INDEFINITE SHAPE. THE PAIR OF SPOTS ORIGINATES FROM TWO SMALL NUCLEI SEEN FIRST ON JUNE 7 SP GROUP 9663. 9666 19250607 19250618 A SHORT STREAM OF A FEW SMALL SPOTS OF QUITE MINOR IMPORTANCE UNTIL THE GROWTH OF THE LEADER INTO A REGULAR SPOT BY JUNE 14. THIS GROUP CLOSELY PRECEDES GROUP 9668. 9667 19250608 19250613 AT FIRST A NUMBER OF INDEFINITE SPOTS IN A STREAM. ON JUNE 10 THE STREAM HAS BECOME ONE OF NORMAL TYPE WITH WELL-DEFINED COMPONENTS. 9668 19250608 19250615 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9642. A FAIRLY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT PRECEDED BY TWO SMALLER ONES OF WHICH THE LEADER INCREASES FOR A TIME. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS INCLINED 30 TO THE EQUATOR, THUS DIFFERENTIATING IT FROM GROUP 9666 WHICH IT CLOSELY FOLLOWS. 9669 19250612 19250615 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, CONNECTED BY BRIGHT FACULAE, DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9670 19250613 19250621 RETURN OF GROUP 9649. INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT IN AN EXTENSIVE REGION OF FACULAE. 9671 19250618 19250619 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 9672 19250622 19250624 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 22 OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS. 9672 19250622 19250623 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 9674 19250624 19250702 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN DIMINISHING NUMBERS. 9675 19250627 19250709 RETURN OF GROUP 9667. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE. A VERY SMALL COMPANION SPOT IS SEEN SP ON JULY 3. 9676 19250630 19250706 RETURN OF GROUP 9669. A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 9677 19250702 19250713 A LARGE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE BEGINNING ITS DEVELOPMENT NEAR THE SUN'S EAST LIMB. FOR SEVERAL DAYS THE LEADER IS THE PREDOMINATING SPOT OF THE STREAM, BUT AFTER JULY 8 IT DIVIDES INTO TWO PARTS WHICH DIMINISH. MEANWHILE, A LARGE CLUSTER OF INDEFINITE MARKINGS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM CONDENSES TO A SPOT OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE, WHICH ABSORBS A REMNANT OF THE DISINTEGRATED LEADER SPOT, NOW RAPIDLY DISAPPEARING. 9678 19250703 19250707 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 9679 19250704 19250705 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON JULY 5. 9680 19250705 19250709 A FEW FAINT SPOTS; NONE ARE VISIBLE ON JULY 7. 9681 19250707 19250710 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JULY 9. 9682 19250709 19250718 A SPARSE STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF NUCLEI NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON JULY 9. THE ONLY STABLE SPOT IS THE LEADER WHICH ALONE SURVIVES AFTER JULY 15. 9683 19250710 19250716 REVIVAL OF GROUP 9670. A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY COMPANIONS. 9684 19250710 19250721 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIVIDING UP ON JULY 15 AND 16, WHEN NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS APPEAR SURROUNDING IT. BY JULY 17, ONE OF THESE NEW SPOTS HAS BECOME AS LARGE AS THE ORIGINAL SPOT, BUT IT DECREASES WITHIN A FEW DAYS. GROUPS 9683, 9684 AND 9685 MARK THE LONGITUDINAL EXTENT OF A LARGE FACULOUS AREA ORIGINATING TWO MONTHS PREVIOUSLY WITH GROUP 9649. 9685 19250713 19250719 INTERMITTENT. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON JULY 13; AFTER AN INTERVAL OF FOUR DAYS, TWO OR THREE OTHERS ARE SEEN IN ITS PLACE. 9686 19250716 19250722 INTERMITTENT. A FACULOUS REGION IN WHICH A SINGLE SMALL SPOT IS SEEN EACH DAY FROM JULY 16-18. AFTER FOUR DAYS' INTERVAL, A PAIR OF SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOTS APPEAR. 9687 19250716 19250721 USUALLY TWO OR MORE SMALL SPOTS. 9688 19250719 19250723 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 9689 19250720 19250722 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 9690 19250720 19250721 A TINY SPOT FOLLOWED BY SLIGHT FACULAE. 9691 19250724 19250802 A STREAM OF SPOTS IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS OF REGULAR OUTLINE FROM THE BEGINNING, AND THE LEADER VARIES FROM REGULAR TO COMPOSITE FORMATION. THE SEPARATION OF THESE TWO COMPONENTS IS VERY MARKED. 9692 19250724 19250804 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 9678. A FEW SPOTS CLUSTERED ABOUT TWO CENTRES 8 APART IN LONGITUDE. ON JULY 30, THE SPOTS ARE FAINT AND SPARSELY SCATTERED, BUT A REVIVAL OF ACTIVITY IS TAKING PLACE ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS, WHEN LARGER BUT IMPERFECTLY-FORMED SPOTS APPEAR. 9693 19250725 19250731 RETURN OF GROUP 9675. THIRD APPARITION. A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 9694 19250726 19250728 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS IN THE P EXTREMITY OF A MODERATELY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE COTERMINOUS WITH THAT BELONGING TO GROUP 9693. 9695 19250803 19250806 A SMALL SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON AUG 4. 9696 19250805 19250808 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM OF SPOTS ON AUG. 5, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS ALONE VISIBLE ON AUG. 6 AND 8. 9697 19250806 19250809 A PAIR OF SMALL AND NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS, 7 APART IN LONGITUDE, OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS ON AUG. 9. 9698 19250807 19250814 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON AUG. 7 BECOMING A CONDENSED STREAM BY AUG. 9. BY AUG. 11, THE GROUP IS CONSIDERABLY MODIFIED AND CONSISTS OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER IS RAPIDLY BREAKING UP ON AUG. 13. THE INCLINATION OF THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS IN THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION FROM THAT OF THE GENERALITY OF GROUPS, THE FOLLOWER BEING SLIGHTLY THE NEARER TO THE EQUATOR. 9699 19250808 19250814 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOTS. ON AUG. 10 AND 11, EACH SPOT IS ITSELF DOUBLE. 9700 19250808 19250814 A SHORT STREAM WITH A SMALL DEFINITE LEADER. 9701 19250808 19250814 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN AREA OF FACULAE. 9702 19250810 19250812 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS IMMEDIATELY P GROUP 9700. 9703 19250810 19250814 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 9700, NOT SEEN ON AUG. 12 AND 13. 9704 19250817 19250821 A SMALL GROUP. 9705 19250819 19250829 RETURN OF GROUP 9692. A REGULAR SPOT DECREASING STEADILY. 9706 19250820 19250821 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON AUG. 20, WITH A COMPANION ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 9707 19250821 19250902 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 27. 9708 19250823 19250903 AN IRREGULAR STREAM MOSTLY OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. AFTER AUG. 30 THE LEADER HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT. 9709 19250823 19250826 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT VISIBLE ON AUG. 25, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 9708 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 9710 19250825 19250901 AN IRREGULAR STREAM SP GROUP 9708. BY AUG. 31, THE HEAD OF THE STREAM IS ALONE REPRESENTED BY A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9711 19250826 19250827 A FEW SMALL SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE SUN'S WEST LIMB. 9712 19250826 19250827 TWO SMALL SPOTS CONNECTED BY FACULAE SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9713 19250828 19250904 AN UNSTABLE GROUP. 9714 19250829 19250830 A TINY SPOT IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE FACULAE ATTENDING GROUP 9705. 9715 19250829 19250904 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT USUALLY PRECEDED BY A TINY COMPANION. THIS GROUP AND GROUP 9717, IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE REPRESENT THE RETURN OF GROUP 9698. 9716 19250830 19250901 A SMALL SPOT APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9717 19250830 19250908 A SMALL DECREASING REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY ONE OR TWO TINY ATTENDANTS UNTIL SEPT. 4. WITH GROUP 9715, A RETURN OF GROUP 9698. 9718 19250831 19250903 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS WITH AN EPHEMERAL COMPANION ON SEPT. 3. 9719 19250831 19250904 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9720 19250902 19250903 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9721 19250902 19250905 A SMALL CLUSTER. 9722 19250903 19250906 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM. 9723 19250903 19250910 AN UNSTABLE GROUP ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 9715 AND 9717 SHOWING A TEMPORARY INCREASE ON SEPT. 6. 9724 19250904 19250906 TWO OR THREE SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 9725 19250904 19250905 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 9726 19250904 19250906 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER ON SEPT. 4 AND 5. 9727 19250906 19250907 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 9728 19250906 19250914 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 6 WHICH IS NOT SEEN THE FOLLOWING DAY. ON SEPT. 8, AN IMPORTANT STREAM OF SPOTS HAS COMMENCED TO DEVELOP. CONTRARY TO THE USUAL BEHAVIOUR, THE LEADER IS THE UNSTABLE COMPONENT WHICH BREAKS UP BEFORE THE FOLLOWER WHICH FOR A FEW DAYS ASSUMES A REGULAR OUTLINE. 9729 19250907 19250910 A SMALL STREAM. 9730 19250908 19250916 INTERMITTENT. A DIMINUTIVE CLUSTER ON SEPT. 8; A FEW SMALL SPOTS FROM SEPT. 12-16. 9731 19250911 19250913 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 9732 19250914 19250922 A SMALL STREAM WHOSE LEADER IS COMPARATIVELY LONG-LIVED. 9733 19250915 19250918 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 9734 19250915 19250925 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY WELL-DEFINED FACULAE IN WHICH SMALL SPOTS APPEAR. WITH GROUP 9735, A PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 9716. 9735 19250916 19250924 A SMALL GROUP F GROUP 9734. 9736 19250917 19250929 RETURN OF GROUP 9707. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY FACULAE IN WHICH GROUP 9741 SUBSEQUENTLY APPEARS. A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN S THE REGULAR SPOT ON SEPT. 22, 27, 28 AND 29. 9737 19250918 19250926 A VERY SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS SP GROUP 9738 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE. 9738 19250918 19250927 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 9708. A SMALL, INCOMPLETELY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT USUALLY WITH VERY SMALL ATTENDANTS. 9739 19250918 19250930 A REGULAR SPOT, IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE, FOLLOWED BY FACULAE IN WHICH ONE OR MORE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ARE USUALLY PRESENT. 9740 19250919 19250921 TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 9741 19250919 19250929 AN ACTIVE STREAM DEVELOPING SUDDENLY BETWEEN SEPT. 22 AND 23 FROM A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS WHICH APPEARED THREE DAYS EARLIER. CONSIDERABLE CHANGES ALSO TAKE PLACE FROM DAY TO DAY IN THE SHAPE AND AREA OF THE COMPONENTS OF THE FULLY DEVELOPED STREAM. 9742 19250920 19250923 TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS IN AN AREA OF FACULAE COTERMINOUS WITH THAT ASSOCIATED WITH GROUPS 9737, 9738 AND 9743. 9743 19250921 19251001 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS SHOWING LITTLE DEVELOPMENT UNTIL SEPT. 27, WHEN THREE MODERATE SIZED SPOTS, ALSO OF UNSTABLE CHARACTER, APPEAR IN A STREAM. 9744 19250922 19250923 A VERY SMALL OUTLYING SPOT TO GROUPS 9734 AND 9735. 9745 19250925 19251004 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE EXTENDING 12 IN LONGITUDE WHEN FULLY DEVELOPED. 9746 19250928 19250929 A SMALL GROUP NF GROUP 9739. 9747 19250928 19251008 AN IRREGULAR STREAM WHOSE COMPONENTS AT FIRST UNDERGO CONSIDERABLE CHANGES. A REGULAR SPOT, WHICH HAS FORMED AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM BY OCT. 2, AND A DOUBLE SPOT AT THE OTHER EXTREMITY MAINTAIN, HOWEVER, A CERTAIN DEGREE OF STABILITY. 9748 19250928 19251010 A REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL OCT. 5. 9749 19250929 19251003 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT. 30 AND OCT. 3 WITH A COMPANION ON THE INTERMEDIATE DAYS. 9750 19251001 19251011 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH SHRINKS TO A NUCLEAR POINT. ONE OR TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS ARE SEEN ON OCT. 5-7. 9751 19251005 19251013 A FEW SMALL SPORADIC SPOTS. 9752 19251008 19251009 A SMALL SPOT SP GROUP 9753. 9753 19251009 19251019 A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE WIDELY IN LONGITUDE. THE FOLLOWER THEN DISAPPEARS AFTER OCT. 12 AND NEW COMPANIONS MAKE THEIR APPEARANCE ON OCT. 14 NEAR THE LEADER. BY THE FOLLOWING DAY THESE SPOTS HAVE COALESCED, BUT THE COMPOUND SPOT SOON BEGINS TO DISAPPEAR. 9754 19251009 19251010 TWO SPOTS IN DISPERSING FACULAE. 9755 19251010 19251012 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE. 9756 19251011 19251014 TWO OR THREE SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 9757 19251011 19251017 A SHORT STREAM OR CLUSTER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 9758 19251013 19251024 A LARGE GROUP OF IMPERFECTLY FORMED AND UNSTABLE SPOTS. 9759 19251014 19251026 RETURN OF GROUP 9741. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION SOUTH OF IT ON OCT. 15 AND 16. 9760 19251014 19251026 AN AGGREGATION OF SEVERAL IMPERFECTLY-FORMED SPOTS FROM WHICH EMERGES A VERY LARGE SPOT AS LEADER WHICH IS LATER VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. THE LARGE SPOT AT FIRST IS ROUGHLY OF REGULAR OUTLINE, BUT AFTER OCT. 20 ITS PENUMBRA IS DISTENDED SOUTHWARDS FOR A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE, AND SMALL UMBRAL POINTS APPEAR AT ITS SOUTHERN BOUNDARY. WHEN PASSING ROUND THE SUN'S WEST LIMB, IT IS BREAKING UP RAPIDLY, THE OTHER COMPONENTS OF THE GROUP HAVING ALL DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 25. 9761 19251015 19251023 TWO SMALL CLUSTERS BECOMING TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS BY OCT. 18. A DAY LATER THE LEADER HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT, WHILST THE FOLLOWER DIVIDES INTO TWO PORTIONS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING ASSUMES A REGULAR OUTLINE AS THE OTHER PART DIES OUT. 9762 19251016 19251029 RETURN OF GROUP 9743. A CONSPICUOUS SPOT, WITH TWO WELL-DEFINED UMBRAE, FOLLOWED AT A DISTANCE OF 9 IN LONGITUDE BY A SMALLER REGULAR SPOT. ON OCT. 22 A COMPLETE DIVISION IN TWO PARTS HAS TAKEN PLACE IN THE LEADER, AFTER WHICH THE SOUTHERN PORTION BEGINS TO DISAPPEAR WHILST THE NORTHERN ASSUMES A REGULAR OUTLINE. 9763 19251017 19251018 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT IN THE SOUTHERN PART OF A LARGE TRACT OF FACULAE PROBABLY ASSOCIATED WITH GROUPS 9737 AND 9738 IN THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. 9764 19251017 19251020 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON OCT. 17 AND 20 IN THE SAME FACULAE ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 9763. 9765 19251017 19251028 A SMALL STREAM IMMEDIATELY NORTHWARDS OF GROUP 9762. ON OCT.25, IT IS REPRESENTED BY A SINGLE SMALL SPOT NEAR THE HEAD OF THE STREAM. 9766 19251017 19251029 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON OCT. 18 WHICH INCREASES UNTIL OCT. 20 AND THEN RAPIDLY DIES OUT. THERE IS ALSO ANOTHER SPOT FOLLOWING IT AT SOME DISTANCE WHICH IS REPRESENTED FOR SOME DAYS BY A SMALL CLUSTER. 9767 19251020 19251028 A STREAM COMPOSED OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 9768 19251020 19251025 A SINGLE, SMALL, FAINT SPOT EACH DAY WITH COMPANIONS ON OCT. 21. 9769 19251020 19251026 A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP ON OCT. 25. 9770 19251022 19251023 ONE SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY IN WELL-DEFINED FACULAE. 9771 19251025 19251031 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS IN WHICH THE LEADER PREDOMINATES THROUGHOUT. 9772 19251028 19251107 A DOUBLE SPOT BREAKING UP INTO A VARIABLE CLUSTER. 9773 19251029 19251103 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. AN OCCASIONAL ATTENDANT SPOT IS SEEN. 9774 19251031 19251106 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON OCT. 31 AND NOV. 6 IN THE NF PART OF THE FACULAE ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 9773. 9775 19251101 19251102 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER. 9776 19251104 19251105 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9777 19251105 19251106 A FAINT SPOT SEEN EACH DAY IN A REGION OF THE PHOTOSPHERE ALREADY DISTURBED. 9778 19251105 19251109 A REGULAR SPOT PASSING TO EXTINCTION. 9779 19251108 19251119 A VERY LARGE GROUP VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE NEAR THE SUN'S CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE GROUP IS UNUSUAL; A RAPID INCREASE TAKES PLACE IN TWO SPOTS SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB AND AFTER REACHING A MAXIMUM ON NOV. 12 THEY BOTH SHOW A CORRESPONDINGLY RAPID DECREASE. THE DISTANCE IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN THE TWO SPOTS REMAINS NEARLY CONSTANT, THE TENDENCY, HOWEVER, BEING TO APPROACH ONE ANOTHER AS THEY ARE DISAPPEARING. A NUMBER OF "BRIDGES" ARE SEEN ESPECIALLY IN THE FOLLOWER ON NOV. 12 AND 14. A REVIVAL, NOT A RETURN, OF GROUP 9761. 9780 19200514 19200515 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9780 19251109 19251110 A SMALL SPOT. 9781 19251109 19251113 A SMALL STREAM F GROUP 9779. 9782 19251110 19251111 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 9783 19251112 19251113 A TINY SPOT. 9784 19251112 19251113 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 9779. 9785 19251112 19251114 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 9786 19251113 19251119 RETURN OF GROUP 9762; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT N OF WHICH UNSTABLE COMPANIONS APPEAR ON NOV. 14 AND THE SUCCEEDING DAYS. 9787 19251116 19251127 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANION IN THE FACULAE WHICH FOLLOWS. 9788 19251117 19251122 A SMALL, RAPIDLY DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WHICH DISAPPEARS ON NOV. 22 AS A PAIR OF MARKINGS. 9789 19251118 19251119 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9790 19251118 19251130 A NAKED-EYE GROUP. AN UNUSUALLY LONG STREAM EXTENDING FOR 20 IN LONGITUDE WHEN FULLY DEVELOPED. THE LEADER IS THE ONLY SPOT WHICH IS SUFFICIENTLY STABLE TO BE TRACED THROUGHOUT THE TRANSIT. FROM NOV. 20-22, A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT AT THE REAR IS THE PREDOMINATING COMPONENT OF THE STREAM, BUT THIS SOON BREAKS UP AND BY NOV. 25, THE LEADER IS THE MOST CONSPICUOUS SPOT. BY THE NEXT DAY, HOWEVER, A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT HAS APPEARED CLOSELY FOLLOWING THE LEADER, BUT THIS IS BREAKING UP WHEN LAST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9791 19251120 19251126 A LARGE STREAM APPROXIMATELY OF NORMAL TYPE BEGINNING ITS DEVELOPMENT NEAR THE SUN'S CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 9792 19251120 19251127 A WELL-DEFINED SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 9793 19251121 19251127 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON NOV. 21 AND 23; A PAIR OF SPOTS ON NOV. 27. 9794 19251121 19251203 A REGULAR SPOT, USUALLY WITH A FEW TINY FOLLOWERS, IMMEDIATELY P GROUP 9796. 9795 19251122 19251125 A PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARING IN THE DISTURBED AREA P GROUP 9791. A CONSIDERABLE INCREASE OF AREA IS SHOWN BETWEEN NOV. 23 AND 24. 9796 19251122 19251204 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS OF COMPARATIVELY BRIEF DURATION, LED BY A LARGE, QUASI-REGULAR SPOT WHICH IS SURROUNDED BY NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 28. 9797 19251126 19251204 A LARGE AREA OF BRIGHT AND WELL-DEFINED FACULAE IN WHICH A NUMBER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR SPORADICALLY. 9798 19251129 19251208 A REGION OF FEEBLE BUT PERSISTENT SPOT AND FACULAE ACTIVITY S GROUP 9797. 9799 19251129 19251210 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER UNTIL DEC. 5. 9800 19251201 19251205 A GROUP SHOWING RAPID INCREASE AND DECLINE OF ACTIVITY. 9801 19251201 19251211 A STREAM OF SPOTS, MAINLY SMALL AND UNSTABLE, GROWING FROM A SMALL SPOT SEEN ON DEC. 1. A COMPARISON OF THE EXTENT OF THE ACCOMPANYING FACULAE ON DEC. 1 AND 11 SHOWS THE CHARACTERISTIC GROWTH OF THE DISTURBANCE IN LONGITUDE. 9802 19251203 19251206 A PAIR OF RATHER WIDELY SEPARATED SPOT CENTRES. 9803 19251203 19251208 A PAIR OF SPOTS, THE LEADER BEING THE MORE DEFINITE AND LONGER-LIVED. 9804 19251205 19251210 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A FEW TINY COMPANIONS. 9805 19251205 19251216 A LARGE NAKED-EYE GROUP. TWO SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 5 WHICH MULTIPLY AND EXTEND RAPIDLY TO FORM WITHIN A FEW DAYS A LARGE STREAM OF IRREGULARLY SHAPED SPOTS. THESE CONDENSE INTO TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS WHICH BREAK UP ALMOST IMMEDIATELY INTO TWO CLUSTERS. 9806 19251206 19251208 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER ALONE REMAINS ON DEC. 8. 9807 19251206 19251213 A DISTURBED AREA SHOWN BY BRIGHT FACULAE AND SLIGHT BUT PERSISTENT SPOT ACTIVITY. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON DEC. 10. 9808 19251207 19251210 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS IN FACULAE F GROUP 9805. NOTHING IS SEEN ON THE PHOTOGRAPH FOR DEC. 9. 9809 19251209 19251210 A VERY SMALL OUTLYING SPOT TO GROUP 9805. 9810 19251210 19251222 A STREAM OF LARGE IRREGULARLY-SHAPED SPOTS IN CONSTANT CHANGE. THE HEAD OF THE STREAM, REPRESENTED BY A LARGE SPOT INTERSECTED BY A BROAD BRIGHT MARKING, IS PERHAPS THE MOST STABLE PART OF THE DISTURBANCE, AND ITS POSITION FROM DAY TO DAY IS GIVEN IN THE LEDGERS. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, COMPRISING GROUP 9811, IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWS GROUP 9810 AND AT TIMES SHOWS THE BAREST SEPARATION FROM THE FOLLOWER OF THAT GROUP. JUDGING FROM THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE ACCOMPANYING FACULAE, AND THE MAGNETIC POLARITIES OF THE SPOTS DETERMINED AT MT. WILSON, THE TWO GROUPS SHOULD BE CONSIDERED AS SEPARATE, THOUGH PERHAPS ALLIED, DISTURBANCES. 9811 19251210 19251222 RETURN OF GROUP 9795. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 9810 WITH WHICH IT MAKES A NAKED-EYE OBJECT. 9812 19251211 19251222 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH HAVE ALL DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 20. 9813 19251211 19251219 A SMALL GROUP CLOSELY PRECEDING GROUP 9814 WITH WHICH IT REPRESENTS A RETURN OF GROUP 9791. 9814 19251211 19251223 A SPOT, NEARLY OF REGULAR FORMATION, WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 9815 19251212 19251224 A STREAM OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. ON DEC. 19, HOWEVER, A REGULAR SPOT HAS APPEARED AT THE HEAD OF THE DISTURBANCE. 9816 19251214 19251216 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON DEC. 14, A SINGLE SPOT ON DEC. 16. 9817 19251214 19251215 THREE OR FOUR TINY MARKINGS IN A STREAM NP GROUP 9810. 9818 19251214 19251224 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM N GROUP 9814. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON DEC. 15 AND 16. 9819 19251214 19251227 RETURN OF GROUP 9790. A LARGE SPOT WHOSE UMBRA IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" UNTIL DEC. 25. AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE FOLLOWS THE SPOT. 9820 19251215 19251226 A STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING N OF GROUP 9819. THE LEADER, WHICH HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT BY DEC. 21, IS THE ONLY IMPORTANT COMPONENT. 9821 19251216 19251226 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF VERY SMALL SPOTS UNTIL DEC. 22. 9822 19251217 19251229 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 9823 19251218 19251225 RETURN OF GROUP 9794. A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON DEC. 22 AND 23. NOTHING IS SEEN ON DEC. 24, BUT FOUR SMALL MARKINGS APPEAR ON DEC. 25. 9824 19251219 19251231 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLIGHTLY ELLIPTICAL. THE MAJOR AXIS INCLINED ABOUT 30 EQUATORWARDS. 9825 19251219 19260101 THREE SMALL SPOTS, CLOSE TO THE EAST LIMB ON DEC. 19, DEVELOPING INTO A VERY LARGE STREAM APPROXIMATELY OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FOLLOWER, HOWEVER, IS THE FIRST TO BE COMPLETELY FORMED AND IS OF REGULAR TYPE THROUGHOUT. THE LEADER, ON THE CONTRARY, NEVER QUITE ATTAINS COMPLETE REGULARITY, AND BY DEC. 26 IT COMMENCES TO DIVIDE INTO TWO PORTIONS. THE GROUP IS EASILY VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 9826 19251220 19251222 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARING S OF GROUP 9812. 9827 19251220 19251222 A TINY OUTLYING SPOT TO GROUP 9820, NOT SEEN ON DEC. 21; TWO OTHERS HAVE APPEARED ON DEC. 22. 9828 19251220 19251230 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 9824; NONE ARE SEEN ON DEC. 24 AND 25. 9829 19251221 19251222 A SINGLE VERY SMALL SPOT. 9830 19251222 19260104 A MAGNIFICENT COMPLEX SPOT EASILY VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. WHEN FIRST SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB, THE SPOT APPEARS NEARLY REGULAR IN FORMATION AND IS FOLLOWED BY A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH LATER COALESCES WITH IT. WHEN NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, THE COMPOUND SPOT EXTENDS FOR NEARLY 18 DEGREES IN LONGITUDE. A SMALL COMPANION SPOT WITH ECCENTRICALLY DEVELOPED PENUMBRA IS MEASURED SEPARATELY. GROUP 9802 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION PROBABLY REPRESENTS THE COMMENCEMENT OF THIS GROUP. 9831 19251224 19251226 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS IN THE FACULAE F GROUP 9819. 9832 19251224 19251228 A SMALL GROUP. 9833 19251228 19250103 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 9834 19251228 19251230 A SMALL GROUP OF VERY SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 9830. 9835 19251228 19250106 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE IN HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER JAN. 4. 9835 19251228 19260106 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE IN HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER JAN. 4. 9836 19251231 19250101 A SMALL GROUP SF GROUP 9830. 9837 19251231 19250103 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 9838 19260101 19260112 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN THE P PART OF AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. AFTER JAN. 4, THE SPOTS DEVELOP RAPIDLY AND CONDENSE INTO THREE LARGE SPOTS IN A STREAM. THE CHANGES ARE CONSIDERABLE, ESPECIALLY IN THE LAST TWO SPOTS. 9839 19260105 19260106 ONE TINY SPOT ON JAN. 5, AND A PAIR ON JAN. 6, SP GROUP 9838. 9840 19260106 19260116 RETURN OF GROUP 9810. AT FIRST, ONLY ONE SMALL SPOT IS SEEN IN THE P PART OF A VERY EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE EMBRACING GROUPS 9841 AND 9842. ON JAN. 8, SMALL COMPANIONS MAKE THEIR APPEARANCE; ONE OF THESE BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT WHICH OUTLIVES THE OTHERS. 9841 19260106 19260117 A STREAM, ROUGHLY OF NORMAL TYPE, IN WHICH THE FORMATION OF THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT IS DELAYED FOR A FEW DAYS. 9842 19260107 19260118 POSSIBLY A RETURN, BUT MORE PROBABLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 9811. AN IRREGULARLY-SHAPED SPOT BREAKING UP INTO SEVERAL FRAGMENTS ON JAN. 9. THE GROUP IS SURROUNDED BY CONSPICUOUS FACULAE WHICH FORM PART OF A GENERAL DISTURBANCE EMBRACING GROUPS 9480 AND 9841. 9843 19260108 19260119 A REGULAR SPOT PASSING SLOWLY TO EXTINCTION. 9844 19260108 19260116 RETURN OF GROUP 9815. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH ECCENTRICALLY-PLACED PENUMBRA TO THE F SIDE OF THE UMBRA. IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE WITH GROUP 9843. 9845 19260109 19260111 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 9838 IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE. 9846 19260109 19260110 A SMALL SPOT N GROUP 9844 IN THE AREA OF FACULAE EMBRACING GROUPS 9843 AND 9844. 9847 19260111 19260117 A SMALL NUCLEAR SPOT, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON JAN. 14 AND 15. 9848 19260111 19260123 RETURN OF GROUP 9819. A SLOWLY DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WITH CONSPICUOUS FACULAE NF. 9849 19260114 19260121 A SMALL STREAM OF FEW COMPONENT SPOTS. NOTHING IS VISIBLE ON JAN. 20. 9850 19260114 19260119 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT P GROUP 9847 AND SEEN ONLY ON JAN. 14, 18 AND 19. 9851 19260115 19260116 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 15 OF WHICH THE PRECEDING ONE REMAINS ON JAN. 16. 9852 19260115 19260117 A SMALL SPOT N GROUP 9848. 9853 19260115 19260118 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JAN. 17. 9854 19260115 19260122 A SMALL BUT STABLE SPOT WITH TINY COMPANIONS ON JAN. 20 AND 21. 9855 19260115 19260125 A SMALL PERSISTENT NUCLEAR SPOT. A TINY COMPANION IS SEEN ON JAN. 25. 9856 19260116 19260127 RETURN OF GROUP 9824. A REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING RAPIDLY AFTER JAN. 22. 9857 19260116 19260128 RETURN OF GROUP 9825. A VERY LARGE SPOT CONFORMING IN GENERAL TO REGULAR TYPE, BUT ELONGATED IN AN E.-W. DIRECTION AND SHOWING CHANGES IN THE UMBRA. THERE ARE A FEW SMALL COMPANION SPOTS. THE GROUP IS VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 9858 19260117 19260123 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART PREDOMINATES. 9859 19260117 19260121 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP OF FEW SPOTS. NOTHING IS SEEN ON JAN. 18. 9860 19260118 19260119 A TINY SPOT. 9861 19260118 19260131 RETURN OF GROUP 9830; THIRD APPEARANCE. AN IMMENSE COMPOSITE SPOT (VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE) EXTENDING 10 IN LONGITUDE AND PRECEDED BY A ROUGHLY CIRCULAR SPOT, WHICH AT TIMES IS ALMOST CONNECTED TO THE MAIN SPOT BY IRREGULAR PENUMBRAL PATCHES. THERE IS ALSO A VERY SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING WHICH IS NOTABLE FOR ITS RELATIVE PERMANENCE. THE MAIN SPOT HAS A NUMBER OF UMBRAE, THE LARGEST ONE BEING IN THE PRECEDING PART OF THE PENUMBRA. A VERY EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE SURROUNDS AND FOLLOWS THIS GROUP, WHICH IS THE LARGEST GROUP YET MEASURED SINCE THE INCEPTION OF THE GREENWICH SERIES IN 1874. A MAGNETIC STORM COMMENCED ON JAN. 26, 16 1/2 HOURS AND LASTED UNTIL JAN. 27, 5 HOURS. 9862 19260120 19260130 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JAN. 21-23. ON JAN. 24 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM APPEARS FOR THREE DAYS. ON JAN. 29, A FEEBLE REVIVAL TAKES PLACE. 9863 19260122 19260123 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 9857. 9864 19260123 19260128 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JAN. 24-26, SP GROUP 9861. 9865 19260124 19260204 A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER JAN. 31. 9866 19260127 19260130 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 9838. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. ON JAN. 30 OTHER SPOTS ARE APPEARING WHICH GIVE RISE TO TWO NEW GROUPS, NOS. 9868 AND 9869. 9867 19260128 19260131 A SMALL GROUP SHOWING FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 9868 19260131 19260207 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEARING WITH GROUP 9869, FROM THE NUCLEUS OF AN EARLIER DISTURBANCE MARKED BY GROUP 9866. 9869 19260131 19260208 A REGULAR SPOT (CROSSED FROM EAST TO WEST BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE) OF RAPID FORMATION AND DECAY. THE SPOT IS PRECEDED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS; SEE NOTE TO GROUP 9868. 9870 19260131 19260201 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9871 19260201 19260209 TWO MINUTE SPOTS ON FEB. 1, DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY FOLLOWERS WHICH DIE OUT AFTER FEB. 3. 9872 19260205 19260215 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 5 AND 7; THREE ON FEB. 8. NO SPOTS ARE VISIBLE ON FEB. 9 AND 10. 9873 19260207 19260219 A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT. 9874 19260207 19260221 AN UNUSUALLY LONG STREAM EXTENDING FOR NEARLY 25 DEGREES IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT UNTIL FEB. 13, AFTER WHICH, CHANGES PRECEDE ITS RAPID DISSOLUTION. THE MAIN FOLLOWER IS REMARKABLE FOR ITS COMPOSITE STRUCTURE AND RAPID CHANGES, WHICH ARE MOST MARKED WHEN THE LEADER IS CHANGING. THERE IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE MEMBER OF A CHAIN OF SPOTS BETWEEN THE LEADER AND MAIN FOLLOWER, WHILST A SMALL CLUSTER OF MARKINGS TERMINATES THE STREAM. 9875 19260208 19260209 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 9872. 9876 19260211 19260220 A REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY A SMALL STREAM OF COMPANIONS. THE REGULAR SPOT DEVELOPS RAPIDLY BETWEEN FEB. 11 AND 12 FROM A SMALL CLUSTER. 9877 19260212 19260216 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LEADER SHOWS AN INCREASE ON FEB. 16. 9878 19260212 19260224 A GROUP WHOSE EARLY DEVELOPMENT IS CHARACTERISTIC OF THAT OF A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER, HOWEVER, BREAK UP AT THE SAME TIME AND SHOW A RAPID DECREASE BETWEEN FEB. 19 AND 21. 9879 19260212 19260221 REVIVAL NEAR GROUP 9856 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT USUALLY WITH SMALL COMPANIONS. 9880 19260212 19260225 RETURN OF GROUP 9857; THIRD APPEARANCE. A LARGE, STABLE REGULAR SPOT VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 9881 19260215 19260227 RETURN OF GROUP 9861; FOURTH APPEARANCE. A DOUBLE SPOT WITH A CONSIDERABLE NUMBER OF VERY SMALL COMPANIONS SOUTHWARDS. AN UNUSUALLY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE ACCOMPANIES THE GROUP. 9882 19260216 19260227 A REGULAR SPOT, INCOMPLETELY FORMED, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS UNTIL FEB. 22. 9883 19260219 19260220 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ADJACENT TO GROUP 9874. 9884 19260223 19260227 A COMPACT STREAM APPEARING SP GROUP 9882. 9885 19260225 19260311 A VERY LARGE SPOT, IN COMPARATIVELY HIGH LATITUDE AND REMARKABLE FOR ITS COMPOSITE STRUCTURE AND UNUSUALLY RAPID CHANGES. THERE IS COMPARATIVELY STABLE COMPANION FOLLOWING AT SOME DISTANCE. THE GROUP IS VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. SPOT 968C IS A PRECURSOR IN THE PRECEDING ROTATION OF THIS LARGE SPOT. A CONSIDERABLE MAGNETIC DISTURBANCE WAS REGISTERED FROM MAR. 5, 10H, TO MAR. 6, 6H. 9886 19260226 19260305 A SMALL STREAM. 9887 19260227 19260301 A TINY SPOT SEEN ON FEB. 27 AND MAR. 1. 9888 19260228 19260301 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 9889 19260301 19260307 A STREAM WITH CHARACTERISTIC DEVELOPMENT FROM TWO TINY SPOTS SEEN ON MAR. 1. THE INCLINATION OF THE AXIS OF THE STREAM IS ABNORMAL, BEING ABOUT (20 DEGREES) TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR AND WITH THE LEADER IN THE HIGHER LATITUDE. 9890 19260302 19260311 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SMALLISH SPOTS. 9891 19260303 19260314 A STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER DISAPPEARS BEFORE THE FOLLOWER, THE LATTER BEING A REGULAR SPOT FOR SEVERAL DAYS. 9892 19260306 19260316 A REGULAR SPOT, SLIGHTLY IMPERFECT IN STRUCTURE, DISAPPEARING SLOWLY. A CONSIDERABLE AREA OF FACULAE FOLLOWS. A COMPANION SPOT APPEARS ON MAR. 16. 9893 19260308 19260309 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 8 OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON MAR. 9. 9894 19260309 19260313 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 9891. 9895 19260310 19260317 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS UNTIL MAR. 13. ON MAR. 15 MORE DEFINITE SPOTS APPEAR IN ABOUT THE SAME PLACE. 9896 19260310 19260319 AT FIRST A STREAM OF ILL-FORMED AND UNSTABLE SPOTS. ON MAR. 15 AND 16, THE STREAM CHANGES INTO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE. 9897 19260311 19260313 A FEW SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 9892. 9898 19260311 19260317 INTERMITTENT. A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS ON MAR. 11. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL MAR. 15 WHEN A PAIR OF SPOTS MAKE THEIR APPEARANCE. 9899 19260312 19260324 RETURN OF GROUP 9880; FOURTH APPEARANCE. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. A FAINT "BRIDGE" IS SEEN ON MOST DAYS CROSSING THE UMBRA FROM N TO S. 9900 19260313 19260321 A STREAM OF SMALLISH SPOTS LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 9901 19260313 19260318 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, RAPIDLY SHRINKING. THERE IS A VERY EXTENSIVE TRACT OF FACULAE NF, WHICH REPRESENTS THE GREAT SPOT DISTURBANCE OF THE PREVIOUS DEC. AND JAN.-GROUPS 9830, 9861, 9881. 9902 19260314 19260319 INTERMITTENT. ONE TINY SPOT, S GROUP 9899, SEEN ONLY ON MAR. 14, 17 AND 19. 9903 19260315 19260316 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 15; A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 16. 9904 19260315 19260322 A SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER ON MAR. 15-16. 9905 19260317 19260323 A SHORT STREAM OR CLUSTER OF INDEFINITE SPOTS APPEARING WITHIN A VERY EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE (SEE NOTE TO GROUP 9901). 9906 19260319 19260321 A SHORT-LIVED SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER ON MAR. 19. 9907 19260321 19260322 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 9908 19260322 19260329 INTERMITTENT. RETURN OF GROUP 9889. A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL MAR. 26. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL MAR. 29, WHEN AN EPHEMERAL SPOT MAKES ITS APPEARANCE. 9909 19260323 19260324 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON MAR. 23 OF WHICH ONE SPOT REMAINS ON MAR. 24. 9910 19260323 19260326 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 9911 19260324 19260405 A STREAM OF SPOTS IN WHICH THERE IS MARKED INCREASING SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING SPOTS. 9912 19260325 19260331 A PAIR OF UNSTABLE SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER HAS BECOME A SMALL CLUSTER ON MAR. 29. 9913 19260327 19260403 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT APPEARING IN THE P PART OF AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE WHICH ORIGINATED WITH GROUP 9885. NO SPOT IS SEEN ON APRIL 1 AND 2. 9914 19260330 19260410 A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 9915 19260401 19260404 A SMALL SPOT WITH TWO COMPANIONS ON APRIL 2. 9916 19260406 19260407 A SMALL SPOT IN AN AREA ALREADY DISTURBED. 9917 19260406 19260418 A REGULAR SPOT. THE UMBRA IS USUALLY "BRIDGED" MORE OR LESS COMPLETELY NORTH TO SOUTH. 9918 19260408 19260409 ONE SMALL SPOT. 9919 19260409 19260411 A FEW SMAL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON APRIL 11. 9920 19260409 19260420 RETURN OF GROUP 9899; FIFTH AND LAST APPEARANCE. A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS PROBABLY REPRESENTING THE REGULAR SPOT IN THE PREVIOUS ROTATIONS. THE NORTHERN PORTION DISSOLVES AS A CLUSTER OF SMALL MARKINGS AFTER APRIL 12, WHILST THE SOUTHERN SHRINKS TO A TINY SPOT. 9921 19260412 19260418 A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON APRIL 12 AND 18, P GROUP 9920. 9922 19260412 19260414 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM OF TINY SPOTS. 9923 19260412 19260423 A COMPOSITE SPOT IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. GROUP 9932 DEVELOPS CLOSELY IN FRONT OF THE GROUP ON APRIL 19. 9924 19260413 19260416 A STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 9925 19260413 19260416 A VERY SMALL SPOT OF UNCERTAIN IDENTITY FROM DAY TO DAY. 9926 19260413 19260414 A SMALL SPOT LEADING A SLIGHT FACULA DISTURBANCE. 9927 19260413 19260417 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE REPRESENTING A MINOR DISTURBANCE. 9928 19260414 19260417 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT VISIBLE ON APRIL 16. 9929 19260416 19260421 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT-THE ONLY COMPONENT OF MODERATE SIZE AND STABILITY. 9930 19260416 19260420 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER HAS DISAPPEARED BY APRIL 19. 9931 19260416 19260422 A TINY CLUSTER OF SPOTS ON APRIL 16, NOT SEEN THE FOLLOWING DAY. ON APRIL 18, A STREAM, ATTAINING MODERATE DIMENSIONS, DEVELOPS IN THE SAME PLACE. 9932 19260419 19260423 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING IMMEDIATELY IN FRONT OF GROUP 9923. 9933 19260422 19260426 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE. A DISTURBANCE OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. 9934 19260423 19260426 A SPOT AND FACULAE SIMILAR TO GROUP 9933. 9935 19260426 19260429 A SMALL STREAM OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 9936 19260427 19260429 A SMALL STREAM OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 9937 19260429 19260509 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE PREDOMINATING AND MOST STABLE MEMBER. 9938 19260429 19260511 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, IN WHICH THE SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER BECOMES INCREASINGLY MARKED. 9939 19260502 19260509 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS ON MAY 2 AND 3. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL MAY 8, WHEN TWO MORE DEFINITE SPOTS APPEAR. 9940 19260503 19260507 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE PASSING RAPIDLY THROUGH ITS STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT. 9941 19260504 19260510 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 9942 19260505 19260515 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS UNTIL MAY 9. ON MAY 10 INCREASED ACTIVITY IS SHOWN BY THE DEVELOPMENT OF A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM. 9943 19260507 19260519 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALLER COMPOSITE ONE. THE FORMER DEVELOPS VERY RAPIDLY. THE GROUP IS VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 9944 19260508 19260513 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON MAY 11. 9945 19260508 19260509 A TINY SPOT IN A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. 9946 19260509 19260517 A STREAM LED BY A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA. AT FIRST, THE SPOTS FOLLOWING ARE SMALL AND HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MAY 14. BY THE FOLLOWING DAY, HOWEVER, A SPOT APPEARS IN THEIR PLACE AND THIS BECOMES AS LARGE AS THE LEADER WAS ORIGINALLY. 9947 19260511 19260523 A PROMINENT TRACT OF BRIGHT FACULAE IN WHICH A SUCCESSION OF SMALL AND GENERALLY FAINT SPOTS APPEAR. 9948 19260512 19260516 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. FOR ONE DAY, MAY 14, THE FOLLOWER IS A WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT. 9949 19260513 19260514 A SMALL OUTLYING SPOT TO GROUP 9943. 9950 19260513 19260519 A STREAM OF GENERALLY FAINT AND INSIGNIFICANT SPOTS. 9951 19260513 19260518 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION ON MAY 14-16. 9952 19260515 19260526 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS REPRESENTED THROUGHOUT BY A VARIABLE CLUSTER OF SPOTS. 9953 19260516 19260517 A TINY SPOT. 9954 19260517 19260528 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT REGION OF MINOR ACTIVITY PRODUCING ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS ON MAY 17, 19, 22, 25 AND 27. 9955 19260518 19260523 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PASSING TO EXTINCTION. THREE TINY COMPANIONS APPEAR N ON MAY 21. 9956 19260519 19260520 A PAIR OF SPOTS, SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB-APPARENTLY A SHORT-LIVED DISTURBANCE. 9957 19260520 19260525 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 9958 19260526 19260528 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAY 26; A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MAY 27 AND 28. 9959 19260526 19260606 RETURN OF GROUP 9938. A REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES NOTICEABLY ELONGATED IN AN E. AND W. DIRECTION AFTER JUNE 2; AFTER THIS DATE IT SOON DISAPPEARS IN COMPANY WITH TWO OR THREE SMALL COMPANIONS WHICH FIRST MAKE THEIR APPEARANCE ON JUNE 3. 9960 19260528 19260607 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL SPOT OR CLUSTER OF SPOTS UNTIL JUNE 3. 9961 19260529 19260530 A PAIR OF SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 9962 19260529 19260604 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A FACULOUS REGION, SF GROUP 9960. 9963 19260529 19260608 A STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 9964 19260529 19260610 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 9942. A REGULAR SPOT, DURING THE GREATER PART OF ITS TRANSIT, WITH A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS UNTIL JUNE 4. WHEN FIRST SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB, THE REGULAR SPOT IS ABSORBING AN APPENDAGE WITH SEPARATE NUCLEUS WHICH PRECEDES THE MAIN SPOT. THE GROUP IS SURROUNDED AND FOLLOWED BY CONSPICUOUS FACULAE IN WHICH GROUP 9965 ALSO APPEARS. 9965 19260601 19260606 ONE OR MORE VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A REGION OF BRIGHT FACULAE F GROUP 9964. 9966 19260601 19260613 RETURN OF GROUP 9946. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 9967 19260603 19260616 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE SEPARATION BETWEEN THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING SPOTS IS LESS THAN USUAL. ON JUNE 13 THE FOLLOWER IS BREAKING UP, BUT BY THE FOLLOWING DAY THE PARTS HAVE PARTIALLY COALESCED INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT. 9968 19260604 19260611 RETURN OF GROUP 9943. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 8. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS APPEAR NEAR ITS PLACE ON JUNE 10 AND 11. 9969 19260605 19260616 A STREAM IN WHICH NONE OF THE COMPONENTS ARE STABLE. 9970 19260606 19260611 AT FIRST ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS; ON JUNE 9 A LARGER BUT EQUALLY UNSTABLE SPOT APPEARS. 9971 19260607 19260612 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS EACH OF WHICH IS A DOUBLE ON JUNE 9. 9972 19260607 19260611 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST AND LONGEST-LIVED COMPONENT. 9973 19260610 19260613 A STREAM IN MINIATURE; ONE COMPONENT SPOT REMAINS ON JUNE 13. 9974 19260611 19260620 A STREAM OF GENERALLY UNIMPORTANT SPOTS IN BRIGHT FACULAE WHICH JOIN ANOTHER FACULOUS REGION SOUTHWARDS. 9975 19260613 19260614 A PAIR OF SPOTS IN A REGION ALREADY DISTURBED BY FACULAE. 9976 19260614 19260624 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 9977 19260616 19260628 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED CLOSELY BY A FRAGMENTARY COMPANION, WITH WHICH IT ALMOST COALESCES ON JUNE 20 AND 21. WHEN SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB, THE GROUP IS EVIDENTLY BUT A DAY OR TWO OLD, WHILE, AT THE WEST LIMB IT IS DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY. ITS LIFE-HISTORY IS, THEREFORE, UNUSUALLY RAPID FOR SO LARGE A GROUP, WHICH FOR SOME DAYS IS SEEN WITH THE NAKED EYE. 9978 19260618 19260619 A STREAM OF TINY SPOTS. 9979 19260619 19260629 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION, FOLLOWED BY A LONG TRAIN OF FACULAE. 9980 19260623 19260706 A VERY LARGE AND ABNORMALLY LONG STREAM, IN WHICH THE LEADER SPOT IS THE PREDOMINATING COMPONENT. THIS LEADER SPOT IS NOTICEABLY ELONGATED ABOUT JUNE 28 IN THE DIRECTION OF THE SOLAR ROTATION, AND ITS UMBRA IS CROSSED BY "BRIDGES" FROM NORTH TO SOUTH; ON JUNE 30 AND JULY 1 A BROAD "BRIDGE" CROSSES THE PENUMBRA ALSO, THUS DIVIDING, APPARENTLY, THE SPOT INTO TWO PORTIONS. IN THE CLUSTER AT THE REAR OF THE STREAM, A SPOT OF REGULAR FORMATION IS A PROMINENT FEATURE. 9981 19260624 19260703 INTERMITTENT. A DISTURBED REGION N GROUP 9980. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN FROM JUNE 28 TO JULY 2 INCLUSIVE. 9982 19260625 19260701 A SMALL GROUP WITH ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT. 9983 19260626 19260703 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 9964. A SMALL CLUSTER IN THE P PART OF EXTENSIVE FACULAE. 9984 19260627 19260705 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY FOLLOWER ON JUNE 30 AND JULY 1. 9985 19260628 19260702 A CLUSTER OF MODERATE-SIZED SPOTS. 9986 19260629 19260703 RETURN OF GROUP 9966; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 9987 19260629 19260704 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 9975. A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH A TINY COMPANION. 9988 19260630 19260702 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS. 9989 19260630 19260704 RETURN OF GROUP 9967. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH TWO COMPANIONS AFTER JULY 1. 9990 19260702 19260704 A SMALL SPOT. 9991 19260703 19260712 A REGION OF DISTURBANCE IN WHICH ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS PERSIST. 9992 19260605 19260606 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 5 OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS ON JULY 6. 9993 19260705 19260709 A PAIR OF SPOT CENTRES OF WHICH THE PRECEDING ALONE REMAINS ON JULY 8 AND 9. 9994 19260706 19260710 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM. 9995 19260707 19260708 TWO OR THREE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 9996 19260709 19260713 AN UNIMPORTANT GROUP. 9997 19260713 19260715 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP. 9998 19260717 19260722 INTERMITTENT. RETURN OF GROUP 9985. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS IN THE PRECEDING PORTION OF A PROMINENT AREA OF FACULAE. THE SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JULY 17, 19 AND 22 ONLY. 9999 19260719 19260723 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JULY 19, 21 AND 23. 10000 19260719 19260730 AT FIRST AN INSIGNIFICANT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS SHOWING NO INCREASE UNTIL AFTER JULY 23, WHEN A MODERATELY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT APPEARS AS THE LEADER. 10001 19260720 19260725 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JULY 20. A SMALL GROUP ON JULY 23 TO 25. 10002 19260720 19260802 RETURN OF GROUP 9980. A SPOT NEARLY REGULAR IN OUTLINE. ON JULY 27, A TINY STREAM FORMS NORTHWARDS. 10003 19260721 19260723 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 10004 19260722 19260730 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE BEGINNING AS TWO PAIRS OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 23. 10005 19260724 19260726 A PAIR OF FAINT SPOTS P GROUP 10000. 10006 19260724 19260805 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WHOSE COMPONENTS SEPARATE 14 DEGREES IN LONGITUDE. UNTIL JULY 30 THE LEADER SPOT IS OF A SEMI-COMPOSITE STRUCTURE, AND IT AND THE FOLLOWING SPOTS UP TO THIS TIME SHOW MARKED CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. THE GROUP IS VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 10007 19260725 19260731 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ON JULY 25, 29 AND 31, F GROUP 10002. 10008 19260726 19260805 A PAIR OF SPOT CENTRES WHICH SEPARATE CONSIDERABLY. THE FOLLOWING ONE IS NOT REPRESENTED BY A SPOT AFTER JULY 29, BUT THE LEADING ONE CONTINUES TO THE WEST LIMB AS THE ORIGIN OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10009 19260728 19260805 A GROUP CONSISTING OF A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS ARRANGED IN A STREAM TO THE S. BY AUG. 3, THE REGULAR SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED, BUT TWO OR THREE FAINT SPOTS CONTINUE TO MARK THE PLACE OF THE DISTURBANCE ON AUG. 3 AND 5. 10010 19260730 19260804 A SMALL DISTURBANCE IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING GROUP 10008. 10011 19260731 19260805 SMALL EVANESCENT SPOTS. A VERY SMALL SPOT 974I IS PROBABLY CONNECTED WITH THEM. 10012 19260731 19260805 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT ON JULY 31; A PAIR ON AUG. 5. 10013 19260731 19260807 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 10014 19260802 19260807 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT FOLLOWED BY BRIGHT FACULAE ON AUG. 2; A TINY CLUSTER OF MARKINGS ON AUG. 7. 10015 19260803 19260805 THREE SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOTS ON AUG. 3; TWO ON AUG. 4; AND ONE-THE LEADER-ON AUG. 5. 10016 19260803 19260814 A LARGE SPOT ON AUG. 3 PRECEDED BY AN INCREASING NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS, STRETCHING OUT INTO A STREAM WHICH CHANGES CONSIDERABLY FROM DAY TO DAY. MEANWHILE, THE ORIGINAL SPOT DECREASES RAPIDLY, AND BY AUG. 12 IT RANKS MERELY AS AN ORDINARY COMPONENT OF THE STREAM. THE FACULAE ATTENDING THE GROUP IS VERY BRIGHT AND DENSE. 10017 19260808 19260809 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 10018 19260808 19260815 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT PAIR OF SPOTS. 10019 19260810 19260822 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FOLLOWER HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 21, AND THE LEADER HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PORTIONS ON THE SAME DAY. 10020 19260812 19260813 A TINY SPOT. 10021 19260815 19260821 A GROUP OF FEEBLE BUT SUSTAINED ACTIVITY. 10022 19260819 19260824 A SMALL CLUSTER OF FAINT SPOTS FROM WHICH EMERGE A PAIR OF SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOTS. 10023 19260819 19260830 RETURN OF GROUP 10006. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO TINY COMPANIONS ON AUG. 26 AND 27. 10024 19260819 19260826 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 10010. A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON AUG. 25. 10025 19260821 19260826 A SMALL MARKING ON AUG. 21, DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM WITH TWO MODERATE-SIZED SPOTS AT THE HEAD AND MIDDLE OF THE DISTURBANCE RESPECTIVELY, THE TAIL BEING REPRESENTED BY ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10026 19260821 19260830 A LIKELY RETURN OF GROUP 10008. A VERY SMALL SPOT, OR OCCASIONALLY A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING GROUP 10024. 10027 19260821 19260829 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER UNTIL AUG. 24. 10028 19260823 19260901 AN UNSTABLE LEADER SPOT WITH A SHORT-LIVED CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING. 10029 19260825 19260901 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS IN WHICH THE LEADER COMES INTO BRIEF PROMINENCE ON AUG. 29. 10030 19260827 19260829 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON AUG. 27; A SINGLE SPOT ON AUG. 29 NP GROUP 10027 AND SP GROUP 10029. 10031 19260827 19260828 A TINY SPOT WHICH IS A DOUBLE ON AUG. 28. 10032 19260827 19260831 A VERY SMALL DISTINCT SPOT WITH TINY FOLLOWERS AFTER AUG. 28. 10033 19260830 19260907 RETURN OF GROUP 10016. FOUR OR FIVE DECREASING SPOTS IN A STREAM. 10034 19260831 19260902 A FEW VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 10035 19260901 19260903 A PAIR OF SPOTS FOLLOWED BY A LONG TRAIN OF FACULAE. 10036 19260901 19260910 ONE TINY SPOT ON SEPT. 1 AND 2; ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS A SMALL STREAM MAKES ITS APPEARANCE IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE ALTHOUGH NOT IN THE IDENTICAL POSITION OF THE FIRST SPOT. 10037 19260904 19260907 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 10038 19260905 19260910 A SMALL GROUP N GROUP 10036. 10039 19260909 19260918 A LONG STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS OF WHICH THE PRECEDING MEMBER REMAINS AFTER SEPT. 15. 10040 19260910 19260921 RETURN OF REVIVAL OF GROUP 10025. WHEN FIRST SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB, A CLEFT-SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA FOLLOWED BY TWO COMPANIONS. THE DIVISION OF THE LEADER INTO TWO PARTS HAS TAKEN PLACE BY SEPT. 12, AFTER WHICH THE TWO PORTIONS MAINTAIN A NEARLY CONSTANT DISTANCE APART. 10041 19260913 19260927 AN UNUSUALLY LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER SPOT SHOWS A MARKED ELONGATION FROM EAST TO WEST AFTER SEPT. 18, AND HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS ON SEPT. 23. THE FOLLOWER ON THE OTHER HAND, ALTHOUGH AT FIRST IRREGULAR WITH SEVERAL "BRIDGES," HAS ASSUMED A NEARLY CIRCULAR OUTLINE BY SEPT. 20. THE TWO LARGE SPOTS ARE ALMOST LINKED TOGETHER ON SEPT. 18 AND 19 BY A SINUOUS LINE OF SMALL COMPANION SPOTS. THE GROUP IS EASILY VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE, AND RANKS AS THE SECOND LARGEST OF THE YEAR. 10042 19260915 19260922 RETURN OF GROUP 10023; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PASSING TO EXTINCTION. 10043 19260916 19260922 A RETURN OR POSSIBLY ONLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 10029. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS; NONE IS SEEN ON SEPT. 20. 10044 19260917 19260918 A SMALL SPOT. 10045 19260917 19260920 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 10046 19260918 19260922 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 20-21. 10047 19260918 19260919 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 18 WITH A COMPANION ON SEPT. 19. 10048 19260919 19261001 A STREAM WITH A PREDOMINATING REGULAR SPOT. 10049 19260920 19260924 A PAIR OF SPOTS FORMING THE EXTREMITIES OF A DISTURBANCE. 10050 19260921 19260926 A VERY SMALL SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON SEPT. 25. 10051 19260922 19260923 A SMALL SPOT. 10052 19260924 19260929 A SHORT STREAM OR CLUSTER OF SPOTS. 10053 19260926 19261001 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM. 10054 19260926 19261003 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS SEPARATING CONSIDERABLY. THE LEADER SURVIVES AFTER SEPT. 28. 10055 19260926 19261004 A SMALL DECREASING REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TINY COMPANION ON SEPT. 30 AND OCT. 2. 10056 19260928 19261001 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN STREAM FORMATION. 10057 19260928 19261001 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 29. 10058 19260928 19260929 ONE SMALL SPOT. 10059 19261002 19261008 A FEW SPOTS SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA. 10060 19261003 19261004 ONE SMALL SPOT. 10061 19261004 19261009 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS WITH AXIS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 10062 19261004 19261017 A LARGE STREAM IN WHICH, CONTRARY TO THE USUAL SEQUENCE, THE FOLLOWER IS THE LONGER-LIVED OF THE TWO CHIEF COMPONENTS. 10063 19261006 19261016 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY, FOLLOWED BY A BROAD AREA OF FACULAE, IN WHICH ARE SEEN AT FIRST SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS AND LATER GROUP 10070. 10064 19261007 19261015 A LARGE GROUP OF RAPID GROWTH AND CONTINUOUS CHANGE IN THE TWO CHIEF COMPONENT SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LONGER-LIVED. 10065 19261007 19261020 REVIVAL OF GROUP 10040. A LARGE PEAR-SHAPED SPOT WHICH HAS BECOME NEARLY CIRCULAR BY OCT. 12 BY THE SEPARATION OF THE TAPERING PORTION FROM THE MAIN BODY. THERE ARE COMPANION SPOTS IN INCREASING NUMBERS UNTIL OCT. 13, WHEN THEY APPEAR SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA FOLLOWING THE LARGE SPOT. 10066 19261008 19261012 A SHORT STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS WITH ITS AXIS INCLINED CONSIDERABLY TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 10067 19261010 19261014 RETURN OF GROUP 10049. A CLUSTER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10068 19261010 19261023 RETURN OF GROUP 10041. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH NUMEROUS COMPANIONS. ON OCT. 14, THOSE IN THE REAR FORM A DENSE CLUSTER, WHICH FOR A WHILE BECOMES ALMOST A COMPLETE SPOT WITH UMBRA. 10069 19261012 19261019 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH NEAR COMPANIONS ON OCT. 15 AND DISTANT ONES ON OCT. 19. 10070 19261014 19261017 A SMALL STREAM OF BRIEF DURATION F GROUP 10063. 10071 19261016 19261018 A TINY SPOT IN THE FOLLOWING END OF THE LARGE TRACT OF FACULAE F GROUP 10065. 10072 19261016 19261027 RETURN OF GROUP 10048. A DECREASING SPOT APPROXIMATELY REGULAR IN STRUCTURE. FAINT, INDEFINITE COMPANIONS ARE NOTICEABLE ON OCT. 24-26. 10073 19261018 19261019 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT. 10074 19261021 19261030 A COMPOSITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY CONSIDERABLE FACULAE. 10075 19261024 19261102 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PASSING TO EXTINCTION USUALLY FOLLOWED BY TINY COMPANIONS. 10076 19261024 19261105 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 10077 19261025 19261026 A TINY SPOT ON OCT. 25; A COUPLE ON OCT. 26. 10078 19261025 19261029 A SMALL STREAM. 10079 19261025 19261030 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL GROUP; NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON OCT. 28 AND 29. 10080 19261026 19261030 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 10081 19261027 19261105 AN IMPERFECTLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS ON OCT. 29 AND NOV. 1. 10082 19261029 19261030 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 10083 19261031 19261106 A SMALL STREAM; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON AND AFTER NOV. 3. 10084 19261101 19261111 RETURN OF GROUP 10062. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING NEAR WHICH SMALL EVANESCENT COMPANIONS APPEAR NORTHWARDS IN THE FACULAE ATTENDING THE DISTURBANCE. 10085 19261102 19261103 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10086 19261103 19261104 ONE TINY SPOT. 10087 19261104 19261106 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. 10088 19261104 19261116 RETURN OF GROUP 10065. A REGULAR SPOT CLEFT BY A "BRIDGE" WHICH FORMS THE LINE OF SEPARATION OF THE SPOT INTO TWO PORTIONS ON NOV. 7. THE LARGER AND PRECEDING PORTION ASSUMES A REGULAR OUTLINE AND SLOWLY DIES OUT; THE FOLLOWING PORTION RAPIDLY DIMINISHES TO AN UMBRAL DOT. A NUMBER OF ATTENDANT SPOTS APPEAR ON AND AFTER NOV. 8, AND ONE OF THESE BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT FOR A FEW DAYS. 10089 19261108 19261116 A DOUBLE SPOT WHICH BECOMES REGULAR BY NOV. 11, FOLLOWED, UNTIL THEN, BY SMALL COMPANIONS. 10090 19261110 19261116 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10091 19261112 19261114 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON NOV. 13. 10092 19261114 19261121 AN INSIGNIFICANT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS COMING INTO SUDDEN PROMINENCE ON NOV. 18, WHEN LARGER BUT UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR. 10093 19261116 19261117 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON NOV. 16 OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON NOV. 17. 10094 19261116 19261125 INTERMITTENT. A DOT ON NOV. 16; ON NOV. 20 A SMALL STREAM APPEARS IN THE SAME PLACE. 10095 19261117 19261124 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS BECOMING A SMALL STREAM AFTER NOV. 19. 10096 19261117 19261118 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON NOV. 18. 10097 19261119 19261128 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10098 19261119 19261129 A STREAM OF SPOTS LED BY A SMALL REGULAR COMPONENT WHICH IS ACCOMPANIED BY A CLOSE COMPANION ON AND AFTER NOV. 24. 10099 19261120 19261203 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY CONSIDERABLE FACULAE IN WHICH GROUP 10103 APPEARS AND WITH WHICH IT IS PROBABLY CONNECTED. 10100 19261121 19261125 A SMALL STREAM ON NOV. 21 OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 10101 19261121 19261202 RETURN OF GROUP 10076. A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER NOV. 29. 10102 19261122 19261123 A GROUP FORMING SP GROUP 10095. 10103 19261122 19261203 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT ON NOV. 22 AND 23; FROM NOV. 25 TO 29 ONE OR TWO UNSTABLE SPOTS; ON DEC. 3, A SINGLE DISTINCT SPOT. 10104 19261123 19261125 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 10101. 10105 19261123 19261205 A GROUP OF IRREGULAR DEVELOPMENT. AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPOSITE ONE. THE FORMER COALESCES WITH A NEW AND RAPIDLY GROWING COMPANION, WHILST THE LATTER DISSIPATES AS A SMALL CLUSTER; MEANWHILE A FEW SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOTS IN A CLUSTER APPEAR IN THE FRONT OF THE GROUP. 10106 19261124 19261126 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 10107 19261127 19261130 A SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 27; A PAIR ON NOV. 30. 10108 19261127 19261202 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 10101. 10109 19261128 19261205 AN IRREGULAR STREAM; LATTERLY THE SPOTS ARE DEFINITELY GROUPED ABOUT TWO CENTRES. 10110 19261130 19261209 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM DIMINISHING FROM THE FRONT REARWARDS. 10111 19261201 19261208 A CONSIDERABLE CLUSTER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10112 19261201 19261202 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10113 19261203 19261210 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, THOSE IN THE FRONT DISAPPEARING FIRST. 10114 19261204 19261216 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT BECOMING SLIGHTLY ELONGATED IN THE DIRECTION N.E.-S.W. 10115 19261207 19261217 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, EXCEPT THAT THE LEADER IS LESS STABLE THAN USUAL, AND THE FOLLOWER, THOUGH COMPOSITE IN CHARACTER, IS LONGER-LIVED. 10116 19261209 19261212 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 10102. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 10117 19261209 19261219 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 10118 19261210 19261222 A POSSIBLE RETURN, BUT MORE PROBABLY A REVIVAL OF GROUP 10094. A LARGE STREAM BEGINNING AS A PAIR OF SPOTS BUT DEVELOPING IN A VERY COMPLEX MANNER OWING TO RAPIDLY CHANGING COMPONENTS. 10119 19261212 19261213 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 12, ONE ONLY ON DEC. 13. 10120 19261212 19261222 AN UNSTABLE STREAM OF FEW SPOTS. 10121 19261213 19261214 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL DISTANT COMPANION ON DEC. 16 AND 19. 10122 19261216 19261217 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 10123 19261216 19261217 A FEW TINY SPOTS P GROUP 10120. 10124 19261216 19261219 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 10125 19261218 19261229 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL FOLLOWERS. 10126 19261218 19261229 REVIVAL NEAR GROUP 10099. A COMPOSITE SPOT BREAKING ON DEC. 20 INTO SEVERAL PORTIONS OF WHICH THE LARGEST AND MOST SOUTHERN CONTINUES FOR SOME TIME AS A REGULAR SPOT. 10127 19261218 19261229 A LONG STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS REPRESENTED NEAR THE WEST LIMB BY ONE SURVIVING COMPONENT IN CONSIDERABLE FACULAE. 10128 19261221 19261225 RETURN OF GROUP 10105. A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT. 10129 19261222 19261226 A RELATIVELY SMALL GROUP. 10130 19261223 19261225 A SMALL GROUP. 10131 19261223 19261229 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS SHOWING AN INCREASE WHEN NEARING THE WEST LIMB. 10132 19261224 19261228 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP. 10133 19261226 19270107 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION WHICH DISSOLVES INTO A CLUSTER AND DISAPPEARS AFTER JAN. 2. THE LARGE SPOT WHICH IS ELONGATED IN THE DIRECTION OF THE SOLAR ROTATION IS CROSSED BY "BRIDGES" FROM NORTH TO SOUTH ON JAN. 1-3. THE GROUP IS VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 10134 19261228 19261230 A STREAM FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10135 19261228 19270108 A REGULAR SPOT SURROUNDED BY A NUMBER OF COMPANIONS AND FOLLOWED AT SOME DISTANCE BY A SMALL BUT COMPARATIVELY LONG-LIVED SPOT. BETWEEN JAN. 4 AND 5, THE REGULAR SPOT IS CONSIDERABLY DRAWN OUT IN THE DIRECTION N.E. AND S.W., AND SHOWS A RAPID DIMINUTION BEFORE FINALLY BREAKING UP. 10136 19261231 19270112 RETURN OF GROUP 10114. A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 10137 19270101 19270103 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 10138 19270102 19270115 A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 10115. A LARGE, ACTIVE STREAM PREDOMINATED BY A COMPOSITE LEADER SPOT WITH A BROAD CLEFT IN A NORTH-SOUTH DIRECTION. THE GROUP IS VISBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 10139 19270105 19270111 A SMALL STREAM. 10140 19270105 19270116 A COMPACT STREAM OF WHICH THE MOST STABLE MEMBER IS THE LEADING SPOT. 10141 19270105 19270111 INTERMITTENT. ON JAN. 5 AND 6 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS IN THE P PART OF A CONSPICUOUS AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH GROUP 10143 DEVELOPS ON JAN. 7; ON JAN. 11, A SMALL SPOT IS SEEN. 10142 19270107 19270110 A COUPLE OF SMALL SPOTS. 10143 19270107 19270117 A GROUP OF RAPID INCREASE AND DECREASE IN WHICH THE FORMATION OF THE COMPONENT SPOTS IS IRREGULAR. SEE NOTE TO GROUP 10141. 10144 19270108 19270110 A SMALL, DISTINCT SPOT IN THE P PORTION OF AN AREA OF FACULAE WHICH ORIGINATED WITH GROUP 10120. 10145 19270109 19270110 A SMALL SPOT. 10146 19270112 19270113 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 10143. 10147 19270113 19270118 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 10148 19270113 19270125 RETURN OF GROUP 10131. A VERY LARGE SPOT, SEEN WITH THE NAKED EYE, ACCOMPANIED BY SMALL CHANGING SPOTS AND PENUMBRAL MARKINGS. THIS SPOT, WHICH IS SURROUNDED BY CONSIDERABLE FACULAE, IS CROSSED BY A "BRIDGE" FROM JAN. 15 TO 18. 10149 19270115 19270127 RETURN OF GROUP 10125. A REGULAR SPOT UNDERGOING CHANGE AFTER JAN. 22; ON JAN. 25 AN EVANESCENT CLUSTER OF IRREGULAR SPOTS HAS APPEARED CLOSELY FOLLOWING IT. 10150 19270115 19270127 A LARGE SPOT, TENDING TO COMPOSITE STRUCTURE, FOLLOWED BY A PARTIALLY-FORMED SPOT WHICH HAS DIMINISHED TO A DOT BY JAN. 27; OCCASIONAL SMALL ATTENDANTS ARE PRESENT. 10151 19270116 19270119 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 10152 19270116 19270120 A TINY SPOT S GROUP 10153; NO SPOT IS SEEN ON JAN. 18 AND 19. 10153 19270116 19270123 A SMALL STREAM S GROUP 10148. 10154 19270117 19270118 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS SP GROUP 10153. 10155 19270120 19270123 A SHORT STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JAN. 21. 10156 19270122 19270201 RETURN OF GROUP 10133. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS, DIMINISHING TO A DOT. THE GROUP IS FOLLOWED BY CONSPICUOUS FACULAE IN THE REAR OF WHICH GROUP 10162 APPEARS. 10157 19270123 19270125 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 10158 19270126 19270129 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10159 19270127 19270208 A LARGE STREAM COMMENCING AS A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB ON JAN. 27; THE LEADER, WHICH PREDOMINATES THROUGHOUT, HAS GROWN RAPIDLY TO A LARGE SPOT ON JAN. 30, BUT A PORTION BREAKS AWAY ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. THE REMAINDER OF THE STREAM IS MADE UP OF A TRAIN OF RAPIDLY CHANGING SPOTS. 10160 19270127 19270208 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS UNTIL FEB. 4. 10161 19270128 19270129 A DOT BECOMING A SMALL REGULAR SPOT BY THE FOLLOWING DAY. 10162 19270128 19270203 A SMALL STREAM. 10163 19270129 19270205 A STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING RAPIDLY AND SOON DECLINING. A PAIR OF SPOTS FORM THE REAR OF THE STREAM. 10164 19270129 19270207 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS, NP GROUP 10165 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. 10165 19270129 19270211 RETURN OF GROUP 10138. A REGULAR SPOT WHICH INCREASES AND BECOMES ELONGATED IN A LONGITUDINAL DIRECTION; ON FEB. 8 IT IS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY A NARROW "BRIDGE" WHICH CROSSES THE ENTIRE SPOT NORTH TO SOUTH. THERE ARE A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS AT FIRST FOLLOWING AT SOME DISTANCE IN DENSE FACULAE, AND LATER ADJACENT TO THE SPOT. 10166 19270129 19270210 A FAIR SIZED SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER. THE FORMER DIVIDES INTO SEVERAL PORTIONS AFTER JAN. 31. 10167 19270130 19270131 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10168 19270131 19270207 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS AFTER FEB. 4. THE GROUP CLOSELY PRECEDES NO. 10169. 10169 19270201 19270210 A SPOT WITH COMPANIONS DIMINISHING RAPIDLY ON FEB. 6 AND 7, NOTHING IS VISIBLE, BUT ON THE TWO FOLLOWING DAYS A TINY EPHEMERAL SPOT MARKS THE PLACE. 10170 19270202 19270213 A COMPLEX GROUP. AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. ON FEB. 5, IRREGULARLY-SHAPED SPOTS ORIGINATE IMMEDIATELY IN FRONT, AND THE REGULAR SPOT BECOMES ABSORBED IN A LARGER SPOT OF COMPOSITE STRUCTURE WHICH FORMS RAPIDLY. THE GROUP HAS A BRIEF MAXIMUM AND IS DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 10171 19270202 19270214 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, STABLE FOR ITS SIZE. 10172 19270203 19270205 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 10173 19270203 19270215 TWO SPOTS 7 DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE NEAR THE EAST LIMB; THE LEADER INCREASES VERY CONSIDERABLY; THE FOLLOWER BECOMES AN UNSTABLE CLUSTER. THE FACULAE SEEN SURROUNDING THE GROUP AT THE WEST LIMB ARE SMALL CONSIDERING THE SIZE OF THE SPOTS. 10174 19270204 19270208 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON FEB. 7, F GROUP 10171. 10175 19270205 19270210 AN UNSTABLE CLUSTER, P GROUP 10173. THE REAR PART ONLY OF THE DISTURBANCE IS REPRESENTED BY A SPOT ON FEB. 10. 10176 19270205 19270214 AN UNSTABLE STREAM WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ABOUT FEB. 10. 10177 19270206 19270211 ONE OR TWO SPOTS NEAR THE SOUTHERN BOUNDARY OF A MODERATELY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON FEB. 9. 10178 19270207 19270215 A LONG STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS, N GROUP 10173. 10179 19270208 19270210 A FEW SPOTS IN STREAM FORMATION. 10180 19270208 19270220 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A LONG TRAIN OF FACULAE IN WHICH A SMALL COMPANION APPEARS ON FEB. 12. 10181 19270212 19270218 ONE OR MORE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10182 19270212 19270214 SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 10183. 10183 19270212 19270224 RETURN OF GROUP 10150. A STABLE, REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO ATTENDANTS ON FEB. 18 TO 21. 10184 19270213 19270221 RETURN OF GROUP 10149. THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL BUT DISTINCT AND PERSISTENT SPOT WITH TWO COMPANIONS PRECEDING IT ON FEB. 16 AND ONE ON FEB. 17. 10185 19270214 19270217 ONE SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON FEB. 14 AND 17. 10186 19270215 19270223 A MODERATE-SIZED UNSTABLE STREAM. THIS DEVELOPS SUDDENLY BETWEEN FEB. 14-15 AMONGST A SMALL BUT WELL DEFINED AREA OF FACULAE SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON FEB. 13. 10187 19270216 19270223 A PAIR OF SMALL CLUSTERS BECOMING WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON FEB. 22. 10188 19270219 19270227 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 10189 19270219 19270221 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS APPEARING IN THE REAR OF GROUP 10188. 10190 19270221 19270224 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 10191 19270221 19270304 A DOUBLE SPOT LEADING AN AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH TINY SPOTS ARE SEEN ON FEB. 24-25. ON FEB. 26 A CLUSTER OF SPOTS ORIGINATES NEXT TO THE LEADER. 10192 19270222 19270225 A FEW VERY UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10193 19270223 19270225 A DISTURBED REGION MARKED BY FACULAE IN WHICH TWO OR THREE SCATTERED SPOTS ARE SEEN. 10194 19270223 19270224 A SMALL SPOT, SEE GROUP 10195. 10195 19270224 19270303 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON FEB. 28 AND MAR. 2. GROUPS 10194 AND 95 ARE SURROUNDED BY A FAIRLY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE WHICH EVIDENTLY ORIGINATED WITH GROUP 10159. 10196 19270224 19270309 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 10197 19270225 19270226 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 10198 19270225 19270226 A VERY SMALL FAINT SPOT. 10199 19270225 19270303 A SMALL INTERMITTENT SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAR. 1 AND 2. 10200 19270227 19270302 A DOT ON FEB. 27; ANOTHER ON MAR. 1; ON MAR. 2, TWO SPOTS ARE DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10201 19270227 19270228 ONE SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 27, A PAIR ON FEB. 28. 10202 19270227 19270228 A FEW SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 10203 19270227 19270309 A MODERATE DISTURBANCE REPRESENTED AT FIRST BY VERY SMALL SPOTS: THEN BY A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER, AND LATER, AT THE WEST LIMB, BY OTHER SPOTS OF UNSTABLE CHARACTER IN A LONG STRETCH OF FACULAE. 10204 19270228 19270301 A FEW TINY SPOTS NP GROUP 10196. 10205 19270301 19270304 A SMALL SPOT, N GROUP 10203 WITH A COMPANION ON MAR. 2. 10206 19270303 19270306 A SMALL GROUP. 10207 19270303 19270308 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 10208 19270303 19270315 RETURN OF GROUP 10173. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A "BRIDGE" ACROSS IT FROM MAR. 6. 10209 19270304 19270314 AN UNSTABLE CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, S GROUP 10208. 10210 19270306 19270312 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10211 19270307 19270309 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 10212 19270307 19270309 A SMALL SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON MAR. 7. 10213 19270308 19270310 SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS, TWO ARE SEEN ON MAR. 8 AND ONE ON MAR. 9 AND 10. 10214 19270309 19270310 A TINY STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS. 10215 19270309 19270313 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 10216 19270310 19270318 A STREAM OF RAPID RISE AND DECLINE WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER UNTIL MAR. 16, WHEN A COMPANION SPOT APPEARS IN FRONT OF IT. 10217 19270311 19270323 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. SMALL COMPANIONS ARE PRESENT ON MAR. 19-20. 10218 19270313 19270326 A LARGE AND UNUSUALLY LONG STREAM IN HIGH LATITUDE. THE HEAD OF THE STREAM IS REPRESENTED BY A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WHILST THE REAR PORTION IS MADE UP OF A LARGE CLUSTER OF RAPIDLY CHANGING COMPONENTS. THE REGION OF THIS GROUP HAS BEEN ACTIVE SINCE MID DECEMBER, 1926. SEE GROUP 10125 ET SEQ. 10219 19270313 19270325 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 10220 19270314 19270323 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF IMPERFECTLY FORMED SPOTS. 10221 19270314 19270323 TWO CLUSTERS OF SPOTS DECREASING RAPIDLY. THE NUCLEUS OF THE LARGER SPOT OF THE PRECEDING CLUSTER IS ALL THAT REMAINS AFTER MAR. 21. 10222 19270315 19270316 A TINY SPOT, SF GROUP 10219, IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE. 10223 19270316 19270319 A SMALL SPOT WHICH HAS BROKEN UP ON MAR. 18. 10224 19270317 19270326 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 10225 19270320 19270321 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 10226 19270321 19270327 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 21; A ROW OF FOUR TINY MARKINGS ON MAR. 22, A TINY SPOT ON MAR. 27. 10227 19270322 19270323 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10228 19270322 19270323 A COUPLE OF FAINT MARKINGS. 10229 19270323 19270328 A SMALL GROUP; ON MAR. 25-27 ONE SPOT ONLY IS SEEN. 10230 19270324 19270329 A SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON MAR. 27. 10231 19270325 19270329 A SMALL GROUP. 10232 19270327 19270328 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 27 OF WHICH ONE COMPONENT REMAINS ON MAR. 28. 10233 19270327 19270328 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS. 10234 19270329 19270331 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAR. 30. 10235 19270329 19270407 A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT. 10236 19270330 19270405 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 10237 19270331 19270401 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON MAR. 31, A CLUSTER ON APR. 1. 10238 19270331 19270407 A STREAM OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. 10239 19270331 19270412 A LARGE IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS SHOWING CONSIDERABLE CHANGES. THE LEADER IS THE LARGEST SPOT AND TENDS TO COMPOSITE STRUCTURE. 10240 19270401 19270409 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS BECOMING MORE DEFINITE AFTER APR. 4. 10241 19270401 19270406 A SMALL STREAM OF BRIEF DURATION; THE REAR PORTION HAVING DISAPPEARED BY APR. 3. 10242 19270401 19270402 A VERY SMALL SPOT PRECEDED BY FACULAE. 10243 19270402 19270407 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON APR. 2 WHICH IS REDUCED TO ONE SMALL SPOT ON APR. 3. ON APR. 5 A LARGER STREAM BEGINS TO FORM. 10244 19270402 19270409 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY FACULAE AND PRECEDED BY GROUP 10239; ON APR. 9 IT IS REPRESENTED BY A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS. 10245 19270403 19270404 A DOT ACCOMPANIED BY ANOTHER ON APR. 4. 10246 19270405 19270417 AN UNUSUAL GROUP, OF WHICH THE ORIGIN OCCURS ON THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE-A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS SLOWLY APPROACHING ONE ANOTHER. THE LEADER IS FURTHER FROM THE SUN'S EQUATOR AND BEGINS TO DIMINISH RAPIDLY AFTER APR. 10. 10247 19270406 19270416 A FEW SMALL SPOTS LYING BETWEEN GROUPS 10246 AND 10248. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON APR. 9-11. 10248 19270406 19270418 A LARGE COMPLEX STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. GROUP 10246, 47, 48 AND 52 CLOSELY FOLLOW ONE ANOTHER. 10249 19270407 19270409 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, S GROUP 10244. 10250 19270407 19270419 A VARIABLE GROUP. 10251 19270408 19270411 ON APR. 8 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS; ON APR. 9 AND 10, ONLY SMALL FACULAE ARE VISIBLE. ON APR. 11 A LARGER PAIR OF SPOTS HAVE FORMED. 10252 19270408 19270418 A SMALL GROUP COMPRISING LATER A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL ATTENDANT F GROUP 10248. 10253 19270409 19270411 A VERY SMALL GROUP, F GROUP 10244. 10254 19270410 19270418 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING AFTER APR. 14; AFTERWARDS, ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE. 10255 19270411 19270422 A SMALL SPOT ON APR. 11, DEVELOPING INTO A SHORT IRREGULAR STREAM, COMPOSED OF TWO PARALLEL AND INTERMINGLING STREAMS. 10256 19270411 19270421 RETURN OF GROUP 10218. A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF COMPANIONS IN DIMINISHING NUMBERS. A LARGE PATCH OF FACULAE ACCOMPANIES THE GROUP. 10257 19270411 19270418 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS, N GROUP 10255. 10258 19270412 19270419 A STREAM DECREASING RAPIDLY. 10259 19270412 19270418 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING AS A CLUSTER. 10260 19270414 19270416 ONE TINY SPOT, S GROUP 10246, NOT SEEN ON APR. 15. 10261 19270414 19270416 A VERY SMALL GROUP, P GROUP 10250. 10262 19270415 19270424 A STREAM OF RAPID GROWTH. THE LEADER SPOT PASSES THROUGH UNUSUAL CHANGES AS A SMALL SPOT ON APR. 15, A PAIR OF SPOTS ON APR. 16, A COMPOSITE SPOT ON APR. 17, AND A REGULAR SPOT ON APR. 19. 10263 19270418 19270424 A PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 10264 19270419 19270421 A TINY SPOT ON APR. 19, A PAIR ON APR. 21. 10265 19270420 19270501 RETURN OF GROUP 10236. A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING SLOWLY. THERE ARE TINY FOLLOWERS ON APR. 28. 10266 19270421 19270428 A PARTIALLY FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS. 10267 19270422 19270426 INTERMITTENT. A FEW TINY SPOTS IN A STREAM ON APR. 22. A SINGLE SPOT ON APR. 23 AND 26. 10268 19270422 19270503 NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS IN A BROAD STREAM. THE LEADER IS THE ONLY SPOT WHICH CAN BE TRACED FOR LONGER THAN A DAY OR TWO. A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 10243. 10269 19270423 19270424 A VERY SMALL SPOT, S GROUP 10265. 10270 19270425 19270426 ONE SMALL SPOT. 10271 19270425 19270505 A REGULAR SPOT BECOMING MARKEDLY ELONGATED ON APR. 29 BEFORE DIVIDING INTO TWO PARTS ON APR. 30, OF WHICH THE LARGER AND PRECEDING PART OUTLIVES THE OTHER. 10272 19270426 19270427 A PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY ON APR. 26 NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10273 19270426 19270428 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 10274 19270426 19270430 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON APR. 30. 10275 19270427 19270507 A VERY SMALL SPOT, IN A REGION MARKED BY FACULAE, DEVELOPING INTO A LONG VARIABLE STREAM. ON MAY 3, THIS CONSISTS OF FOUR REGULAR SPOTS, ONE AT THE HEAD, A PAIR IN THE MIDDLE AND ONE AT THE END OF THE STREAM. 10276 19270502 19270507 A DIMINISHING SPOT WITH FOLLOWERS ON MAY 3 AND 5. 10277 19270503 19270512 A STREAM UNDERGOING MARKED CHANGES. THE PRECEDING SPOTS LAST THE LONGEST. 10278 19270504 19270508 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 10279 19270504 19270513 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WITH ITS AXIS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 10280 19270505 19270508 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON MAY 6, IN FACULAE F GROUP 10277. 10281 19270506 19270512 A SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 10282 19270506 19270507 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP, P GROUP 10277. 10283 19270508 19270510 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10284 19270508 19270514 A SMALL SPOT. 10285 19270509 19270511 A GROUP APPEARING 3 DAYS BEFORE PASSING ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 10286 19270509 19270511 A SMALL GROUP SUBORDINATE TO GROUP 10277. 10287 19270509 19270518 A VERY LARGE GROUP OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT CONSISTING AFTER MAY 11 OF TWO LARGE SPOTS. THE GROUP IS VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 10288 19270509 19270518 A STREAM OF SMALLISH UNSTABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 10287. 10289 19270509 19270519 RETURN OF GROUP 10262. AN IMPERFECTLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLOSE COMPANION AND ANOTHER FARTHER AWAY. THE GROUP DECREASES RAPIDLY. 10290 19270510 19270513 A SMALL GROUP WITH ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT. 10291 19270511 19270512 A SMALL EPHEMERAL CLUSTER. 10292 19270511 19270514 A FEW FAINT ISOLATED SPOTS. 10293 19270511 19270520 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 10272. A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP ON MAY 17 AND DISAPPEARING QUICKLY. 10294 19270515 19270526 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 21. 10295 19270517 19270523 A GROUP OF UNSTABLE SPOTS WITH AXIS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. 10296 19270517 19270520 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON MAY 17. 10297 19270517 19270527 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING SPOT IS AT FIRST LARGER AND MORE STABLE THAN THE LEADER. 10298 19270518 19270522 A SMALL STREAM. 10299 19270518 19270524 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING SPOT REMAINS ALONE ON AND AFTER MAY 20. 10300 19270520 19270524 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 10301 19270521 19270601 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER WHICH HAS DIED OUT BY MAY 29. 10302 19270522 19270524 A SMALL GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10303 19270522 19270529 A SMALL STREAM. 10304 19270522 19270526 INTERMITTENT TINY SPOTS IN FACULAE ADJOINING GROUP 10303. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON MAY 24 AND 25. 10305 19270523 19270526 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON MAY 25 AND 26. 10306 19270524 19270529 A STREAM OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 10307 19270524 19270604 A STREAM GROWING FROM A SMALL SPOT IN FACULAE AT THE EAST LIMB ON MAY 24. THE LEADER, WHICH IS A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE SOLE SURVIVOR AFTER MAY 30. 10308 19270525 19270530 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST AND LONGEST-LIVED SPOT. 10309 19270525 19270606 A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 10310 19270602 19270614 RETURN OF GROUP 10287. A VERY LARGE SPOT FOLLOWED CLOSELY BY ONE OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE WHICH COALESCES TEMPORARILY WITH IT ON JUNE 8. BY THIS DATE ANOTHER SPOT HAS FORMED BEHIND, THUS COMPLETING A STREAM 10 DEGREES IN LENGTH BETWEEN THE CENTRES OF THE FIRST AND LAST SPOTS. THE LARGE LEADER SPOT IS CROSSED BY A "BRIDGE," N TO S, FROM JUNE 2 TO 9. THE GROUP HAS DECREASED CONSIDERABLY BY THE TIME IT PASSES AROUND THE WEST LIMB. 10311 19270604 19270608 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 4 AND 5; A PAIR ON JUNE 8. 10312 19270605 19270610 SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 9, IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 10310. 10313 19270605 19270613 A SHORT STREAM OR CLUSTER WITH ONE CONSPICUOUS COMPONENT ON JUNE 8. 10314 19270606 19270613 A SMALL GROUP WITH A SUDDEN BUT BRIEF MAXIMUM ON JUNE 10, WHEN A REGULAR SPOT HAS APPEARED AS THE LEADER. 10315 19270611 19270623 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 10297. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 10316 19270612 19270615 A SMALL GROUP. 10317 19270612 19270619 A SMALL SPARSE STREAM. 10318 19270612 19270619 A SMALL, DISTINCT AND PERSISTENT SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON JUNE 12-14. 10319 19270613 19270614 A SMALL EVANESCENT CLUSTER OF WHICH ONE SPOT IS LEFT ON JUNE 14. 10320 19270614 19270616 ONE TINY SPOT EACH DAY. 10321 19270617 19270628 A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 10301. A SMALL CLUSTER SHOWING AN INCREASE OF ACTIVITY ON JUNE 23. GROUP 10322 IS IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA. 10322 19270619 19270626 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS NEAR GROUP 10321; NOTHING IS SEEN ON JUNE 21. 10323 19270619 19270630 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGER AND LONGER-LIVED. 10324 19270622 19270626 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 10325 19270623 19270625 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 10326 19270624 19270628 A FEW TINY SPOTS, F GROUP 10323. 10327 19270625 19270630 A VERY SMALL SPOT WHICH GROWS AND BECOMES ELONGATED BEFORE DIVIDING UP ON JUNE 28. 10328 19270625 19270706 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES UNUSUALLY LARGE COMPARED WITH THE OTHER SPOTS. BETWEEN JUNE 30 AND JULY 1 THE LEADER ANNEXES A SPOT IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING IT. A PRONOUNCED "BRIDGE" REMAINS ACROSS THE COMPOUND SPOT UNTIL JULY 4. 10329 19270625 19270701 A SPOT BREAKING UP INTO A CLUSTER ON JUNE 29. 10330 19270626 19270702 A PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY; THE FOLLOWER HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLUSTER ON JUNE 29, WHILST THE LEADER CONTINUES AS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 10331 19270626 19270704 AT FIRST A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH SPLIT UP; BETWEEN JUNE 29 AND JULY 1 THE GROUP REFORMS AS ANOTHER PAIR OF RATHER LARGER SPOTS. 10332 19270626 19270703 A FEW FAINT SPOTS IN FACULAE, F GROUP 10328. 10333 19270628 19270629 ONE TINY SPOT. 10334 19270628 19270703 A MODERATE-SIZED SPOT, BREAKING UP AFTER JUNE 28. 10335 19270629 19270711 RETURN OF GROUP 10310. THIRD APPEARANCE. A PAIR OF FAIRLY LARGE REGULAR SPOTS IN A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. THE SMALLER AND MORE NORTHERN SPOT SLOWLY DECREASES, BUT THE OTHER INCREASES, FIRST BY THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN EXTENSION FOLLOWING IT AND LATER, ON JULY 5, BY A NEBULOUS GROWTH PRECEDING IT. THE LONG COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH RESULTS IS BREAKING UP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. EARLIER THERE IS A SMALL DISTANT COMPANION AND A CLUSTER OF FAINT SPOTS IN THE ACCOMPANYING FACULAE. 10336 19270702 19270705 A SMALL STREAM. 10337 19270702 19270705 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 10338 19270704 19270711 A LONG STREAM OF FEW SPOTS, THE MOST STABLE BEING AT THE REAR. 10339 19270708 19270712 RETURN OF GROUP 10315; THIRD APPEARANCE. A VERY SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 10340 19270709 19270712 A SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 12. 10341 19270712 19270714 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 10342 19270713 19270724 RETURN OF GROUP 10321. A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER JULY 18. COMPANION SPOTS ARE NUMEROUS ABOUT JULY 18 AND JULY 20 WHEN THEY FORM A SUBSIDIARY STREAM SOUTHWARDS. 10343 19270715 19270718 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 10344 19270715 19270718 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 10345 19270716 19270718 A SMALL GROUP. 10346 19270719 19270801 RETURN OF GROUP 10331. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 10347 19270720 19270727 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10348 19270721 19270802 RETURN OF GROUP 10328. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT SEEN WITH THE NAKED EYE. 10349 19270724 19270727 A CLUSTER. 10350 19270727 19270730 A SPARSE STREAM OF WHICH ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON JULY 29 AND 30. 10351 19270727 19270801 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING AS A VERY SMALL MARKING ON AUG. 1. 10352 19270730 19270808 A DISTURBED AREA CONTINUING TO PRODUCE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10353 19270731 19270804 A SHORT STREAM OR CLUSTER. 10354 19270801 19270804 A GROUP INCREASING AS IT ROUNDS THE WEST LIMB. 10355 19270801 19270806 A STREAM OF FEW SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST AND LONGEST-LIVED. 10356 19270802 19270806 A VERY SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT; COMPANIONS HAVE APPEARED ON AUG. 6. 10357 19270802 19270809 A FAIRLY LARGE IRREGULAR STREAM, WHICH COMMENCES AS A PAIR OF SPOTS ON AUG. 2, AND WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED TEMPORARILY ON AUG. 3. 10358 19270808 19270820 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 10342. TWO SPOTS, WIDELY SEPARATED, WHICH BECOME TWO CLUSTERS. ON AUG. 17, ONE TINY SPOT REMAINS, BUT A SLIGHT REVIVAL TAKES PLACE ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 10359 19270811 19270820 A BIG COMPOSITE SPOT DEVELOPING RAPIDLY (ESPECIALLY BETWEEN AUG. 13 AND 14) FROM A FEW TINY SPOTS, P GROUP 10358. 10360 19270814 19270820 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10361 19270814 19270824 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 21. 10362 19270815 19270827 A PAIR OF SMALLISH SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE WIDELY IN LONGITUDE. BETWEEN AUG. 20 AND 21 NEW SPOTS HAVE APPEARED, ALTERING ENTIRELY THE CHARACTER OF THE GROUP, WHICH THEN BECOMES A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM. 10363 19270818 19270830 RETURN OF GROUP 10348. THIRD APPEARANCE. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 10364 19270819 19270822 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 10354. A VERY SMALL SPOT. 10365 19270822 19270824 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON AUG. 22; ONE DOT ON AUG. 24. 10366 19270822 19270903 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A COMPOSITE ONE WITH WHICH IT MERGES ON AUG. 28 AND 29. A LARGE COMPLEX SPOT RESULTS, BUT THIS BREAKS UP, AND BY AUG. 31 THE GROUP RESEMBLES ITS FORMER APPEARANCE ABOUT AUG. 26. 10367 19270826 19270829 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 10368 19270827 19270829 A TINY SPOT, F GROUP 10366. 10369 19270827 19270908 A DOUBLE SPOT CLOSE TO WHICH A SHORT STREAM DEVELOPS AFTER AUG. 29. 10370 19270829 19270830 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 10371 19270830 19270909 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE IN WHICH THE LEADER IS AT FIRST COMPLEX. THE INCREASING SEPARATION BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER IS MARKED. 10372 19270904 19270916 RETURN OF GROUP 10359. A REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS BOTH PRECEDING AND FOLLOWING. A VERY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE ACCOMPANIES THE GROUP. 10373 19270907 19270908 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10374 19270908 19270912 A SPOT IN CONSIDERABLE FACULAE ADJOINING THAT BELONGING TO GROUP 10372. 10375 19270909 19270911 A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS SITUATED BETWEEN GROUPS 10372 AND 10374. 10376 19270909 19270912 AN UNSTABLE SPOT. 10377 19270909 19270920 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, SHOWING RAPID DEVELOPMENT FROM TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON SEPT. 9. 10378 19270911 19270912 A SMALL EVANESCENT GROUP. 10379 19270911 19270920 A VERY LARGE STREAM, N GROUP 10377, WITH WHICH IT IS NEARLY SYNCHRONOUS IN ITS DEVELOPMENT. BY SEPT. 17 THE STREAM CONSISTS OF A VERY LARGE LEADER SPOT AND A TRAIN OR CLUSTER OF COMPANIONS. 10380 19270912 19270922 A STREAM WITH THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE SPOT AT THE REAR. 10381 19270913 19270915 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 10382 19270913 19270917 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON SEPT. 16. 10383 19270913 19270915 A FAINT SPOT NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 14. 10384 19270913 19270925 A REGULAR SPOT, SOMEWHAT BROKEN IN APPEARANCE ON SEPT. 14 AND 15. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL TINY COMPANIONS. 10385 19270915 19270917 ONE SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 16, MARKING THE SOUTHERN BOUNDARY OF A FAIRLY LARGE PATCH OF FACULAE. 10386 19270915 19270922 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING AWAY AS A PAIR OF DOTS. POSSIBLY A RETURN OF GROUP 10363. 10387 19270916 19270917 A SMALL SPOT. 10388 19270916 19270925 A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT. 10389 19270920 19270921 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 20; ONE ONLY ON SEPT. 21. 10390 19270920 19270921 A SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 20, JOINED BY A COMPANION ON THE NEXT DAY. 10391 19270920 19270925 SOME VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN STREAM FORMATION. 10392 19270922 19270927 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM SHOWING RAPID CHANGE. 10393 19270922 19270927 A VARIABLE STREAM APPEARING IN FRONT OF GROUP 10388 WHEN THAT GROUP IS DISAPPEARING. 10394 19270922 19270927 A SMALL STREAM. 10395 19270922 19271004 A REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON AND AFTER SEPT. 28; ONE OF THESE IS CONSIDERABLE ON OCT. 2. 10396 19270923 19270927 A VERY SMALL STREAM, ONLY ONE SPOT BEING SEEN ON SEPT. 23, 26 AND 27. 10397 19270926 19270929 A TINY STREAM ON SEPT. 26 OF WHICH THE LEADER SURVIVES ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 10398 19270926 19270929 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. 10399 19270927 19270928 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 10400 19270927 19270930 TWO OR THREE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 29. 10401 19270930 19271006 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL GROUP NOT SEEN ON OCT. 2 AND 3. 10402 19271001 19271010 RETURN OF GROUP 10372. THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING AS A CLOSE PAIR OF DOTS. ON OCT. 7, GROUP 10408 DEVELOPS CLOSELY PRECEDING IT. 10403 19271001 19271003 A SINGLE SHORT-LIVED SPOT. 10404 19271002 19271015 A STREAM UNDERGOING MUCH CHANGE. THE LEADER IS AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT BUT DIVIDES INTO A CLUSTER. THE FOLLOWER BECOMES INCREASINGLY COMPOSITE IN CHARACTER AND ALSO DIVIDES, LENGTHENING OUT INTO A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10405 19271003 19271008 A SMALL GROUP. 10406 19271004 19271015 RETURN OF GROUP 10379. A SPOT, SOMEWHAT COMPLEX IN STRUCTURE, WHICH SPLITS UP INTO A CLUSTER ON OCT. 9 AND SO DISAPPEARS. MEANWHILE, ANOTHER CLUSTER APPEARS IN FRONT AND DEVELOPS RAPIDLY INTO A REGULAR SPOT WITH A LARGER COMPOSITE COMPANION. THIS REVIVAL OF ACTIVITY SOON DIMINISHES, AFTER A BRIEF MAXIMUM ABOUT OCT. 10. 10407 19271005 19271017 RETURN OF GROUP 10377. A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA WHICH HAS SEPARATED INTO TWO DISTINCT PARTS BY OCT. 9. THE LARGER AND SOUTHERN PORTION CONTINUES AS A REGULAR SPOT, WHILST THE OTHER PART SPEEDILY DIMINISHES. 10408 19271007 19271011 A SMALL STREAM APPEARING IN FRONT OF GROUP 10402. 10409 19271007 19271008 A FAINT SPOT. 10410 19271007 19271013 INTERMITTENT. A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON OCT. 7, 8 AND 13. 10411 19271007 19271010 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10412 19271009 19271019 AN IRREGULAR STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON OCT. 9, IN A DISTURBED REGION MARKED ALREADY BY BRIGHT FACULAE. ON OCT. 11 A LARGE SPOT IS FORMING AS THE LEADER; ON OCT. 12 THIS IS DIVIDING INTO TWO OF WHICH THE LEADING SPOT BECOMES NEARLY CIRCULAR. NONE OF THE OTHER COMPONENTS, WHICH ARE NUMEROUS ON SOME DAYS, ARE LARGE OR STABLE. 10413 19271010 19271012 A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS, F GROUP 10406. 10414 19271010 19271011 A TINY EPHEMERAL STREAM. 10415 19271010 19271023 RETURN OF GROUP 10384. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING. 10416 19271011 19271012 A VERY SMALL OUTLYING GROUP TO NO. 10406. 10417 19271014 19271015 A VERY SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT WITH FAINT COMPANIONS ON OCT. 14. 10418 19271016 19271022 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT, N GROUP 10419 IN THE SAME PATCH OF FACULAE. 10419 19271017 19271028 A STREAM OF SMALLISH SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE. 10420 19271018 19271019 ONE SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY A PATCH OF FACULAE. 10421 19271019 19271031 RETURN OF GROUP 10395. A REGULAR SPOT DEVELOPING A DOUBLE UMBRA ON OCT. 24 AND SPLITTING COMPLETELY INTO TWO WITHIN THE FOLLOWING THREE DAYS. 10422 19271021 19271022 A PAIR OF SMALLISH SPOTS. 10423 19271021 19271026 A STREAM WHICH GROWS QUICKLY AND IS LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 10424 19271022 19271025 A SMALL STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST SPOT. 10425 19271025 19271031 A SPOT WHICH HAS FADED BY OCT. 29; ON OCT. 31 FAINT MARKINGS ARE SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE. 10426 19271029 19271102 A SMALL STREAM. 10427 19271029 19271107 WITH GROUP 10430, A RETURN OF GROUP 10404. A SPOT RAPIDLY DIMINISHING; SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR AFTER NOV. 3. 10428 19271030 19271104 A SMALL STREAM SYNCHRONOUS IN ITS DEVELOPMENT WITH THAT OF THE ADJACENT GROUP 10429. 10429 19271030 19271104 A SMALL STREAM. 10430 19271030 19271108 WITH GROUP 10427, A RETURN OF GROUP 10404. A SPOT, WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER NOV. 5. TINY COMPANIONS APPEAR ON AND AFTER NOV. 5. 10431 19271101 19271104 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 10432 19271105 19271107 A SMALL EVANESCENT GROUP. 10433 19271106 19271116 A VERY BIG GROUP (VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE) GROWING FROM TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS ON NOV. 6-7 IN A PATCH OF BRIGHT FACULAE BELONGING TO GROUP 10412 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. BETWEEN NOV. 8 AND 10 THERE IS A GREAT INCREASE AND, AFTER A BRIEF MAXIMUM, A RAPID DECREASE FOLLOWS. ON NOV. 11 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT FOLLOWED CLOSELY BY ANOTHER OF ABOUT HALF THE SIZE. THESE CHANGE AND THEN BREAK UP WITHIN A FEW DAYS. 10434 19271109 19271112 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 10435 19271109 19271114 A STREAM OF FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10436 19271109 19271113 A TINY GROUP. 10437 19271109 19271110 ONE SMALL SPOT. 10438 19271109 19271121 RETURN OF GROUP 10423. A LARGE SPOT WITH COMPOSITE UMBRA FOLLOWED AND SOMETIMES PRECEDED BY NUMEROUS SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP IS ACCOMPANIED WITH CONSPICUOUS FACULAE. 10439 19271110 19271122 SCATTERED SPOTS CONDENSING INTO A STREAM ON NOV. 15, WITH THE LARGEST COMPONENT AT THE REAR. THE STREAM HAS DIS-APPEARED BY NOV. 20, BUT A SPOT IS SEEN ON NOV. 22 IN ITS PLACE. 10440 19271111 19271119 A SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 10439, AND, PERHAPS, ORIGINATING WITH IT. 10441 19271111 19271117 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT, IN BRIGHT FACULAE, NOT SEEN ON NOV. 12 AND 15. 10442 19271113 19271122 FEEBLE BUT PERSISTENT ACTIVITY SHOWN BY A PATCH OF BRIGHT FACULAE AND ONE OR MORE TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON NOV. 14, 15 AND 16. 10443 19271113 19271124 AT FIRST, ONE SMALL SPOT WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED ON NOV. 15. A REGULAR SPOT THEN DEVELOPS AND IS FOLLOWED BY A FEW TINY SPOTS UNTIL NOV. 18. 10444 19271114 19271116 A SMALL CLUSTER NOT PRESENT ON NOV. 15. 10445 19271116 19271119 A SMALL GROUP. 10446 19271116 19271127 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS, THE LEADER BEING BY FAR THE LARGEST COMPONENT AND SHOWING INTERESTING CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. 10447 19271118 19271120 A SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 18; A PAIR ON NOV. 20, IN FACULAE, F GROUP 10438. 10448 19271118 19271126 A STREAM IN WHICH THE REARMOST SPOT BECOMES THE CHIEF COMPONENT. 10449 19271119 19271127 A PAIR OF IRREGULAR SPOTS WHICH DO NOT SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE TO THE USUAL EXTENT. 10450 19271123 19271124 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 23, OF WHICH ONE IS LEFT ON THE NEXT DAY. 10451 19271123 19271201 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES LARGE AND COMPOSITE AFTER NOV. 27, AND A CLUSTER OF SPOTS BETWEEN IT AND THE FOLLOWER IS OF CONSIDERABLE EXTENT. 10452 19271124 19271125 A FEW TINY SPOTS ON NOV. 24; ONLY ONE REMAINS ON NOV. 25. 10453 19271124 19271127 A SMALL SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON NOV. 26. 10454 19271127 19271128 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 10455 19271129 19271203 A SHORT STREAM OR CLUSTER WITH THE CHIEF SPOT AT THE REAR. 10456 19271130 19271201 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 10457 19271201 19271202 ONE SMALL SPOT SEEN EACH DAY, DIFFERING IN LONGITUDE BY 6 DEGREES BUT PROBABLY RELATED TO ONE ANOTHER. 10458 19271202 19271203 A SMALL SPOT. 10459 19271202 19271205 A SMALL SPOT. 10460 19271204 19271211 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 10461 19271205 19271215 AT FIRST A SMALL STREAM WHICH SUDDENLY EXPANDS AFTER DEC. 8 AND BECOMES A VERY LARGE COMPLEX STREAM. THE LARGEST SPOT IS AT THE REAR TO BEGIN WITH, BUT ONE FULLY AS BIG AS FORMS IN FRONT ON DEC 12. 10462 19271205 19271213 A SMALL STREAM REPRESENTED LATER BY ONE OR TWO EVANESCENT AND WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS. 10463 19271206 19271217 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 10438. A STREAM IN WHICH THE SPOTS ARE IN TWO CLUSTERS AT EACH EXTREMITY; THE LEADING SPOTS LAST THE LONGEST. 10464 19271208 19271211 A SMALL GROUP. 10465 19271208 19271220 A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP AFTER DEC. 17. 10466 19271212 19271213 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 12, ONE OF WHICH REMAINS ON DEC. 13. 10467 19271213 19271217 INTERMITTENT. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON DEC. 13 AND 17 IN A REGION WELL MARKED BY FACULAE ON THE LATTER DATE. 10468 19271213 19271214 ONE SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 13, WITH A COMPANION ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 10469 19271219 19271226 A STREAM OF SMALLISH SPOTS ORIGINATING WITH A SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 19. 10470 19271221 19271222 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 10471 19271222 19271227 A WIDELY SEPARATED PAIR OF SPOTS WITH RAPID RISE AND DECLINE. THE PLACE OF THIS GROUP IS MARKED BY FACULAE WHICH CAN BE TRACED TO GROUP 10451 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. 10472 19271223 19271224 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON DEC. 23, OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON DEC. 24. 10473 19271223 19271225 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10474 19271224 19271229 A STREAM OF RAPID RISE AND DECLINE, FOLLOWING GROUP 10471. 10475 19271224 19280102 A COUPLE OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING SUDDENLY BETWEEN DEC. 25 AND 26 INTO A LONG STREAM WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. THIS LEADER HAS GROWN TO A LARGE SPOT ON DEC. 29, BUT BY THE FOLLOWING DAY IT HAS SPLIT INTO TWO WHICH, TOGETHER WITH THE OTHER SPOTS OF THE STREAM, ARE DISAPPEARING AS THEY PASS OUT OF SIGHT ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 10476 19271227 19280107 AN UNUSUAL GROUP. A MEDIUM-SIZED REGULAR SPOT WHICH CONTRACTS CONSIDERABLY BETWEEN DEC. 31 AND JAN. 1, AND THEN SLOWLY DIMINISHES TO A DOT BY JAN. 7. MEANWHILE, GREAT ACTIVITY IS OBSERVED IN THE IMMEDIATE REGION SOUTHWARDS OF THIS SPOT. ON DEC. 31 AN INCREASING NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS MAKE THEIR APPEARANCE, AND FROM SOME OF THESE A FAIRLY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT EMERGES BY JAN. 3 SOUTH OF THE ORIGINAL REGULAR SPOT WITH WHICH IT ALMOST COALESCES. THIS NEW SPOT IS, HOWEVER, UNSTABLE, AND THE WHOLE DISTURBANCE EXCEPT FOR THE SURROUNDING FACULAE IS DYING OUT BY THE TIME THE WEST LIMB IS REACHED. 10477 19271228 19280109 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, BOTH PRECEDED AND FOLLOWED BY SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL JAN. 6. 10478 19271230 19280102 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10479 19271231 19280109 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING. 10480 19280101 19280104 A PAIR OF SPOTS NOT SEEN ON THE PHOTOGRAPH OF JAN. 3. 10481 19280101 19280109 SCATTERED SPOTS OF UNSTABLE CHARACTER IN A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE SF GROUP 10477. 10482 19280101 19280108 A SMALL UMBRAL SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 10483 19280103 19280114 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. THE GROUP ORIGINATES ON JAN. 3 FROM A SINGLE SPOT THAT HAS INCREASED AND HAS BECOME A DOUBLE SPOT BY JAN. 4. 10484 19280105 19280110 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY AND SOON DYING AWAY. 10485 19280105 19280111 INTERMITTENT; A FAINT SPOT ON JAN. 5; A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON JAN. 8-11. 10486 19280106 19280108 A PAIR OF SMALLISH SPOTS THAT SEPARATE WIDELY IN LONGITUDE AND THEN DISAPPEAR WHEN GROUP 10487 DEVELOPS SOUTHWARDS. 10487 19280108 19280117 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS SF THE POSITION OF GROUP 10486. 10488 19280108 19280113 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 10489 19280110 19280119 A STREAM WITH SUDDEN GROWTH OF WHICH THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE SPOT IS THE LEADER. THE GROUP IS ADJACENT TO GROUP 10490 AND DEVELOPS WITH IT. 10490 19280110 19280118 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 10489. 10491 19280110 19280119 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM DYING AWAY AFTER JAN. 15. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS APPEAR IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD ON JAN. 16 AND 19. 10492 19280112 19280117 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT PRESENT ON JAN. 13 AND 14. 10493 19280114 19280116 A COUPLE OF TINY SPOTS IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. 10494 19280114 19280118 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM F GROUP 10495. 10495 19280115 19280119 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS P GROUP 10494. 10496 19280116 19280120 A SMALL SPOT P GROUP 10497. 10497 19280116 19280128 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF ACTIVE SPOTS COVERING 15 OF SOLAR LONGITUDE. THE STREAM IS DIMINISHING RAPIDLY WHEN NEARING THE WEST LIMB. 10498 19280117 19280125 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JAN. 20, 21 AND 23. 10499 19280119 19280130 A SPOT-TENDING TO COMPOSITE STRUCTURE-SURROUNDED BY A LARGE AREA OF DENSE FACULAE. A TEMPORARY INCREASE OF AREA OF THE SPOT TAKES PLACE ABOUT JAN. 23. GROUP 10501 DEVELOPS IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING THIS GROUP. 10500 19280121 19280123 A TINY SPOT. 10501 19280121 19280131 A GROUP UNDERGOING TRANSFORMATION, F GROUP 10499. ON JAN. 21-22 THERE IS ONE TINY SPOT; ON JAN. 23 A CLUSTER; ON JAN. 24 THERE ARE TWO PARTIALLY FORMED REGULAR SPOTS THAT SEPARATE CONSIDERABLY IN LONGITUDE, WHILST A CONNECTING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS FORMS BETWEEN THEM ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. THE F PART OF THE STREAM THEN BEGINS TO DISAPPEAR, BUT THE LEADER SHOWS A MARKED INCREASE AFTER JAN. 28. 10502 19280124 19280127 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF USUAL FORMATION. 10503 19280124 19280128 A SMALL SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON JAN. 25. 10504 19280124 19280205 A LARGE SPOT WITH MULTIPLE UMBRAE, USUALLY WITH SMALL COMPANIONS WHICH ARE NUMEROUS ON JAN. 30 AND 31. 10505 19280124 19280131 A DIMINISHING STREAM OF SMALLISH SPOTS N GROUP 10504. 10506 19280124 19280205 RETURN OF GROUP 10477; THIRD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT DECREASING, WITH SMALL ATTENDANT SPOTS FROM JAN. 29 TO FEB. 2. 10507 19280125 19280201 A SMALL STREAM; THE LEADING PAIR OF SPOTS REMAINS AFTER JAN. 29. 10508 19280128 19280202 A SMALLISH STREAM; THE LEADER ALONE SURVIVES AFTER JAN. 31, ALTHOUGH THE FOLLOWER IS AT FIRST THE LARGEST COMPONENT. 10509 19280130 19280201 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN A FAIRLY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE, N GROUP 10504 AND ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 10505. 10510 19280131 19280203 A SMALL SPOT ON JAN. 31 AND FEB. 1.; A PAIR ON FEB. 3. 10511 19280131 19280203 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10512 19280131 19280206 A SMALL SPOT WITH TWO OR THREE COMPANIONS, FOLLOWED BY A FAIRLY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON FEB. 5, BUT A FAINT CLUSTER APPEARS IN THE REGION ON FEB. 6. 10513 19280202 19280211 REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 10489. TWO DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOTS, 10 DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE, OF WHICH THE LEADER LASTS THE LONGER AND IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE." THE GROUP IS ACCOMPANIED BY CONSIDERABLE FACULAE. 10514 19280203 19280204 THE BEGINNING OF A GROUP AT THE WEST LIMB. 10515 19280204 19280210 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON FEB. 8, SF GROUP 10513. 10516 19280207 19280209 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10517 19280210 19280219 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING COMPONENTS SHOWING MARKED SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE DURING THE FIRST FEW DAYS OF DEVELOPMENT. 10518 19280212 19280215 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10519 19280213 19280218 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING AS A DOT. 10520 19280215 19280223 A COUPLE OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH HAVE ALMOST DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 18; ON FEB. 19 A PAIR OF CLUSTERS OR COMPOSITE SPOTS HAVE FORMED BUT THESE SOON DISSIPATE. 10521 19280215 19280220 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN STREAM FORMATION. 10522 19280215 19280227 RETURN OF GROUP 10501. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPACT CLUSTER OF IMPERFECTLY FORMED SPOTS ALMOST TOUCHING IT ON ITS SOUTHERN SIDE. THIS CLUSTER, WHICH IS PRECEDED BY A FAIRLY STABLE SPOT, LENGTHENS OUT AND HAS PRACTICALLY DISAPPEARED BY FEB. 25. AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE ACCOMPANIES THE GROUP. 10523 19280216 19280223 A STREAM OF USUAL FORMATION, COMPOSED OF A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER AND A SMALL CLUSTER AS THE FOLLOWER. 10524 19280217 19280224 A STREAM OF RATHER UNSTABLE COMPONENTS SF GROUP 10523. 10525 19280219 19280220 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS S GROUP 10520. 10526 19280219 19280302 AT FIRST A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS IN A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. ON FEB. 25 A NEW GROUP BEGINS TO DEVELOP, AND BY FEB. 27 THIS HAS BECOME A VERY LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; A DECREASE FOLLOWS IMMEDIATELY. 10527 19280220 19280226 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, ORIGINATING WITH ITS AXIS NEARLY AT RIGHT-ANGLES TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. ON FEB. 23 AN OUTLYING SPOT TO THE STREAM MAKES ITS APPEARANCE SOUTHWARDS. 10528 19280220 19280229 A FEW SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 10526. 10529 19280220 19280226 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, DISAPPEARING AS A PAIR OF DOTS ON FEB. 22. ON FEB. 25 AND 26 ANOTHER SPOT APPEARS IN ITS PLACE. 10530 19280220 19280303 RETURN OF GROUP 10504. A REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING RAPIDLY AFTER FEB. 29. 10531 19280221 19280225 SMALL SPOTS IN A DISTURBED REGION P GROUP 10522. 10532 19280221 19280304 RETURN OF GROUP 10506; FOURTH APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 10533 19280222 19280226 A SMALL SPOT UNTIL FEB. 24; THEN A SMALL GROUP. 10534 19280225 19280229 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10535 19280225 19280308 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING SPOT IS THE LONGEST LIVED. 10536 19280226 19280309 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF TINY COMPANIONS THAT HAVE DIED OUT BY MAR 7. 10537 19280227 19280303 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 10538 19280302 19280314 A FEW SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS OF WHICH THE REAR ONE ALONE REMAINS ON MAR. 7. ON THE FOLLOWING DAY THE DEVELOPMENT OF A NEW GROUP BEGINS; THIS BECOMES A LARGE AND ACTIVE STREAM WHICH PRACTICALLY COALESCES WITH GROUP 10540. 10539 19280304 19280305 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 10540 19280304 19280313 AN ACTIVE STREAM. THE LEADER SPOT IS THE MOST STABLE MEMBER; THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM UNITES WITH GROUP 10538. 10541 19280304 19280315 A STREAM IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 10542 19280305 19280310 A STREAM WITH THE LARGEST SPOT AT THE REAR. 10543 19280305 19280310 A SMALL BUT DISTINCT SPOT, SHOWING CONSIDERABLE PROPER MOTION IN LONGITUDE. 10544 19280308 19280317 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING BETWEEN MAR. 10 AND 11 INTO A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY MAR. 14. 10545 19280308 19280310 A COUPLE OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 8; THE FOLLOWER REMAINS ON MAR. 9 AND 10. 10546 19280309 19280322 A LARGE, ALMOST REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING IN AREA BOTH BY SHRINKAGE AND BY THE BREAKING AWAY OF SMALL PORTIONS FROM ITS NP EDGE. 10547 19280311 19280324 AN UNUSUAL GROUP CONSISTING OF THREE REGULAR SPOTS NEARLY IN LINE WITH EACH OTHER. THERE ARE NUMEROUS SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL MAR. 21. RATHER DENSE FACULAE FOLLOW THE GROUP. 10548 19280312 19280317 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE ONLY STABLE SPOT. 10549 19280313 19280324 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 10550 19280314 19280325 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 10522. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY COMPANIONS OF IRREGULAR OUTLINE; ON MAR. 17-20 A CLUSTER OF THESE LINKS UP WITH THE LARGE SPOT. 10551 19280315 19280321 AN UNSTABLE STREAM. 10552 19280316 19280317 A SMALL STREAM S GROUP 10546. 10553 19280318 19280322 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 10554 19280318 19280325 PROBABLY A REMNANT OF GROUP 10537. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 18; A SMALL CLUSTER ON MAR. 20,22,23 AND 25. 10555 19280322 19280328 TWO SPOTS JOINING ONE ANOTHER WHICH SHRINK AND DISAPPEAR AS THREE SMALL NUCLEI. 10556 19280323 19280404 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH TWO OR THREE SMALL COMPANIONS S OF IT ON MAR. 30-APR. 1. 10557 19280323 19280402 A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH DOUBLE NUCLEUS, DIVIDING INTO TWO SPOTS THAT SEPARATE. 10558 19280324 19280402 A SMALL PARTIALLY FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS F GROUP 10557. 10559 19280325 19280328 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 25 AND A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 28 POSSIBLY RELATED TO ONE ANOTHER. 10560 19280325 19280330 RETURN OF GROUP 10536. ONE SMALL SPOT WITH AN ATTENDANT ON MAR. 29 AND 30. 10561 19280327 19280407 A REGULAR SPOT RAPIDLY SHRINKING TO A DOT AFTER APR. 2. A SMALL CLUSTER NORTHWARDS ACCOMPANIES THE SPOT FROM MAR. 31-APR. 3. 10562 19280327 19280408 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 10563 19280329 19280409 RETURN OF GROUP 10538 OR 10540. A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL TINY COMPANION. 10564 19280331 19280403 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 10565 19280401 19280404 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10566 19280401 19280409 A STREAM WITH THE LARGEST SPOT AT THE REAR. 10567 19280401 19280412 RETURN OF GROUP 10544. A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER APR. 9. 10568 19280402 19280415 A LARGE AND SOMEWHAT UNUSUAL STREAM. THERE IS A LAG OF SEVERAL DAYS IN THE FULL DEVELOPMENT OF THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM, WHICH COMPRISES A CLUSTER OF SPOTS (POSSIBLY A SEPARATE BUT ALLIED DISTURBANCE) AT THE REAR, AND A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BETWEEN THIS AND THE BIG LEADER. 10569 19280403 19280410 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10570 19280404 19280409 A STREAM OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 10571 19280404 19280414 AN IMPERFECTLY FORMED SPOT WITH SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWERS. 10572 19280404 19280406 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 10573 19280405 19280406 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10574 19280406 19280417 RETURN OF GROUP 10553. A REGULAR SPOT, WHOSE UMBRA BECOMES DOUBLE ON APR. 13, DIVIDING, ON APR. 14, INTO TWO PARTS WHICH SEPARATE APPRECIABLY IN LATITUDE. 10575 19280407 19280410 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 10576 19280407 19280408 ONE SMALL SPOT ON APR. 7, WITH ANOTHER ON APR. 8. 10577 19280408 19280415 A SMALL STREAM. 10578 19280408 19280419 RETURN OF GROUP 10549. A FAIRLY LARGE SPOT DIVIDING UP AND, WITH SMALL COMPANIONS, MAKING AN EXTENSIVE CLUSTER. THE GROUP IS FOLLOWED BY CONSIDERABLE FACULAE. 10579 19280410 19280422 RETURN OF GROUP 10550. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, USUALLY WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 10580 19280410 19280421 A STREAM APPROXIMATELY OF NORMAL TYPE BUT OF UNUSUAL LENGTH. 10581 19280412 19280413 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10582 19280414 19280416 A SMALLISH GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10583 19280416 19280417 TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS F GROUP 10579. 10584 19280416 19280418 A SMALL SPOT. 10585 19280419 19280421 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP. 10586 19280419 19280424 RETURN OF GROUP 10556. A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT P GROUP 10587. 10587 19280419 19280501 A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 10588 19280422 19280428 A STREAM OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 10589 19280424 19280506 A STREAM LED BY A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS AFTER APR. 29. 10590 19280425 19280502 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT F GROUP 10589. 10591 19280425 19280503 A COMPOSITE SPOT, WITH COMPANIONS, EXPANDING TO A CLUSTER THAT SOON DIES AWAY. 10592 19280427 19280509 A LARGE ACTIVE STREAM OF IRREGULAR FORMATION. 10593 19280428 19280504 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM NOT SEEN ON MAY 3. 10594 19280428 19280510 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON APR. 28-29; ON MAY 1 A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM OF IRREGULAR SPOTS DEVELOPS. 10595 19280429 19280501 A SPOT ON APR. 29; A TINY STREAM ON APR. 30 AND MAY 1. 10596 19280430 19280504 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10597 19280430 19280501 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS N GROUP 10591. 10598 19280430 19280512 PROBABLY A RETURN OF GROUP 10568, BUT CONTINUITY NOT CERTAIN. A LONG STREAM WITH A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER, UNTIL MAY 7, AND A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT AS TRAILER. 10599 19280501 19280503 ONE SMALL SPOT. 10600 19280502 19280514 AN UNUSUALLY LONG AND ACTIVE STREAM OF NUMEROUS SPOTS WITH ITS AXIS INCLINDED 15 DEGREES TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 10601 19280503 19280504 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS P GROUP 10598. 10602 19280506 19280511 A SMALL STREAM. 10603 19280507 19280512 RETURN OF GROUP 10579. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT. 10604 19280508 19280515 A FEEBLE STREAM SHOWING A SLIGHT INCREASE ON MAY 13. 10605 19280509 19280510 A TINY SPOT. 10606 19280509 19280511 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 10604. 10607 19280509 19280510 ONE SMALL SPOT NP GROUP 10603. 10608 19280513 19280519 A DOUBLE SPOT BREAKING UP INTO A STREAM WHICH RAPIDLY DIMINISHES. 10609 19280516 19280521 ONE SMALL DEFINITE SPOT ON MAY 16 - 18; ON MAY 21 THERE IS A SPOT NEAR ITS PLACE. 10610 19280519 19280523 INTERMITTENT; A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON MAY 19 AND 23. 10611 19280521 19280524 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS SP GROUP 10612. 10612 19280521 19280602 RETURN OF GROUP 10589. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS PRECEDING IT FROM MAY 24-27. 10613 19280522 19280602 A FEEBLE GROUP DISAPPEARING BY MAY 27; A WELL-DEFINED STREAM SUDDENLY APPEARS IN ITS PLACE ON MAY 28, BUT THIS SOON DIMINISHES. 10614 19280523 19280601 A COUPLE OF SMALL SPOTS, SP GROUP 10612, INCREASING TO A MODERATE SIZED GROUP ABOUT MAY 28-29. 10615 19280524 19280604 RETURN OF GROUP 10592. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING. 10616 19280526 19280604 A STREAM WHICH BECOMES A PAIR OF CLUSTERS, EACH LENGTHENING INTO A SHORT UNSTABLE STREAM. 10617 19280527 19280608 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 10598. A LARGE STREAM OF UNUSUAL FORMATION CHANGING RAPIDLY IN APPEARANCE AFTER JUNE 2. 10618 19280528 19280609 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED AT SOME DISTANCE BY A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT. THE FORMER DIVIDES INTO TWO PARTS ON JUNE 5, A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS HAVING APPEARED NEAR IT ON JUNE 3. 10619 19280529 19280606 A STREAM WITH THE LARGEST SPOT IN THE REAR. 10620 19280529 19280607 RETURN OF GROUP 10600. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY COMPANIONS ON JUNE 2 AND 5. EXTENSIVE FACULAE FOLLOW THE SPOT. 10621 19280601 19280603 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 10622 19280602 19280607 INTERMITTENT; SCATTERED UNSTABLE SPOTS, NONE BEING SEEN ON JUNE 5 AND 6. 10623 19280602 19280610 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS; THE LEADER DIES OUT AND ANOTHER PAIR REPLACES THE ORIGINAL FOLLOWER. THE LEADER OF THIS NEW PAIR MOVES FORWARDS APPRECIABLY IN LONGITUDE. 10624 19280602 19280611 A SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 2 THAT HAS DISAPPEARED ON JUNE 3; ON JUNE 4 A STREAM BEGINS ITS DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SHOW TEMPORARILY THE USUAL DIVERGENCE IN LONGITUDE. 10625 19280603 19280607 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS F GROUP 10616, WITH WHICH IT APPEARS TO BE ASSOCIATED. 10626 19280605 19280612 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE ONLY SIGNIFICANT SPOT. 10627 19280607 19280608 A CLOSE PAIR OF TINY SPOTS; ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JUNE 8. 10628 19280607 19280608 A SMALL SPOT. 10629 19280607 19280608 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JUNE 8. 10630 19280607 19280614 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT BREAKING UP INTO A CLUSTER OR STREAM. 10631 19280608 19280609 A TINY ISOLATED SPOT F GROUP 10626. 10632 19280613 19280614 TWO OR THREE SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 10633 19280613 19280623 A STREAM IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. THE LEADER IS AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT BUT BECOMES COMPOSITE. 10634 19280615 19280617 A FEW SPOTS P GROUP 10635. 10635 19280615 19280622 A GROUP OF STREAM FORMATION IN WHICH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER INSTEAD OF SEPARATING IN LONGITUDE COME CLOSER TOGETHER. THERE IS A RAPID BREAK-UP OF THE GROUP AFTER JUNE 20. 10636 19280617 19280624 AN ELONGATED CLUSTER OR SHORT STREAM OF FAINT SPOTS. 10637 19280617 19280629 A REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS AFTER JUNE 20; THESE BECOME SPECIALLY NUMEROUS ABOUT JUNE 24 AND OF APPRECIABLE SIZE ON JUNE 27-28. 10638 19280618 19280623 A STREAM N GROUP 10633. 10639 19280618 19280620 A SMALL, DEFINITE SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON JUNE 19 IN THE FACULAE F GROUP 10636. 10640 19280619 19280622 A SMALLISH STREAM SF GROUP 10633. 10641 19280621 19280627 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. 10642 19280621 19280703 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED AT SOME DISTANCE BY ONE OR TWO FROM JUNE 25-29. 10643 19280622 19280624 A FEW FAINT SPOTS F GROUP 10637. 10644 19280622 19280705 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE (PROBABLY BEGINNING AS GROUP 10622) IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES VERY LARGE WHILST THE REAR SPOT BREAKS INTO A CLUSTER AND RAPIDLY FADES. THE LEADER BECOMES ELONGATED IN AN E-W DIRECTION, AND A CLUSTER OF SMALL COMPANIONS COMES IN FRONT OF IT. SEE ALSO GROUP 10654. 10645 19280623 19280702 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER (A REGULAR SPOT) AND THE FOLLOWER (A CLUSTER) TEND TO APPROACH ONE ANOTHER. 10646 19280623 19280703 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FOLLOWER WHICH SUDDENLY APPEARS BETWEEN JUNE 23 AND 24 AND THEN DISSOLVES INTO A CLUSTER THAT TENDS TO APPROACH THE LEADER. 10647 19280623 19280702 A GROUP OF A FEW SPOTS P GROUP 10649. 10648 19280624 19280627 A SMALL STREAM P GROUP 10645. 10649 19280624 19280705 A SINGLE COMPOSITE SPOT OR TWO SPOTS CLOSE TOGETHER AT THE EAST LIMB. THESE INCREASE AND SEPARATE, THE LEADER STREAMING OUT IN LONGITUDE. THE DECLINE OF THE GROUP IS RAPID. 10650 19280626 19280705 RETURN OF GROUP 10624. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING SLOWLY TO A DOT. THERE ARE TINY COMPANIONS S ON JULY 4. 10651 19280627 19280628 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10652 19280627 19280701 INTERMITTENT; A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 27 AND JULY 1. 10653 19280627 19280708 RETURN OF GROUP 10626. A SMALL BROKEN SPOT FADING OUT; A FAINT CLUSTER OCCUPIES ITS POSITION ON JULY 2; A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 4; AND A PAIR ON JULY 8. 10654 19280629 19280704 A FEEBLE STREAM OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT REMAINS ALONE AFTER JULY 2. 10655 19280630 19280704 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS WITH COMPANIONS, DEVELOPING IMMEDIATELY SP GROUP 10644. 10656 19280701 19280704 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NP GROUP 10644. 10657 19280701 19280704 INTERMITTENT; ONE TINY SPOT ON JULY 1; A SMALL STREAM ON JULY 3, AND A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JULY 4. 10658 19280701 19280713 A CHANGING STREAM - IN FAIRLY HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE - IN WHICH THE LEADER, AT FIRST A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, SUB-DIVIDES; THEPRECEDING PORTION TENDS TO BECOME A REGULAR SPOT. 10659 19280702 19280709 ONE OR TWO UNSTABLE SPOTS SCATTERED OVER A DISTURBED AREA MARKED BY FACULAE N GROUP 10658. 10660 19280704 19280707 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 10661 19280705 19280706 ONE OR TWO UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10662 19280706 19280718 A LARGE GROUP OF ABNORMAL DEVELOPMENT. AT FIRST TWO SPOTS, IN CLOSE JUXTAPOSITION NEAR THE EAST LIMB, BOTH SURROUNDED AND FOLLOWED BY VERY BRIGHT FACULAE. THE TWO SPOTS INCREASE, THE LEADER LENGTHENING OUT IN LONGITUDE AND THEN DIVIDING ON JULY 11 OR 12. THE PRECEDING PART BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT, WHILST THE FOLLOWING PART DISSOLVES AS A CLUSTER. THE ORIGINAL FOLLOWER, OF SOMEWHAT COMPOSITE STRUCTURE, DEVELOPS A DOUBLE UMBRA BUT REMAINS INTACT. 10663 19280706 19280715 A STREAM WITH A LEADER THAT BECOMES DOUBLE BY JULY 12. ONE SMALL SPOT REPRESENTS THE REAR OF THE GROUP ON JULY 15. 10664 19280708 19280720 RETURN OF GROUP 10633. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL ATTENDANTS ON JULY 14 AND 16. 10665 19280711 19280715 A SMALL GROUP, PRECEDING GROUP 10663, NOT SEEN ON JULY 13 AND 14. 10666 19280712 19280717 A SMALL STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LAST SPOT TO DISAPPEAR. 10667 19280712 19280714 A FEW TINY SPOTS F GROUP 10662. 10668 19280712 19280714 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEPARATING IN LONGITUDE. 10669 19280712 19280723 A VERY LARGE ACTIVE STREAM (VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE), DEVELOPING FROM A FEW SPOTS SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON JULY 12. THE LEADER BECOMES A VERY LARGE SPOT, BEING SLIGHTLY ELONGATED IN THE DIRECTION OF THE AXIS OF THE GROUP WHICH IS INCLINED ABOUT 25 TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. THE REAR OF THE STREAM IS MADE UP OF TWO CLUSTERS EACH BECOMING A COMPOSITE SPOT (FROM JULY 18-20 THE TWO SPOTS MERGE INTO ONE) CONTAINING NUMEROUS UMBRAE. CONSIDERING ITS SIZE THE GROUP IS SHORT-LIVED. 10670 19280713 19280717 ONE OR TWO UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10671 19280713 19280726 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 10637. A LARGE STREAM OF SPOTS MARKING WITH ITS ATTENDANT FACULAE AN ACTIVE AREA OF VERY GREAT EXTENT. AT THE FRONT OF THE STREAM THERE ARE TWO REGULAR SPOTS, AT FIRST ALMOST TOUCHING ONE ANOTHER AND THEN FINALLY COALESCING. THE REAR OF THE STREAM, STRETCHING OVER SEVERAL DEGREES OF LATITUDE, COMPRISES A COMPOSITE SPOT, A SMALL NEARLY REGULAR SPOT, AND ONE OR TWO CLUSTERS. 10672 19280716 19280720 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 10672*19280722 19280726 A SMALL STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 10673 19280716 19280723 A STREAM OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS; NOTHING IS SEEN ON JULY 22. 10674 19280717 19280718 A TINY SPOT. 10675 19280718 19280721 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH TINY FOLLOWERS ON JULY 19. 10676 19280718 19280719 ONE TINY, FAINT SPOT. 10677 19280719 19280721 A SMALL GROUP P GROUP 10675. 10678 19280719 19280723 A NUMBER OF SMALL, FAINT SPOTS SCATTERED IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 10671. 10679 19280720 19280721 FAINT MARKINGS N GROUP 10671. 10680 19280720 19280724 RETURN OF GROUP 10644. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY CONSIDERABLE FACULAE. 10681 19280720 19280801 A SPOT AT FIRST WITH SLIGHT DEPARTURE FROM COMPLETE REGULARITY, FOLLOWED BY AN INSIGNIFICANT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT AFTER JULY 28. 10682 19280724 19280803 A PERSISTENT STREAM OF INDIVIDUALLY UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10683 19280725 19280728 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER, DEVELOPING QUICKLY BETWEEN JULY 25 AND 26. 10684 19280725 19280728 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JULY 25 AND 28. 10685 19280725 19280805 A STREAM WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER, ANOTHER AS FOLLOWER, AND A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH DISSOLVES INTO A CLUSTER NEAR THE FOLLOWER. THE GROUP HAS ALMOST DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 2, BUT TWO NEW SPOTS APPEAR ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 10686 19280727 19280806 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A FEW SPOTS ON JULY 27, WHICH WERE PRECEDED BY A PATCH OF FACULAE SEEN ON JULY 26. THE LEADER, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, COMES FROM THE FUSION OF TWO SEPARATE SPOTS, AND A DOUBLE UMBRA REMAINS UNTIL JULY 31. THE DECREASE OF THE GROUP IS RAPID FOR SO LARGE A GROUP, WHICH FOR SOME DAYS IS VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 10687 19280729 19280730 A SMALL SPOT, ONE ON EACH DAY, N GROUP 10682. 10688 19280729 19280805 A STREAM REPRESENTED AT FIRST BY A PAIR OF SPOTS, THE LARGER BEING IN FRONT. 10689 19280729 19280803 RETURN OF GROUP 10658. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT. 10690 19280729 19280807 A SPOT SUB-DIVIDING ON AUG. I; THERE IS A SMALL FOLLOWER ON AUG. I. 10691 19280730 19280807 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JULY 30; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE FOLLOWING DAY; A VERY SMALL STREAM ON AUG. I IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE ONLY SURVIVOR AFTERWARDS. 10692 19280801 19280810 WITH GROUP 10694 A RETURN OF GROUP 10662. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 10693 19280802 19280806 A SMALL STREAM; THE LEADER IS THE SOLE SURVIVOR AFTER AUG 4. 10694 19280802 19280814 WITH GROUP 10692 A RETURN OF GROUP 10662. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY FOLLOWERS ON AUG. 6, 7 AND 11. 10695 19280804 19280815 AT FIRST SMALL SPOTS WHICH ARE RATHER SCATTERED OVER AN AREA MARKED BY FACULAE; BY AUG. 7 TWO GROUPINGS OF SPOTS HAVE APPEARED, AND THESE DEVELOP INTO A LARGE STREAM OF APPROXIMATELY NORMAL TYPE THAT QUICKLY PASSES THROUGH THE USUAL PHASES. 10696 19280804 19280811 RETURN OF GROUP 10664; THIRD APPEARANCE. ONE SMALL SPOT SEEN ON AUG. 4, 5 AND 11. 10697 19280806 19280809 ONE OR TWO SPOTS IN AN AREA ALREADY MARKED BY FACULAE. 10698 19280807 19280817 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT GROUP OF FEW SPOTS. 10699 19280808 19280810 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 10700 19280810 19280822 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER AUG. 17, WHEN SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR NEAR IT. 10701 19280811 19280813 TWO SPOTS ON AUG. 11; ONE ON AUG. 13. 10702 19280811 19280819 A VERY SMALL STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER-AT FIRST A DOUBLE SPOT-IS LEFT AFTER AUG. 15. 10703 19280812 19280816 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 10704 19280812 19280819 A STREAM, LED FOR A FEW DAYS BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, F GROUP 10700. 10705 19280813 19280814 A TINY GROUP. 10706 19280814 19280817 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10707 19280814 19280815 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 14; ONE SPOT ON AUG. 15. 10708 19280815 19280825 A SMALL IRREGULAR STREAM OR CLUSTER. GROUP 10709 DEVELOPS NORTHWARDS. 10709 19280818 19280827 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING NORTH OF GROUP 10708. THE LEADER EMERGES AS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, IS JOINED BY ANOTHER SPOT ON AUG. 20, WITH WHICH IT COALECES ON AUG. 21, AND THEN ASSUMES A NEARLY REGULAR OUTLINE. 10710 19280818 19280829 A SPOT, WITH MULTIPLE UMBRAE, PARTLY BREAKING UP ON AUG. 23 AND 24, WHEN A FEW SMALL SPOTS APPEAR IN THE REAR. 10711 19280820 19280829 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER AT SOME DISTANCE. A BRIGHT MARKING INVADES THE FORMER ON AUG. 24, AFTER WHICH ITS DISSOLUTION IS RAPID. 10712 19280821 19280901 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART HAS DISAPPEARED AFTER AUG.27. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT. 10713 19280821 19280903 RETURN OF GROUP 10686. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 10714 19280822 19280823 ONE SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY DIFFERING SOMEWHAT IN POSITION, BUT PROBABLY RELATED. 10715 19280823 19280903 A STREAM, APPROXIMATELY OF NORMAL TYPE WHEN FULLY DEVELOPED, GROWING RAPIDLY FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON AUG 23. ON AUG. 24 A COMPOSITE SPOT HAS FORMED IN FRONT AND BY AUG. 25 THIS HAS BECOME TWO SEPARATE SPOTS. THE PRECEDING SPOT IS FAIRLY LARGE AND REGULAR; THE OTHER SMALLER AND NOT COMPLETELY FORMED. THE LATTER SPOT SHOWS APPRECIABLE DRIFTS IN LONGITUDE AND LATITUDE, AND BY AUG. 30 IT HAS REACHED THE CLUSTER OF SPOTS WHICH MAKE UP THE REAR OF THE STREAM. 10716 19280824 19280904 A REGULAR SPOT DIVIDING INTO TWO PARTS JUST BEFORE EXTINCTION. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWS IT AT SOME DISTANCE ON SEPT. 3. 10717 19280825 19280902 AN ILL-FORMED SPOT, IN A BRIGHT PATCH OF FACULAE, BREAKING UP AFTER AUG. 28. 10718 19280826 19280830 TWO OR THREE SPOTS NF GROUP 10712. 10719 19280826 19280829 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS; NONE SEEN ON AUG. 28. 10720 19280827 19280907 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS; NONE SEEN ON AUG. 29-31 AND SEPT. 3-6. 10721 19280829 19280902 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 1. 10722 19280829 19280831 A SINGLE SPOT. 10723 19280829 19280909 RETURN OF GROUP 10694; THIRD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON SEPT. 3. 10724 19280829 19280901 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 10725 19280831 19280906 RETURN OF GROUP 10695. INTERMITTENT; TWO SMALL SPOTS ON AUG 31, OF WHICH ONE SURVIVES UNTIL SEPT 3; A DOT APPEARS IN ITS PLACE SEPT 6. 10726 19280901 19280912 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 10706. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 10727 19280903 19280905 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 10728 19280903 19280906 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10729 19280903 19280907 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM; THE LEADER ALONE SURVIVES ON SEPT 6. 10730 19280903 19280909 A FEEBLE STREAM. 10731 19280904 19280905 ONE SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY-NOT IDENTICAL IN POSITION BUT PROBABLY RELATED. 10732 19280904 19280905 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 4; A WIDE PAIR ON SEPT 5. 10733 19280906 19280919 A VERY LARGE, ACTIVE, AND COMPLEX STREAM. THE GROUP IS DEVELOPING AS IT ROUNDS THE EASTERN LIMB, WHEN IT IS LED BY A LARGE AND NEARLY REGULAR SPOT THAT REMAINS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. ON SEPT. 9 A SMALL SPOT APPEARS IN FRONT, AND THIS HAS GROWN AND BECOMES REGULAR BY SEPT. 12; BETWEEN SEPT. 13 AND 15 IT EXPANDS CONSIDERABLY AND CHANGES SHAPE. MEANWHILE TRANSFORMATIONS OCCUR IN THE MIDDLE AND REAR OF THE STREAM; A LARGE COMPOSITE FORMATION IS CONSPICUOUS ON SEPT. 11 AND 12; THIS DIMINISHES AND TENDS TO BREAK UP, BUT IT HAS REFORMED AS A COMPOSITE SPOT ON SEPT. 16. 10734 19280907 19280909 A SMALL CLUSTER. 10735 19280908 19280913 A DISTURBED AREA, NP GROUP 10736, PRODUCING SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10736 19280908 19280916 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH MARKED SEPARATION BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER. 10737 19280909 19280911 A SMALL SPOT NOT VISIBLE ON SEPT. 10. 10738 19280910 19280913 A PAIR OF DOTS ON SEPT. 10; A CLOSER PAIR ON SEPT. 13. 10739 19280911 19280923 RETURN OF GROUP 10709. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL DOTS SF ON SEPT. 16. 10740 19280917 19280918 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 10741 19280917 19280929 A SPOT, CROSSED BY A BRIGHT MARKING, APPRECIABLY ELONGATED IN A DIRECTION E-W ON SEPT. 21, BUT BECOMING CIRCULAR AFTER A SMALL PART HAS BROKEN AWAY ON THE F SIDE. AT THE EAST LIMB THE SPOT IS FOLLOWED BY A SINUOUS LINE OF FACULAE. 10742 19280917 19280930 REVIVAL OF GROUP 10713. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY TWO SPOTS SPREADING ONE INTO THE OTHER, AS AT FIRST, OR LINKED TOGETHER BY NUMEROUS COMPANION SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING AND MORE SOUTHERN OF THESE TWO SPOTS IS FAIRLY STABLE THROUGHOUT; THE OTHER BECOMES A SUITABLE SPOT FOR SEPERATE MEASUREMENT ON SEPT. 24. THE GROUP IS A NAKED-EYE OBJECT. 10743 19280918 19280921 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. 10744 19280918 19280930 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF CONSIDERABLE EXTENT WITH THE LARGEST SPOT AT THE REAR. THE CLUSTER OF SPOTS, EXCENTRICALLY SITUATED NORTH OF THE MAIN STREAM, IS PERHAPS A SEPERATE BUT INTERMINGLING GROUP. 10745 19280919 19280929 REVIVAL OF GROUP 10715. A FAIRLY LARGE SPOT, WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, SEPARATING INTO TWO PARTS ON SEPT. 27. SMALL SPOTS IN FRONT FORM AN APPRECIABLE CLUSTER ON SEPT. 25-26. 10746 19280921 19281003 AN UNUSUALLY LARGE AND COMPLICATED GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. THE GROUP APPEARS TO BE DEVELOPING IN THE NORMAL MANNER WHEN IT COMES ROUND THE EAST LIMB, BUT A REMARKABLE CHANGE, WHICH COMPLETELY ALTERS THE GROUP, TAKES PLACE BETWEEN SEPT. 24 AND 25. THE GROUP THEN COMPRISES A FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A SHAPELESS MASS OF UMBRAL POINTS AND PENUMBRAL MARKINGS, SOMEWHAT ARBITRARILY SEPARATED FROM THE LEADER ON SOME DAYS FOR PURPOSES OF MEASUREMENT. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP IS MADE UP OF IRREGULARLY SHAPED SPOTS ARRANGED NEARLY AS A SQUARE WITH ITS DIAGONAL ALONG THE AXIS OF THE STREAM. THE DECLINE OF THE GROUP IS RAPID. 10747 19280922 19280923 POSSIBLY THE RETURN OF GROUP 10728. ONE OR TWO OUTLYING SPOTS TO GROUP 10746. 10748 19280925 19280927 SMALL SPOT F GROUP 10745. 10749 19280926 19280929 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 26 AND 27, ONE SPOT ON SEPT. 29. 10750 19280927 19281004 A SMALL STREAM WITH THE LARGEST SPOT AT THE REAR. 10751 19280928 19281001 A SMALL STREAM WITH MARKED SEPARATION BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER. 10752 19280930 19281001 ONE SMALL SPOT. 10753 19280930 19281005 A SHORT STREAM WITH THE LARGEST SPOT IN THE REAR. ON OCT 5 A SPOT MARKS THE PRECEDING PART OF THE DISTURBANCE. 10754 19281002 19281005 A SMALL SPOT IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE CONTAINING GROUP 10756. 10755 19281002 19281004 A SMALL WELL-DEFINED SPOT. 10756 19281003 19281006 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 10757 19281003 19281015 RETURN OF GROUP 10733. TWO REGULAR SPOTS-THE LARGER ONE LEADING- KEEPING THE SAME DISTANCE APART IN LONGITUDE. SMALL COMPANIONS, PRESENT ON MOST DAYS SOUTHWARDS, MAKE UP A WIDE CLUSTER ON OCT. 11 AND 12. A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE ACCOMPANIES THE GROUP. 10758 19281005 19281011 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 5, A SMALL GROUP SEEN IN THEIR PLACE ON OCT. 10 AND 11. 10759 19281005 19281011 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. 10760 19281006 19281018 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 10743. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TINY CLUSTER OF DOTS ON OCT 13. 10761 19281007 19281009 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS. 10762 19281007 19281019 A LARGE STREAM OF ABNORMAL DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER, AT FIRST A SINGLE REGULAR SPOT, IS REPRESENTED LATER BY A CLUSTER, THE FOLLOWER GROWS RAPIDLY TO A COMPOSITE SPOT POSSESSING MULTIPLE UMBRAE, WHILST A CLUSTER IN THE MIDDLE OF THE GROUP ATTAINS THE DIMENSIONS OF A SMALL STREAM ON OCT. 12 AND 13. 10763 19281010 19281016 A SMALL STREAM OF VARIABLE COMPONENTS. 10764 19281010 19281018 A DISTURBED REGION, NF GROUP 10762, MARKED BY FACULAE AND SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS (NONE SEEN ON OCT. 14 AND 16). 10765 19281011 19281013 A SMALL SPOT. 10766 19281013 19281019 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON OCT. 13; ON OCT. 19 A SMALL SPOT COMES NEAR THEIR POSITION. 10767 19281013 19281020 A GROUP OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 10768 19281014 19281016 A SMALL STREAM. 10769 19281015 19281027 RETURN OF GROUP 10742. A FAIRLY LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OUTBREAK OF NUMEROUS SMALL COMPANIONS FROM OCT. 20. GROUP 10772 FORMS PART OF THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE. 10770 19281016 19281021 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WITH RAPID GROWTH. 10771 19281017 19281024 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 17; ON OCT. 19 A SMALL STREAM LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 10772 19281017 19281027 A STREAM DEVELOPING SF GROUP 10769. THE LEADER IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 10773 19281018 19281023 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 10774 19281020 19281021 A SMALL GROUP P GROUP 10769 AND 10772. 10775 19281021 19281028 A STREAM LED BY A COMPOSITE SPOT. A PORTION OF THIS SPOT BREAKS AWAY BETWEEN OCT. 23 AND 24 AND HAS AN APPRECIABLE MOTION IN LATITUDE NORTHWARDS. 10776 19281023 19281026 A SMALL GROUP S GROUP 10771. 10777 19281023 19281103 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE ONLY CONSPICUOUS COMPONENT. 10778 19281023 19281025 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10779 19281024 19281026 A DOT ON OCT. 24; A CLUSTER OF DOTS ON OCT. 26. 10780 19281025 19281027 A CLUSTER OF DOTS ON OCT. 25; ONE SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 27. 10781 19281029 19281104 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP. 10782 19281030 19281102 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 10783 19281030 19281103 A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT. 10784 19281030 19281111 RETURN OF GROUP 10757. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT ASSOCIATED WITH AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. 10785 19281031 19281102 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 10786 19281031 19281101 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 10787 19281103 19281109 A DISTURBED AREA CONTAINING A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10788 19281103 19281114 RETURN OF GROUP 10760; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DISAPPEARING. 10789 19281103 19281115 A LARGE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE, VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE, CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT AND A CLUSTER OF SPOTS (BECOMING LATER MERE PENUMBRAL MARKINGS) 15 DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE. THE OUTER AND FOLLOWING EDGE OF THE PENUMBRA OF THE LEADER SPOT APPEARS BROKEN ON NOV. 8-11, WHEN SMALL COMPANIONS FORM NEAR IT. 10790 19281105 19281106 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON NOV. 6, P GROUP 10784. 10791 19281105 19281115 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 10770. A REGULAR SPOT WITH ITS UMBRA CROSSED BY A BRIGHT MARKING, THAT LATER BECOMES A BROAD CLEFT IN THE SOUTHERN SIDE OF THE SPOT WHICH HAS BROKEN APART ON NOV. 14. 10792 19281109 19281115 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH RAPID RISE AND DECREASE. 10793 19281111 19281124 RETURN OF GROUP 10769; THIRD APPEARANCE. WHEN FIRST SEEN TWO SPOTS ALMOST IN CONTACT; THE SMALLER AND PRECEEDING ONE DIMINISHES TO A DOT BY NOV. 18; THE FOLLOWER IS REGULAR. 10794 19281113 19281121 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART IS OF SLIGHT DEVELOPMENT. 10795 19281113 19281120 A SMALL SEMI-REGULAR SPOT DIVIDING INTO TWO ON NOV. 15-16 AND DISAPPEARING IN COMPANY WITH TWO OR THREE SMALL COMPANIONS. 10796 19281116 19281121 A FAIR SIZED STREAM OF RAPID RISE AND DECLINE. 10797 19281118 19281123 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT JOINED BY A DISTANT COMPANION ON NOV. 22. 10798 19281119 19281122 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEPARATING IN LONGITUDE; THE LEADER SURVIVES ON NOV. 22. 10799 19281121 19281123 A SMALL GROUP. 10800 19281123 19281124 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 10801 19281126 19281128 A GROUP FROMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10802 19281126 19281128 A SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON NOV. 28. 10803 19281128 19281202 POSSIBLY A RETURN OF GROUP 10784. A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT. 10804 19281130 19281212 A VERY LARGE AND COMPLEX STREM VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. AT FIRST IS A REGULAR SPOT LEADING THE STREAM, BUT THIS BECOMES ABSORBED INTO A LARGE COMPLEX FORMATION. ANOTHER SPOT IN THE SF PART OF THE STREAM IS PERHAPS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 10805 19281130 19281212 RETURN OF GROUP 10789. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 10806 19281201 19281208 RETURN OF GROUP 10792. A DISTURBED AREA, F GROUP 10804, IN WHICH VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS APPEAR. 10807 19281202 19281205 A SMALL STREAM. 10808 19281202 19281203 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 10807. 10809 19281202 19281214 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN APPEARANCE, BUT IN WHICH THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING SPOTS DO NOT SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE TO THE USUAL EXTENT. 10810 19281206 19281218 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY BRIGHT FACULAE IN WHICH A CLUSTER AND A FEW OTHER SPOTS DEVELOP AS A TRAIN TO THE REGULAR SPOT. 10811 19281207 19281208 A SMALL SPOT ON DEC 7; A PAIR ON DEC. 8. 10812 19281207 19281217 A STREAM OF INDEFINTIE SPOTS. 10813 19281209 19281218 AT FIRST A SMALL STREAM OF FAINT SPOTS; FRESH ACTIVITY IS SHOWN AFTER DEC. 12, WHEN A STREAM OF LARGER SPOTS DEVELOPS. 10814 19281209 19281218 RETURN OF GROUP 10793; FOURTH APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT ON DEC. 14. AN EPHEMERAL SPOT IS SEEN IN ITS PLACE ON DEC. 18. 10815 19281210 19281211 A SMALL SPOT S GROUP 10810. 10816 19281211 19281223 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED AT SOME DISTANCE BY THREE SMALL SPOTS THAT HAVE DISAPPEARED BY DEC.18. 10817 19281212 19281216 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP. 10818 19281212 19281218 A VERY SMALL STREAM;ONLY ONE SPOT IS PRESENT ON DEC.14,15 AND 18,NONE BEING SEEN ON DEC.16 AND 17. 10819 19281213 19281219 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM. 10820 19281214 19281218 A SMALL STREAM. 10821 19281214 19281221 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 10801. A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 10822 19281215 19281223 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL GROUP DISAPPEARING ON DEC.17,BUT RE-FORMING ON DEC.21. 10823 19281217 19281218 A SMALL SPOT. 10824 19281222 19281224 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 10825 19281224 19281229 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 10826 19281225 19290105 A STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 10827 19281226 19290106 RETURN OF GROUP 10804. A MODERATELY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BREAKING UP,AND,WITH THE ADDITION OF COMPANIONS IN THE REAR,LENGTHENING INTO A STREAM OF FAINT UNSTABLE SPOT. THE GROUP HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY JAN.3,BUT NEW AND LARGER SPOTS ARE DEVELOPING ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 10828 19281227 19290101 A SMALL SPOT ON DEC.27 AND 29; THEN A SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 10829 19281229 19290104 RETURN OF GROUP 10809. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON SOME DAYS. 10830 19281231 19290104 A SMALL STREAM. 10831 19290102 19290105 A SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 10832 19290102 19290103 A TINY SPOT IN FACULAE THAT ADJOINS THAT GROUP 10833. 10833 19290102 19290114 RETURN OF GROUP 10813. A REGULAR SPOT, NOT QUITE PERFECTLY FORMED, DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER JANUARY 7. 10834 19290104 19290110 ON JAN. 4, A SMALL STREAM OF FAINT SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JAN. 5 AND 6; ON JAN. 7 A MORE DEFINITE STREAM APPEARS. 10835 19290105 19290109 A SMALL GROUP IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 10833. 10836 19290105 19290113 A SMALL STREAM IN CONSTANT CHANGE. 10837 19290107 19290110 A SMALL STREAM RESOLVING INTO A PAIR OF SPOTS. 10838 19290108 19290110 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 10839 19290109 19290111 A SINGLE SPOT ON JAN. 9, AND ANOTHER ON JAN. 11 - PROBABLY RELATED. 10840 19290109 19290119 WHEN FIRST SEEN A SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA; BETWEEN JAN. 10 AND 11 THE SPOT APPARENTLY DIVIDES INTO TWO PARTS THAT SLIGHTLY SEPARATE. THE LEADING PART BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT THAT BREAKS UP INTO THREE PORTIONS BETWEEN JAN. 16-17 AND SO DISAPPEARS. 10841 19290111 19290123 A LARGE COMPLEX STREAM OF RELATIVELY SHORT DURATION; THE LEADER IS AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT, BUT BETWEEN JAN. 16-18 IT MERGES INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH HAS DEVELOPED IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING IT. 10842 19290112 19290113 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 10836. 10843 19290112 19290118 A CLUSTER OR STREAM WITH THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE SPOT IN THE REAR. 10844 19290112 19290115 A FEEBLE GROUP OF FEW SPOTS. 10845 19290113 19290114 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 10846 19290114 19290118 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 10847 19290116 19290120 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JAN. 18 AND 19. 10848 19290116 19290117 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 10849 19290116 19290128 A LARGE AND RATHER STRAGGLING STREAM UNDERGOING FREQUENT CHANGE. THE LEADER, BEGINNING AS A NEARLY REGULAR SPOT, INCREASES AND BECOMES COMPOSITE; BETWEEN JAN. 22 AND 23, IT BREAKS UP, AND THE PARTS SEPARATE IN THE MANNER OF A NEWLY DEVELOPING STREAM; THE NF PORTION OF THE ORIGINAL LEADER IS TEMPORARILY A REGULAR SPOT. THE AREA OF ASSOCIATED FACULAE IS CONSIDERABLE. 10850 19290119 19290129 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM SHOWING APPRECIABLE ACTIVITY IN ITS REARWARD PORTION. THE LEADER, THOUGH SMALL, PERSISTS UNTIL JAN. 25. 10851 19290120 19290128 A LONG, UNSTABLE STREAM DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER JAN. 25, WHEN GROUP 10853 IS DEVELOPING IN CLOSE JUXTAPOSITION TO IT. THE LEADER IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 10852 19290122 19290123 A SMALL GROUP. 10853 19290123 19290201 A GROUP DEVELOPING CLOSELY NF GROUP 10851 WHOSE CHARACTERISTIC FORMATION IS A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY NUMBERS OF TINY SPOTS. 10854 19290130 19290205 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM OF UNSUAL FORMATION UNTIL FEB. 2, WHEN ITS DECAY SETS IN RATHER RAPIDLY. 10855 19290131 19290203 A VERY SMALL GROUP NOT SEEN ON FEB. 2. 10856 19290202 19290212 A STREAM COMMENCING ON FEB. 2 WITH A SINGLE SMALL SPOT AS LEADER, THAT GROWS BY ACCRETION AND LENGTHENS OUT IN AN EAST TO WEST DIRECTION. 10857 19290203 19290205 A SMALL STREAM. 10858 19290204 19290210 A FEEBLE STREAM OF FEW SPOTS. 10859 19290204 19290214 A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL ATTENDANTS FROM FEB. 7-11 AND A DISTANT COMPANION SP ON FEB 12-13. 10860 19290206 19290207 A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON FEB 7. 10861 19290206 19290218 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER AS WELL AS THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT. 10862 19290206 19290217 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A "BRIDGE" ACROSS ITS UMBRA, THAT HAS DIVIDED INTO THREE PARTS BY FEB. 14; THE LARGEST AND NF PORTION SURVIVES UNTIL FEB. 17. 10863 19290207 19290209 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY A COMPANION. 10864 19290207 19290208 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 10865 19290207 19290212 RETURN OF GROUP 10841. A CLOSE PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS IN A CONSPICUOUS AREA OF FACULAE. 10866 19290208 19290218 A STREAM F GROUP 10862 (F GROUP 10862) IN WHICH THE DEVELOPMENT OF A DEFINITE LEADER SPOT IS DELAYED FOR SEVERAL DAYS. 10867 19290208 19290212 A SMALL GROUP. 10868 19290208 19290218 A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH SMALL FOLLOWERS. 10869 19290212 19290221 INTERMITTENT. A DIMINUTIVE GROUP ON FEB. 12 ; A PAIR OF DOTS ON FEB. 19, AND A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 20 AND 21. 10870 19290214 19290215 A GROUP FORMING AT THE WEST LIMB. 10871 19290215 19290216 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 10872 19290215 19290216 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 10873 19290216 19290226 A REGULAR SPOT USUALLY WITH A TRAIN OF COMPANIONS. 10874 19290217 19290218 A FEW SMALL SPOTS REPRESENTING A FEEBLE REVIVAL OF ACTIVITY IN THE REGION OF FACULAE RELATED TO GROUP 10841 AND 65. 10875 19290218 19290301 A REGION OF SLIGHT BUT PERSISTENT ACTIVITY REPRESENTED ALTERNATELY BY A SMALL STREAM, CLUSTER, AND STREAM. 10876 19290219 19290221 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10877 19290220 19290301 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT. 10878 19290221 19290302 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY COMPANIONS ON MAR. 1 AND 2. 10879 19290222 19290304 A COMPOSITE SPOT BREAKING APART ON FEB. 23 TO FORM A STREAM WHICH BEGINS ALMOST AT ONCE TO DIMINISH, THOUGH A TEMPORARY REVIVAL TAKES PLACE ON MARCH 2-3. 10880 19290223 19290224 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10881 19290223 19290306 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A VARIABLE TRAIN OF TINY COMPANIONS THAT DIE OUT AS THEIR LEADER IS DIMINISHING RAPIDLY. 10882 19290224 19290228 A SINGLE SPOT ON FEB. 24, 25 AND 28 ; A VERY SMALL GROUP ON FEB. 26-27. 10883 19290224 19290303 A FEW FAINT BUT PERSISTENT SPOTS F GROUP 10879. 10884 19290301 19290313 A RETURN OF GROUP 10870. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS FROM MAR. 5-10, IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF DISTURBANCE AS GROUP 10885. A SMALL PART OF THE REGULAR SPOT HAS BROKEN AWAY BY MAR. 6. 10885 19290302 19290314 A LARGE SPOT BECOMING COMPOSITE IN CHARACTER, FOLLOWED AT FIRST BY A WELL-DEFINED COMPANION AND, AT ITS DISAPPEARANCE ON MAR. 7, BY SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 10886 19290303 19290306 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM. 10887 19290303 19290309 A DOT ON MAR. 3 ; ON MAR. 5 A PAIR OF SPOTS THAT SEPARATE RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON MAR 8 AND 9. 10888 19290303 19290304 A VERY SMALL SPOT IN THE SF REGION OF THE FACULAE C GROUPS 10884-5. 10889 19290304 19290316 A STREAM LED BY A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. THE SPOT GROWS BY ACCRETION-TWO REGULAR SPOTS JUST TOUCHING ONE ANOTHER ABSORB ANOTHER SPOT DEVELOPING BEHIND; THE RESULTING SPOT HAS BECOME ESTABLISHED BY ABOUT MAR. 10, BUT THREE SEPARATE NUCLEI CONTINUE WITHIN IT. A RETURN OF GROUP 10861. 10890 19290306 19290310 A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 6 AND A TINY CLUSTER ON MAR. 10, IN A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE STRETCHING NORTHWARDS FROM THAT SURROUNDING GROUP 10889. 10891 19290307 19290310 A GROUP OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 10892 19290307 19290317 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON MAR. 9-11. NOTHING IS SEEN ON MAR.14,BUT A VERY SMALL SPOT MARKS THE PLACE AFTERWARDS. 10893 19290308 19290314 A SMALL GROUP OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY WITH ITS AXIS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 10894 19290310 19290317 A STREAM WITH MARKED SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER. 10895 19290311 19290315 A SMALL VERY DARK SPOT SF GROUP 10894. 10896 19290315 19290318 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 10897 19290315 19290327 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE REAR SPOTS SOON DISAPPEAR. 10898 19290323 19290403 A STREAM COMPOSED OF A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER AND A TRAIN OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. THE LEADER DIMINISHES CONSIDERABLY BETWEEN MAR.31 AND APR.1. 10899 19290330 19290331 A SMALL GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10900 19290330 19290403 A STREAM. 10901 19290330 19290403 A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR.30 AND APR.3; A CLOSE PAIR ON THE OTHER THREE DAYS. 10902 19290331 19290412 RETURN OF GROUP 10889. A FAIRLY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT (PRECEDED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL COMPANIONS)THAT SPLITS INTO TWO ON APR.3,THE REAR PORTION REMAINING WHILST THE PRECEDING PORTION DISSOLVES INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 10903 19290401 19290405 A COUPLE OF TINY SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING ONE SHOWS A DEFINITE UMBRA AND PENUMBRA ON APR.3. 10904 19290402 19290404 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 10905 19290405 19290412 TWO OR THREE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS (IN FRONT OF GROUP 10902)THAT BECOME A DEFINITE GROUP ON APR.10. 10906 19290405 19290414 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 10907 19290406 19290408 A SMALL GROUP S GROUP 10902. 10908 19290409 19290411 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER. 10909 19290409 19290421 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART HAS DISAPPEARED BY APR. 16. THE LEADER, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, SHOWS MINOR CHANGES IN STRUCTURE FROM DAY TO DAY. 10910 19290410 19290416 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 10911 19290411 19290423 RETURN OF GROUP 10897. A STEADY REGULAR SPOT TO WHICH A DISTANT COMPANION APPEARS ON APR. 16-19. 10912 19290412 19290413 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 10913 19290413 19290424 A STREAM COMPOSED OF A REGULAR SPOT, A NEAR COMPANION SF, AND A TRAIN OF SMALL EVANESCENT SPOTS SCATTERED OVER A WIDE AREA MARKED BY FACULAE. 10914 19290414 19290415 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 10915 19290418 19290424 AN ACTIVE GROUP FORMING IMMEDIATELY SOUTH OF GROUP 10911. 10916 19290420 19290428 A FEW SPOTS IN AN INSIGNIFICANT STREAM UNTIL APR. 24 WHEN A LARGE SPOT SUDDENLY FORMS AS THE LEADER. 10917 19290422 19290423 A FEW SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 10916. 10918 19290424 19290428 A SMALL GROUP. 10919 19290425 19290506 A FAIR-SIZED SPOT FROM WHICH A PORTION IN FRONT BREAKS AWAY ON APRIL 29. 10920 19290427 19290510 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 10902. A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED AT SOME DISTANCE BY A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA. THESE TWO UMBRAE SLOWLY SEPARATE, AND THE SPOT DIVIDES INTO TWO ON MAY 3. THERE ARE SMALL COMPANIONS TO THE LEADER ON MAY 2-5. 10921 19290428 19290510 A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10922 19290429 19290509 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER SOON DISAPPEARS ALTHOUGH OTHER SPOTS APPEAR NEAR THE LEADER. 10923 19290501 19290503 A SMALL STREAM WHOSE AXIS IS HIGHLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 10924 19290502 19290504 A COUPLE OF TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MAY 3. 10925 19290503 19290510 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE MOST IMPORTANT COMPONENT. 10926 19290503 19290504 A COUPLE OF SMALL SPOTS THAT HAVE SEPARATED CONSIDERABLY IN LONGITUDE WITHIN 24 HOURS. 10927 19290505 19290516 A FAIR-SIZED SPOT WITH SMALL EPHEMERAL FOLLOWERS AT VARIOUS DISTANCES. BETWEEN MAY 10 AND 13 THE SPOT IS OF COMPOSITE STRUCTURE. 10928 19290506 19290517 RETURN OF GROUP 10909. A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TINY CLUSTER ON MAY 9 AND A SINGLE FAINT SPOT ON MAY 11 AND 12. 10929 19290507 19290515 AN UNUSUAL GROUP. A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MAY 7 THAT BECOME A STREAM OF FORMLESS SPOTS BY MAY 11. TWO DAYS LATER THIS STREAM HAS ALTERED INTO A PAIR OF LARGE BUT IMPERFECTLY-FORMED SPOTS. 10930 19290508 19290509 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 10931 19290508 19290520 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A LARGE TRACT OF BRIGHT FACULAE. A "BRIDGE" HAS FORMED ACROSS THE F END OF THE UMBRA ON MAY 13, AND THE SMALL PORTION OF UMBRA AND PENUMBRA, THUS SEPARATED FROM THE MAIN BULK OF THE SPOT, SLOWLY SHRINKS AND HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 18. 10932 19290513 19290516 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MAY 14. 10933 19290513 19290520 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT RAPIDLY DWINDLING AND DISAPPEARING IN COMPANY WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS. 10934 19290514 19290519 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING SPOT. 10935 19290515 19290516 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10936 19290516 19290522 TWO SPOTS WHICH DRIFT WIDELY APART IN LONGITUDE; THE FOLLOWER HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 21, BUT OTHER SMALL SPOTS COME BEHIND THE LEADER. 10937 19290516 19290524 A STREAM OF A FEW CHANGING SPOTS IN A REGION ALREADY MARKED BY FAIRLY BRIGHT FACULAE. 10938 19290521 19290525 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN A FAIRLY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE; ON MAY 25 A NEW GROUP OF SPOTS AND FACULAE IS FORMING, BUT ITS SUBSEQUENT DEVELOPMENT IS LOST BY ITS DISAPPEARANCE AROUND THE SUN'S WEST LIMB. 10939 19290522 19290603 A REVIVAL OF GROUP 10919. A LARGE SPOT, AT FIRST SOMEWHAT COMPOSITE, BUT BECOMING REGULAR BY MAY 26, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH HAVE DIED OUT BY MAY 31. 10940 19290524 19290530 A STREAM LENGTHENING CONSIDERABLY IN THE FIRST FEW DAYS OF ITS ORGIN. THE LEADER IS A PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT. 10941 19290524 19290529 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT P GROUP 10942 IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA OF FACULAE. THERE IS A SMALL DISTANT COMPANION ON MAY 27. 10942 19290525 19290601 RETURN OF GROUP 10925. A REGULAR SPOT IN THE SAME DISTURBED AREA WITH GROUP 10941. 10943 19290526 19290527 ONE OR TWO SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 10944 19290531 19290608 A SMALL SPOT SOMETIMES WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER. 10945 19290602 19290606 A SMALL GROUP NOT SEEN ON JUNE 5. 10946 19290603 19290615 A STREAM OF UNUSUAL DEVELOPMENT. A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN INCREASING NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS NORTH PRECEDING IT. BY JUNE 9, A CLUSTER OF THESE SMALL SPOTS HAS CONDENSED INTO AN UNSTABLE SPOT, WHILST ANOTHER CLUSTER HAS JOINED ON TO THE ORIGINAL REGULAR SPOT, WHICH THUS BECOMES OF COMPOSITE FORMATION AND THE FOLLOWER OF THE RESULTING STREAM OF UNSTABLE CHARACTER. 10947 19290604 19290608 A PAIR OF MODERATELY LARGE SPOTS OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT. 10948 19290604 19290605 TWO SPOTS ON JUNE 4 OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS ON JUNE 5. 10949 19290604 19290612 RETURN OF GROUP 10931. A REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING RAPIDLY AFTER JUNE 10. 10950 19290604 19290616 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER ON JUNE 5 AND 6. 10951 19290605 19290607 A TINY CLUSTER. 10952 19290606 19290614 SLIGHT BUT SUSTAINED ACTIVITY IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 10950. 10953 19290606 19290616 A REGULAR SPOT DWINDLING TO A DOT. THERE IS A TINY FOLLOWER ON JUNE 10 AND 12. 10954 19290609 19290615 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN THE P PART OF A MODERATELY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. 10955 19290610 19290618 A REGION OF SLIGHT BUT CONTINUOUS ACTIVITY. 10956 19290611 19290623 A SLOWLY DIMINSHING REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL FOLLOWERS. 10957 19290611 19290619 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES A SMALL CLUSTER AFTER JUNE 15. THERE ARE ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS PRECEDING IT ON JUNE 13 AND JUNE 15-18. 10958 19290612 19290620 A FEW FAINT SPOTS WHICH HAVE GONE BY THE NEXT DAY; ON JUNE 15 A SMALL STREAM IF FORMING, AND THIS SOON DIMINSHES BUT RE-FORMS AGAIN BEFORE PASSING AROUND THE WEST LIMB. 10959 19290613 19290615 A COUPLE OF SPOTS IN GROUP 10950. 10960 19290614 19290623 A REGULAR SPOT THAT SHOWS TWO UMBRAE ON JUNE 15 AND DIVIDES INTO TWO PARTS, WHICH AFTER THE INITIAL SEPARATION REMAIN ABOUT THE SAME DISTANCE APART. THERE ARE DISTANT FAINT COMPANIONS ON JUNE 19-21. 10961 19290616 19290622 A SHORT STREAM WITH AN APPRECIABLE SPOT AS LEADER ON JUNE 19 AND 20. 10962 19290618 19290629 A STREAM OF SPOTS DOMINATED BY A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES ELONGATED ALONG AN AXIS INCLINED SLIGHTLY TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. THE SPOT COMES APPARENTLY FROM THE FUSION OF A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS ON JUNE 18 AND 19, AND LATER THERE ARE USUALLY ONE OR TWO BRIGHT PROJECTIONS OVER THE UMBRA. 10963 19290618 19290630 RETURN OF GROUP 10939. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BECOMING APPRECIABLY ELONGATED ALONG AN AXIS INCLINED ABOUT 45 DEGREES TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. THERE ARE TWO SMALL DISTANT COMPANIONS ON JUNE 24. 10964 19290619 19290626 A SMALL SUBSIDIARY GROUP SF GROUP 10962. 10965 19290620 19290622 A SMALL STREAM. 10966 19290620 19290627 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS F GROUP 10962. 10967 19290621 19290626 USUALLY A PAIR OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 10968 19290621 19290626 A SHORT STREAM OF WHICH ONE COMPONENT REMAINS AFTER JUNE 24. 10969 19290622 19290704 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 10947. A STEADY REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. 10970 19290624 19290627 A TINY SPOT INVISIBLE ON JUNE 25 AND 26. 10971 19290625 19290627 A SMALL SPOT. 10972 19290626 19290704 A SMALL SPOT THAT COMES INTO BRIEF PROMINENCE ON JUNE 29, WHEN IT IS JOINED BY A COMPANION SPOT. 10973 19290626 19290708 AT FIRST A COUPLE OF SPOTS IN RATHER WIDE SPREAD FACULAE; THESE SPOTS WERE NOT SEEN ON JUNE 30; ON JULY 1-3 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS ARE PRESENT, AND ON JULY 5 A NEW DEVELOPMENT TAKES PLACE. 10974 19290628 19290629 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 10975 19290628 19290629 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10976 19290628 19290703 A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE WIDELY IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON JULY 2 AND 3. 10977 19290629 19290710 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS THAT HAVE DIED OUT BY JULY 8. 10978 19290629 19290630 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 10979 19290630 19290706 A PAIR OF SPOTS THAT DIVERGE IN LONGITUDE; THE FOLLOWER IS LEFT ON JULY 4. 10980 19290630 19290711 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT SOON BECOMING COMPOSITE AND BREAKING UP. A COMPANION SPOT FOLLOWING IT LIKEWISE DISSOLVES AS A CLUSTER OF FAINT MARKINGS. A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE ACCOMPANIES THE GROUP. 10981 19290702 19290706 REVIVAL OF GROUP 10950. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10982 19290704 19290714 A PAIR OF SPOTS 3 DEGREES APART IN LATITUDE OF WHICH THE SOUTHERN SURVIVES AFTER JULY 9. 10983 19290706 19290707 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 10980. 10984 19290706 19290709 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 10985 19290707 19290716 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT BEFORE EXTINCTION. 10986 19290708 19290717 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF RAPID GROWTH WHOSE POINT OF ORIGIN IS REPRESENTED BY A TINY SPOT ON JULY 8. THE COMPONENTS OF THE STREAM ARE COMPOSITE IN CHARACTER, THE LEADER SPOT BEING LARGE AND CHANGING CONSIDERABLY IN APPEARANCE FROM DAY TO DAY. 10987 19290709 19290712 REVIVAL OF GROUP 10956. A VERY SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 10988 19290711 19290723 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BECOMING APPRECIABLY ELONGATED, IN A DIRECTION PARALLEL TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR, BETWEEN JULY 15 AND 16. THERE ARE USUALLY SOME TINY ATTENDANT SPOTS, AND A CONSIDERABLE AREA OF FACULAE FOLLOWS. 10989 19290713 19290719 A SMALL STREAM FORMING IN FRONT OF THE POSITION OF GROUP 10987. 10990 19290713 19290716 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 10991 19290714 19290725 A SHORT STREAM WITH THE LARGEST COMPONENT AT THE REAR, THIS BEING A REGULAR SPOT UNTIL JULY 19, AFTER WHICH IT BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER. 10992 19290714 19290726 A REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY A SMALL COMPANION WHOSE PLACE IS TAKEN ON JULY 20 BY A SMALL ELONGATED CLUSTER OR STREAM THAT HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 24. THERE IS A BROAD BRIDGE ACROSS THE REGULAR SPOT ON JULY 19 AND 21, BUT THE SPOT REMAINS INTACT. 10993 19290715 19290725 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH ATTENDANT DOTS ON JULY 18-21. 10994 19290715 19290721 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED AT SOME DISTANCE BY A FAINT MARKING ON JULY 18 AND A FAINT CLUSTER ON JULY 20; THE LATTER IS ALL THAT REMAINS OF THE GROUP BY THE FOLLOWING DAY. 10995 19290718 19290720 A SINGLE DOT ON JULY 18 AND 19; A PAIR ON JULY 20. 10996 19290718 19290724 A SMALL DISTURBED AREA PRODUCING ONE OR MORE TINY SPOTS ON EACH DAY EXCEPT JULY 20. 10997 19290719 19290723 ONE OR TWO SPOTS DIFFERING SOMEWHAT IN THEIR DAILY POSITION BUT SEEMINGLY CONNECTED. 10998 19290720 19290727 RETURN OF GROUP 10969. A SMALL WELL-DEFINED SPOT FADING FROM VIEW ON JULY 24, WHEN ONE OR TWO SPOTS COME NEAR ITS PLACE. 10999 19290721 19290801 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY FOLLOWER ON JULY 21-23. 11000 19290724 19290803 A STREAM, GENERALLY WITH THE LARGEST SPOT AT THE REAR. 11001 19290725 19290802 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE PASSING RAPIDLY THROUGH ITS PHASES. 11002 19290725 19290729 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM IN A FAIRLY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 11000. 11003 19290727 19290729 ONE SPOT ON JULY 27-28; A FAINT STREAM ON JULY 29. 11004 19290731 19290802 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 11005 19290731 19290803 A SHORT STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS AFTER AUG.1. 11006 19290731 19290811 TWO REGULAR SPOTS NOT FAR APART IN LONGITUDE; THE LEADING AND LARGER SPOT REMAINS STABLE; THE FOLLOWER BECOMES COMPOSITE AND DISSOLVES INTO A CLUSTER. 11007 19290801 19290803 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 11008 19290801 19290804 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11009 19290804 19290810 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL MARKING ON AUG. 4; A PAIR OF SPOTS ON AUG. 7, 9 AND 10. 11010 19290804 19290807 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM SHOWING CHARACTERISTIC FORMATION. 11011 19290805 19290806 A COUPLE OF SMALL SPOTS. 11012 19290805 19290806 A SINGLE SPOT ON EACH DAY. 11013 19290805 19290811 A SMALL STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH SURVIVES ON AUG. 10. 11014 19290806 19290817 A REGULAR SPOT INVADED BY A NARROW BRIGHT MARKING FROM THE PHOTOSPHERE ON AUG. 14. 11015 19290807 19290818 RETURN OF GROUP 10988. A REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL CLUSTERS OF TINY SPOTS, SOUTH-FOLLOWING, BETWEEN AUG. 9 AND 15. 11016 19290808 19290812 A SHORT STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS ON AUG. 11. 11017 19290810 19290813 RETURN OF GROUP 10992. A TINY SPOT IN CONSPICUOUS FACULAE: GROUP 11020 ORIGINATES NORTHWARDS ON AUG. 13. 11018 19290810 19290819 A STREAM IN CONTINUOUS CHANGE. 11019 19290811 19290814 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER. 11020 19290812 19290822 A LARGE STREAM SHOWING RAPID DEVELOPMENT FROM A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS ON AUG. 12. THE LEADER SPOT IS DUPLEX ON AUG. 15; THE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER ON AUG. 19-20. 11021 19290813 19290819 AN IMPERFECTLY FORMED SPOT BECOMING REGULAR WITH A TRAIN OF TINY COMPANIONS. 11022 19290814 19290820 A CLUSTER OF SMALLISH SPOTS LENGTHENING TO A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER, NOW WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE, ALONE REMAIN ON AUG. 19 AND 20. 11023 19290814 19290817 A SMALL CLUSTER NF GROUP 11018. 11024 19290815 19290817 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11025 19290815 19290826 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT ON AUG. 15; ON AUG. 19 ANOTHER SMALL SPOT ; ON AUG. 20 A SMALL STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT THAT REMAINS ON AUG. 25 AFTER THE DISAPPEARANCE OF ITS COMPANIONS. 11026 19290815 19290826 A SMALL STEADY REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON AUG. 18-20. 11027 19290815 19290823 A ROW OF SMALLISH SPOTS. 11028 19290816 19290827 A PAIR OF SPOTS WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. THE FOLLOWER DISAPPEARS AFTER AUG. 19. WHEN THE LEADER SHOWS A TEMPORARY INCREASE. 11029 19290817 19290820 A SMALL STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS PREDOMINANT. 11030 19290820 19290828 A PAIR OF SPOTS WITH SMALL COMPANIONS SHOWING THE USUAL DRIFTING APART IN LONGITUDE AS THE GROUP IS DEVELOPING. 11031 19290820 19290828 A VARIABLE STREAM N GROUP 11030. 11032 19290821 19290826 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 21 AND 26; A SINGLE SPOT ON AUG. 22. 11033 19290825 19290831 A SMALL STREAM OR CLUSTER. 11034 19290828 19290830 TWO OR THREE FAINT SPOTS. 11035 19290829 19290831 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 11036 19290830 19290831 A VERY SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 11033. 11037 19290901 19290904 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 11038 19290902 19290904 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER ALONE REMAINS ON SEPT. 3. 11039 19290903 19290904 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 11040 19290903 19290913 RETURN OF GROUP 11021. A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RATHER SUDDENLY. 11041 19290905 19290910 A STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY WITH A PREDOMINANT LEADER SPOT. 11042 19290905 19290907 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11043 19290905 19290910 AN EPHEMERAL SPOT ON SEPT. 5; A SMALL STREAM NEAR ITS PLACE ON SEPT. 7-10. 11044 19290906 19290913 RETURN OF GROUP 11020. A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT, IN CONSIDERABLE FACULAE, WITH A TINY FOLLOWER ON SEPT. 9. 11045 19290907 19290909 A VERY SMALL CLUSTER ON SEPT. 7 OF WHICH ONE COMPONENT REMAINS ON SEPT. 8 AND 9. 11046 19290908 19290909 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 11047 19290909 19290916 INTERMITTENT. A COUPLE OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 9 AND 10; ON SEPT. 13 A SMALL GROUP APPEARS IN THE SAME PLACE. 11048 19290909 19290913 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS NF GROUP 11044. 11049 19290910 19290917 ONE OR SOMETIMES TWO SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWED BY VERY BRIGHT FACULAE. 11050 19290911 19290918 A SLIGHT BUT PERSISTENT CENTRE OF ACTIVITY SHOWN USUALLY BY A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11051 19290912 19290914 A SMALL SPOT. 11052 19290914 19290923 A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY FOLLOWER ON SEPT. 19. 11053 19290916 19290917 A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT. 16; A PAIR ON SEPT. 17. 11054 19290916 19290927 A REGULAR SPOT BECOMING ELONGATED ON SEPT. 22-23, BEFORE BREAKING UP AND QUICKLY DISAPPEARING. 11055 19290917 19290922 A SMALL STREAM WITH THE LARGEST SPOT AT THE REAR. THE APPEARANCE OF THE GROUP IS PRECEDED BY A SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 17. 11056 19290919 19290923 ONE OR SOMETIMES TWO SMALL SPOTS. 11057 19290920 19290923 APAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 20; A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT. 23. 11058 19290921 19290924 A SMALL GROUP F GROUP 11054. 11059 19290926 19291006 A LONG STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. THE COMPOSITE LEADER ON OCT. 3 APPEARS TO COME FROM THE FUSION OF TWO SPOTS THAT ARE SEVERAL DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE ON SEPT. 30. 11060 19290926 19290929 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11061 19290929 19291010 A LARGE STREAM UNDERGOING RAPID CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. THE LEADER IS A SMALL PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT. 11062 19290929 19291005 AN IMPERFECTLY FORMED SPOT IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 11061. 11063 19291001 19291003 A SMALL SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON OCT. 2. 11064 19291003 19291008 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 3-4; A SMALL STREAM ON OCT. 6-8. 11065 19291006 19291017 A LARGE COMPLEX STREAM. 11066 19291007 19291012 A DOT ON OCT. 7; A SMALL STREAM ON OCT. 9-12. 11067 19291007 19291018 A LARGE STREAM. THE LEADER COALESCES WITH A COMPANION SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWING IT ON OCT. 12, AND A "BRIDGE" REMAINS ACROSS THE SPOT THUS COMPOUNDED. THE FOLLOWER IS FOR A FEW DAYS THE LARGEST COMPONENT, BUT IT BEGINS TO BREAK UP AFTER OCT. 12. 11068 19291007 19291019 A VERY LARGE SPOT, ALMOST CIRCULAR, CROSSED BY A "BRIDGE" UNTIL OCT. 15. 11069 19291017 19291023 A FEEBLE STREAM. 11070 19291019 19291021 A SMALL STREAM F GROUP 11069. 11071 19291019 19291030 A DOT ON OCT. 19; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL OCT. 26 WHEN A FAIR-SIZED BUT SHORT-LIVED SPOT APPEARS. 11072 19291021 19291022 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 11073 19291021 19291028 RETURN OF GROUP 11059. A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP ON OCT. 24-25 IN COMPANY WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS. SCATTERED FAINT SPOTS CONTINUE ON OCT. 27-28. 11074 19291023 19291024 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 11075 19291025 19291105 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF UNUSUAL FORMATION THAT DEVELOPS FROM THREE SPOTS. THE CHIEF FEATURE IS THE GREAT ACTIVITY SHOWN ABOUT THE FOLLOWING SPOT WHICH, ABSORBING ITS NEAR COMPANION, HAS GROWN TO A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BY OCT. 30. THE LEADER IS A RELATIVELY SMALL BUT STABLE SPOT. 11076 19291027 19291103 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF RAPID ORIGIN. 11077 19291028 19291029 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 28 OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON OCT. 29. 11078 19291029 19291030 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 29; A WIDE PAIR ON OCT. 30. 11079 19291029 19291106 A PAIR OF SPOTS IN FRONT OF WHICH THE LARGE GROUP NO. 11081 BEGINS TO DEVELOP ON OCT. 31. 11080 19291030 19291101 ONE SMALL SPOT. 11081 19291031 19291110 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF USUAL TYPE IN APPEARANCE BUT WHOSE EARLY DEVELOPMENT IS NOT QUITE NORMAL. 11082 19291103 19291116 RETURN OF GROUP 11068. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT THAT PARTLY BREAKS UP ON NOV. 14. 11083 19291105 19291110 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11084 19291105 19291107 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 11085 19291106 19291118 A REGULAR SPOT SHEDDING A PORTION FROM ITS NORTHERN EDGE ON NOV. 16-17. FROM NOV. 7-9 THERE ARE TWO DISTANT FOLLOWERS. 11086 19291107 19291109 A SMALL GROUP. 11087 19291108 19291114 A SMALL GROUP N GROUP 11082. 11088 19291108 19291119 A REGULAR SPOT PASSING TO EXTINCTION. THERE IS A TINY FOLLOWER ON NOV. 14. 11089 19291109 19291121 A LONG STREAM WITH A PREDOMINANT REGULAR SPOT. 11090 19291110 19291112 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11091 19291110 19291116 A SMALL SPOT JOINED BY OTHERS IN A STREAM. 11092 19291113 19291118 A SMALL STREAM NP GROUP 11089. 11093 19291113 19291122 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF RAPID RISE TO MAXIMUM AREA. 11094 19291116 19291127 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM. 11095 19291120 19291121 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 11096 19291121 19291203 RETURN OF GROUP 11075. A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA; A TINY COMPANION PRECEDES IT ON NOV. 24 AND 27, WHILST OTHERS SURROUND IT ON NOV. 28-30. 11097 19291121 19291204 TWO SPOTS, AT FIRST VERY CLOSE TOGETHER AND COMPOSITE IN NATURE, BECOMING THE CHIEF COMPONENTS OF A STREAM. 11098 19291123 19291205 A REGULAR SPOT FROM WHICH APPARENTLY A PORTION BREAKS AND DRIFTS AWAY ON THE FOLLOWING SIDE BETWEEN NOV. 25 AND 26. THERE ARE USUALLY A FEW SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWERS. 11099 19291124 19291205 A PAIR OF IMPERFECTLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOTS THAT COALESCE BETWEEN NOV. 26 AND 27. A COMPANION FOLLOWS AT A SHORT DISTANCE. THIS GROUP CLOSELY PRECEDES GROUP 11102, THAT IS AN ACOLYTE STREAM TO THE BIG SPOT OF GROUP 11100. 11100 19291124 19291206 RETURN OF GROUP 11081. AN UNUSUALLY LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 11101 19291125 19291128 A FEW FAINT SPOTS P GROUP 11096. 11102 19291125 19291206 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS SF GROUP 11100. 11103 19291125 19291203 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT F GROUP 11100. 11104 19291125 19291207 A REGULAR SPOT IN FRONT OF WHICH A NUMBER OF COMPANIONS APPEAR. THE PRECEDING PART OF THE STREAM THUS FORMED JOINS UP WITH THE PRECEDING PART OF ANOTHER STREAM, GROUP 11105, THE TWO STREAMS MAKING A LARGE > SHAPED FORMATION DIRECTED TOWARDS THE BIG SPOT, GROUP 11100. 11105 19291125 19291207 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF COMPOSITE SPOTS WHOSE AXIS IS AT FIRST HIGHLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR: SEE NOTE TO GROUP 11104. 11106 19291126 19291129 A VERY SMALL GROUP S GROUP 11097. 11107 19291126 19291127 A TINY SPOT WHOSE PLACE IS LATER OCCUPIED BY THE EXTENDING STREAM OF GROUP 11104. 11108 19291127 19291208 A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP ON DEC. 3, FOLLOWED AT NEARLY A CONSTANT DISTANCE BY A COMPANION WHICH DISSOLVES INTO A CLUSTER. 11109 19291127 19291204 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 11110 19291129 19291203 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 29 AND DEC. 3. 11111 19291201 19291202 TWO OR THREE VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11112 19291201 19291213 RETURN OF GROUP 11082: 3RD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT, GENERALLY WITH ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS; ON DEC. 9 THESE ARE CONSIDERABLE. 11113 19291204 19291205 A PAIR OF EPHEMERAL SPOTS N THE BIG SPOT OF GROUP 11100. 11114 19291204 19291205 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11115 19291204 19291206 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 11116 19291204 19291206 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 11117 19291204 19291205 A TINY SPOT. 11118 19291206 19291218 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH AN EXTENSION ON ITS SOUTHERN EDGE ON DEC. 10, PRECEDED BY SMALL COMPANIONS ON DEC. 8-13. 11119 19291206 19291219 A STREAM OF CONSIDERABLE LENGTH CONSISTING OF TWO STABLE REGULAR SPOTS (AT THE FRONT AND END OF THE GROUP RESPECTIVELY), A LINK OF NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS BETWEEN THEM, AND AN IRREGULARLY-SHAPED SPOT THAT HAS A COMMON ORIGIN WITH THE FOLLOWING REGULAR SPOT. 11120 19291210 19291216 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 11121 19291210 19291222 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH A BIG REGULAR LEADER. GROUPS 11121, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 31 AND 33 ARE ALL ON NEARLY THE SAME MERIDIAN. 11122 19291210 19291222 A STREAM IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING GROUP 11127; THE BAREST SEPARATION EXISTS BETWEEN THE FOLLOWER OF GROUP 11122 AND THE LEADER OF GROUP 11127. 11123 19291210 19291214 A SMALL SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO DISTANT COMPANIONS ON DEC. 13-14, S GROUP 11122. 11124 19291210 19291221 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 11125 19291211 19291214 A SMALL GROUP. 11126 19291211 19291220 A PARTLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 11127 19291212 19291222 A STREAM APPROXIMATELY OF NORMAL TYPE FORMING IMMEDIATELY BEHIND GROUP 11122. 11128 19291213 19291221 RETURN OF GROUP 11094. A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON DEC. 19 AND 21. 11129 19291214 19291224 AN INSIGNIFICANT STREAM UNTIL DEC. 19, WHEN MORE DEFINITE SPOTS APPEAR, OF WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. 11130 19291215 19291226 A REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON DEC. 21, 22 AND 23. 11131 19291216 19291222 A SMALL STREAM SP GROUP 11122. 11132 19291216 19291227 A REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS TO THE NORTH OF IT ON DEC. 23 AND 24. 11133 19291217 19291218 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 11122. 11134 19291217 19291225 REVIVAL OF GROUP 11096: A REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON DEC. 22-24. 11135 19291218 19291225 A SMALL CHANGING STREAM. 11136 19291219 19291230 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 11097. A REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY COMPANIONS ON DEC. 20 AND 21. 11137 19291219 19291225 ONE OR TWO SPOTS DIFFERING SOMEWHAT IN POSITION FROM DAY TO DAY BUT IN THE SAME SLIGHTLY DISTURBED AREA. 11138 19291220 19291226 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT VISIBLE ON DEC. 24 AND 25. 11139 19291220 19291231 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 11099. A LARGE STREAM OF VERY COMPOSITE SPOTS THAT DECREASE RAPIDLY AFTER ABOUT DEC. 25. 11140 19291222 19291223 AN EPHEMERAL SPOT NP GROUP 11138. 11141 19291222 19291229 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT: THERE IS A COMPANION SPOT ON DEC. 26. 11142 19291222 19300103 RETURN OF GROUP 11100: 3RD APPEARANCE. A LARGE SPOT WITH MULTIPLE UMBRAE AND A BROAD CLEFT ACROSS IT THAT, ON SOME DAYS, PRACTICALLY DIVIDES THE SPOT INTO TWO OR THREE PORTIONS. 11143 19291222 19300101 A PAIR OF SPOTS S OF GROUP 11142. THE LEADER, AT FIRST NEARLY CIRCULAR, BECOMES DRAWN OUT IN AN E.-W. DIRECTION AND HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO ON DEC. 29. 11144 19291222 19291231 AN INCOMPLETELY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT, SMALL BUT STABLE, WITH NUMEROUS SMALL COMPANIONS IN A STREAM SOUTHWARDS. 11145 19291223 19291228 A STREAM OF TINY SPOTS AT FIRST, BUT LATER OF MORE DEFINITE COMPONENTS. 11146 19291223 19291229 RETURN OF GROUP 11105. A SMALL SPOT OF REMARKABLE PERSISTENCE FOLLOWED BY A LARGE TRACT OF FACULAE BEHIND GROUP 11142 AND 43. 11147 19291224 19291226 A TINY SPOT. 11148 19291227 19291230 A FAINT SPOT. 11149 19291228 19291230 RETURN OF GROUP 11112: 4TH APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT IN CONSIDERABLE FACULAE. 11150 19291229 19291231 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11151 19291230 19300105 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 11152 19300101 19300111 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT. 11153 19300102 19300114 RETURN OF GROUP 11118. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 11154 19300102 19300112 A CLOSE PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, THE SMALLER ONE LEADING. OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR AND SURVIVE BY A DAY OR TWO THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE TWO SPOT. THIS GROUP REPRESENTS THE RETURN OF THE LEADING PORTION OF GROUP 11119, WHILST GROUP 11155 IS THE RETURN OF THE FOLLOWING PART. 11155 19300103 19300112 WITH GROUP 11154, A RETURN OF GROUP 11119. A REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL COMPANIONS NORTH-PRECEDING IT. 11156 19300105 19300111 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CONSPICUOUS AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH A TINY SPOT APPEARS ON JAN. 9 AND ANOTHER ON JAN. 11. 11157 19300106 19300118 RETURN OF GROUP 11121. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT; ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS OCCASIONALLY FOLLOW. 11158 19300106 19300118 RETURN OF GROUP 11122. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 11159 19300108 19300118 A STREAM WITH A LARGE SPOT AS LEADER WHICH MOVES TOWARDS THE SPOT OF GROUP 11158. 11160 19300111 19300117 A SPARSE STREAM COMMENCING AS TWO SPOTS THAT DRIFT APART IN LONGITUDE. 11161 19300112 19300121 A SMALLISH STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS AFTER JAN. 18. 11162 19300112 19300124 A FAIRLY LARGE SPOT IMMEDIATELY NORTH OF WHICH A MEDLEY OF SPOTS BREAK OUT AFTER JAN. 14, RESULTING IN A COMPLEX STREAM. ACTIVITY SOON DIMINISHES, HOWEVER, AND ONLY THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING COMPONENTS ARE LEFT BY JAN 23. 11163 19300113 19300118 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED ON JAN. 14 BY A SMALL COMPANION WHICH CONTINUES FOR A COUPLE OF DAYS AFTER THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE FORMER. 11164 19300113 19300115 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 11165 19300113 19300120 A SMALLISH STREAM OF BRIEF DURATION LED BY A PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT. 11166 19300114 19300123 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT (USUALLY WITH A SMALL COMPANION) DIMINISHING TO A DOT. 11167 19300115 19300117 A FEW EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 11168 19300115 19300117 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT ON JAN. 15 AND ANOTHER ON JAN. 17 IN A PATCH OF FACULAE F GROUP 11165. 11169 19300115 19300117 A DOT. 11170 19300117 19300120 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM. 11171 19300117 19300119 TWO SMALL SPOTS WIDE APART IN LATITUDE ON JAN 17; A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT ON JAN. 19. 11172 19300117 19300123 A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP BETWEEN JAN. 19 AND 20. THIS AND GROUP 11174 CONSTITUTE A REVIVAL OF GROUP 11139. 11173 19300117 19300119 A SMALL SPOT N GROUP 11172. 11174 19300117 19300124 A SPOT BECOMING DOUBLE AND THE COMPONENTS SEPARATING AFTER JAN. 18. 11175 19300118 19300128 RETURN OF GROUP 11142; 4TH APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER JAN. 21, WHEN IT IS ASSOCIATED WITH ATTENDANT SPOTS. 11176 19300121 19300201 AT FIRST TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS 10 APART IN LONGITUDE; THE LEADER REMAINS COMPARATIVELY STABLE, BUT THE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP INTO A SMALL STREAM WHICH, SPREADING OUT, APPEARS AS A LONG TRAIN TO THE LEADER SPOT. 11177 19300124 19300125 A TINY, FAINT SPOT. 11178 19300125 19300204 A STREAM WITH THE LARGEST COMPONENT AT THE REAR. 11179 19300128 19300208 A REGULAR SPOT TENDING TO BREAK INTO HALF AFTER FEB. 1. THERE IS A SMALL DISTANT COMPANION NF ON FEB. 4. 11180 19300129 19300130 A SMALL EPHEMERAL CLUSTER. 11181 19300130 19300131 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 11182 19300130 19300211 A REGULAR SPOT, WHOSE UMBRA IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE," FOLLOWED BY A SMALL DIMINISHING CLUSTER OF COMPANIONS. 11183 19300201 19300211 A STREAM OF INDEFINITE SPOTS IN CONSTANT CHANGE. 11184 19300202 19300205 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 11185 19300202 19300212 RETURN OF GROUP 11157. A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT. 11186 19300202 19300214 RETURN OF GROUP 11157; 3RD APPEARANCE. A SPOT DIVIDING INTO THREE PARTS, TWO OF WHICH REMAIN AS A PAIR OF WELL DEFINED SPOTS. 11187 19300202 19300214 A COMPLEX STREAM OF CONSIDERABLE LENGTH ABOUT FEB. 9. 11188 19300203 19300206 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11189 19300203 19300209 A SMALL SPOT BEHIND WHICH A STREAM OF COMPANIONS DEVELOPS ON FEB. 5. 11190 19300204 19300209 A RAPIDLY DEVELOPING STREAM IN WHICH THE SPOTS ARE GROUPED IN TWO CLUSTERS. 11191 19300205 19300212 ONE OR TWO SPOTS. 11192 19300206 19300207 A SMALL, FAINT SPOT. 11193 19300209 19300210 A SMALL STREAM OF LITTLE SPOTS ON FEB. 9; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEB. 10. 11194 19300209 19300218 SMALL SPOTS, IN A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE, BECOMING A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF MODERATE DIMENSIONS. 11195 19300210 19300215 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 11196 19300214 19300224 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS WITH A WELL-DEFINED LEADER AFTER FEB. 16. 11197 19300216 19300218 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 11198 19300217 19300218 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 11199 19300223 19300307 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 1. 11200 19300228 19300313 A VERY LARGE SPOT BECOMING ELONGATED TO A MARKED DEGREE IN A DIRECTION, EAST TO WEST; SEVERAL "BRIDGES" CROSS THE UMBRA, ONE IN PARTICULAR BEING A BROAD CLEFT IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE SPOT. A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS APPEARS AFTER MARCH 3 FORMING A LINK BETWEEN THIS GROUP AND GROUP 11201. 11201 19300301 19300313 A LONG STREAM OF SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE IS EMBRACED BY THE TWO GROUPS 11200 AND 11201. 11202 19300307 19300309 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 7 AND 9 WITH A COMPANION ON MAR. 8. 11203 19300311 19300322 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS WHICH HERALD A SUDDEN ERUPTION ON MAR. 16 WHEN A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE BEGINS RAPIDLY TO DEVELOP. THE AXIS OF THE STREAM IS INCLINED ABOUT 35 TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 11204 19300312 19300320 A SMALLISH STREAM WITH A SINGLE SURVIVING COMPONENT ON MAR. 17. 11205 19300315 19300317 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 11206 19300316 19300319 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NP GROUP 11203. 11207 19300316 19300323 A SMALLISH STREAM. 11208 19300317 19300321 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 11209 19300320 19300322 A SMALL SPOT. 11210 19300322 19300403 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH AN OCCASIONAL SMALL SPOT APPEARS. 11211 19300324 19300404 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT IN FRONT OF WHICH OTHER SPOTS DEVELOP ON AND AFTER MARCH 30. 11212 19300326 19300407 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS. 11213 19300329 19300331 A FAINT SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAR. 30. 11214 19300330 19300402 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER IS LEFT ON APR. 1. 11215 19300330 19300404 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 11212. 11216 19300401 19300404 A SMALL, FAINT SPOT. 11217 19300402 19300413 A LARGE STREAM WITH A PREDOMINANT LEADER SPOT THAT IS THE SOLE SURVIVOR AFTER APRIL 10. 11218 19300405 19300411 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON APR. 8 AND 9. 11219 19300405 19300413 A SMALL, BUT PERSISTENT STREAM. 11220 19300407 19300410 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON APR. 8 AND 9. 11221 19300408 19300415 A SMALL STREAM. 11222 19300409 19300412 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS IN AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. 11223 19300409 19300418 A STREAM IN WHICH, AS USUAL, THE LEADER IS THE FIRST SPOT TO DEVELOP AND THE LAST TO SURVIVE. 11224 19300413 19300414 A SPOT WITH A TINY COMPANION APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11225 19300413 19300418 A SMALL VARIABLE GROUP F GROUP 11221. 11226 19300413 19300416 A SINGLE SPOT. 11227 19300418 19300423 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 11228 19300418 19300424 A SMALL STREAM OR CLUSTER OF SPOTS. 11229 19300420 19300421 A VERY SMALL STREAM OCCUPYING NEARLY THE SAME PLACE AS GROUP 11226. 11230 19300422 19300504 RETURN OF GROUP 11212. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS ON APR. 28, MAY 1 AND MAY 3. 11231 19300424 19300503 A STREAM GENERALLY INCONSPICUOUS BUT WITH A RISE TO PROMINENCE ABOUT APR. 30. 11232 19300428 19300507 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11233 19300501 19300505 A SMALL GROUP F GROUP 11230. 11234 19300503 19300513 A LARGE STREAM OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT. FOR A FEW DAYS THERE ARE CONSIDERABLE CHANGES IN STRUCTURE OF THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING SPOTS. 11235 19300511 19300517 A SMALLISH GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. 11236 19300513 19300514 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11237 19300514 19300516 A PAIR OF FAINT SPOTS ON MAY 14 AND 15, ONE OF WHICH IS REPLACED BY A CLUSTER ON MAY 16. 11238 19300515 19300519 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM. 11239 19300516 19300527 A STREAM, APPROXIMATING TO NORMAL TYPE, WHOSE COMPONENTS SHOW A GOOD DEAL OF CHANGE ESPECIALLY MARKED IN THE LEADER. 11240 19300519 19300530 RETURN OF GROUP 11230. A SMALLISH SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. ONE OR TWO TINY COMPANIONS ARE PRESENT ON MAY 25, 26, 27 AND 29. 11241 19300523 19300524 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11242 19300523 19300601 A SMALLISH STREAM WITH ITS AXIS INCLINED ABOUT 50 DEGREES TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR; ONLY A FEW FAINT SPOTS ARE LEFT BY MAY 28. 11243 19300524 19300531 A STREAM WITH MARKED SEPARATION OF THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING COMPONENTS BETWEEN MAY 25 AND 27. 11244 19300524 19300525 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 11245 19300525 19300526 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP NP GROUP 11243. 11246 19300526 19300527 A TINY STREAM. 11247 19300528 19300529 A FAINT SPOT. 11248 19300528 19300604 A SMALLISH STREAM OF INDEFINITE CHARACTER. 11249 19300528 19300609 RETURN OF GROUP 11234. A STEADY, REGULAR OR NORMAL SPOT WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS ON JUNE 4 AND 5. 11250 19300529 19300531 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS MULTIPLYING TO A SMALL CLUSTER. 11251 19300602 19300607 A SMALL STREAM. 11252 19300603 19300607 A TINY SPOT ON JUNE 3 AND 4. A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON JUNE 5. A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT ON JUNE 6. 11253 19300604 19300614 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER TAKES A FEW DAYS TO DEVELOP INTO A REGULAR SPOT. 11254 19300606 19300607 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11255 19300606 19300611 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE OF THE SIMPLEST FORM IE WITH LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS ONLY. 11256 19300607 19300612 A STREAM OF INDEFINITE SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE OR TWO REMAIN AFTER JUNE 10. 11257 19300607 19300618 A LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING RATHER SLOWLY FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS; AFTER REACHING A MAXIMUM ABOUT JUNE 12 (WHEN THE LARGEST COMPONENT IS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM) THE GROUP DECREASES RATHER RAPIDLY. 11258 19300616 19300619 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 17. 11259 19300619 19300623 A SMALL SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON JUNE 21. 11260 19300624 19300627 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 11261 19300625 19300630 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 11249. A SMALL, DEFINITE SPOT. 11262 19300627 19300703 A REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY A CLUSTER OF TINY COMPANIONS, RAPIDLY FORMING AND THEN DISAPPEARING. 11263 19300627 19300704 A REGULAR SPOT USUALLY WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER. 11264 19300702 19300709 A SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO FOLLOWERS. 11265 19300702 19300709 USUALLY AN INSIGNIFICANT GROUP. 11266 19300709 19300712 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS (REPRESENTING A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF THE SIMPLEST FORMATION) SUDDENLY APPEARING WELL PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, SO THAT ONLY A FEW DAYS OF ITS DEVELOPMENT CAN BE OBSERVED. 11267 19300709 19300710 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11268 19300711 19300721 A STREAM COMMENCING WITH A TINY SPOT ON JULY 11. BY JULY 14 A REGULAR SPOT HAS APPEARED AS THE LEADER AND ALONE REMAINS BY JULY 19. 11269 19300713 19300714 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONE IS LEFT ON JULY 14. 11270 19300715 19300717 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS. 11271 19300721 19300724 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY APPRECIABLE FACULAE. 11272 19300721 19300729 A REGULAR SPOT. 11273 19300723 19300725 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON JULY 24. 11274 19300724 19300803 A REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS AFTER JULY 26. 11275 19300728 19300729 A RATHER WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER IS LEFT ON JULY 29. 11276 19300728 19300729 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11277 19300728 19300729 A TINY SPOT. 11278 19300731 19300804 A VERY SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT. 11279 19300806 19300812 A SMALL GROUP NOT SEEN ON AUG. 9. 11280 19300806 19300818 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS ON AUG. 11-14. 11281 19300818 19300826 A REGULAR SPOT DECREASING RAPIDLY AFTER AUG. 22; SMALL FOLLOWERS APPEAR AFTER AUG. 20. 11282 19300818 19300828 A SMALLISH STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 11283 19300819 19300821 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11284 19300822 19300825 A SMALL, FAINT SPOT IN THE REAR OF GROUP 11281. 11285 19300824 19300827 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 11286 19300824 19300903 A SMALL STREAM OR CLUSTER OF CHANGING SPOTS. 11287 19300826 19300902 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WITH A SHARP RISE TO MAXIMUM AND AS RAPID A DIMINUTION. 11288 19300827 19300908 A REGULAR SPOT. 11289 19300829 19300905 A SMALL BUT COMPARATIVELY LONG-LIVED SPOT ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 11288. THREE DOTS REPRESENT ITS PLACE ON SEPT. 5. 11290 19300901 19300910 AT FIRST A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY A TINY COMPANION. SMALL FAINT SPOTS REPRESENT THE GROUP FROM SEPT. 5-10. 11291 19300902 19300913 RETURN OF GROUP 11280. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A VERY SMALL COMPANION ON SEPT. 5 AND 9. 11292 19300903 19300910 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM TINY SPOTS ON SEPT. 3. 11293 19300903 19300910 A SMALL STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS. 11294 19300904 19300916 A LARGE SPOT BECOMING ELONGATED IN AN EAST TO WEST DIRECTION, AFTER WHICH THE PRECEDING PORTION BREAKS AWAY ABOUT SEPT. 10 AND DISSOLVES INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DISAPPEARS AFTER SEPT. 13. 11295 19300906 19300907 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11296 19300907 19300908 A PAIR OF DOTS ON SEPT. 7. A SINGLE DOT ON SEPT 8. 11297 19300907 19300909 A DOT NP GROUP 11291. 11298 19300907 19300908 A TINY SPOT. 11299 19300911 19300912 A SMALL GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11300 19300911 19300913 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 11301 19300913 19300915 A SMALL CLUSTER OF SPOTS ON SEPT. 13. A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT. 14 AND 15. 11302 19300913 19300918 A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH HAVE DISAPPEARED BY SEPT. 18, WHEN A TINY SPOT MARKS THEIR PLACE. 11303 19300916 19300917 A DOT IN THE AREA OF FACULAE ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 11302. 11304 19300920 19300921 A SMALL SPOT WITH A FAINT COMPANION ON SEPT. 20. 11305 19300922 19300928 A SMALL CLUSTER OR STREAM OF MINOR IMPORTANCE ON SEPT. 27. 11306 19300925 19301007 RETURN OF GROUP 11292. A REGULAR SPOT, IN WHICH A SMALL SUBSIDIARY UMBRA APPEARS IN THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE PENUMBRA ON OCT. 1 AND BREAKS AWAY AS A SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 3. 11307 19300926 19301007 A REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS TO THE SOUTH. THESE COMPANIONS FORM A CONSIDERABLE CLUSTER ABOUT OCT. 2. 11307a193009 *THE POSITION OF THESE FACULAE OCCURS ON A FOGGED PART OF THE PHOTOGRAPH FOR SEPT. 26; HENCE, THE POSITION AND AREA GIVEN IS THE MEAN OF THE RESPECTIVE MEASURES FOR SEPT. 25 AND 27. 11308 19301002 19301008 A VERY SMALL GROUP IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 11307. 11309 19301004 19301016 A VERY LARGE STREAM WHOSE COMPONENTS SHOW CONSIDERABLE CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. THERE IS A RAPID DIMINUTION OF THE GROUP AFTER PASSING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 11310 19301010 19301019 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 11311 19301018 19301021 A SHORT-LIVED GROUP APPEARING IN THE SAME REGION AS GROUP 11310 WHEN THAT GROUP IS DYING OUT. 11312 19301018 19301020 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 11313 19301022 19301023 A SINGLE, ISOLATED SPOT. 11314 19301022 19301103 A LARGE SPOT WITH SMALL COMPANIONS THAT SURROUND IT; LATER A TRAIN OF SPOTS THAT MIGHT PERHAPS BE CONSIDERED AS A SEPARATE BUT CLOSELY ALLIED GROUP BECOMES COSPICUOUS WHEN THE LARGE SPOT IS RAPIDLY DECREASING ABOUT NOV. 1. FROM OCT. 28-31, THE LARGE SPOT IS CROSSED BY A WELL-DEFINED "BRIDGE" IN A DIRECTION PARALLEL TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 11315 19301024 19301102 A SMALL STREAM IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 11314. 11316 19301025 19301029 A PAIR OF SPOTS, REPRESENTING A "BI-POLAR" GROUP, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY; THE LEADER HAS APPARENTLY DISAPPEARED ON OCT. 29, BUT THE PROXIMITY OF THE GROUP TO THE SUN'S LIMB MAKES THIS UNCERTAIN. 11317 19301026 19301101 A SMALL CENTRE OF ACTIVITY REPRESENTED BY ONE OR TWO SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON OCT. 26, 28, AND NOV 1. 11318 19301027 19301029 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11319 19301028 19301104 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM OF SPOTS, SHOWING CONSIDERABLE CHANGES, ACCOMPANYING GROUP 11315 IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 11314. 11320 19301102 19301103 A PAIR OF SPOTS P GROUP 11319. 11321 19301103 19301105 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS IN A LARGE AREA MARKED BY FACULAE. 11322 19301103 19301112 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT. 11323 19301114 19301125 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 11316. A LONG STREAM UNDERGOING CHANGES WHICH DIFFER FROM THE USUAL SEQUENCE IN THE NORMAL STREAM. 11324 19301118 19301129 RETURN OF GROUP 11314. A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH COMPANIONS. 11325 19301119 19301120 A SMALL SPOT P GROUP 11324. 11326 19301121 19301203 TWO CONSPICUOUS SPOTS WITH SMALL COMPANIONS REPRESENTING A TYPICAL "BI-POLAR" GROUP. THE LEADER WHICH IS THE LARGER SPOT IS OF COMPOSITE FORMATION FROM NOV. 23-26. 11327 19301121 19301130 TWO SPOTS ABOUT 7 DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER, WHICH IS THE LARGER, REMAINS AFTER NOV. 27. 11328 19301124 19301126 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11329 19301124 19301204 A FEW FAINT SPOTS UNTIL NOV. 30,WHEN A SHORT-LIVED,BUT COMPLETELY FORMED,GROUP OF STREAM-TYPE APPEARS. 11330 19301126 19301201 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 11331 19301126 19301206 AT FIRST QUITE A SMALL STREAM; AFTER NOV.30 A REGULAR SPOT APPEARS AS LEADER. 11332 19301127 19301129 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM. 11333 19301209 19301219 AN UNSTABLE STREAM. 11334 19301211 19301221 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT ON DEC. 11 AND 12 IN FACULAE JOINING THAT OF GROUP 11333. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL DEC. 17, WHEN ANOTHER SMALL SPOT APPEARS AS THE PRECURSOR OF A GROUP WHOSE LATER DEVELOPMENT IS LOST TO VISIBILITY AROUND THE SUN'S WEST LIMB. 11335 19301214 19301216 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 11336 19301217 19301220 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING. 11337 19301218 19301219 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11338 19301218 19301223 A SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON DEC. 19 AND 20. 11339 19301218 19301226 RETURN OF GROUP 11326. A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP ON DEC. 25. 11340 19301220 19301231 A PAIR OF SMALLISH SPOTS EXPANDING INTO A STREAM WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. 11341 19301225 19301226 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON DEC. 25 OF WHICH ONE IS LEFT ON DEC. 26. 11342 19301225 19301230 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS THAT HAVE DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 29; ON DEC. 30 THERE IS A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11343 19301225 19310102 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 25, 26 AND 28; A CLOSE PAIR ON JAN. 2. 11344 19310102 19310103 A SMALL SPOT. 11345 19310104 19310115 A COMPOSITE SPOT THAT BECOMES REGULAR BEFORE IT DIES OUT. SMALL COMPANIONS FOLLOW IT ON JAN. 5 AND 6. 11346 19310113 19310119 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS DEVELOPING RAPIDLY AFTER JAN. 14 INTO A LARGE GROUP IN WHICH THE CHIEF COMPONENTS ARE TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS. 11347 19310113 19310116 A SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE IN WHICH ANOTHER SPOT IS SEEN ON JAN. 15 AND 16. 11348 19310118 19310125 A MODERATE-SIZED SPOT APPEARING SUDDENLY ON JAN. 18 AND ACCOMPANIED ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS BY COMPANIONS IN IRREGULAR FORMATION. REVIVAL OF ACTIVITY REPRESENTED BY GROUP 11347. 11349 19310119 19310128 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT DISAPPEARING AFTER JAN. 22. ON JAN. 25 THERE IS A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR ITS PLACE, AND ON JAN. 28 ANOTHER PAIR. 11350 19310123 19310127 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON JAN. 23, 24 AND 27. 11351 19310202 19310213 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A NUMBER OF COMPANIONS, ONE OF WHICH, TO THE NORTH, PERSISTS FOR SEVERAL DAYS. 11352 19310203 19310209 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON FEB. 6 AND 7. 11353 19310209 19310211 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS. 11354 19310212 19310217 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 11355 19310214 19310227 A GROUP VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. A STREAM DEVELOPING BETWEEN FEB. 18 AND 20, FROM ONE OF MINOR IMPORTANCE TO ONE OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE. THE STREAM IS OF NORMAL TYPE, ITS COMPONENTS CONSISTING OF A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER, A PAIR OF UNEQUAL SPOTS AS FOLLOWER, AND A CLUSTER OF SMALLER SPOTS INTERMEDIATE IN POSITION. THE MOST INTERESTING DEVELOPMENT IS THAT OF THE LEADER FROM HALF A DOZEN CLUSTERED NUCLEI ON FEB. 19 TO A LARGE, COMPLETELY-FORMED SPOT ON FEB. 20, WHICH HAS BECOME NEARLY CIRCULAR BY FEB. 21. 11356 19310215 19310218 A STREAM IN MINIATURE. 11357 19310215 19310216 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 15 OF WHICH ONE COMPONENT IS LEFT ON FEB. 16. 11358 19310215 19310226 AT FIRST A GROUP CONSISTING OF A REGULAR SPOT AND A DISTANT SMALL COMPANION; THE LATTER DIES OUT, BUT IS REPRESENTED ON FEB. 20 AND 21 BY ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS. THE SECOND PHASE TAKES PLACE ABOUT FEB. 22, WHEN THE WHOLE GROUP REFORMS ON A LARGER SCALE, BUT ITS ACTIVITY IS WANING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 11359 19310219 19310223 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS THAT SEPARATE AND BECOME EACH A DOUBLE SPOT. 11360 19310222 19310301 A STREAM OF IMPERFECTLY-FORMED SPOTS. 11361 19310222 19310301 A GROUP OF EPHEMERAL SPOTS; NONE ARE SEEN ON FEB. 27. 11362 19310226 19310301 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS. 11363 19310226 19310228 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEPARATING IN LONGITUDE. 11364 19310226 19310309 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. A CLUSTER OF SPOTS IN THE REAR OF THE STREAM CONDENSES INTO A SPOT BY MAR. 5. 11365 19310227 19310228 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SF GROUP 11364. 11366 19310301 19310313 A STREAM WHICH LENGTHENS OUT MARKEDLY IN LONGITUDE. 11367 19310309 19310321 A LARGE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY AND CONSISTING OF TWO CHIEF SPOTS THAT UNDERGO CONSIDERABLE CHANGES BETWEEN MAR. 12 AND 15. 11368 19310310 19310318 A STREAM OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 11367. 11369 19310313 19310324 RETURN OF GROUP 11355. A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. THE SPOT DIMINISHES RATHER RAPIDLY AFTER ABOUT MAR. 18 AND IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE." 11370 19310317 19310318 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11371 19310317 19310320 A SMALL STREAM N GROUP 11367. 11372 19310319 19310322 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH ONE SPOT REMAINS ON MAR. 21 AND 22. 11373 19310320 19310323 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MAR. 20; A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 21 AND 22; A CLUSTER OF DOTS ON MAR. 23. 11374 19310324 19310405 RETURN OF GROUP 11364. A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING AS IT NEARS THE WESTERN LIMB AND BREAKING INTO TWO PORTIONS ON APR. 4. 11375 19310329 19310403 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 29 AND THREE SIMILAR ONES ON APR. 3, NOTHING BEING SEEN ON THE INTERVENING DAYS. 11376 19310330 19310407 A GROUP WHOSE ACTIVITY IS GENERALLY REPRESENTED BY A PAIR OF SPOTS OF VARYING IMPORTANCE. 11377 19310331 19310402 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11378 19310401 19310413 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 11370. A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE IN WHICH SMALL SPOTS MAKE THEIR APPEARANCE ON AND AFTER APR. 4. 11379 19310403 19310405 A SMALL SPOT N GROUP 11374. 11380 19310406 19310412 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 11381 19310407 19310409 A GROUP OF STREAM-TYPE APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB SF GROUP 11376. 11382 19310410 19310422 A FAIRLY LARGE SPOT, WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, FOLLOWED BY SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL APR. 18 AND A SINGLE COMPANION ON APR. 21 AND 22. THE SPOT APPARENTLY COMES FROM THE FUSION OF TWO SPOTS THAT ARE CLEARLY DIVIDED ON APR. 11; THE RESULTING DOUBLE UMBRA PERSISTS UNTIL APR. 20. 11383 19310411 19310422 INTERMITTENT. A REGULAR SPOT THAT HAS DISAPPEARED BY APR. 16; ON APR. 17 A FAINT MARKING IS VISIBLE, AND ON APR. 22 A TINY SPOT. THE REGULAR SPOT IS ACCOMPANIED BY A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. 11384 19310413 19310425 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE COMPONENTS DO NOT SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE TO THE USUAL EXTENT AND IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING PORTION IS OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. 11385 19310417 19310423 A PAIR OF SMALL, EPHEMERAL SPOTS ON APR. 17; ON APR. 21 A PAIR OF FAIRLY LARGE COMPLEX SPOTS HAVE SUDDENLY APPEARED. 11386 19310422 19310423 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 11387 19310423 19310428 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 11388 19310424 19310430 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 11381. A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 11389 19310429 19310503 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING EXPANDS INTO A REGULAR SPOT. 11390 19310504 19310505 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 4 OF WHICH ONE IS LEFT ON MAY 5. 11391 19310505 19310507 A SHORT-LIVED SPOT. 11392 19310506 19310513 A STREAM, NOT VERY EXTENSIVE IN LONGITUDE, WITH A FAIR-SIZED SPOT AS LEADER ON MAY 11. THE FIRST INDICATION OF THE GROUP IS ON MAY 6 WHEN A TINY EPHEMERAL SPOT IS SEEN. 11393 19310507 19310516 A SPOT BREAKING UP INTO A CLUSTER BY MAY 10 AND DISAPPEARING THE FOLLOWING DAY; A SPOT REAPPEARS ON MAY 14. 11394 19310507 19310518 RETURN OF GROUP 11382. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. GROUPS 11393 AND 11395 ARE CLOSE TO IT. 11395 19310509 19310518 A STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING N GROUP 11394. THERE IS A MARKED SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER, THE MOVEMENT OF THE LEADER BEING ESPECIALLY CONSPICUOUS IN ITS DRIFT PAST THE REGULAR SPOT OF GROUP 11394. 11396 19310515 19310526 A STREAM, APPROXIMATELY OF NORMAL TYPE, WHOSE DEVELOPMENT IS RATHER LESS RAPID THAN USUAL. 11397 19310515 19310522 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON MAY 15, 17 AND 22; A WIDE PAIR ON MAY 16. 11398 19310518 19310519 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11399 19310521 19310531 A RATHER FEEBLE BUT PERSISTENT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 11400 19310522 19310527 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 11401 19310526 19310529 A SMALL GROUP WITH BRIEF MAXIMUM. 11402 19310530 19310611 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE OF THE SIMPLEST FORMATION, NAMELY TWO WELL-DEFINED COMPONENTS, EACH A REGULAR SPOT, AT THE FRONT AND REAR OF THE STREAM RESPECTIVELY. THERE ARE USUALLY ONE OR MORE TINY COMPANIONS. THE LEADER LOSES ITS SYMMETRICAL STRUCTURE AFTER JUNE 5, AND THE FOLLOWER HAS DISAPPEARED BY JUNE 9. THE AXIS OF THE STREAM IS INCLINED AT FIRST ABOUT 35 DEGREES TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR, BUT THIS ANGLE DIMINISHES. 11403 19310602 19310603 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11404 19310602 19310610 A STREAM OF USUAL TYPE BUT OF UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. 11405 19310608 19310612 A SMALL,SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 11406 19310627 19310629 A TINY SPOT ON JUNE 27; A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JUNE 28, OF WHICH ONE IS LEFT ON JUNE 29. 11407 19310629 19310708 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY FOLLOWER ON JULY 1 AND 2. 11408 19310629 19310708 A STREAM OF SPOTS, ASSOCIATED WITH A CONSIDERABLE AREA OF FACULAE, DYING OUT RATHER SUDDENLY. A CLOSE PAIR OF TINY SPOTS IS SEEN ON JULY 8. 11409 19310702 19310708 AN AREA OF DISTURBANCE, IN FRONT OF GROUP 11408, REPRESENTED BY ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 11410 19310706 19310716 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT THAT DISAPPEARS ON JULY 11; ON JULY 16 A TINY SPOT APPEARS NEAR ITS POSITION. 11411 19310707 19310715 A SMALLISH STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER, A DOUBLE SPOT, ALONE REMAINS AFTER JULY 10. 11412 19310708 19310718 A REGULAR SPOT USUALLY WITH A FOLLOWER; THE LATTER IS ALONE VISIBLE ON JULY 16, WHILST A TINY SPOT REAPPEARS AT THE POSITION OF THE LEADER ON JULY 18. 11413 19310710 19310715 ONE OR TWO SPOTS. 11414 19310712 19310713 A SMALL SPOT. 11415 19310717 19310718 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11416 19310722 19310725 A SPOT WITH TINY FOLLOWERS ON JULY 22 AND 23. 11417 19310726 19310804 A REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL FOLLOWERS ON JULY 28, 30, 31 AND AUG. 1. 11418 19310730 19310805 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; A SINGLE SPOT REPRESENTS THE GROUP ON AUG. 3-5. 11419 19310802 19310807 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS THAT CONDENSES INTO A MODERATE-SIZED COMPOSITE SPOT ON AUG. 5. 11420 19310802 19310804 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON AUG. 2 AND 3. 11421 19310813 19310814 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 11422 19310817 19310822 A STREAM WHOSE PRIMARY COMPONENTS ARE DOUBLE SPOTS ON AUG. 18, SEPARATING RATHER WIDELY IN LONGITUDE. 11423 19310826 19310829 A TINY SPOT. 11424 19310826 19310830 A SINGLE SPOT ON AUG. 26; A FAIRLY WIDE PAIR ON AUG. 28-30. 11425 19310826 19310907 A STABLE, REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA ON SEPT. 2. 11426 19310827 19310829 TWO OR THREE RATHER WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS. 11427 19310830 19310901 ONE OR TWO SPOTS, DIFFERING SOMEWHAT IN POSITION FROM DAY TO DAY, IN A MODERATE AREA OF FACULAE. 11428 19310831 19310907 A STREAM APPEARING SUDDENLY ON AUG. 31 IN WHICH THE COMPONENTS SEPARATE CONSIDERABLEY IN LONGITUDE AS THEY FADE OUT. 11429 19310902 19310913 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT.2-4 AND SEPT. 7-8; AFTER SEPT. 8 A GROUP OF STREAM-TYPE DEVELOPS AND IS LED BY A FAIRLY LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA ON SEPT. 11 11430 19310909 19310912 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11431 19310912 19310918 A GROUP OF STREAM-TYPE THAT DECLINES AFTER A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON SEPT. 14. 11432 19310913 19310918 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM. 11433 19310916 19310925 A REGULAR SPOT THAT DIVIDES ON SEPT. 21 INTO TWO NEARLY EQUAL PARTS WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE; THE FOLLOWING PART HAS DISAPPEARED BY SEPT. 24. SMALL COMPANIONS FOLLOW THE REGULAR SPOT ON SEPT. 18 AND 19. 11434 19310922 19310924 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 11435 19310927 19311007 A PAIR OF SPOTS 9 APART IN LONGITUDE OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING SPOT IS THE LARGER AND LONGER LIVED. 11436 19310929 19311008 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON SEPT. 29 AND OCT 8. IN THE PRECEDING PART OF A FAIRLY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. 11437 19311004 19311005 ONE SMALL SPOT. 11438 19311008 19311009 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON OCT. 9. 11439 19311014 19311015 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 11440 19311019 19311031 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION FOLLOWING ON OCT. 20, 22, 23 AND 24 AND SEVERAL COMPANIONS SURROUNDING IT ON OCT. 27 AND 28. 11441 19311023 19311026 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON OCT. 23 AND 24; A SINGLE SPOT ON OCT. 25 AND 26. 11442 19311030 19311101 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11443 19311103 19311106 A STREAM FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11444 19311103 19311112 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS SHOWING THE USUAL SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING COMPONENTS. THE GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 10, BUT A TINY SPOT REAPPEARS IN THE ACCOMPANYING FACULAE ON NOV. 12. 11445 19311118 19311123 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS ON NOV.18; A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED STREAM APPEARS IN THE SAME PLACE ON NOV.21. 11446 19311119 19311121 A STREAM OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. 11447 19311120 19311124 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP. 11448 19311120 19311202 A LARGE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WITH WELL-DEFINED LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS. 11449 19311124 19311126 A SMALL GROUP. 11450 19311126 19311202 A STREAM FOLLOWING GROUP 11448. 11451 19311206 19311217 A COMPLEX STREAM IN WHICH CHANGES ARE ESPECIALLY APPARENT ON DEC.8-10 AND ON DEC.13-14, AFTER WHICH THE SPOTS RAPIDLY DISAPPEAR. 11452 19311210 19311217 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM. 11453 19311218 19311224 RETURN OF GROUP 11448. A REGULAR SPOT IN A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE, DIMINISHING TO A TINY SPOT. A SMALL COMPANION, POSSIBLY A DISINTEGRATED PORTION OF THE SPOT, SOUTH-PRECEDES IT ON DEC. 20 AND 21, AND THERE IS ANOTHER FAINT COMPANION ON DEC.24. 11454 19311224 19311225 AN EPHEMERAL GROUP. 11455 19311224 19311225 AN INDEFINITE SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 11453. 11456 19311225 19311228 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11457 19311225 19310105 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY CONSIDERABLE FACULAE. THERE ARE SMALL COMPANION SPOTS ON DEC. 29, 30, AND JAN. 2. 11458 19311227 19311228 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 11459 19320101 19320105 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11460 19320104 19320107 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION 4 DEGREES AWAY IN LONGITUDE ON JAN. 6. 11461 19320109 19320119 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT ON JAN. 9; ON JAN. 15 A SMALL STREAM FORMS IN THE USUAL WAY, THE LEADER SPOT ALONE REMAINING ON JAN. 18-19. 11462 19320115 19320117 A SMALL STREAM. 11463 19320118 19320125 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL, EPHEMERAL SPOTS ON JAN. 18; ON JAN. 22 ANOTHER PAIR APPEARS, THE LEADER BEING THE LARGER SPOT AND LASTING FOR A FEW DAYS. 11464 19320121 19320202 RETURN OF GROUP 11457. A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANION. 11465 19320124 19320128 A DOT ON JAN. 24 BECOMING A TINY STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER SPOT ALONE REMAINS AFTER JAN. 26. 11466 19320126 19320127 A CLUSTER OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 26: A SMALL STREAM ON JAN. 27. 11467 19320126 19320207 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH POSSIBLY BEGINS IN THE PREVIOUS ROTATION WITH THE SMALL SPOT 1047 F AND ITS ATTENDANT FACULAE. 11468 19320210 19320212 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM OF WHICH A SINGLE SPOT SURVIVES ON FEB. 12. 11469 19320222 19320303 A LARGE, RATHER COMPLEX STREAM, IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DEVELOP FIRST; THE LEADING REGULAR SPOT DOES NOT FORM COMPLETELY UNTIL FEB. 27. 11470 19320223 19320225 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 23 AND 25; THREE SPOTS ON FEB. 24. 11471 19320227 19320310 A LONG STREAM DEVELOPING AS IT COMES INTO VIEW ON TO THE DISC. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS, THOUGH FORMING A CONSIDERABLE CLUSTER ABOUT MARCH 3, ARE SUBORDINATE TO THE WELL-DEFINED LEADER SPOT. 11472 19320228 19320303 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MAR. 1; A SINGLE SPOT ON OTHER DAYS. 11473 19320301 19320302 A SMALL SPOT. 11474 19320302 19320306 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 2 AND 3; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE REMAINING DAYS. 11475 19320316 19320320 A SMALL GROUP. 11476 19320321 19320322 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 11477 19320325 19320403 RETURN OF GROUP 11471. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 11478 19320327 19320330 A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 27, 29, AND 30; A WIDE PAIR ON MAR. 28. 11479 19320403 19320404 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM OF USUAL FORMATION. 11480 19320404 19320405 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 11481 19320410 19320412 A SINGLE SPOT ON APR. 10 AND 12: A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APR. 11. 11482 19320415 19320418 A SMALL, UNSTABLE STREAM. 11483 19320421 19320423 A STREAM FORMING NEAR THE SUN'S WEST LIMB. 11484 19320421 19320501 A LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY BETWEEN APR. 21 AND 22. THE LEADER IS AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES COMPOSITE ABOUT APR. 26 BUT REVERTS TO REGULAR TYPE. THE FOLLOWER IS CONSPICUOUS ON APR. 28 AS A LARGE, ELONGATED SPOT THAT SOON DIMINISHES. 11485 19320507 19320518 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 11483. A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RATHER SUDDENLY. 11486 19320508 19320509 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY, NP GROUP 11485. 11487 19320513 19320517 A SMALL GROUP NOT SEEN ON MAY 16. 11488 19320513 19320524 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB; A REGULAR SPOT HAS FORMED AS THE LEADER BY MAY 17 AND CONTINUES WHEN THE TRAIN DISAPPEARS THREE DAYS LATER. 11489 19320516 19320528 RETURN OF GROUP 11484. A SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA, DIVIDING ON MAY 18-19 INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS THAT DRIFT APART IN LONGITUDE. TINY COMPANION SPOTS APPEAR NEAR THE FOLLOWING SPOT. 11490 19320517 19320518 A SINGLE SPOT. 11491 19320520 19320601 A LARGE, STABLE REGULAR SPOT USUALLY WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS. 11492 19320522 19320523 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 22; A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 23. 11493 19320603 19320614 A STREAM IN WHICH THE PREDOMINANT SPOT, THE LEADER, COMES FROM THE FUSION OF TWO SPOTS THAT ARE COMPLETELY SEPARATED ON JUNE 5. 11494 19320606 19320611 A SMALL, DEFINITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CONSPICUOUS, THOUGH NOT LARGE, AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH SPOT 1053C APPEARS ON JUNE 7. 11495 19320607 19320611 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON JUNE 9 AND 10. 11496 19320615 19320616 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JUNE 15: A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 16. 11497 19320616 19320627 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 11491. A REGULAR SPOT, PRACTICALLY ON THE SUN'S EQUATOR, DISAPPEARING RATHER SUDDENLY AFTER JUNE 23. THE SPOT APPEARS TO HAVE UNUSUAL DRIFTS IN LATITUDE. 11498 19320617 19320628 A STREAM HEADED BY A LARGE SPOT, AT FIRST THIS LEADER SPOT IS REGULAR; IT THEN DEVELOPS A DOUBLE UMBRA ABOUT JUNE 23 AND SUBSEQUENTLY DIVIDES INTO UNEQUAL PORTIONS, THE LEADING PART REGAINING A REGULAR OUTLINE AS THE FRAGMENT DIES OUT. 11499 19320624 19320704 A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA DIVIDING INTO TWO PARTS; THERE ARE COMPANION SPOTS ON MOST DAYS. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON JULY 3. 11500 19320628 19320630 A SMALL SPOT ON THE SUN'S EQUATOR, THE BULK OF THE FACULAE FOLLOWING BEING NORTH OF THE EQUATOR. 11501 19320629 19320706 RETURN OF GROUP 11493. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING TO A FAINT MARKING ON JULY 6; THERE ARE ONE OR TWO TINY COMPANIONS ON JULY 4 AND 5. 11502 19320702 19320712 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER, GENERALLY OF REGULAR FORMATION, COMES FROM A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 3. THE FOLLOWER IS SMALL BUT COMPARATIVELY LONG-LIVED. 11503 19320704 19320705 A SMALL SPOT. 11504 19320713 19320714 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY. 11505 19320720 19320722 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11506 19320727 19320808 RETURN OF GROUP 11502. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 11507 19320810 19320811 A SMALL EQUATORIAL GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11508 19320823 19320903 RETURN OF GROUP 11506: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING TO A POINT. 11509 19320824 19320829 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11510 19320921 19320925 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEP. 21 AND 24; A SINGLE SPOT ON SEP. 22 AND 25. 11511 19320927 19320928 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11512 19320929 19321001 A SMALL GROUP. 11513 19321001 19321006 A SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 1 AND 3 IN THE PRECEDING PART OF AN AREA OF FACULAE: A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS ON OCT. 6. 11514 19321003 19321007 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 3 IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE FACULAE CONTAINING GROUP 11513: A SINGLE FAINT SPOT ON OCT. 7. 11515 19321012 19321019 A TINY SPOT ON OCT. 12: A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON OCT. 13: A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 19. 11516 19321014 19321022 A SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE IN WHICH ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ARE SEEN UNTIL OCT. 19 ON OCT 21 AND 22 THE GROUP IS REPRESENTED BY A TINY SPOT ON EACH DAY. 11517 19321018 19321030 A GROUP CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF A REGULAR SPOT THAT BECOMES COMPOSITE FOR A FEW DAYS AND SURVIVES IN PART AS A SPOT OF REGULAR OUTLINE. 11518 19321020 19321021 A VERY SMALL GROUP SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11519 19321031 19321101 A SMALL, DEFINITE SPOT. 11520 19321102 19321105 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 11521 19321102 19321107 A SPOT, SF GROUP 11520, NOT SEEN ON NOV. 5 AND 6. 11522 19321111 19321115 A SMALL EQUATORIAL GROUP. 11523 19321114 19321122 A LARGE STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING RAPIDLY, A TINY SPOT ON NOV. 14 AND 16 BEING THE PRECURSOR OF THE GROUP. THE LEADER THAT SUBSEQUENTLY DEVELOPS COMES FROM A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 19. 11524 19321129 19321206 A STREAM OF SMALLISH, UNSTABLE SPOTS. A SINGLE SPOT REMAINS ON DEC. 6. 11525 19321206 19321218 RETURN OF GROUP 11523. A VERY LARGE SPOT REGULAR IN OUTLINE UNTIL ABOUT DEC. 13 WHEN THE NF PORTION DETACHES ITSELF AND REMAINS AS A SMALL SATELLITE. THE REMAINING AND LARGER PART ASSUMES A REGULAR OUTLINE AFTER THE SEPARATION HAS TAKEN PLACE. 11526 19321212 19321214 A SMALL SPOT SEEN ON DEC. 12 AND 14. 11527 19321212 19321220 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 12, 13 AND 14; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL DEC. 19 WHEN A MORE DEFINITE GROUP APPEARS IN THE SAME PLACE. 11528 19321215 19321220 A SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 15; A GROUP FORMING IN ITS PLACE ON DEC. 18-20 IN THE AREA OF FACULAE F GROUP 11525. 11529 19321227 19321231 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. 11530 19330103 19330115 RETURN OF GROUP 11525; 3RD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CONSIDERABLE AREA OF FACULE IN WHICH GROUP 11531 APPEARS. 11531 19330104 19330116 A REGULAR SPOT. 11532 19330112 19330117 A SMALL STREAM. 11533 19330113 19330116 A SMALL GROUP IN THE WAKE OF GROUPS 11530 AND 11531. 11534 19330128 19330206 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. GROUP 11536 DEVELOPS CLOSELY FOLLOWING IT ON JAN. 31; AFTERWARDS THE TWO GROUPS ARE MORE CLEARLY SEPARATED OWING TO THE DIFFERENCE IN INCLINATION OF THEIR AXES. 11535 19330130 19330211 RETURN OF GROUP 11530; 4TH APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY COMPANION ON JAN. 31, FEB. 1, 2 AND 5. 11536 19330131 19330204 A SMALL STREAM FOLLOWING AND DEVELOPING WITH GROUP 11534. 11537 19330201 19330213 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF SPOTS VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE SPOT, THOUGH THIS DEPARTS CONSIDERABLY FROM ITS REGULAR FORMATION. THE FOLLOWING SPOT IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT WHEN FIRST THE GROUP APPEARS AROUND THE EASTERN LIMB, BUT THIS SPOT BREAKS UP AFTER FEB. 4, THE SOUTHERN PART BECOMING A REGULAR SPOT. THIS IS THE LARGEST GROUP SINCE 1931 FEBRUARY (GROUP 11355). GROUP 11533 INDICATES EARLIER ACTIVITY IN THIS AREA. 11538 19330204 19330213 A STREAM WITH A COMPLEX LEADER SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 11537. 11539 19330207 19330208 A SMALL GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11540 19330227 19330228 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP. 11541 19330228 19330312 TOGETHER WITH GROUP 11542, A RETURN OF GROUP 11537. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A TINY DISTANT COMPANION ON MAR. 9. 11542 19330228 19330310 TOGETHER WITH GROUP 11541, A RETURN OF GROUP 11537. A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY TO A DOT AFTER MAR. 7. A TINY COMPANION APPEARS ON MAR. 7 AND 8. 11543 19330322 19330402 A GROUP LED BY A SPOT WITH A PROMINENT BRIGHT "BRIDGE" ACROSS IT, ALMOST DIVIDING THE SPOT INTO TWO HALVES. AFTER MAR. 27, THE BRIDGE DIMINISHES AND THE SPOT ASSUMES A REGULAR OUTLINE. THE OTHER COMPONENTS OF THE GROUP ARE USUALLY VERY SMALL AND UNSTABLE. 11544 19330325 19330329 A SMALL STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 11545 19330417 19330421 A SMALL STREAM WITH THE LARGEST COMPONENT FOLLOWING. 11546 19330429 19330502 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON APR. 29 AND MAY 2. 11547 19330509 19330510 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 11548 19330519 19330523 A SMALL STREAM OF TYPICAL FORMATION. 11549 19330521 19330526 A SMALL INDEFINITE SPOT ON MAY 21-22: A SMALL STREAM AFTERWARDS. 11550 19330602 19330607 A FAIR-SIZED AREA OF FACULAE CONTAINING ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 11551 19330613 19330622 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RATHER RAPIDLY. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS ON AND AFTER JUNE 17. 11552 19330705 19330712 A PAIR OF SPOTS THAT LATER BECOME A SMALL CLUSTER IN THE FOLLOWING PART OF AN AREA OF FACULAE. 11553 19330707 19330709 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 11551. A SMALL SPOT. 11554 19330711 19330713 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT IN APPRECIABLE FACULAE. 11555 19330902 19330904 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11556 19330906 19330910 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE SHOWING THE USUAL INITIAL SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE OF THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING SPOTS. 11557 19330921 19330924 A SMALL STREAM. 11558 19330927 19330930 A SMALL EQUATORIAL STREAM OF TINY COMPONENTS. 11559 19331026 19331101 A MODERATE-SIZED GROUP OF THE USUAL STREAM TYPE. 11560 19340112 19340118 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH THE COMPONENTS ARE AT FIRST SMALL AND UNSTABLE BUT CONDENSE INTO A PAIR OF MODERATE-SIZED SPOTS BY JAN. 16. WITH THE EXCEPTION OF A SMALL GROUP SEEN FOR ONE DAY ONLY ON DEC. 11, THIS IS THE FIRST GROUP DETECTED SINCE 1933, NOV. 1. 11561 19340129 19340203 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION THAT IS THE FIRST TO APPEAR ON JAN. 29 AND LASTS UNTIL FEB. 1. 11562 19340205 19340207 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. 11563 19340207 19340209 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB IN THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE AREA OF FACULAE ORIGINATING WITH GROUP 11561. 11564 19340209 19340217 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY CONSIDERABLE FACULAE IN WHICH A FEW TINY SPOTS APPEAR ABOUT FEB 15. A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" APPEARS ACROSS THE SPOT BY FEB. 15 AND DIVIDES IT INTO TWO DISTINCT PORTIONS ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. THE PROGRESSIVE CHANGE OF DIRECTIONS OF THE MAJOR AXIS OF THE SPOT BETWEEN FEB. 13 AND 17 INDICATES A ROTATION OF THE SPOT, COUNTER-CLOCKWISE, THROUGH AN ANGLE OF ABOUT 50 DEGREES IN FOUR DAYS. CARRINGTON GIVES AN EXAMPLE OF A ROTARY MOTION OF A SPOT AMOUNTING TO 4 DEGREES PER DAY (OBSERVATIONS OF THE SPOTS ON THE SUN, BY R. C. CARRINGTON, 1863, P 200), AND ANOTHER CONSPICUOUS EXAMPLE WAS OBSERVED BY DAWES IN 1852 (MONTHLY NOTICES, 12, 167, 1852). 11565 19340224 19340225 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 24; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEB. 25. 11566 19340306 19340311 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY EXCEPT MARCH 8, WHEN THERE IS A COMPANION. PROBABLY A REVIVAL OF 1075B IN THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. SEE ALSO THE 1-DAY SPOT, 1077A, IN THE FOLLOWING ROTATION. 11567 19340307 19340311 A SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11568 19340325 19340326 A SINGLE TINY SPOT. 11569 19340327 19340328 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. SEE GROUP 11571. 11570 19340329 19340330 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP. 11571 19340401 19340405 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, BUT OF COMPARATIVELY BRIEF DURATION. ITS CENTRE OF ORIGIN IS IMMEDIATELY SOUTH OF GROUP 11569. 11572 19340414 19340418 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON APRIL 15-16. 11573 19340415 19340428 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE LED BY A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING COMPOSITE SPOT, AT NO TIME DISTINCTIVE, IS LAST SEEN ON APRIL 24, AND THE REMNANTS OF A CLUSTER (BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER) DIE OUT AT ABOUT THE SAME TIME. A PAIR OF TINY COMPANIONS SOUTH-PRECEDES THE LEADER ON APRIL 20-21. 11574 19340427 19340501 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WITH ITS AXIS HIGHLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. NO SPOTS ARE SEEN ON APRIL 30. 11575 19340504 19340512 AN EXTENSIVE STREAM IN WHICH THE INITIAL SEPARATION OF LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS IS CONSIDERABLE DURING THE FIRST FEW DAYS OF DEVELOPMENT. 11576 19340507 19340508 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 11577 19340508 19340509 A SINGLE SPOT. 11578 19340513 19340526 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 11572. A LARGE GROUP, IN WHICH THERE ARE THREE CHIEF COMPONENTS ARRANGED APPROXIMATELY AS THE APICES OF AN EQUILATERAL TRIANGLE. A GENERAL BREAK-UP OF THE GROUP COMMENCES ON MAY 19; THE NORTHERN OF THE TWO FOLLOWING SPOTS SURVIVES, HOWEVER, AS A REGULAR SPOT, SO FAR AS IT CAN BE TRACED TO ITS DISAPPEARANCE AROUND THE WEST LIMB. THIS PARTICULAR SPOT IS PERHAPS THE RETURN OF THE LEADER OF GROUP 11573, THE OTHER COMPONENTS OF THE PRESENT GROUP REPRESENTING A DISTINCT THOUGH CLOSELY ADJACENT DISTURBANCE. 11579 19340516 19340529 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 11574. A GROUP, BIPOLAR IN TYPE, IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING SPOT HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAY 21. 11580 19340522 19340523 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 11581 19340615 19340626 AN EQUATORIAL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE OF MINOR IMPORTANCE AND HAVE DISAPPEARED COMPLETELY BY JUNE 22. 11582 19340616 19340621 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 11583 19340706 19340719 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 11584 19340709 19340714 ONE OR TWO SMALL BUT WELL-DEFINED SPOTS, REPRESENTING A REVIVAL OF GROUP 11582. 11586 19340724 19340729 A SINGLE SPOT. 11587 19340807 19340818 A MODERATELY LARGE REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING IN AREA AS IT CROSSES THE DISC. SEVERAL "BRIDGES" APPEAR ACROSS THE UMBRA. 11588 19340812 19340819 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH THE PRECEDING SPOTS DIE OUT FIRST. 11589 19340823 19340824 A STREAM OF TINY SPOTS. 11590 19340827 19340830 A TINY SPOT SEEN ONLY ON AUG. 27 AND 30. 11591 19340902 19340903 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 11592 19340912 19340916 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 14. 11593 19340915 19340917 A GROUP APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. DURING THE LIMITED TIME OF OBSERVATION, THE FOLLOWER SHOWS THE STRONGER DEVELOPMENT. 11594 19340924 19341001 A DISTURBED AREA MARKED BY FACULAE AND USUALLY BY A SINGLE SMALL SPOT, THOUGH THERE IS A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON SEPT. 30. 11595 19340929 19340930 A BRIGHT AREA OF FACULAE CONTAINING TWO SPOTS ON SEPT. 29 AND ONE ON SEPT . 30; ANOTHER SMALL SPOT APPEARS LATER AS GROUP 11596. 11596 19341003 19341004 ON EACH DAY, A SINGLE SMALL SPOT PROBABLY RELATED THOUGH SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE; SEE GROUP 11595. 11597 19341011 19341020 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON OCT. 13. 11598 19341022 19341023 A TINY SPOT ON OCT. 22; TWO ON OCT. 23. 11599 19341025 19341031 A SMALL SPOT BECOMING A CLOSE DOUBLE. 11600 19341030 19341103 INTERMITTENT; ON OCT. 30, A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH A COMPANION: ON NOV. 3 A SINGLE SPOT. 11601 19341031 19341112 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER HAS DIED OUT BY NOV. 8, THOUGH ITS POSITION IS MARKED BY A SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 9. 11602 19341125 19341127 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 11603 19341127 19341202 A SMALL STREAM REPRESENTED BY A SINGLE COMPONENT SPOT ON NOV. 27, DEC. 1 AND DEC. 2. 11604 19341128 19341201 A STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING IN FRONT OF GROUP 11603. 11605 19341129 19341205 A STREAM OF SPOTS WHICH APPEARS TO BE DYING OUT ON DEC. 2, BUT NEW AND LARGER SPOTS DEVELOP ON DEC. 3 AND 4. 11606 19341205 19341208 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER DEVELOPS RAPIDLY TO A REGULAR SPOT BETWEEN DEC. 6 AND 7. 11607 19341220 19341228 A STREAM LED BY A DOUBLE SPOT. 11608 19341221 19341225 A PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT, USUALLY WITH A TINY COMPANION. 11609 19341221 19341223 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 11605. A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE CONTAINING ONE OR TWO SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 11610 19341224 19341226 A PAIR OF SPOTS, THE LEADER BEING LEFT ON DEC. 26. 11611 19341224 19350101 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, PASSING RAPIDLY THROUGH ITS USUAL PHASES, THE LEADING REGULAR SPOT ALONE REMAINING ON DEC. 30, ALTHOUGH IT SOON AFTERWARDS DISAPPEARS. 11612 19341224 19341225 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11613 19341225 19350105 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11614 19341229 19350102 A GROUP FORMING IN FRONT OF GROUP 11611. 11615 19350101 19350102 A SMALL ISOLATED SPOT. 11616 19350102 19350103 A SINGLE SPOT. 11617 19350102 19350114 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF THE SIMPLEST STRUCTURE, NAMELY A PAIR OF SPOTS ABOUT 10 DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER IS A STABLE CIRCULAR SPOT; THE FOLLOWER IS SMALLER AND GRADUALLY FADES OUT. 11618 19350105 19350108 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 11619 19350111 19350122 A GROUP CONSISTING CHIEFLY OF ONE LARGE SPOT WHICH, DIVIDING INTO TWO PARTS BETWEEN JANUARY 14 AND 15, PASSES RAPIDLY TO EXTINCTION. THE ASSOCIATED AREA OF FACULAE IS DISTINCTIVE. 11620 19350122 19350123 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11621 19350123 19350128 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING VERY RAPIDLY FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 23. THE LEADER HAS BECOME A WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT BY JAN. 26; THE FOLLOWING SPOT IS SMALLER AND COMPOSITE. 11622 19350123 19350203 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER THAT DIES OUT ON JAN. 29; TWO OTHER TINY COMPANIONS ARE SEEN ON JAN. 31. 11623 19350204 19350213 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT SLOWLY. 11624 19350206 19350211 A VERY LARGE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE DEVELOPING WITH GREAT RAPIDITY; BY FEB. 8 THE GROUP CONSISTS SIMPLY OF TWO LARGE, NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS, APPROXIMATELY EQUAL IN AREA, WITH A TINY COMPANION BETWEEN THEM. 11625 19350210 19350211 A SMALL GROUP APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11626 19350211 19350214 A SMALL, EPHEMERAL GROUP. 11627 19350213 19350216 A DECLINING GROUP NEAR THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 11628 19350214 19350218 A STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS; THE AXIS IS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 11629 19350218 19350222 A STREAM OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11630 19350220 19350221 A SMALL GROUP APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11631 19350220 19350222 RETURN OF GROUP 11622. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11632 19350222 19350226 A DIMINUTIVE BUT PERFECTLY-FORMED STREAM. GROUP 11633 IS IMMEDIATELY NORTHWARDS AND MAY BE INTERMINGLED ON FEB. 25 AND 26. 11633 19350223 19350224 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM IMMEDIATELY NORTH OF GROUP 11632. 11634 19350225 19350309 RETURN OF GROUP 11624. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH AN OCCASIONAL TINY COMPANION, FOLLOWED BY A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH GROUP 11635 APPEARS. 11635 19350302 19350306 A FEW TINY SPOTS IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 11634. 11636 19350308 19350317 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 11630. A STREAM OF SMALLISH, UNSTABLE SPOTS; THE REAR PART SHOWS A BRIEF INCREASE IN ACTIVITY BETWEEN MAR. 13 AND 15. 11637 19350310 19350321 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE ON THE SUN'S EQUATOR. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT, THE FOLLOWER BEING SOMEWHAT COMPOSITE AND UNSTABLE. 11638 19350311 19350314 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF SPOTS OF EPHEMERAL NATURE NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11639 19350311 19350315 A SMALL GROUP. 11640 19350314 19350319 A REGULAR SPOT BECOMING A CLUSTER ON MAR. 16. 11641 19350315 19350316 A SMALL SPOT ON ABOUT THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 11636, 11637 AND 11642. 11642 19350316 19350322 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM. 11643 19350319 19350324 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11644 19350326 19350327 A SMALL SPOT IN MODERATELY HIGH LATITUDE. 11645 19350403 19350404 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 11646 19350408 19350410 A TINY SPOT ON APR. 8: A PAIR ON APR. 9 AND 10. 11647 19350408 19350415 A STREAM OF SLIGHT DEVELOPMENT; ITS AXIS IS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 11648 19350411 19350414 A FEEBLE GROUP PRODUCING ONE OR TWO SPOTS. 11649 19350412 19350422 A MODERATELY LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN FAIRLY HIGH LATITUDE. 11650 19350420 19350421 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP IN FAIRLY HIGH LATITUDE. 11651 19350422 19350425 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS EXCEPT ON APR. 25 WHEN ONLY ONE SPOT IS SEEN. 11652 19350429 19350503 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION THAT SEPARATES FROM IT IN LATITUDE. GROUP 11655 ORIGINATES SOUTHWARDS ON MAY 3. 11653 19350429 19350509 A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER MAY 6. A PAIR OF TINY FOLLOWERS IS SEEN ON MAY 5 AND A SINGLE DISTANT FOLLOWER ON MAY 8. 11654 19350502 19350506 SLIGHT BUT PERSISTENT ACTIVITY REPRESENTED BY ONE OR MORE TINY SPOTS. 11655 19350503 19350511 A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM OF RAPID GROWTH AND APPROXIMATING TO NORMAL TYPE, EXCEPT THAT THE FOLLOWER IS LARGER AND LONGER LIVED THAN THE LEADER SPOT. 11656 19350505 19350509 A VERY SMALL GROUP, NOT SEEN ON MAY 7. 11657 19350505 19350517 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY COMPANION ON MAY 14 AND 15. 11658 19350507 19350517 A TYPICAL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 11659 19350508 19350509 A SMALL SPOT. 11660 19350511 19350516 A SMALL SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON MAY 14. 11661 19350513 19350515 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON MAY 15. 11662 19350524 19350525 A VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 11663 19350527 19350608 AN UNUSUAL GROUP. A REGULAR SPOT NEAR WHICH OTHER SPOTS SUDDENLY APPEAR ON JUNE 1 AND COALESCE TO FORM A MODERATE-SIZED SPOT OF LOOSE AND COMPLEX STRUCTURE. THE NUCLEUS OF THE ORIGINAL SPOT, BECOMING DOUBLE ON JUNE 3, CAN BE TRACED THROUGHOUT. 11664 19350528 19350601 A SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 11665 19350530 19350606 A SMALL STREAM OF DECLINING IMPORTANCE. 11666 19350605 19350612 A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RATHER RAPIDLY AFTER JUNE 9. 11667 19350607 19350615 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF RAPID GROWTH AND DECLINE. THE REAR SPOT BECOMES DOUBLE SUDDENLY ON JUNE 10, AND FOR A FEW DAYS, UNTIL THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE SOUTHERN COMPONENT, THE AXIS OF THE DOUBLE UMBRA APPEARS TO ROTATE CLOCKWISE. 11668 19350607 19350617 A STREAM THAT IS NEVER LARGE BUT IS MAINTAINED. 11669 19350607 19350614 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS. 11670 19350609 19350613 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WITH ITS AXIS HIGHLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 11671 19350611 19350617 A SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL FOLLOWERS. 11672 19350615 19350621 A SMALL VARIABLE STREAM. 11673 19350615 19350626 A LONG STRAGGLING STREAM THAT DECLINES UNTIL ITS SCATTERED COMPONENTS ARE ONLY JUST DISCERNIBLE AFTER JUNE 21. 11674 19350618 19350630 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO TINY COMPANIONS ON JUNE 20, 22 AND 23. 11675 19350620 19350623 A SMALL SPOT SHOWING A DEFINITE INCREASE IN SIZE BETWEEN JUNE 22 AND 23. 11676 19350621 19350627 INTERMITTENT; A SMALL SPOT NOT VISIBLE ON JUNE 23 AND 24. 11677 19350623 19350706 A VERY LARGE SPOT ELONGATED IN A LONGITUDINAL DIRECTION; ITS UMBRA IS CROSSED BY "BRIDGES", GENERALLY IN A NORTH TO SOUTH DIRECTION. A PENUMBRAL APPENDAGE IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWS THE SPOT, AND AT A GREATER DISTANCE NF THERE IS A REGULAR SPOT THAT LATER BECOMES DOUBLE. 11678 19350624 19350630 A STREAM IN MINIATURE ON ABOUT THE SAME MERIDIAN AS THE LARGE GROUP, 11677. 11679 19350703 19350714 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A SMALL NUCLEUS. 11680 19350705 19350717 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS AFTER JULY 9. THE UMBRA OF THIS SPOT IS MULTIPLE AT FIRST, AND THE SPOT AS A WHOLE IS ELONGATED IN A LONGITUDINAL DIRECTION. 11681 19350707 19350714 A STREAM OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 11682 19350708 19350720 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY FOLLOWER ON JULY 10. 11683 19350711 19350714 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 11684 19350712 19350723 AN UNUSUAL GROUP. FOR THE FIRST FEW DAYS A STREAM APPEARS TO BE DEVELOPING NORMALLY, BUT BETWEEN JULY 15 AND 16, BOTH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS BREAK INTO FRAGMENTS. THE COMPONENT PARTS OF THE LEADER SEPARATE IN LATITUDE, AND BY JULY 18 THE SOUTHERN PARTS APPEAR TO HAVE UNITED INTO A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH PERSISTS TO THE WEST LIMB. THE CLUSTER REPRESENTING THE SPOT AT THE REAR OF THE STREAM SLOWLY FADES OUT. 11685 19350715 19350720 RETURN OF GROUP 11674. A REGULAR SPOT PASSING TO EXTINCTION. 11686 19350719 19350728 A STREAM WHICH LENGTHENS CONSIDERABLY WHILST IT DEVELOPS. THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT (WHICH IS A REGULAR SPOT) IS THE FOLLOWER; THE LEADER IS SMALL AND ALSO OF REGULAR TYPE, BUT IT APPEARS DOUBLE ON JULY 24 AND 25, PERHAPS BY ABSORBING ONE OF THE SEVERAL SPOTS WHICH FOLLOW IT AS A TRAIN. 11687 19350725 19350727 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY NOT IDENTICAL IN POSITION BUT PROBABLY RELATED. 11688 19350730 19350810 A GROUP CONSISTING SIMPLY OF A LEADER AND A FOLLOWER WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. THE FOLLOWER SOON DISINTEGRATES INTO A TINY CLUSTER WHICH HAS VANISHED BY AUG. 3; THE LEADER SHOWS A TEMPORARY BREAKING UP ON AUG. 6, BUT PORTIONS SURVIVE ALMOST TO THE WEST LIMB, WHERE ANOTHER SPOT RE-APPEARS TO MARK THE POSITION OF THE ORIGINAL FOLLOWER. 11689 19350803 19350804 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON AUG. 3, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS LEFT ON AUG. 4. 11690 19350804 19350816 RETURN OF GROUP 11682. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT; A COMPANION HAS APPEARED PRECEDING ON AUG. 7, BUT IT DISSOLVES INTO A CLUSTER OF WHICH REMNANTS LAST UNTIL AUG. 12. THREE NEW SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR NORTHWARD ON AUG. 14. 11691 19350806 19350808 THREE RATHER WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS IN A MODERATE EXTENT OF FACULAE. 11692 19350807 19350813 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER IS SEEN AFTER AUGUST 9; WHEN THIS IS DISAPPEARING AS A TINY SPOT AFTER AUGUST 12, ONE OR TWO OTHER DOTS APPEAR. 11693 19350809 19350813 A SMALL GROUP. 11694 19350810 19350816 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 11692 AND 1096E. 11695 19350812 19350813 ONE SMALL SPOT. 11696 19350814 19350826 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT UNTIL AUG. 25, WHEN A SUDDEN DECREASE IN AREA TAKES PLACE BETWEEN AUG. 25 AND 26. 11697 19350816 19350826 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS APPEAR AS A PRELIMINARY TO THE SUDDEN DEVELOPMENT, BETWEEN AUG. 19 AND 20, OF A VERY LARGE GROUP WHICH APPEARS TO BE ALREADY ON THE DECLINE BY THE TIME THAT IT PASSES AROUND THE WEST LIMB. THE GROUP IS A TYPICAL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 11698 19350817 19350821 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE IN WHICH THE LEADER GREATLY PREDOMINATES. 11699 19350819 19350820 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11700 19350821 19350826 A SINGLE SPOT SEEN ONLY ON AUG. 21 AND 26. 11701 19350824 19350906 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FROM WHICH PORTIONS ARE BEING SHED BETWEEN AUG 28 AND 31; AFTER THIS, THE SPOT REGAINS ITS REGULAR OUTLINE ALTHOUGH CONSIDERABLY DIMINISHED. THERE IS A SMALL COMPANION NORTHWARD ON SEPTEMBER 5 AND 6. 11702 19350828 19350829 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON AUG. 28 OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON AUG. 29. 11703 19350829 19350910 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT COMMENCING POSSIBLY AS A SMALL SPOT, 1095G, ON AUG. 14. 11704 19350830 19350909 A SMALL SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER ON SEPT. 3, 4, AND 5. AFTER SEPT. 5 THE GROUP IS NOT VISIBLE UNTIL SEPT. 9. GROUP 11708 FORMS SOUTHWARD ON SEPTEMBER 6. 11706 19350902 19350903 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 11707 19350904 19350909 A GROUP OF UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM. 11708 19350906 19350908 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP SP GROUP 11704. 11709 19350908 19350911 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. 11710 19350909 19350913 RETURN OF GROUP 11697. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY CONSIDERABLE FACULAE. 11711 19350912 19350919 A STREAM IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 11710. 11712 19350914 19350921 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11713 19350917 19350929 AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION AND LATER BY A SMALL CLUSTER. THE REGULAR SPOT BREAKS UP SUDDENLY BETWEEN SEPT. 25 AND 27 AND THUS DIES OUT. 11714 19350922 19350927 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT AND SUBSEQUENT DECLINE. 11715 19350923 19350929 A STREAM OF SPOTS WHICH ARE AT FIRST UNIMPORTANT, BUT THEY DEVELOP CONSIDERABLY AFTER SEPT. 26. 11716 19350924 19350925 A SMALL STREAM FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11717 19350924 19351003 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGER COMPONENT. THIS DIVIDES ON SEPTEMBER 27, AND THE TWO PORTIONS DRIFT APART IN LONGITUDE. 11718 19350926 19351002 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT GROUP. 11719 19350926 19351007 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA; THERE ARE SMALL COMPANIONS ON SEPT. 29 AND OCT. 2. 11720 19350926 19351008 RETURN OF GROUP 11709. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY COMPANION ON SEPT. 29. 11721 19350928 19351001 A SHORT STREAM OF TINY SPOTS. 11722 19350929 19351008 A TINY SPOT NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 30. ON OCT. 1 A SMALL STREAM APPEARS IN ITS PLACE; THE COMPONENT SPOTS ARE QUITE SMALL EXCEPT ON OCT. 4 AND 5. 11723 19350929 19351003 A STREAM OF A FEW SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 11719. 11724 19350929 19351006 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 11725 19350930 19351008 THREE OR FOUR SPOTS WITH SMALL COMPANIONS IN A LONG STRAIGHT STREAM. 11726 19351004 19351009 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY COMPANION ON OCT. 5 AND 6. 11727 19351005 19351008 A VERY SMALL STREAM. 11728 19351010 19351017 THREE SMALL SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 11729 19351010 19351016 A VERY SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH NEAR COMPANIONS ON OCT. 11 AND 14 AND A DISTANT ONE ON OCT. 16. 11730 19351011 19351014 RETURN OF GROUP 11716. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. A FEEBLE REVIVAL SETS IN ON OCT. 17 AS GROUP 11737. 11731 19351012 19351016 A GROUP ORIGINATING SUDDENLY ON OCT. 12 BUT QUICKLY FADING OUT. 11732 19351013 19351020 A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 11733 19351013 19351025 RETURN OF GROUP 11715. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 11734 19351015 19351026 A LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON OCT. 15. THE LEADER IS AT FIRST COMPOSITE, AND THERE APPEARS TO BE A ROTATION OF THE SPOT IN A CLOCKWISE DIRECTION BETWEEN OCT. 18 AND 20. A PAIR OF SPOTS IS AT THE REAR OF THE STREAM, BUT THESE AND OTHER SMALLER SPOTS DIE OUT, AND THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER OCT. 25. 11735 19351015 19351017 A SINGLE SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON OCT. 17. 11736 19351017 19351021 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WHOSE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS SEPARATE CONSIDERABLY IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON OCT. 21. 11737 19351017 19351020 A FEEBLE GROUP NOT SEEN ON OCT. 19. 11738 19351017 19351022 A SMALLISH STREAM WHOSE COMPONENTS HAVE VERY DENSE UMBRAE ON OCT. 18. 11739 19351017 19351018 A TINY GROUP. 11740 19351017 19351027 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 17 NEAR THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS AFTER OCT. 21, THOUGH TINY FOLLOWERS APPEAR TEMPORARILY ON OCT. 26. 11741 19351019 19351022 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11742 19351019 19351101 A STREAM, GROWING FROM SMALL SPOTS SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB, IN WHICH THE LEADER SPOT IS THE PREDOMINATING COMPONENT THROUGHOUT. 11743 19351020 19351101 A GROUP SIMILAR IN APPEARANCE TO GROUP 11742 WITH WHICH IT IS SYNCHRONOUS IN DEVELOPMENT. 11744 19351024 19351026 RETURN OF GROUP 11720; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11745 19351025 19351027 ONE OR TWO SPOTS IN A CONSPICUOUS AREA OF FACULAE. 11746 19351101 19351110 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A TINY CLUSTER ON NOV. 1. THE LEADER WHICH BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT IS THE SOLE SURVIVING COMPONENT AFTER NOV. 7. 11747 19351103 19351110 A SMALLISH STREAM OF TYPICAL FORMATION. 11748 19351103 19351115 A STREAM WITH A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER, WHICH ITSELF IS VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 11749 19351107 19351116 A REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR MORE TINY COMPANIONS ON NOV. 11, 13, 15 AND 16. 11750 19351107 19351119 A LARGE STREAM OF CONSIDERABLE LENGTH. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, BEGINS TO LENGTHEN OUT IN LONGITUDE AND ACTUALLY DIVIDES INTO TWO PARTS BETWEEN NOV. 13 AND 14, THE LARGER PORTION IMMEDIATELY ASSUMING A REGULAR OUTLINE; THE SMALLER FRAGMENT IN FRONT SOON DIES OUT. 11751 19351109 19351114 A TINY STREAM SUBSIDIARY TO GROUP 11750. 11752 19351111 19351119 A SHORT COMPACT STREAM; THE LEADER TENDS TO COMPOSITE STRUCTURE, AND A CONSPICUOUS BRIGHT "BRIDGE" CROSSES IT FROM NORTH TO SOUTH ON NOV. 16. 11753 19351111 19351123 RETURN OF GROUP 11734. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 11754 19351113 19351124 A STREAM APPROXIMATING TO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER STOPS SHORT OF DEVELOPING INTO A REGULAR SPOT, WHILE THE FOLLOWER BECOMES REGULAR FOR A DAY OR TWO; THE CONNECTING LINK OF SMALL SPOTS HAS DISAPPEARED BY NOV. 20. 11755 19351114 19351115 A SINGLE SPOT ON EACH DAY. 11756 19351114 19351122 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER IS VERY MARKED; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON NOV. 21. 11757 19351115 19351118 A SMALL STREAM; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON NOV. 18. 11758 19351115 19351122 A SMALL STREAM REPRESENTED ONLY BY ONE COMPONENT ON NOV. 17, 18, AND 22. 11759 19351116 19351124 RETURN OF GROUP 11742. A SMALL SPOT WITH A COUPLE OF COMPANIONS ON NOV. 18; THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON NOV. 22 AND 23. 11760 19351116 19351128 ON NOV. 16 A REGULAR SPOT COMES INTO VIEW OVER THE EAST LIMB; BY NOV. 20 A LARGE STREAM HAS FORMED, THE LEADER HAVING AT FIRST A DOUBLE UMBRA AND THE FOLLOWER GROWING INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT FROM THREE CHIEF NUCLEI. THE LEADER SPOT APPEARS TO ROTATE IN A CLOCKWISE DIRECTION BETWEEN NOV. 21 AND 24. 11761 19351123 19351124 A TINY SPOT. 11762 19351125 19351206 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT WHICH ESCAPES BEING ABSORBED BY THE LARGE LEADER SPOT OF GROUP 11764 WHICH APPROACHES IT CLOSELY. 11763 19351126 19351202 A SIMPLE BI-POLAR GROUP, CONSISTING OF A LEADER SPOT AND A FOLLOWER; THERE IS A TINY SPOT BETWEEN THEM ON NOV. 29 AND 30. 11764 19351126 19351208 A GREAT IRREGULAR STREAM DEVELOPING FROM TWO OR THREE SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB ON NOVEMBER 26 AMONGST THE FEATURES OF INTEREST ARE (1) THE CLOSE APPROACH OF THE LEADER SPOT TO THE SMALL SPOT COMPRISING GROUP 11762; THE LARGER SPOT NEVER SUCCEEDS IN ABSORBING THE SMALLER. (2) A SEMI-OPAQUE PHOTOSPHERIC STRUCTURE ON DEC. 2 AND 3 OVER THE PRECEDING PART OF THE FOLLOWING SPOT OF THE STREAM. (3) THE MARKED ROTATION OF THE FOLLOWER SPOT IN A CLOCKWISE DIRECTION BETWEEN DEC. 2 AND 4. 11765 19351201 19351214 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING. 11766 19351204 19351205 A TINY DOUBLE SPOT. 11767 19351205 19351213 A SMALL SPOT DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM ON DEC. 8. 11768 19351205 19351210 RETURN OF GROUP 11752. A SMALL SPOT ASSOCIATED WITH A FAIRLY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. 11769 19351206 19351219 A LARGE STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER AND LEADER SPOTS ARE WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. ON DEC. 10-11 AND AGAIN ON DEC. 13-14, THE LEADER SPOT SHEDS A PORTION OF ITSELF. SEVERAL COMPANIONS ACCOMPANY THE FOLLOWER SPOT. 11770 19351208 19351210 A SMALL GROUP SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11771 19351207 19351212 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11772 19351208 19351209 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11773 19351208 19351212 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 11756. A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT WITH A TINY FOLLOWER ON DEC. 9. 11774 19351211 19351213 A SMALL GROUP FIRST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11775 19351212 19351219 A DIMISHING STREAM OF SPOTS. 11776 19351213 19351225 RETURN OF GROUP 11760. A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON DEC. 20-23. 11777 19351215 19351218 A SMALL STREAM. 11778 19351215 19351216 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11779 19351215 19351216 A SMALL SPOT. 11780 19351216 19351227 A SMALL STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT THAT HAS FORMED BY DEC. 18 AND BREAKS UP AFTER DEC. 23; A NEW SPOT HAS DEVELOPED AT THE REAR BY DEC. 26. 11781 19351221 19360101 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON DEC. 21-23. 11782 19351222 19351224 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 11783 19351223 19360102 RETURN OF GROUP 11764. A REGULAR SPOT ACCOMPANIED BY SEVERAL IMPERFECTLY-FORMED SPOTS. THIS GROUP IS FOLLOWED IN LONGITUDE BY GROUPS 11784 AND 11785. A VERY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE SURROUNDS THE THREE GROUPS. 11784 19351224 19360102 A BROKEN SPOT. 11785 19351225 19360106 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, USUALLY WITH A FEW TINY FOLLOWERS. 11786 19351225 19351231 AN INSIGNIFICANT STREAM; THIS IS NOT SEEN ON DEC. 30, BUT A SPOT MARKING THE REAR OF THE GROUP APPEARS ON DEC. 31. ON JAN. 1, A SMALL NEW GROUP DEVELOPS A FEW DEGREES PRECEDING IN LONGITUDE. 11787 19351228 19360108 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 11788 19351229 19360110 A LARGE STREAM APPROXIMATELY OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER, WHICH BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, IS THE PREDOMINANT FEATURE. THE ORIGINAL FOLLOWER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, DIES OUT, WHILST ANOTHER SPOT A FEW DEGREES PRECEDING IT IN LONGITUDE BECOMES THE CHIEF REPRESENTATIVE OF THIS PART OF THE STREAM. 11789 19360101 19360103 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON JAN. 3. 11790 19360101 19360114 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, PRECEDED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH DIES OUT BY JAN. 8. THE COMPOSITE SPOT TENDS TO SPREAD OUT IN LONGITUDE; THE PRECEDING PART BECOMES A DIMINISHING CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, WHILST THE FOLLOWING PORTION REMAINS A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT WITH WIDELY SEPARATED UMBRAE. 11791 19360109 19360121 RETURN OF GROUP 11776. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING; THERE IS A SMALL DISTANT COMPANION ON JAN. 18. 11792 19360111 19360124 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 11793 19360112 19360123 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FAINT CLUSTER WHICH HAS DIED OUT BY JAN. 18. 11794 19360112 19360114 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11795 19360114 19360126 A VERY LARGE COMPLEX STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM THREE SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON JAN. 14. THE STREAM AT FIRST APPEARS TO BE DEVELOPING INTO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE, BUT BY JAN. 21 IT HAS BECOME COMPLEX IN CHARACTER, THE NUMEROUS COMPONENT SPOTS BEING PACKED SO CLOSELY THAT THEY FORM ALMOST ONE VERY LONG SPOT. THROUGHOUT THESE CHANGES, A SMALL COMPANION SPOT TO THE LEADER REMAINS STABLE. 11796 19360114 19360126 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH LESS THAN THE USUAL SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS. 11797 19360117 19360119 A TINY GROUP. 11798 19360117 19360118 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE. 11799 19360120 19360129 A REGULAR SPOT FROM WHICH A PORTION SEPARATES ON JAN. 25-26; THERE ARE COMPANIONS ON JAN. 20 TO JAN. 23. 11800 19360121 19360126 A FEEBLE GROUP NOT SEEN ON JAN. 22. 11801 19360121 19360123 A TINY SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JAN. 21 AND JAN. 23. 11802 19360121 19360202 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT FOLLOWED BY A VERY LONG SINUOUS TRAIN OF SMALL AND UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. 11803 19360122 19360126 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JAN. 23 AND 24. 11804 19360124 19360202 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT GROUP, NOT SEEN ON JAN. 30. 11805 19360124 19360205 RETURN OF GROUP 11788. A REGULAR SPOT SHEDDING A SMALL PORTION FROM ITS FOLLOWING SIDE ON JAN. 29 AND 30. 11806 19360130 19360206 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 11790. A REGULAR SPOT DECREASING RAPIDLY; A TINY COMPANION APPEARS ON FEB. 6. 11807 19360131 19360211 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS FROM FEB. 4 TO 8. 11808 19360201 19360210 TWO SMALL CLUSTERS BECOMING A STREAM OF APPROXIMATELY NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER SPOT ALONE REMAINS ON FEB. 8. 11809 19360201 19360204 A TINY SPOT NOT SEEN ON FEB. 2. 11810 19360202 19360206 A PAIR OF SPOTS, OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON FEB. 6. 11811 19360202 19360203 A SINGLE SPOT. 11812 19360205 19360207 A PAIR OF SPOTS DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11813 19360205 19360216 INTERMITTENT; A SCATTERED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON FEB. 11, 13 AND 15. 11814 19360207 19360209 TWO SPOTS DEVELOPING SUDDENLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11815 19360207 19360220 A LARGE STREAM CONTAINING TWO CHIEF SPOTS AND A NUMBER OF TINY SPOTS SOMETIMES GROUPED INTO CLUSTERS. THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT BREAKS UP VERY SUDDENLY AFTER FEB. 16. THE WHOLE DISTURBANCE AT ITS MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT EXTENDS OVER 25 DEGREES OF LONGITUDE. 11816 19360208 19360209 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 11817 19360208 19360211 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 8, AFTER WHICH NOTHING IS SEEN UNTIL FEB. 11, WHEN TWO SMALL SPOTS APPEAR. 11818 19360208 19360214 A SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 8: A PAIR OF SPOTS ON FEB. 13-14, NOTHING BEING SEEN ON THE INTERVENING DAYS. 11819 19360210 19360217 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON FEB. 12-13. 11820 19360210 19360223 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, REPRESENTING A RETURN OF GROUP 11795. 11821 19360211 19360212 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11822 19360212 19360220 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT STREAM OF ORDINARY TYPE. 11823 19360215 19360225 A SMALL SPOT USUALLY PRECEDED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 11824 19360216 19360228 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE IN WHICH THE PRECEDING PART DEVELOPS ONLY TO A SMALL EXTENT. 11825 19360216 19360228 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO TINY COMPANIONS ON FEB. 22-23. 11826 19360220 19360221 ON FEB. 20, A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS: A WIDE PAIR ON FEB. 21. 11827 19360220 19360227 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING; ANOTHER SPOT APPEARS F ON FEB. 25. 11828 19360221 19360222 A TINY GROUP. 11829 19360221 19360228 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART SOON DISAPPEARS. 11830 19360221 19360302 THIS GROUP COMMENCES AS A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, THE FOLLOWING SPOT BREAKING UP INTO A CLUSTER BY FEB. 24. CONTRARY TO THE USUAL COURSE OF DEVELOPMENT, THE LEADER SPOT DIVIDES ON FEB. 26-27 INTO TWO PARTS WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. 11831 19360221 19360301 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS WITH TWO OR THREE COMPANIONS. 11832 19360222 19360228 ON FEB. 22, A SINGLE SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON THE FOLLOWING DAY; AFTERWARDS, TWO OR THREE UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 11833 19360224 19360306 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT; POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 11814, BUT CONTINUITY NOT CERTAIN. 11834 19360226 19360228 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 11835 19360226 19360309 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING SPOT IS LONGER LIVED THAN USUAL. 11836 19360227 19360305 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 11835. 11837 19360228 19360310 A SMALLISH STREAM THAT IS COMPARATIVELY LONG LIVED. 11838 19360301 19360305 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11839 19360301 19360310 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 11840 19360302 19360303 A SMALL SPOT. 11841 19360302 19360312 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT IS THE LARGEST AND LONGEST LIVED. THIS GROUP APPEARS IN A REGION ALREADY MARKED BY EXTENSIVE FACULAE. 11842 19360302 19360305 A TINY SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 11839. 11843 19360303 19360305 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 11844 19360304 19360305 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11845 19360305 19360310 A SMALL STREAM. 11846 19360306 19360318 RETURN OF GROUP 11815. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY EXTENSIVE FACULAE IN WHICH A SMALL COMPANION SPOT IS SEEN ON MAR. 8,9,13 AND 14. TWO SMALL ATTENDANTS APPEAR IN FRONT OF THE LEADER SPOT ON MAR. 15 AND 16. 11847 19360307 19360309 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP FOLLOWING GROUP 11845. 11848 19360307 19360312 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 11849 19360308 19360311 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 11850 19360309 19360315 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY MAR. 12. 11851 19360310 19360317 A GROUP OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11852 19360310 19360323 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER SPOT DEVELOPS SOMEWHAT IRREGULARLY; THE FOLLOWER IS EXCEPTIONALLY LONG LIVED. 11853 19360311 19360314 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAR. 12 AND 13. 11854 19360311 19360314 A FEW VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11855 19360313 19360318 A SHORT-LIVED GROUP THAT COMMENCES WITH QUITE DEFINITE SPOTS, BECOMING SMALL NEBULOUS MARKINGS AFTER MAR. 15. 11856 19360315 19360325 INTERMITTENT. A SINGLE SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAR. 18, 19, AND 23. 11857 19360317 19360318 A SMALL SPOT. 11858 19360318 19360322 A STREAM WHICH SUDDENLY DEVELOPS INTO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE. 11859 19360318 19360324 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER SPOT GREATLY PREDOMINATES. 11860 19360318 19360325 A STREAM OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 11861 19360319 19360320 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON MAR. 19; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 11862 19360319 19360329 A SINGLE SPOT. 11863 19360319 19360401 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. ON MAR. 28, THE SPOT IS ELONGATED AND AFTERWARDS BREAKS UP INTO THREE PORTIONS. 11864 19360320 19360323 A SMALL STREAM. 11865 19360322 19360326 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MAR. 24. 11866 19360324 19360325 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 11867 19360325 19360405 A STREAM THAT LENGHENS CONSIDERABLY. THE FOLLOWER BECOMES THE LARGEST COMPONENT, BUT AFTER A BRIEF MAXIMUM IT BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT AS A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS. 11868 19360326 19360406 A STREAM OF COMMON TYPE. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT ON MAR. 29, BECOMES ELONGATED IN A LONGITUDINAL DIRECTION AND BREAKS UP AFTER APRIL 2, THE PRECEDING PORTION CONTINUING AS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 11869 19360326 19360409 RETURN OF GROUP 11848. A STREAM WHICH EXTENDS FOR A CONSIDERABLE DISTANCE (16) IN LONGITUDE. THE FOLLOWER IS A REGULAR SPOT WHICH SURVIVES THE PRECEDING PART OF THE STREAM; ITS STRUCTURE IS UNUSUAL ON APRIL 4. 11870 19360327 19360402 A SMALLISH STREAM IN WHICH, AS USUAL, THE LEADER IS THE LONGEST-LIVED COMPONENT. 11871 19360327 19360402 A TINY SPOT ON MAR. 27, AFTER WHICH NOTHING IS SEEN UNTIL APRIL 1 WHEN A GROUP APPEARS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11872 19360330 19360407 A SMALL STREAM WHOSE AXIS IS HIGHLY INCLINED (ABOUT 45 DEGREES) TO THE DIRECTION OF THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 11873 19360401 19360407 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT SEEN ON EACH DAY EXCEPT APRIL 2, 4 AND 5, IN AN AREA OF GENERAL DISTURBANCE MARKED BY BRIGHT FACULAE. 11874 19360402 19360405 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 2, ONE COMPONENT REMAINING ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 11875 19360402 19360408 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT THAT BREAKS UP ON APRIL 6. 11876 19360403 19360414 A STREAM, COMPLEX IN CHARACTER, WHICH DEVELOPS IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING GROUP 11875. 11877 19360403 19360407 RETURN OF GROUP 11846; THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RATHER SUDDENLY AFTER APRIL 6. 11878 19360406 19360407 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 11879 19360406 19360417 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER DISAPPEARS AFTER APRIL 11 AND THE LEADER BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER BETWEEN APRIL 14 AND 15. 11880 19360406 19360419 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 11881 19360407 19360415 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. 11882 19360408 19360409 A SMALL GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11883 19360408 19360422 RETURN OF GROUP 11859. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY COMPANIONS ON APRIL 14, 18, 19 AND 20. 11884 19360410 19360411 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER REMAINS ON APRIL 11. 11885 19360410 19360419 A SMALL STREAM THAT IS RELATIVELY LONG-LIVED FOR ITS SIZE. 11886 19360410 19360422 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON APRIL 14. THE GROUP IS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 18-21. 11887 19360411 19360419 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11888 19360415 19360427 A STREAM OF SIMPLE FORMATION, CONSISTING OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A RELATIVELY SMALL FOLLOWER 10 DISTANT IN LONGITUDE. 11889 19360416 19360417 A TINY SPOT. 11890 19360416 19360428 A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT SOUTH OF GROUP 11891. 11891 19360416 19360427 AN ACTIVE STREAM IN WHICH THE COMPONENTS ARE IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 11892 19360417 19360419 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM. 11893 19360418 19360419 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11894 19360420 19360424 A GROUP OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT F GROUP 11891. 11895 19360420 19360430 ONE OR TWO EPHEMERAL SPOTS SEEN ON APRIL 20 AND 21 IN AN AREA OF FACULAE. THE GROUP REVIVES ON APRIL 26. 11896 19360423 19360424 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11897 19360423 19360428 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON APRIL 27 AND 28. 11898 19360424 19360427 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE AND OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 11899 19360425 19360429 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 11900 19360426 19360428 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM. 11901 19360428 19360508 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER REMAINS ON MAY 1. ONE OR TWO SMALL NEW SPOTS APPEAR ON MAY 5. 11902 19360430 19360506 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11903 19360501 19360506 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 1 AND 2: A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON MAY 4-6. 11904 19360501 19360502 A SINGLE SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE. 11905 19360504 19360513 A GROUP OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 11906 19360504 19360505 ONE OR TWO SPOTS. 11907 19360506 19360508 ONE OR TWO SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 11908 19360506 19360509 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 6; A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 9. 11909 19360507 19360512 A SMALL STREAM. 11910 19360507 19360518 PROBABLE RETURN OF A GROUP (1105A) DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB ON APRIL 22. A STREAM, IN WHICH THE LEADER-SOMEWHAT COMPOSITE IN STRUCTURE-PREDOMINATES THROUGHOUT. 11911 19360510 19360511 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 11912 19360510 19360523 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 11913 19360511 19360518 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT GROUP. 11914 19360511 19360514 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE ALONE REMAINS ON MAY 14. 11915 19360514 19360517 A SMALL GROUP DEVELOPING IN FRONT OF GROUP 11910. 11916 19360515 19360524 INTERMITTENT: TWO SPOTS WITH SMALL COMPANIONS THAT HAVE DIED OUT BY MAY 20. THE AREA IS AGAIN MARKED BY TINY SPOTS ON MAY 22 AND 24. 11917 19360516 19360522 A TINY SPOT SEEN ONLY ON MAY 16 AND 22. 11918 19360520 19360524 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM, NOT SEEN ON MAY 21. 11919 19360521 19360527 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11920 19360521 19360522 ONE TINY SPOT. 11921 19360522 19360528 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGER AND MORE SYMMETRICAL SPOT. 11922 19360522 19360527 A SMALL SPOT SEEN ON MAY 22 AND 25: A PAIR ON MAY 27. 11923 19360523 19360529 A CLUSTER OR DWARF STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 11924 19360523 19360524 A COUPLE OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11925 19360524 19360526 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM IN FAIRLY HIGH LATITUDE. 11926 19360524 19360531 A SMALL STREAM WHICH DIES OUT AFTER MAY 26, BUT IS REPRESENTED BY A TINY SPOT ON MAY 31. 11927 19360524 19360604 A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, FOLLOWED BY TINY COMPANIONS WHICH INCREASE CONSIDERABLY IN SIZE FOR A FEW DAYS AFTER MAY 29. 11928 19360526 19360529 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 11929 19360528 19360529 A SMALL SPOT. 11930 19360528 19360529 A DOT. 11931 19360528 19360607 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 11932 19360529 19360530 A SMALL GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11933 19360529 19360530 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON MAY 30. 11934 19360530 19360603 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 11935 19360531 19360603 A SMALL STREAM. 11936 19360602 19360603 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON JUNE 2. 11937 19360602 19360608 A TINY SPOT, SP GROUP 11931, ON JUNE 2, AND RE-APPEARING ON JUNE 8 AFTER THAT GROUP HAS DISAPPEARED. 11938 19360602 19360609 A STREAM OF APPROXIMATELY NORMAL TYPE; THE LEADER BECOMES A DOUBLE SPOT ON JUNE 9, INDICATING A FRESH SPURT OF ACTIVITY. 11939 19360605 19360610 A SMALL STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT IS THE LAST TO DISAPPEAR. 11940 19360605 19360609 A STREAM OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 11941 19360605 19360616 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; THE LEADER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS AFTER JUNE 10. 11942 19360607 19360610 A VERY SMALL STREAM NOT RECORDED ON JUNE 8. 11943 19360608 19360614 RETURN OF GROUP 11912. A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP INTO FRAGMENTS ON JUNE 12-13. 11944 19360611 19360612 A TINY GROUP. 11945 19360612 19360619 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT GROUP. 11946 19360613 19360617 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 11947 19360615 19360625 A SMALL STREAM. 11948 19360615 19360628 A STREAM IN WHICH THERE IS MARKED SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER; BETWEEN THESE TWO COMPONENTS THERE ARE VARIABLE SPOTS WHICH ON SOME DAYS MAKE UP A COMPLEX CLUSTER. 11949 19360618 19360623 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT. 11950 19360619 19360620 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 11951 19360619 19360623 A SMALL STREAM APPEARING AT THE SAME TIME AS GROUP 11952 ON THE SAME MERIDIAN. 11952 19360619 19360621 A SMALL STREAM ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 11951. 11953 19360619 19360625 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS EXTENDING IN LONGITUDE. 11954 19360621 19360627 A VERY SMALL GROUP, COMPARATIVELY LONG-LIVED FOR ITS SIZE. 11955 19360621 19360703 A GROUP OF SIMPLE FORMATION, COMPRISING A STABLE REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER AND A SMALLER SPOT 8 DEGREES FOLLOWING IN LONGITUDE. BETWEEN JUNE 28 AND 29, THERE IS A SUDDEN DEVELOPMENT OF NEW SPOTS, AND A REGULAR SPOT EMERGES AS THE NEW FOLLOWER. 11956 19360622 19360625 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; THOUGH NOT SEEN ON JUNE 24, A LARGER SPOT SUGGESTING A NEW DEVELOPMENT, IS VERY NEAR THE WEST LIMB ON JUNE 25. 11957 19360623 19360625 A GROUP ORIGINATING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11958 19360625 19360627 A GROUP ORIGINATING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB; APPARENTLY IT IS SHORT LIVED. 11959 19360625 19360702 A LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 25. THE LEADER WHEN FULLY DEVELOPED ABOUT JUNE 29, APPEARS TO HAVE COME FROM THE FUSION OF TWO SPOTS WHICH ARE CLEARLY SEPERATED ON JUNE 27. 11960 19360625 19360630 A SMALL SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON JUNE 27-30 IN AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. 11961 19360627 19360702 A TINY SPOT ON JUNE 27 WHICH PRECEDES THE DEVELOPMENT OF A GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11962 19360629 19360704 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JUNE 29, JULY 2 AND JULY 4. THERE IS AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. 11963 19360630 19360705 A DISTURBED AREA, MARKED BY EXTENSIVE FACULAE, PRODUCING A SMALL SPOT ON EACH OF THE DAYS JUNE 30, JULY 2, 4, AND 5. 11964 19360630 19360703 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON JULY 3. 11965 19360701 19360705 A SMALLISH STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 11966 19360701 19360706 A GROUP OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. 11967 19360701 19360711 A SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11968 19360705 19360711 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 11969 19360708 19360710 A SMALL GROUP. 11970 19360708 19360720 A LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING AT FIRST IN THE USUAL MANNER; ON JULY 14-15, HOWEVER, OTHER SPOTS APPEAR NEAR THE LEADER, ONE OF THEM BECOMING A REGULAR SPOT FOR A FEW DAYS. 11971 19360710 19360711 A TINY SPOT. 11972 19360710 19360714 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEPARATING IN LONGITUDE; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON JULY 14. 11973 19360711 19360716 A SMALL STREAM. 11974 19360711 19360719 A SINGLE SPOT. 11975 19360713 19360723 A DISTURBED AREA MARKED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT RECORDED ON JULY 17 AND 18. 11976 19360714 19360715 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS IN A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. 11977 19360716 19360727 A REGULAR SPOT ATTENDED BY A SUBSIDIARY SPOT WHICH IS ABSORBED BY JULY 19 OR 20 INTO THE PENUMBRA OF THE MAIN SPOT, BUT BECOMES DETACHED AGAIN BY JULY 22. MEANWHILE, THE AXIS JOINING THE TWO UMBRAE ROTATES COUNTER-CLOCKWISE. A SMALL CLUSTER FOLLOWS FROM JULY 21 TO 24. 11978 19360717 19360719 A SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 11979 19360720 19360731 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 20, AFTER WHICH NOTHING IS SEEN UNTIL JULY 29 WHEN A GROUP BEGINS TO DEVELOP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11980 19360720 19360730 RETURN OF GROUP 11965. A REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT SLOWLY. A SMALL SPOT APPEARS NEAR ITS PLACE ON JULY 30. 11981 19360722 19360728 INTERMITTENT; A LARGE AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS APPEAR. 11982 19360723 19360729 A MEDIUM-SIZED GROUP OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 11983 19360724 19360726 A SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 11982. 11984 19360726 19360727 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED SPOT. 11985 19360727 19360806 A STREAM, IN WHICH THE LEADER IS A DOUBLE SPOT, THE TWO COMPONENTS COMBINING ON AUGUST 2. 11986 19360728 19360808 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER TENDS TO COMPOSITE STRUCTURE AND IS THE PREDOMINATING COMPONENT. 11987 19360728 19360808 A STREAM SHOWING AT FIRST THE GREATER ACTIVITY IN ITS FOLLOWING COMPONENT. NEW SPOTS IN THE PRECEDING PART DEVELOP AFTER AUG. 3. 11988 19360730 19360802 A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 30: A STREAM OF TINY SPOTS ON AUG. 1: A SINGLE SPOT ON AUG. 2. 11989 19360803 19360806 A SMALL GROUP (PRECEDING GROUP 11987) DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 11990 19360804 19360815 RETURN OF GROUP 11970. A SPOT OF MODERATE SIZE FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS IN AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. PART OF THIS LEADER SPOT BREAKS AWAY BETWEEN AUG. 7 AND 8 AND SEPARATES WIDELY FROM THE ORIGINAL NUCLEUS. 11991 19360805 19360808 A SMALL STREAM. 11992 19360805 19360813 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON AUG. 10 IN THE SAME AREA OF DISTURBANCE AS GROUP 11990. 11993 19360806 19360810 A SINGLE SPOT. 11994 19360807 19360809 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON AUG. 8. 11995 19360807 19360817 A STREAM OF SPOTS INCREASING RAPIDLY TO ITS MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT ON AUG. 9. THE FOLLOWER, SOMEWHAT COMPOSITE IN STRUCTURE, IS THE LARGEST AND LONGEST LIVED COMPONENT. 11996 19360808 19360814 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE CONSISTING SIMPLY OF TWO SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. 11997 19360809 19360810 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 11998 19360809 19360811 A SMALL GROUP. 11999 19360809 19360819 A STREAM OF RATHER UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12000 19360810 19360813 A SMALL STREAM. 12001 19360811 19360819 A SMALL GROUP OF INTERMITTENT ACTIVITY. 12002 19360812 19360816 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON AUG. 13. 12003 19360812 19360819 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 12004 19360813 19360820 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON AUG. 16-19. 12005 19360814 19360817 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NP GROUP 12006. 12006 19360814 19360825 RETURN OF GROUP 11982. A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 12007 19360815 19360828 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 11979. A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE, IN WHICH THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING COMPONENTS ARE WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER, WHICH IS A REGULAR SPOT, HAS FOLLOWING IT A COMPANION WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. 12008 19360816 19360818 A TINY SPOT ON AUG. 16; A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON AUG. 18. 12009 19360816 19360819 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP. 12010 19360817 19360820 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 12011 19360821 19360831 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS AFTER AUG. 25. 12011*19360822 19360824 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUG. 23, P GROUP 12006. 12012 19360822 19360831 RETURN OF GROUP 11985. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF COMPANIONS AFTER AUG. 27. 12013 19360823 19360903 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RATHER RAPIDLY AFTER AUG. 29. THERE ARE ONE OR TWO TINY COMPANIONS ON AUG. 25 AND 29. 12014 19360825 19360826 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12015 19360825 19360901 A PAIR OF SPOTS; THE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER ON AUG. 28-29 AND THIS HAS DISAPPEARED BY AUG. 30. 12016 19360825 19360906 A REGULAR SPOT NEAR WHICH OTHER SPOTS GROW RAPIDLY AND COALESCE TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BY AUG. 29; TWO SMALL SUBSIDIARY STREAMS FORM IN THE WAKE OF THIS LARGE SPOT, BUT THE WHOLE DISTURBANCE DECREASES RAPIDLY AFTER AUG. 31. A RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 12016. 12017 19360826 19360901 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE IN WHICH GROUP 12019 APPEARS ON AUG. 29. THERE IS A COMPANION SPOT ON AND AFTER AUG. 29. 12018 19360829 19360902 A SMALL STREAM. 12019 19360829 19360830 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 12020 19360830 19360831 ONE OR TWO SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 12011. 12021 19360901 19360904 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 12022 19360901 19360908 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP OF FEW SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 5-7. 12023 19360902 19360904 A SMALL SPOT. 12024 19360902 19360914 A STREAM CONSISTING AT FIRST OF A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY COMPANIONS; THE NEARER OF THESE INCREASES IN SIZE AND DRIFTS TOWARDS THE REGULAR SPOT, BEING ABSORBED BY IT, PARTIALLY ON SEPT. 8 AND COMPLETELY ON SEPT. 9. ON SEPT. 9, A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARS, FOLLOWING IN LONGITUDE, AND THIS DEVELOPS INTO AN INDEPENDENT GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE. 12025 19360903 19360906 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 12026 19360903 19360912 A STREAM OF SPOTS WHICH ARE GENERALLY UNSTABLE UNTIL A REGULAR SPOT FORMS AS THE LEADER AFTER SEPT. 7. 12027 19360905 19360906 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 12028 19360905 19360907 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 12029 19360906 19360913 A DISTURBED AREA MARKED BY FACULAE IN WHICH A SMALL SINGLE SPOT IS SEEN ON SEPT. 6 AND 13. 12030 19360910 19360918 A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP AFTER SEPT. 12 INTO A SMALL CLUSTER; SOME FAINT MARKINGS FOLLOW ON SEPT. 17. 12031 19360912 19360914 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE ALONE REMAINS ON SEPT. 14. 12032 19360912 19360922 A STREAM OF VERY UNSTABLE COMPONENTS, NONE PREDOMINATING IN SIZE. 12033 19360913 19360918 A TYPICAL "BI-POLAR" GROUP WITH SUDDEN DEVELOPMENT. 12034 19360914 19360915 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT. 12035 19360914 19360920 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING COMPONENTS BOTH BREAK UP INTO SMALL CLUSTERS. 12036 19360915 19360918 A STREAM OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 12037 19360916 19360926 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT UNTIL SEPT. 19 WHEN A COMPANION APPEARS. THIS PAIR OF SPOTS THEN DEVELOPS INTO A FAIRLY LARGE GROUP IN WHICH THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT AND THE FOLLOWER HAS A DOUBLE UMBRA. 12038 19360918 19360922 A SMALL STREAM WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON SEPT. 20. 12039 19360918 19360929 A CLUSTER OF IRREGULAR SPOTS DRAWN OUT LATER INTO A STREAM. 12040 19360920 19360922 A SMALL GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12041 19360921 19360929 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WHICH COLLAPSES RATHER SUDDENLY. 12042 19360921 19361002 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY TINY COMPANIONS. ON SEPT. 25, A DOUBLE UMBRA HAS DEVELOPED IN THE MAIN SPOT WHICH DIVIDES ON SEPT. 26 INTO TWO PARTS THAT SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. 12043 19360921 19360923 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT. 12044 19360922 19360923 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS. 12045 19360922 19360924 A TINY STREAM. 12046 19360922 19360924 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT, PROBABLY REPRESENTING A RETURN OF GROUP 12027. 12047 19360923 19360924 A TINY EPHEMERAL GROUP. 12048 19360923 19360927 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON SEPT. 23, THE LEADER OF WHICH DEVELOPS PARTIALLY INTO A REGULAR SPOT. 12049 19360923 19360926 A TINY STREAM NP GROUP 12042. 12050 19360924 19360929 A CONSPICUOUS AREA OF FACULAE (PROBABLY ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 12016), IN WHICH A TINY SPOT APPEARS ON SEPT. 24 AND A SMALL CLUSTER ON SEPT. 29. 12051 19360924 19361005 A SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 24-26; AFTERWARDS A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS OF WHICH ONE IS LEFT ON OCT. 4-5. 12052 19360926 19361002 A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT, 26 PRECEDING THE DEVELOPMENT OF A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 12053 19360927 19361006 RETURN OF GROUP 12026. A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING INTO TWO PARTS ON SEPT. 29, THE NORTHERN COMPONENT PERSISTING FOR SEVERAL DAYS. 12054 19360927 19361009 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT RESOLVING INTO A REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED AND FOLLOWED BY COMPANIONS. THE CHIEF SPOT DEVELOPS A DOUBLE UMBRA ON OCT. 4, PARTLY BREAKS UP AND THEN DIMINISHES RAPIDLY. 12055 19360928 19360929 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS NF GROUP 12042. 12056 19360928 19361009 A TINY STREAM WHICH EXPANDS ON OCT. 2 FOR A FEW DAYS. 12057 19360929 19360930 A TINY, FAINT CLUSTER. 12058 19360930 19361003 ONE OR TWO SPOTS. 12059 19360930 19361010 RETURN OF GROUP 12024. A SINGLE SPOT, NOT SEEN ON OCT. 2, WITH AN OCCASIONAL TINY COMPANION. 12060 19360930 19361012 AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE (APPARENTLY MARKING A PREVIOUS SUNSPOT DISTURBANCE) IN WHICH A VERY LARGE STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPS. THE LEADER SPOT IS THE LARGEST SINGLE COMPONENT, ALTHOUGH THERE IS A CONSIDERABLE CLUSTER OF UNSTABLE SPOTS IN THE REAR OF THE STREAM. 12061 19361002 19361012 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS ON OCT. 5; THE LEADER DIVIDES INTO TWO PARTS AND THESE DRIFT APART RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE, WHILST COMPANION SPOTS APPEAR ON OCT. 8. 12062 19361004 19361008 A SMALL SPOT. 12063 19361005 19361017 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THERE ARE BRIGHT "BRIDGES" ACROSS THE UMBRA FROM OCT. 6 TO 11 AND FROM OCT. 15 TO 17. 12064 19361006 19361009 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 12065 19361006 19361017 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY OCT. 10. 12066 19361007 19361013 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEPARATING IN LONGITUDE; THE LEADER REMAINS ALONE AFTER OCT. 10. 12067 19361008 19361012 A SINGLE SPOT SEEN ONLY ON OCT. 8, 11 AND 12. 12068 19361009 19361010 A SINGLE SPOT ON OCT. 9: A PAIR OF SPOTS ON OCT. 10. 12069 19361009 19361017 A GROUP OF CHANGING SPOTS. 12070 19361011 19361019 A SHORT STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH DEVELOPS SUDDENLY BETWEEN OCT. 13 AND 14. 12071 19361011 19361022 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT THAT IS THE SOLE COMPONENT AFTER OCT. 17. 12072 19361012 19361017 A SINGLE SPOT ON OCT. 12, 13 AND 17: A SMALL CLUSTER ON THE OTHER DAYS. 12073 19361013 19361024 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM DEVELOPING IN THE USUAL MANNER. THE LEADER BREAKS UP INTO TWO OR THREE PARTS ON OCT. 21. 12074 19361014 19361020 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH ONLY ONE COMPONENT IS SEEN ON OCT. 17, 19 AND 20. 12075 19361015 19361024 AN UNSTABLE STREAM. 12076 19361016 19361020 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 12077 19361017 19361023 A DOUBLE SPOT IN WHICH THE SEPARATION BETWEEN THE TWO UMBRAE IS COMPLETED ACROSS THE PENUMBRA BY OCT. 20. 12078 19361019 19361028 AN AREA OF FEEBLE BUT PROLONGED DISTURBANCE. 12079 19361020 19361021 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 20: A SINGLE SPOT ON OCT. 21. 12080 19361020 19361101 A SPARSE STREAM OF CONSIDERABLE EXTENT IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER SPOT, CONTOUR IS BROKEN BY A BRIGHT ENCROACHMENT OF THE PHOTOSPHERE, FINALLY BREAKS INTO TWO PARTS ON NOV. 1. 12081 19361022 19361030 A FAIRLY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE CONTAINING SMALL INTERMITTENT SPOTS. 12082 19361026 19361030 A SMALL STREAM SHOWING THE USUAL SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS. 12083 19361027 19361101 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON OCT 29. 12084 19361027 19361106 RETURN OF GROUP 12060. A LARGE SPOT, WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, THAT EVENTUALLY DIVIDES INTO THREE PARTS BETWEEN NOV. 1 AND 2, AND SO DISAPPEARS. 12085 19361027 19361106 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING; THERE IS A SMALL FOLLOWER ON NOV. 5. 12086 19361029 19361108 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM. 12087 19361029 19361109 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS ARE REPLACED BY CLUSTERS OR PARTIALLY-FORMED SPOTS. ON NOV. 6, A FRESH DISTURBANCE TAKES PLACE AT THE HEAD OF THE GROUP, AND THIS RESULTS IN A NEW STREAM FED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 12088 19361030 19361111 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, THE FOLLOWING PART BEING THE LAST TO DISAPPEAR. 12089 19361101 19361104 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12090 19361102 19361111 A STREAM OF BI-POLAR TYPE NF GROUP 12088. 12091 19361102 19361113 RETURN OF GROUP 12063. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SATELLITE CLUSTER ON NOV. 8. 12092 19361102 19361111 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY COMPANION ON NOV. 5. 12093 19361103 19361112 A SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY WITH A COMPANION ON NOV. 6 AND 10. 12094 19361103 19361109 A SMALL GROUP NOT SEEN ON NOV. 6 AND 7. 12095 19361104 19361116 A WIDE PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS. A PART OF THE NORTHERN SECTION OF THE LEADER SPOT BREAKS AWAY ON NOV. 14. 12096 19361105 19361115 A SMALL NONDESCRIPT GROUP. 12097 19361105 19361108 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS IN A CLUSTER. 12098 19361105 19361117 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON NOV. 11 AND 13. 12099 19361108 19361118 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS PREDOMINANT THROUGHOUT, EXCEPT ON THE FIRST TWO DAYS OF DEVELOPMENT. 12100 19361108 19361119 A REGULAR SPOT NEAR WHICH COMPANIONS, FORMING AND DISAPPEARING, NEARLY COALESCE WITH IT. 12101 19361108 19361120 A LARGE SPOT PRECEDED BY A COMPANION WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. A SUDDEN CHANGE IN SHAPE IS NOTICEABLE IN THE LARGE SPOT BETWEEN NOV. 11 AND 13, AND IT DIVIDES INTO TWO, THE PRECEDING COMPONENT BECOMING A REGULAR SPOT. 12102 19361109 19361116 A SMALL GROUP DEVELOPING IN FRONT OF GROUP 12097. FRESH ACTIVITY IS SHOWN ON NOV. 15. 12103 19361110 19361113 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON NOV. 11. 12104 19361111 19361119 A GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE SYNCHRONOUS IN DEVELOPMENT WITH GROUP 12101 SITUATED CLOSELY NORTHWARDS. 12105 19361114 19361115 A SMALL NEBULOUS SPOT. 12106 19361116 19361118 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12107 19361117 19361118 A SPOT ORIGINATING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12108 19361117 19361128 AN EXTENSIVE STREAM IN WHICH A VERY LARGE SPOT HAS DEVELOPED AS LEADER BY NOV. 24. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM DECREASES VERY RAPIDLY AFTER NOV. 25. 12109 19361123 19361205 THIS GROUP, A REVIVAL OF GROUP 12084, COMES ROUND THE EAST LIMB AS A SINGLE REGULAR SPOT, BUT ON NOV. 25 AND THE FOLLOWING DAYS A VERY EXTENSIVE CONGLOMERATION OF SPOTS DEVELOPS WESTWARDS AND NORTHWARDS. IT IS INTERESTING TO NOTE THAT, THROUGHOUT THE TRANSIT, THE REGULAR SPOT REMAINS NARROWLY DIVIDED FROM THE NEW SPOT FORMATION WITHOUT BEING ABSORBED BY IT. 12110 19361125 19361204 AN EXTENSIVE STREAM ON NEARLY THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 12109 AND SYNCHRONOUS WITH ITS DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER IS LARGE WHEN FULLY GROWN BUT IS VERY UNSTABLE. 12111 19361126 19361206 RETURN OF GROUP 12087; A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING THE LARGE GROUP, NO. 12112. 12112 19361126 19361208 A VERY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, SEPARATING INTO FOUR PARTS ON DEC. 5. 12113 19361127 19361203 A SMALL STREAM NORTH OF GROUP 12109. 12114 19361127 19361128 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT. 12115 19361127 19361210 A LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING IN THE USUAL MANNER; CONSIDERABLE CHANGES TAKE PLACE, HOWEVER, FROM DEC. 6 TO 9 AS EVIDENCE OF RENEWED ACTIVITY. 12116 19361128 19361129 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 12117 19361128 19361129 A SMALL STREAM ON NOV. 28; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOV. 29. 12118 19361128 19361201 A SMALL STREAM FOLLOWING GROUP 12109. 12119 19361128 19361207 A STREAM OF GENERALLY UNIMPORTANT SPOTS IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 12112. 12120 19361129 19361204 RETURN OF GROUP 12091: 3RD APPEARANCE. A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH A FAINT COMPANION ON DEC. 2. 12121 19361130 19361202 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM. 12122 19361130 19361209 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT GROUP. 12123 19361201 19361213 A GROUP OF THREE OR FOUR SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB; OF THESE A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION REMAIN ON DEC. 4. 12124 19361201 19361213 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 12102. A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, 3 DEGREES APART IN LATITUDE, USUALLY WITH A FEW FAINT COMPANIONS. 12125 19361201 19361211 A PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWER ON DEC. 5. 12126 19361202 19361203 A GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12127 19361203 19361209 RETURN OF GROUP 12098. A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 12128 19361205 19361208 A SMALL STREAM ON DEC. 5 OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER SPOT IS LEFT ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 12129 19361205 19361208 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12130 19361206 19361207 A SMALL SPOT. 12131 19361206 19361214 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON DEC. 6; ON DEC. 8, A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM APPEARS. 12132 19361208 19361210 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM. 12133 19361209 19361219 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 12134 19361210 19361215 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON DEC. 12, 13 AND 14. 12135 19361211 19361222 A LARGE DOUBLE SPOT CHANGING CONSIDERABLY AFTER DEC. 15. 12136 19361212 19361215 A STREAM OF SIMPLE FORMATION NEAR THE SUN'S WEST LIMB. 12137 19361213 19361214 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 12138 19361213 19361226 RETURN OF GROUP 12108. A REGULAR SPOT; THERE IS A SMALL COMPANION ON DEC. 21, WHILST ON DEC. 26 TWO NEW SPOTS HAVE APPEARED INDICATING A RENEWAL OF ACTIVITY. 12139 19361218 19361221 A STREAM DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12140 19361218 19361219 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 12141 19361218 19361230 AN EXTENSIVE STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM IS A CONSIDERABLE CLUSTER OF RAPIDLY CHANGING SPOTS. 12142 19361219 19361225 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM F GROUP 12138. 12143 19361219 19361230 A SMALL STREAM OR CLUSTER NOT SEEN ON DEC. 25, 28 AND 29. 12144 19361220 19361228 A SMALL STREAM WHOSE EARLY DEVELOPMENT SUGGESTS THAT A LARGER GROUP WOULD RESULT. 12145 19361221 19361226 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12146 19361221 19370101 RETURN OF GROUP 12109. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING. ON DEC. 27, 28, 30 AND 31, SOME SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING ARE INCLUDED IN THE GROUP, THOUGH IT IS UNCERTAIN WHETHER THESE MAY NOT BELONG TO GROUP 12150. 12147 19361221 19370102 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON DEC. 28. 12148 19361222 19361226 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12149 19361222 19361226 A GROUP SHOWING SLIGHT ACTIVITY ONLY. 12150 19361223 19361229 A STREAM, WITH THE LARGEST COMPONENT IN THE REAR, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 12146. 12151 19361223 19361230 RETURN OF GROUP 12112. A SMALL SPOT WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY DEC. 28, BUT A SMALL GROUP APPEARS NEAR ITS PLACE ON DEC. 29-30. 12152 19361224 19361227 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 12153 19361224 19370103 A COMPACT STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12154 19361224 19370102 A FAIRLY LARGE REGULAR SPOT WHICH BREAKS UP ON DEC. 30, THE COMPONENT PARTS SEPARATING CONSIDERABLY IN LONGITUDE BEFORE DYING OUT. 12155 19361225 19361230 A SMALL SPOT NP GROUP 12153, SEEN ONLY ON DEC. 25 AND 30. 12156 19361228 19361230 ONE OR TWO SPOTS SEEN ON DEC. 28 AND 30. 12157 19361228 19370104 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY EXCEPT DEC. 31, JAN. 1 AND 2. 12158 19361228 19370105 A REGULAR SPOT, BREAKING UP AND DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER JAN. 3. 12159 19361228 19370105 A SMALL GROUP SHOWING FEEBLE BUT SUSTAINED ACTIVITY. 12160 19361228 19370109 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY COMPANIONS SOUTHWARDS ON DEC. 29-31 AND JAN. 2-5. 12161 19361229 19370109 A STREAM OF BI-POLAR TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS REPRESENTED AT FIRST BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, WHILST THE LEADER IS A TYPICAL REGULAR SPOT THROUGHOUT. 12162 19361229 19370110 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 12123. A PAIR OF SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB; THE LEADER DIES OUT BY JAN. 5, BUT NEW SPOTS DEVELOP SOUTH OF THE FOLLOWER. 12163 19361230 19370101 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12164 19361230 19370104 A SMALL STREAM OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 12165 19361230 19370108 A DISTURBED AREA MARKED BY FACULAE AND A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 12166 19361230 19370104 A REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT SUDDENLY. 12167 19370101 19370103 A SMALL SPOT. 12168 19370104 19370106 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM. 12169 19370105 19370110 A SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS NF GROUP 12165. 12170 19370106 19370111 A VERY SMALL GROUP, BUT LONG-LIVED FOR ITS SIZE. 12171 19370106 19370113 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 12172 19370106 19370111 A PAIR OF SPOTS BECOMING A SMALL STREAM. 12173 19370107 19370109 A VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 12174 19370108 19370110 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM. 12175 19370109 19370120 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER SPOT ALONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 15. ON JANUARY 19, NEW SPOTS APPEAR. 12176 19370110 19370111 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS F GROUP 12172. 12177 19370110 19370116 A SMALL STREAM; THE LEADER SPOT ALONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 13, BUT THERE IS A NEW SMALL SPOT IN THE SAME AREA OF FACULAE ON JANUARY 15. 12178 19370110 19370122 A LARGE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WHICH IS FAIRLY WELL DEVELOPED ON ITS APPEARANCE AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT; THE FOLLOWER IS SMALLER AND ELONGATED IN A DIRECTION NORTH TO SOUTH. THERE IS A CLUSTER OF COMPANION SPOTS EXTENDING SOUTHWARDS, BUT THIS HAS DISAPPEARED BY JANUARY 20. 12179 19370112 19370115 A STREAM DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12180 19370113 19370117 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER THAT HAS DIED OUT BY JANUARY 16. 12181 19370114 19370115 A SINGLE SPOT ON EACH DAY IN A FAIRLY LARGE AREA OF FACULAE. 12182 19370114 19370122 AN IMPERFECTLY FORMED REGULAR SPOT. THERE IS A SMALL DISTANT FOLLOWER ON JANUARY 15-17, AND ON JANUARY 19 A SHORT-LIVED TRAIN OF TINY SPOTS. THE EXTENSIVE FACULAE ASSOCIATED WITH THE GROUP SUGGEST THAT THE SPOTS WERE VERY LARGE ON THE INVISIBLEHEMISPHERE. 12183 19370115 19370118 A SMALL STREAM. 12184 19370115 19370116 A STREAM OF TINY SPOTS. 12185 19370115 19370125 RETURN OF GROUP 12141. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY FOLLOWER ON JANUARY 23. 12186 19370116 19370125 A STREAM OF WEAK DEVELOPMENT. 12187 19370116 19370120 TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 12188 19370117 19370129 A VERY LARGE GROUP; THE LEADER, WHICH IS BY FAR THE LARGEST COMPONENT, IS ELONGATED IN A DIRECTION NORTH TO SOUTH, AND DEVELOPING SEVERAL UMBRAE ABOUT JANUARY 23, DISINTEGRATES RAPIDLY. IN THE REAR OF THE STREAM IS A REGULAR SPOT WHOSE UMBRA, BECOMING DOUBLE ON JANUARY 20, BREAKS INTO TWO PARTS ON JANUARY 22. THE SUDDEN COLLAPSE OF THE GROUP IS NOTEWORTHY. 12189 19370118 19370122 A SMALL STREAM OF FAINT SPOTS. 12190 19370119 19370123 A SMALL GROUP OF A FEW SPOTS. 12191 19370119 19370130 A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM NF GROUP 12188. 12192 19370121 19370124 SOME UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM. 12193 19370121 19370124 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. 12194 19370121 19370129 AN EXTENDED STREAM OF SPOTS OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT. 12195 19370121 19370131 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF THE SIMPLEST FORMATION, NAMELY, PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE; A FEW TINY SPOTS COME BETWEEN THE PAIR ON JANUARY 23-27. IT IS INTERESTING TO SEE THE RELATIVE MOVEMENT IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN THE LEADER SPOT OF THIS GROUP AND THE SPOTS OF GROUP 12199 WITH WHICH THE FORMER ALMOST MERGES. 12196 19370122 19370125 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS NP GROUP 12188. 12197 19370123 19370126 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, ONE COMPONENT REMAINING AFTER JANUARY 24. 12198 19370123 19370129 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT. 12199 19370124 19370201 A STREAM ORIGINATING CLOSELY NP THE LEADER OF GROUP 12195. 12200 19370125 19370129 A GROUP OF THREE SPOTS, FAIRLY WIDELY SEPARATED. 12201 19370125 19370205 RETURN OF GROUP 12161. A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS WITH COMPANIONS. THE PRECEDING COMPONENT DIES OUT AFTER JANUARY 29. 12202 19370125 19370128 RETURN OF GROUP 12160. A SMALL DECREASING REGULAR SPOT. 12203 19370125 19370205 ONE OR TWO SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 12204 19370125 19370206 A LARGE SPOT WITH TRIPLE UMBRAE. TWO OTHER SPOTS DEVELOP RAPIDLY NP, AND BY JANUARY 30 HAVE PRACTICALLY COMBINED WITH THE ORIGINAL SPOT TO MAKE ONE GREAT COMPOSITE STRUCTURE WITH THREE PRINCIPAL UMBRAE. THIS COMPOSITE SPOT IS EASILY VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 12205 19370126 19370131 A DOUBLE SPOT IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 12204. 12206 19370126 19370206 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. THERE IS A DISTANT CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 3. 12207 19370126 19370207 A FEEBLE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. 12208 19370126 19370206 A COMPOSITE SPOT. 12209 19370127 19370206 A STREAM LED BY A FAIRLY LARGE REGULAR SPOT; THE TRAIN SOON DIES OUT. 12210 19370127 19370209 RETURN OF GROUP 12171. A LARGE SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. 12211 19370128 19370129 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS 12212 19370129 19370203 A PAIR OF SPOTS DEVELOPING IN THE USUAL MANNER TO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 12213 19370129 19370205 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A SPECK. 12214 19370130 19370204 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER GROWS RAPIDLY TO A REGULAR SPOT AND THE FOLLOWER DIES OUT. 12215 19370130 19370206 A REGULAR SPOT DIVIDING INTO TWO ON JANUARY 31. 12216 19370130 19370210 A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL FOLLOWERS. 12217 19370130 19370206 AN UNSTABLE SPOT PRECEDED BY A SMALL COMPANION ON JANUARY 31 AND FEBRUARY 1-3. 12218 19370131 19370205 A SMALL STREAM WITH THE CHIEF COMPONENT FOLLOWING. 12219 19370131 19370210 RETURN OF GROUP 12179. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 6. 12220 19370201 19370203 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP F GROUP 12203. 12221 19370202 19370203 A TINY GROUP. 12222 19370203 19370209 A SPARSE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 12223 19370203 19370210 A PAIR OF SPOTS, THE LEADER DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 12224 19370204 19370215 A VARIABLE STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12225 19370205 19370207 A STREAM DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12226 19370206 19370208 A STREAM DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12227 19360206 19360210 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT IN AN AREA OF FACULAE ON FEBRUARY 6; A PAIR OF SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 10. 12228 19370207 19370218 RETURN OF GROUP 12178. A SLOWLY DECREASING REGULAR SPOT. 12229 19370208 19370209 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS ON THE SECOND DAY. 12230 19370208 19370217 A TYPICAL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 12231 19370208 19370218 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART IS POORLY DEVELOPED; THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT. 12232 19370210 19370213 A SINGLE SPOT ON EACH DAY EXCEPT FEBRUARY 11. 12233 19370210 19370219 A STREAM OF SPOTS, HALTING IN ITS EARLY DEVELOPMENT. 12234 19370211 19370217 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 11; A PAIR OF SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 15; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 16, AND A SMALL STREAM ON FEBRUARY 17. 12235 19370212 19370224 A REGULAR SPOT THAT PARTLY BREAKS UP ON FEBRUARY 16-17. THE SMALLER PARTS RESULTING FROM THE DIVISION HAVE DIED OUT BY FEBRUARY 21. MEANWHILE THE LARGEST PART REGAINS A REGULAR OUTLINE. 12236 19370215 19370217 A SINGLE SPOT. 12237 19370215 19370223 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE IN WHICH OTHER SMALL SPOTS APPEAR AFTER FEBRUARY 19. 12238 19370216 19370225 A LARGE GROUPING OF SPOTS INDETERMINATE IN CHARACTER AND DIMINISHING RAPIDLY. THIS GROUP IMMEDIATELY PRECEDES GROUP 12239 FROM WHICH IT IS RATHER ARBITRARILY SEPARATED AT FIRST. THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE TWO GROUPS BECOMES QUITE CLEAR HOWEVER BY FEBRUARY 20. THE TWO GROUPS ARE TAKEN TOGETHER AS A RETURN OF GROUP 12199. 12239 19370217 19370301 A LARGE COMPLEX SPOT, THE PRECEDING PART OF WHICH BREAKS AWAY TO FORM A STREAM. SEE NOTE TO GROUP 12238. 12240 19370218 19370302 A LARGE SPOT THAT DIVIDES INTO TWO ON FEBRUARY 20-21. THE TWO PARTS SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE, THE FOLLOWING PART BEING THE LARGER AND NEARLY OF REGULAR OUTLINE. 12241 19370219 19370302 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, USUALLY WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 12242 19370219 19370302 A SPOT OF COMPOSITE STRUCTURE F GROUP 12240. 12243 19370220 19370221 A SMALL ISOLATED SPOT. 12244 19370220 19370221 A SMALL SPOT N GROUP 12242; PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 12212. 12245 19370220 19370302 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE, THE LEADER ALONE SURVIVING AFTER FEBRUARY 26. 12246 19370220 19370302 A FEEBLE GROUP THAT HAS NEARLY DIED OUT BY FEBRUARY 26; A PAIR OF NEW SPOTS APPEAR ON FEBRUARY 27. 12247 19370220 19370304 RETURN OF GROUP 12204. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON MARCH 1 AND 2. 12248 19370221 19370223 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 12249 19370222 19370223 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON FEBRUARY 22 OF WHICH ONE COMPONENT ALONE REMAINS ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 12250 19370222 19370228 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON FEBRUARY 24. 12251 19370222 19370305 RETURN OF GROUP 12209. A REGULAR SPOT, STEADY IN AREA UNTIL FEBRUARY 28 WHEN IT DECREASES RAPIDLY. GROUP 12255 DEVELOPS CLOSELY BEHIND IT. 12252 19370223 19370304 A PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH FOLLOWERS ON FEBRUARY 24-26. 12253 19370224 19370227 A PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLUSTER OF TINY COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 27. 12254 19370224 19370307 A BIG REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY NEBULOUS COMPANIONS. SMALL PORTIONS OF THIS SPOT BREAK AWAY FROM IT NF EDGE ON MARCH 1-2 AND MARCH 4-5. THE SPOT IS EASILY VISIBLE TO THE NAKED EYE. 12255 19370226 19370305 A VARIABLE STREAM F GROUP 12251. 12256 19370227 19370228 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12257 19370227 19370302 A TINY SPOT SEEN ONLY ON FEBRUARY 27 AND MARCH 2. 12258 19370227 19370302 ONE OR TWO SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOTS. 12259 19370228 19370302 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12260 19370228 19370302 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY FACULAE. 12261 19370301 19370304 TWO OR THREE SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 12262 19370301 19370311 A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 1; THERE IS THEN A GAP UNTIL MARCH 7 WHEN A SMALL STREAM MAKES ITS APPEARANCE. 12263 19370302 19370304 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12264 19370303 19370314 A LARGE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE, SHOWING RAPID AND CONSIDERABLE CHANGES FROM MARCH 5 TO 9; AFTERWARDS THE FOLLOWING SPOTS DIE OUT, AND THE LEADER REMAINS AS A REGULAR SPOT. 12265 19370304 19370314 A STREAM OF SIMPLE FORMATION IN WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS AFTER MARCH 8. 12266 19370305 19370313 A PAIR OF SPOTS (THE LEADER REGULAR IN OUTLINE) REPRESENTING THE SIMPLEST FORM OF A BI-POLAR GROUP. 12267 19370307 19370308 A SMALL SPOT. 12268 19370307 19370311 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 12269 19370307 19370311 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 8. 12270 19370307 19370311 A SMALL GROUP OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 12271 19370307 19370319 A PAIR OF SPOTS COALESCING ON MARCH 12 WHEN A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS FIRST MAKES ITS APPEARANCE. 12272 19370308 19370314 A SPARSE STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 12273 19370308 19370312 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12274 19370314 19370315 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 12275 19370316 19370324 A PAIR OF SPOTS WITH AVERAGE SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE FOR A BI-POLAR GROUP. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 20. 12276 19370317 19370320 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 12259. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY FAIRLY EXTENSIVE FACULAE IN WHICH ANOTHER SMALL SPOT APPEARS ON MARCH 20. 12277 19370318 19370324 A SMALL BI-POLAR GROUP OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 12278 19370318 19370323 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 18-19 IN EXTENSIVE FACULAE: A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 22-23. 12279 19370319 19370320 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MARCH 19: A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 20. 12280 19370320 19370328 A VARIABLE CLUSTER OF IRREGULAR SPOTS. 12281 19370320 19370326 RETURN OF GROUP 12247. A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON MARCH 26. 12282 19370321 19370330 A STREAM OF THE SIMPLEST FORMATION-LEADER AND FOLLOWER. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER MARCH 24 AND UNTIL MARCH 29 WHEN A NEW COMPANION APPEARS. 12283 19370322 19370326 A GROUP SIMILAR TO GROUP 12282, THE LEADER BEING LEFT ON MARCH 25. 12284 19370322 19370323 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 22: A PAIR ON MARCH 23. 12285 19370322 19370403 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS ON MARCH 26-29 AND A SINGLE COMPANION ON APRIL 2, THAT ALONE SURVIVES ON APRIL 3. 12286 19370323 19370401 ON MARCH 23-25 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS THAT DEVELOP INTO A CONSIDERABLE STREAM. 12287 19370323 19370331 FEEBLE BUT PERSISTENT ACTIVITY SHOWN BY SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 12288 19370323 19370404 RETURN OF GROUP 12254. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT THE SOUTHERN PART OF WHICH IS CROSSED BY A "BRIDGE" AND HAS COMPLETELY BROKEN AWAY BY APRIL 1. MEANWHILE THE MAIN PORTION REGAINS A REGULAR OUTLINE. 12289 19370323 19370404 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE CONSISTING OF A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER AND A COMPOSITE SPOT AS FOLLOWER. THE LATTER HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY MARCH 27 AND BECOMES A CLUSTER. 12290 19370326 19370327 A TINY SPOT N GROUP 12285. 12291 19370327 19370329 A TINY SPOT ON MARCH 27 BECOMING A SMALL STREAM. 12292 19370327 19370328 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 27: A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 28. 12293 19370327 19370405 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS, DISAPPEARING RATHER SUDDENLY AS A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL NUCLEI. 12294 19370329 19370404 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM. 12295 19370330 19370406 A FEW SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FOLLOWER SPOT PARTLY COALESCES WITH THE LEADER SPOT OF GROUP 12300 WHICH ORIGINATES ON APRIL 1. 12296 19370330 19370331 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 30: A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 31. 12297 19370330 19370331 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 30, JOINED BY A COMPANION ON MARCH 31. 12298 19370330 19370409 A SMALL STREAM OF GENERALLY UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 12299 19370331 19370408 A REGULAR SPOT DECREASING RAPIDLY AFTER APRIL 6. 12300 19370401 19370406 A BI-POLAR GROUP WHOSE TWO COMPONENTS ARE FAIRLY LARGE AND RATHER COMPLEX IN STRUCTION. THIS GROUP CLOSELY FOLLOWS GROUP 12295. 12301 19370401 19370409 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS FROM APRIL 4-6. 12302 19370403 19370405 A VERY SMALL STREAM. 12303 19370403 19370408 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12304 19370403 19370416 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; THERE IS CONSIDERABLE SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS. 12305 19370405 19370413 A STREAM DEVELOPING SUDDENLY BUT SOON DYING OUT. 12306 19370407 19370408 A GROUP APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12307 19370407 19370413 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE FOLLOWERS. 12308 19370407 19370412 A FEW SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM: ONLY ONE COMPONENT REMAINS AFTER APRIL 9. 12309 19370409 19370413 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 12310 19370410 19370413 A SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12311 19370411 19370421 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BARELY VISIBLE ON APRIL 14. ON APRIL 15 THE GROUP RE-FORMS AS A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 12312 19370415 19370420 A SHORT-LIVED BI-POLAR GROUP. 12313 19370415 19370419 A PAIR OF DOUBLE SPOTS SEPARATING RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN APRIL 16 AND 17, AFTER WHICH THE FOLLOWER DISAPPEARS. 12314 19370415 19370426 A BI-POLAR GROUP; THE FOLLOWER SPOT DIES OUT AFTER APRIL 19. 12315 19370418 19370428 A LARGE STREAM WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER AND A COMPOSITE SPOT AS THE FOLLOWER. 12316 19370418 19370424 A REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT. 12317 19370419 19370420 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 12318 19370419 19370420 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 12319 19370419 19370429 A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 19 (IN A LARGE AREA OF SCATTERED FACULAE) DEVELOPING INTO A LARGE STREAM. WITH THE PARTIAL EXCEPTION OF THE LEADER, WHICH BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. THE COMPONENTS ARE OF COMPOSITE AND IN CONSTANT CHANGE. 12320 19370419 19370501 SOME VERY ACTIVE SPOTS IN A CURVED STREAM WHICH GROW AND CONSOLIDATE, SO THAT FOR A FEW DAYS THE GROUP IS PRACTICALLY ONE EXTENSIVE SPOT WITH MULTIPLE UMBRAE. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THIS STRUCTURE THEN EXPANDS AND BECOMES SEPARATED BY APRIL 28 AS A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. 12321 19370419 19370430 RETURN OF GROUP 12288: A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12322 19370420 19370421 A SMALL SPOT. 12323 19370422 19370427 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP CONSISTING OF TWO MAJOR COMPONENTS. 12324 19370423 19370428 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL SPOT IN EXTENDED FACULAE ON APRIL 23: A TINY GROUP ON APRIL 27. 12325 19370424 19370430 A COMPACT STREAM IN WHICH A LARGE LEADER SPOT HAS DEVELOPED BY APRIL 27. 12326 19370425 19370429 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH ONE COMPONENT REMAINS ON APRIL 29. 12327 19370426 19370505 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE SHOWING RAPID GROWTH. THE LEADER DIVIDES INTO TWO ON MAY 1-2. CONTARY TO THE USUAL SEQUENCE IN DEVELOPMENT, A CLUSTER OF SPOTS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM OUTLINES THE FOLLOWER. 12328 19370428 19370503 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 28, APRIL 30 AND MAY 1: AFTERWARDS A SINGLE SPOT. 12329 19370428 19370503 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 28: ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS ON MAY 2 AND 3. 12330 19370428 19370511 RETURN OF GROUP 12307. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SHORT-LIVED CLUSTER SP ON MAY 4. 12331 19370430 19370510 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH ARE SEEN ONE OR TWO SPOTS OF UNUSUAL PERSISTANCE FOR THEIR SMALL SIZE. 12332 19370501 19370503 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP PRECEDING THE LARGE STREAM, GROUP 12327. 12333 19370501 19370503 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON MAY 1: A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 3. 12334 19370503 19370506 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12335 19370504 19370516 A REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS UNTIL MAY 10. 12336 19370507 19370508 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 7: A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 8. 12337 19370507 19370514 A SPARSE STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 12322 OR PERHAPS A REVIVAL ONLY. 12338 19370509 19370517 A SMALLISH GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE SHOWING CONSIDERABLE SEPARATION BETWEEN THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS. 12339 19370509 19370510 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 12340 19370509 19370514 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT. 12341 19370509 19370521 A LARGE STREAM IN AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. THE LEADER, HAVING A DOUBLE UMBRA UNDERGOES A PARTIAL DISRUPTION BUT LATER REGAINS A REGULAR OUTLINE. IT HAS FOR A COMPANION A STABLE REGULAR SPOT NF. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM IS NEVER CONSPICUOUS AND HAS DIED OUT BY MAY 19. 12342 19370510 19370514 A SMALL STREAM WITH THE LARGEST COMPONENT AT THE REAR. 12343 19370510 19370521 A REGULAR SPOT (WITH A TINY COMPANION ON MAY 10, 11 AND 15) DIMINISHING TO A PAIR OF DOTS. 12344 19370514 19370516 A TINY GROUP NF GROUP 12341. 12345 19370514 19370520 A SMALL GROUP OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 12346 19370514 19370520 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 14-16: A TINY CLUSTER ON MAY 17 AND 20. PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 12315. 12347 19370514 19370525 A SMALLISH STREAM PRECEDING GROUP 12349. 12348 19370514 19370526 A FEW SPOTS DEVELOPING RAPIDLY AFTER MAY 20 INTO A LARGE STREAM WHOSE SUBSEQUENT HISTORY IS LOST EARLY BY THE PASSAGE OF THE GROUP AROUND THE WEST LIMB. PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 12319. 12349 19370514 19370527 AN EXTENSIVE STREAM CONTAINING MANY COMPONENTS WHICH ARE USUALLY VERY VARIABLE FROM DAY TO DAY. THERE IS, HOWEVER, A RELATIVELY STABLE REGULAR SPOT AT THE END OF THE STREAM. THE LEADER BEGINS AS A SMALLISH REGULAR SPOT BUT COALESCES ON MAY 21-22 WITH OTHER SPOT NUCLEI TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. 12350 19370515 19370527 RETURN OF GROUP 12320. TWO SPOTS WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT; THE FOLLOWER, SURROUNDED BY A FEW COMPANIONS, IS LARGER BUT DOES NOT LAST QUITE SO LONG. 12351 19370515 19370527 A REGULAR SPOT SPLITTING UP AFTER MAY 22. 12352 19370516 19370521 A GROWING COMPACT STREAM WITH THE LARGEST COMPONENT IN THE REAR. 12353 19370516 19370518 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS. 12354 19370517 19370518 A TINY SPOT; PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 12321. 12355 19370518 19370529 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SOMEWHAT SMALLER ONE WHICH BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER AFTER MAY 20 AND HAS DIED OUT BY MAY 25. 12356 19370519 19370520 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 12357 19370520 19370521 A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 20: A PAIR ON MAY 21. 12358 19370520 19370524 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MAY 22 AND 23. 12359 19370520 19370601 RETURN OF GROUP 12327. A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS NORTHWARDS ON MAY 27-29. 12360 19370521 19370526 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP SF GROUP 12349. 12361 19370521 19370601 A DISTURBED AREA CONTINUING TO BE SHOWN BY INDIVIDUALLY UNSTABLE AND SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. FRESH ACTIVITY OCCURS TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 12362 19370521 19370602 A LARGE SPOT USUALLY OF REGULAR OUTLINE BUT ELONGATED IN AN EAST TO WEST DIRECTION. THE SPOT IS ACCOMPANIED BY COMPANIONS, THE MOST STABLE BEING A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PRECEDING. 12363 19370522 19370529 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MAY 24 AND 26, NP GROUP 12355. 12364 19370523 19370529 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON MAY 23, 26 AND 29. 12365 19370524 19370525 A DIMINUTIVE GROUP NP GROUP 12361. 12366 19370524 19370531 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT STREAM. 12367 19370526 19370528 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 12359. 12367*19370529 19370605 A RAPIDLY CHANGING GROUP NF GROUP 12369. 12368 19370529 19370611 A LARGE COMPOSITE CLUSTER OR STREAM WITH THREE CHIEF NUCLEI. 12369 19370601 19370605 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A FAIRLY LARGE REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 3. 12370 19370602 19370607 A SMALLISH STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12371 19370602 19370608 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS PRECEDING GROUP 12372. 12372 19370602 19370615 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A NUMBER OF COMPANIONS THAT DIE OUT AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 12373 19370604 19370606 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING GROUP 12368. 12374 19370604 19370607 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 4; A SINGLE FAINT SPOT ON JUNE 7, SF GROUP 12368. 12375 19370604 19370615 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AS IT NEARS THE WEST LIMB. 12376 19370605 19370606 A TINY GROUP. 12377 19370605 19370609 A STREAM OF SMALL ACTIVE SPOTS. 12378 19370607 19370608 A SMALL GROUP. 12379 19370607 19370608 A TINY SPOT. 12380 19370609 19370621 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS; A SMALL NUCLEUS BECOMES DETATCHED FROM THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE PARENT SPOT ON JUNE 17. 12381 19370610 19370614 A SMALL TYPICAL BI-POLAR GROUP. 12382 19370610 19370611 A SINGLE SPOT P GROUP 12383. 12383 19370610 19370621 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT AND THE FOLLOWER A CLUSTER OF THREE SPOTS WHICH DISINTEGRATE AND DIE OUT BY JUNE 19. 12384 19370610 19370622 RETURN OF GROUP 12348. A TRIPLE FORMATION OF SPOTS FOLLOWED BY A SPARSE TRAIN THAT HAS DIED OUT BY JUNE 18. ONLY TWO OF THE THREE SPOTS AT THE HEAD OF THE GROUP REMAIN BY JUNE 18. THESE CONTINUE STABLE IN POSITION WITH RESPECT TO ONE ANOTHER. 12385 19370611 19370623 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, F GROUP 12383, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY INTO A VERY LARGE STREAM WHOSE AXIS IS INCLINED ABOUT 30 TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR WHEN THE GROUP IS ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA AT FIRST. THE FOLLOWER ALSO BECOMES REGULAR IN OUTLINE. PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 12349 BUT POSSIBLY A REVIVAL ONLY. 12386 19370612 19370617 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF RAPID INITIAL DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS ON JUNE 17. 12387 19370612 19370618 RETURN OF GROUP 12350; 3RD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY A VERY EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH GROUP 12391 ALSO APPEARS. 12388 19370612 19370623 A FEW SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING RATHER SLOWLY INTO A STREAM IN WHICH THERE IS MARKED SEPARATION BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER. THE LEADER APPROACHES VERY CLOSELY TO A COMPONENT OF GROUP 12385, BUT STOPS SHORT OF ABSORBING IT. 12389 19370612 19370623 A DISTURBED AREA IN WHICH A FEW SMALL SPOTS MAKE LITTLE HEADWAY IN DEVELOPMENT UNTIL JUNE 20, WHEN A MODERATESIZED STREAM RESULTS. 12390 19370613 19370617 A SHORT-LIVED CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 12391 19370613 19370615 A DOUBTFUL SPOT ON JUNE 13: SMALL PAIR ON JUNE 14; ONE SPOT REMAINS ON JUNE 15. 12392 19370614 19370615 A TINY CLUSTER. 12393 19370615 19370626 A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT FROM WHICH A CONSIDERABLE PART BREAKS AWAY ON JUNE 16-17 AND DRIFTS FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. THIS, IN TURN, BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER BY JUNE 21, THE LEADING MEMBER OF WHICH SURVIVES AFTER JUNE 24 AS A COMPOSITE SPOT. MEANWHILE THE PARENT SPOT REGAINS A REGULAR OUTLINE BUT DECREASES, SLOWLY AT FIRST AND THEN RAPIDLY. 12394 19370616 19370628 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE CONSISTING OF LEADER AND FOLLOWER WHICH ARE BOTH REGULAR SPOTS. THERE IS A COMPANION SPOT TO THE LEADER ON JUNE 18, 27 AND 28. 12395 19370617 19370624 A SMALL STREAM ORIGINATING ON JUNE 17 WITH ITS AXIS NEARLY AT RIGHT ANGLES TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR; BY JUNE 20 THE AXIS IS APPROXIMATELY PARALLEL TO THE EQUATOR. 12396 19370617 19370629 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 12359. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING. 12397 19370618 19370621 A SPARSE STREAM OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 12398 19370618 19370620 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY. 12399 19370619 19370620 A SMALL SPOT IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 12393. 12400 19370621 19370623 AN EPHEMERAL, DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 12401 19370621 19370702 A STREAM OF SMALL UNDEVELOPED SPOTS CLOSELY P GROUP 12402. 12402 19370621 19370703 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE LEADER A REGULAR SPOT IS THE PREDOMINANT SPOT. 12403 19370622 19370628 A SMALL STREAM OF SIMPLE FORMATION-LEADER AND FOLLOWER. 12404 19370622 19370624 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 12405 19370622 19370704 A SPOT WHOSE REGULAR OUTLINE IS MODIFIED BY A "BRIDGE" CROSSING THE UPPER HALF OF THE SPOT AND SEPARATING OFF A PORTION OF THE UMBRA. THERE IS A CLOCKWISE ROTATION OF THE SPOT THAT IS MOST MARKED BETWEEN JUNE 26 AND 30. A POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 12370. 12406 19370624 19370627 A SINGLE, FAINT SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JUNE 24 AND 27. 12407 19370624 19370625 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JUNE 24: A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 25. 12408 19370624 19370702 FROM JUNE 24 TO 28, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY A DISTANT COMPANION: ON JUNE 29-30, TWO UNSTABLE CLUSTERS: ON JULY 1-2, A SMALL FAINT STREAM. 12409 19370626 19370628 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JUNE 26-27 OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT REMAINS ON JUNE 28. 12410 19370628 19370630 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 12405. 12411 19370629 19370708 SMALL SPOTS WHICH DEVELOP INTO A COMPACT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. CONTRARY TO THE USUAL LIFE HISTORY, HOWEVER, THE LEADER BREAKS UP FIRST. 12412 19370629 19370630 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 29 OF WHICH ONE IS LEFT ON JUNE 30. 12413 19370630 19370703 A GENERAL AREA OF SLIGHT DISTURBANCE F GROUP 12411. 12414 19370630 19370705 RETURN OF GROUP 12372. A SMALL SPOT WITH COMPANIONS FOR THE FIRST FEW DAYS. 12415 19370702 19370703 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 2: A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 3. 12416 19370702 19370706 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 2, A FEW FAINT SPOTS ON JULY 6. 12417 19370702 19370712 RETURN OF GROUP 12386. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SHOWING MARKED PERSISTENCE. 12418 19370703 19370712 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF RATHER VARIABLE COMPONENTS EXCEPT THE LEADER. 12419 19370704 19370711 A SMALL STREAM REDUCED TO ONE COMPONENT SPOT ON JULY 6 BUT SHOWING A FRESH SPURT OF ACTIVITY ON JULY 7 AND 8. 12420 19370705 19370716 A TYPICAL STREAM, THE LEADER SURVIVING AS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. 12421 19370706 19370709 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 12418. 12422 19370706 19370710 INTERMITTENT: A FEW SMALL, FAINT SPOTS. 12423 19370706 19370715 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 6 DEVELOPING RAPIDLY INTO A LARGE COMPACT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, THAT REMAINS UNUSUALLY CONSTANT IN AREA. 12424 19370706 19370718 RETURN OF GROUP 12380. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES ALMOST ABSORBED BY A NEWLY DEVELOPED GROUP 12431. 12425 19370706 19370715 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT THAT DIES OUT RATHER SUDDENLY. 12426 19370707 19370718 RETURN OF GROUP 12385. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 12427 19370707 19370719 A FAIRLY LARGE REGULAR SPOT SHOWING A DRIFT EQUATORWARDS. 12428 19370708 19370716 A SMALL STREAM S GROUP 12425 AND P GROUP 12426. 12429 19370708 19370710 A SMALLISH SPOT NP GROUP 12430. 12430 19370708 19370720 A STREAM WITH THE FOLLOWER AS THE LARGEST AND LONGEST-LIVED COMPONENT. THE LEADER HAS DISAPPEARED RATHER SUDDENLY BY JULY 16, BUT A NEW CLUSTER OF SPOTS (PERHAPS A SEPARATE BUT CLOSELY ALLIED GROUP) DEVELOPS IMMEDIATELY SP THE FOLLOWER. 12431 19370709 19370718 A STREAM OF ACTIVE SPOTS, DEVELOPING CLOSELY SF GROUP 12424. IT IS INTERESTING TO NOTE THE DRIFT OF THE LEADER SPOT PAST THE REGULAR SPOT OF GROUP 12424. SEE NOTE TO GROUP 12424. 12432 19370709 19370720 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A SHORT TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 12433 19370709 19370719 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS LASTING FOR A FEW DAYS. 12434 19370709 19370716 A STREAM OF SLIGHT DEVELOPMENT NF GROUP 12433. 12435 19370710 19370713 A TINY STREAM OF BRIEF DURATION. 12436 19370710 19370715 A SPOT WITH A COMPANION AFTER JULY 11. 12437 19370711 19370714 A SMALL STREAM SHOWING INCREASE IN SIZE WHEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12438 19370711 19370713 AN EPHEMERAL GROUP OF TINY SPOTS. 12439 19370712 19370716 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12440 19370712 19370713 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JULY 12: A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 13. 12441 19370712 19370724 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER GROWS AND CHANGES FROM ITS REGULAR OUTLINE TO A VERY COMPLEX FORMATION; AFTER JULY 23, WHEN IT HAS CONSIDERABLY DECREASED, IT REVERTS HOWEVER TO A REGULAR SHAPE. THE TRAIN, NEVER VERY CONSPICUOUS, HAS PRACTICALLY DIED OUT BY JULY 20. EXTENSIVE FACULAE ACCOMPANY THE GROUP. 12442 19370712 19370723 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH THOUGH APPARANTLY STABLE, DISINTEGRATES ON JULY 19-20 AND WITH NEW SMALL SPOTS BECOMES A TEMPORARY CLUSTER. 12443 19370713 19370714 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 12444 19370713 19370724 A PAIR OF SPOTS; THE LEADER RAPIDLY DECREASES AND WITH SMALL COMPANIONS MAKES UP A STREAM WHICH IN TURN, DISPERSES. 12445 19370713 19370722 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLUSTER OF COMPANIONS SP UNTIL JULY 18 AND OTHER SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 19-20. 12446 19370713 19370724 A REGULAR SPOT DECREASING RATHER SUDDENLY AFTER JULY 21. THERE IS A SMALL COMPANION SP ON JULY 23. 12447 19370714 19370726 RETURN OF GROUP 12396: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT OF REMARKABLE STABILITY. 12448 19370717 19370725 A REGULAR SPOT DEVELOPING MULTIPLE UMBRAE AND DIMINISHING RATHER RAPIDLY AFTER JULY 20. 12449 19370717 19370729 A BI-POLAR GROUP IN WHICH THERE IS LESS THAN THE USUAL MAXIMUM SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER. THE LATTER INCREASES BETWEEN JULY 26 AND 27 BUT DISINTEGRATES SOON AFTERWARDS. 12450 19370719 19370727 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT SF GROUP 12449. 12451 19370719 19370724 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEPARATING IN LATITUDE. THE SOUTHERN COMPONENT SURVIVES AFTER JULY 21. 12452 19370720 19370723 A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 20 AND 23: A SMALL CLUSTER ON JULY 21 AND 22. 12453 19370720 19370730 AN AREA OF FACULAE IN WHICH SPOTS OF UNSTABLE CHARACTER ARE THE FIRST TO APPEAR. ON JULY 25, A BI-POLAR GROUP WITH WELL-DEFINED LEADER AND FOLLOWER BEGINS TO DEVELOP. 12454 19370720 19370721 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED SPOT. 12455 19370722 19370805 AN IMMENSE GROUP WHOSE MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT TAKES PLACE ON THE VISIBLE HEMISPHERE. THE GROUP COMES ROUND THE EASTERN LIMB AS A COMPACT STREAM OF RAPIDLY GROWING SPOTS. BY JULY 26 THERE IS A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT AS THE LEADER AND AN EVEN BIGGER COMPLEX SPOT AS THE FOLLOWER ALMOST LINKED TOGETHER BY NEBULOUS SPOTS. THREE DAYS LATER, THE LEADER HAS GROWN STILL LARGER BY ACCRETION, BUT THE LINK OF SPOTS BETWEEN IT AND THE FOLLOWER HAS DISAPPEARED. BY AUGUST 2, THE LEADER HAS REGAINED ITS REGULAR OUTLINE (TEMPORARILY LOST DURING GROWTH), BUT THE FOLLOWER HAS BROKEN UP AND IS REPRESENTED ON AUGUST 4 BY TWO PARTIALLY-FORMED SPOTS NEARLY 5 DEGREES APART IN LATITUDE. BOTH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS ARE VISIBLE SEPARATELY TO THE NAKED EYE. THIS GROUP IS ONE OF THE TWO SECOND LARGEST SINCE 1874 WHEN THE GREENWICH SERIES BEGAN, THE LARGEST GROUP BEING GROUP 9861 IN THE YEAR 1926. SEE ALSO GROUP 12553. 12456 19370725 19370731 A SMALL PAIR OF SPOTS. 12457 19370726 19370805 A WELL-FORMED REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT RATHER QUICKLY. THERE IS A SMALL FOLLOWER ON JULY 27, 29 AND 30. 12458 19370727 19370808 A SIMPLE STREAM OR BI-POLAR GROUP CONSISTING OF LEADER AND FOLLOWER; THE LATTER HAS DIED OUT BY AUGUST 6. 12459 19370728 19370807 A SMALL BUT LONG-LIVED SPOT. 12460 19370729 19370806 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM. 12461 19370730 19370807 A STREAM OR ELONGATED CLUSTER OF INDEFINITE SPOTS. 12462 19370730 19370811 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 12423. A LARGE SPOT PRECEDED BY A SATELLITE WHICH HAS BROKEN INTO THREE PARTS BY AUGUST 3. SHORTLY AFTERWARDS THE PARENT SPOT BEGINS TO DECREASE. 12463 19370731 19370802 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JULY 31: A SINGLE SPOT ON AUGUST 1 AND 2. 12464 19370731 19370812 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SHORT TRAIN UNTIL AUGUST 6. 12465 19370801 19370805 A SMALL STREAM OF BRIEF DURATION. 12466 19370801 19370807 RETURN OF GROUP 12439. A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING AS A CLOSE PAIR OF NUCLEI. A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS SOUTH-PRECEDES ON AUGUST 4. 12467 19370801 19370811 RETURN OF GROUP 12420. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A SPECK. 12468 19370803 19370804 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEPARATING IN LONGITUDE. 12469 19370803 19370806 AN EXTENDED CLUSTER OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 12470 19370803 19370804 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS: A RETURN OF GROUP 12431. 12471 19370804 19370816 A CIRCULAR SPOT, APPARONTLY QUITE STABLE UNTIL AUGUST 13-14 WHEN A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" CROSSES THE SPOT FROM NORTH TO SOUTH DIVIDING THE UMBRA INTO TWO. 12472 19370805 19370810 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE-LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS IN BETWEEN. 12473 19370805 19370808 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS S GROUP 12462. 12474 19370805 19370812 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON AUGUST 5-7: A SMALL STROAM FOR THE NEXT TWO DAYS: AFTERWARDS, ONE OR TWO SPOTS. 12475 19370805 19370813 A SMALL STREAM CAPPING GROUP 12471. 12476 19370806 19370808 A TINY SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON AUGUST 7. 12477 19370807 19370813 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 11 AND 12. 12478 19370808 19370811 SOME TINY SPOTS IN A STREAM SF GROUP 12471. 12479 19370808 19370810 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 12480 19370808 19370810 A TINY SPOT APPEARING AS A CLOSE DOUBLE ON AUGUST 9. 12481 19370808 19370820 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH ITS UMBRA CLEFT BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" ON AUGUST 11-13. 12482 19370808 19370810 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 12483 19370809 19370810 A TINY SPOT SF GROUP 12474. 12484 19370809 19370812 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12485 19370809 19370814 A SMALL STREAM REDUCED TO ONE SPOT BY AUGUST 11. 12486 19370809 19370820 A VARIABLE STREAM OF HIGHLY ACTIVE SPOTS. ON AUGUST 15 THE COMPONENTS ARE SO CROWDED TOGETHER AS TO MAKE ALMOST ONE LONG SPOT. A FEW DAYS LATER ONLY THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS ARE LEFT WITH A WIDE GAP BETWEEN THEM. COMPLETE CONTINUITY WITH GROUP 12441 IN THE PREVIOUS ROTATION IS UNCERTAIN BUT PROBABLE. 12487 19370809 19370817 AN IRREGULAR SPOT, WITH COMPANIONS, WHICH DIVIDES INTO TWO ON AUGUST 12-13; THE TWO PARTS SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE AS THEY DIE OUT. 12488 19370810 19370819 SOME VARIABLE SPOTS, ONE OF THEM BECOMING FAIRLY LARGE ON AUGUST 15-16. 12489 19370811 19370816 INTERMITTENT; ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 12490 19370811 19370821 A SPOT WHICH APPEARS TO SUB-DIVIDE ON AUGUST 12 AND AGAIN ON AUGUST 19, OR IT MAY BE THAT NEW CLOSE SATELLITES ARE FORMED. 12491 19370812 19370813 AN EPHEMERAL SPOT. 12492 19370812 19370813 A SMALL SPOT BETWEEN GROUPS 12471 AND 12475. 12493 19370812 19370816 A PAIR OF SPOTS BECOMING A SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12494 19370814 19370817 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS. 12495 19370816 19370817 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON AUGUST 16: A SINGLE SPOT ON AUGUST 17. 12496 19370818 19370821 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 12497 19370818 19370825 A SPOT BREAKING UP INTO A SMALL CLUSTER ON AUGUST 20. 12498 19370818 19370901 RETURN OF GROUP 12455. A VERY LARGE SPOT, WITH TRIPLE UMBRA, FOLLOWED BY EXTENSIVE FACULAE. FROM AUGUST 24 TO 29, THE SPOT IS NEARLY CLEFT IN TWO, BUT AFTERWARDS CONSOLIDATES. 12499 19370819 19370829 A STREAM IN HIGH LATITUDE WITH THE MOST STABLE SPOT AS THE FOLLOWER. 12500 19370819 19370829 A SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 19 WHICH RAPIDLY INCREASES TO A STREAM BY AUGUST 20. THE LEADER, A SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA, BECOMES COMPOSITE FOR A FEW DAYS AND THEN CHANGES TO A REGULAR SPOT BY AUGUST 26. 12501 19370820 19370829 FEEBLE BUT SUSTAINED ACTIVITY REPRESENTED BY A FEW SMALL, VARIABLE SPOTS. 12502 19370820 19370830 AT FIRST, ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH BECOME A DEFINITE PAIR BY AUGUST 23 AND DEVELOP INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM IS SHORT-LIVED. 12503 19370821 19370830 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED AT SOME DISTANCE BY A CLUSTER WHICH HAS DIED OUT BY AUGUST 28. 12504 19370822 19370824 A GROUP APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12505 19370822 19370830 A SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 22-23; A VARIABLE SPOT OR CLUSTER ON AUGUST 27-30. 12506 19370822 19370823 A SINGLE EPHEMERAL SPOT. 12507 19370823 19370901 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 12508 19370824 19370829 A SMALL STREAM REPRESENTED BY TWO DEFINITE SPOTS-LEADER AND FOLLOWER- ON AUGUST 27 AND 28. 12509 19370824 19370826 A VERY SMALL, SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12510 19370826 19370904 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS UNTIL AUGUST 30; THEN A SMALL CLUSTER UNTIL SEPTEMBER 2 WHEN MORE VIGOROUS SPOTS DEVELOP INTO A STREAM. 12511 19370827 19370903 SMALLISH SPOTS, IN STREAM FORMATION, THAT DIMINISH TO TINY MARKINGS WITHIN A FEW DAYS. 12512 19370827 19370907 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF PARTIALLY-FORMED SPOTS. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON SEPTEMBER 7. APPARENTLY A RETURN OF GROUP 12464 BUT COMPLETE CONTINUITY OF ACTIVITY UNCERTAIN. 12513 19370830 19370831 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT-SPOTS. 12514 19370831 19370903 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12515 19370831 19370911 A FAIRLY LARGE SPOT WITH MULTIPLE UMBRAE BREAKING UP AFTER SEPTEMBER 2 AND SLOWLY FADING OUT. ON SEPTEMBER 11, A SMALL PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARS NEARBY 12516 19370831 19370906 RETURN OF GROUP 12471. A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 12517 19370901 19370903 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 12510. 12518 19370902 19370905 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 2 OF WHICH ONE COMPONENT REMAINS AFTERWARDS. 12519 19370902 19370908 A FEW SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 12515. 12520 19370903 19370904 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 3 OF WHICH ONE IS LEFT ON SEPTEMBER 4. 12521 19370903 19370915 A LARGE CIRCULAR SPOT FOLLOWED AT SOME DISTANCE BY A NEBULOUS COMPANION. OTHER SPOTS INCREASE THE TRAIN DURING THE NEXT FEW DAYS. AFTER SEPTEMBER 10, AN OFFSHOOT DEVELOPS ON THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE LEADER SPOT BUT BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER ON SEPTEMBER 13 AND DISAPPEARS BY SEPTEMBER 15. 12522 19370904 19370906 A SMALL, VERY DARK SPOT. 12523 19370906 19370911 A SMALL STREAM SHOWING INCREASED DEVELOPMENT NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12524 19370906 19370918 A RAPIDLY DEVELOPING GROUP RESOLVING INTO A PAIR OF FAIRLY LARGE SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 9. THESE SOON BREAK UP, BUT THE CHIEF NUCLEUS OF EACH SPOT PERSISTS TO THE WEST LIMB. 12525 19370907 19370914 A STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS APPEARING IN FRONT OF GROUP 12521. 12526 19370907 19370917 A STREAM OF LITTLE IMPORTANCE UNTIL AFTER SEPTEMBER 12 WHEN CONSIDERABLE CHANGES TAKE PLACE, AND TWO VERY LARGE SPOTS BECOME THE NEW LEADER AND FOLLOWER. 12527 19370908 19370917 A PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION. 12528 19370910 19370915 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12529 19370912 19370924 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS OF WHICH THE SMALLER IS IN FRONT. 12530 19370912 19370920 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 12508. A SINGLE SPOT BREAKING UP RAPIDLY. ON SEPTEMBER 15, TWO NEW SPOTS APPEAR CLOSE BEHIND. 12531 19370914 19370924 A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING TO A DOT; THERE IS A SMALL FOLLOWER ON SEPTEMBER 15. 12532 19370916 19370917 A SMALL SPOT. 12533 19370916 19370924 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 12534 19370917 19370921 A SMALL GROUP WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON SEPTEMBER 19. 12535 19370917 19370930 RETURN OF GROUP 12498: 3RD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12536 19370918 19370926 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, PREDOMINATES. 12537 19370918 19370919 A SMALL SPOT. 12538 19370919 19370922 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12539 19370920 19370924 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 12510. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT RATHER QUICKLY. 12540 19370921 19370926 A STREAM OF ACTIVE SPOTS. 12541 19370921 19370929 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE OF RATHER FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 12542 19370922 19370926 A SMALL GROUP. 12543 19370922 19370930 INTERMITTENT. A SINGLE SPOT UNTIL SEPTEMBER 24: A SMALL STREAM ON SEPTEMBER 25 AND 27: A CLOSE PAIR ON SEPTEMBER 30. 12544 19370923 19370924 A SINGLE SPOT ON EACH DAY DIFFERING SOMEWHAT IN POSITION. 12545 19370923 19371003 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 12546 19370923 19371005 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY FOLLOWER UNTIL SEPTEMBER 27. ANOTHER SMALL COMPANION IS SEEN ON OCTOBER 2. 12547 19370925 19370927 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 12548 19370925 19370929 A SMALL BI-POPLAR GROUP WITH MARKED SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER. 12549 19370925 19371002 A STREAM, WITH BRIEF MAXIMUM ABOUT SEPTEMBER 29, IN RELATIVELY HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE. 12550 19370926 19370929 A SMALL SPOT. 12551 19370928 19371006 A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS ALMOST AMALGAMATING ON SOME DAYS. 12552 19370928 19371010 A SMALL BUT VERY STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A PRONOUNCED DRIFT IN LATITUDE. 12553 19370928 19371010 AN IMMENSE COMPLEX SPOT CONTAINING A GREAT NUMBER OF UMBRAL NUCLEI. AS THE SPOT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB, IT TENDS TO SPREAD OUT INTO SEPARATE SPOTS, AND A LARGE REGULAR SPOT EVENTUALLY FORMS AT THE HEAD. 12554 19370930 19371008 AN UNIMPORTANT STREAM, THE LEADER ALONE SURVIVING AFTER OCTOBER 6. 12555 19370930 19371013 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 12521. A LARGE ACTIVE STREAM WITH WELL-DEFINED SPOTS AS LEADER AND FOLLOWER RESPECTIVELY. 12556 19371001 19371003 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS ON OCTOBER 3. 12557 19371001 19371007 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS REPRESENTING A DISTURBED AREA NP GROUP 12553. 12558 19371002 19371004 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 12559 19371003 19371005 TWO OR THREE SPOTS APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12560 19371003 19371004 A TINY SPOT. 12561 19371003 19371014 A STREAM WHOSE AXIS IS HIGHLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR DURING ITS EARLY DEVELOPMENT NEAR THE EAST LIMB. NONE OF THE SPOTS ARE STABLE. 12562 19371006 19371014 A SHORT STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER OCTOBER 11. 12563 19371007 19371010 A SMALL REGION OF FEEBLE DISTURBANCE SHOWN BY A FEW TINY VARIABLE SPOTS. 12564 19371008 19371010 A SMALL CLUSTER NP GROUP 12555. 12565 19371008 19371010 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER IS LEFT ON OCTOBER 10. 12566 19371009 19371010 A GROUP DEVELOPING CLOSE TO THE WEST LIMB. 12567 19371009 19371018 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE SHOWING LESS THAN THE USUAL SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER. 12568 19371010 19371017 TWO OR THREE SPOTS ON OCTOBER 10 DEVELOPING RAPIDLY INTO A LARGE STREAM; IT APPEARS HOWEVER, TO BE ALREADY DECREASING AS IT NEARS THE WEST LIMB. 12569 19371010 19371017 A SMALL GROUP. 12570 19371011 19371016 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF ACTIVE SPOTS DEVELOPING NP GROUP 12562. 12571 19371011 19371021 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER UNTIL OCTOBER 14 PRECEDING GROUP 12572. 12572 19371011 19371022 A STREAM OF SPOTS THAT ARE UNSTABLE AT FIRST: LATER A REGULAR SPOT HEADS THE GROUP. 12573 19371011 19371022 RETURN OF GROUP 12536. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES DOUBLE ON OCTOBER 18 TO 19 AND THEN BREAKS UP. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 12574 19371011 19371022 RETURN OF GROUP 12540. A REGULAR SPOT WITH SPOTLETS FORMING SOUTH OF IT ON OCTOBER 13 AND NORTH OF IT ON OCTOBER 16-17. 12575 19371013 19371016 A SMALL SPOT IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 12568. 12576 19371014 19371025 A SPARSE STREAM AT THE HEAD OF WHICH A REGULAR SPOT HAS FORMED BY OCTOBER 17. 12577 19371014 19371016 A SMALL SPOT S GROUP 12576. 12578 19371015 19371027 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 12579 19371017 19371019 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 12580 19371017 19371020 A TINY GROUP NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 19. 12581 19371017 19371019 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT. 12582 19371018 19371019 A GROUP SEEN FOR ONLY TWO DAYS BEFORE IT PASSES AROUND THE WEST LIMB. 12583 19371018 19371021 A PAIR OF SPOTS,ONLY ONE BEING SEEN ON OCTOBER 21. 12584 19371019 19371021 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT ON OCTOBER 19 AND 21: A PAIR ON OCTOBER 20. 12585 19371021 19371031 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE EXCEPT THAT THE LEADER PARTLY BREAKS UP ON OCTOBER 26 AND MORE COMPLETELY ON OCTOBER 30. 12586 19371023 19371024 A SMALL SPOT. 12587 19371024 19371104 A STREAM IN WHICH THERE IS MARKED SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN LEADER AND FOLLOWER, THE LATTER SPOT BEING THE LONGER-LIVED. 12588 19371024 19371104 RETURN OF GROUP 12553. A MEDLEY OF SPOTS, THAT ARE MOSTLY SMALLISH AND ILL-DEFINED, IN A VERY EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. AS THE MAJORITY OF THE SPOTS DIE OUT, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT COMES INTO PROMINENCE AT THE HEAD OF THE DISTURBANCE, WHICH SHOWS A MARKED DRIFT TOWARDS THE EQUATOR. 12589 19371027 19371101 A SMALL INDEFINITE STREAM. 12590 19371028 19371104 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12591 19371028 19371106 RETURN OF GROUP 12555: 3RD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT; ANOTHER DOT APPEARS NEAR BY ON NOVEMBER 6. 12592 19371029 19371107 AT FIRST A SINGLE REGULAR SPOT; AFTER OCTOBER 30 NEW AND ACTIVE SPOTS FORM JUST NORTH OF IT MAKING UP A SHORT STREAM. 12593 19371030 19371103 A SMALL GROUP OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12594 19371030 19371106 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE COMING INTO SUDDEN AND BRIEF PROMINENCE ON NOVEMBER 2. 12595 19371030 19371108 A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM DIFFERING SOMEWHAT FROM THE NORMAL FORMATION. 12596 19371102 19371106 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 2 AND ANOTHER PAIR ON NOVEMBER 5-6 OF WHICH THE COMPONENTS ARE LARGER AND MORE WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. 12597 19371102 19371106 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 2. 12598 19371102 19371112 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM. 12599 19371103 19371104 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 12600 19371107 19371117 TWO SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A LONG SPARSE STREAM. 12601 19371107 19371119 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL SATELLITES SOUTHWARDS FROM NOVEMBER 10-14. 12602 19371108 19371119 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER SPOT, HOWEVER, IS LESS REGULAR IN STRUCTURE THAN IS USUAL, AND IT APPEARS CLEFT BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" ON NOVEMBER 15-18. 12603 19371110 19371115 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE PASSING RAPIDLY THROUGH ITS PHASES OF DEVELOPMENT. 12604 19371110 19371113 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SP GROUP 12602. 12605 19371112 19371121 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS THAT HAVE DISAPPEARED BY NOVEMBER 14. ON NOVEMBER 17-21, ONE OR TWO NEW SPOTS APPEAR SLIGHTLY FOLLOWING THE ORIGINAL POSITION. 12606 19371112 19371118 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, IN FAIRLY EXTENSIVE FACULAE-PROBABLY THE REMNANTS OF A LARGE GROUP. 12607 19371113 19371114 A SMALL PAIR OF SPOTS NP GROUP 12603. 12608 19371113 19371115 A VERY SMALL, SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12609 19371114 19371120 A SMALL AREA OF DISTURBANCE REPRESENTED BY A TINY SPOT ON NOVEMBER 14 AND 15, AND BY A SMALL STREAM OR CLUSTER FROM NOVEMBER 17-20. 12610 19371116 19371119 A SMALL GROUP OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 12611 19371116 19371127 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING TO A SMALL NUCLEUS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12612 19371117 19371130 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW TINY COMPANIONS. 12613 19371118 19371122 A SMALL BI-POLAR GROUP OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS ON NOVEMBER 21. 12614 19371120 19371121 A SINGLE SPOT. 12615 19371120 19371127 A DISTURBED AREA MARKED BY ONE OR MORE SMALL SPOTS. 12616 19371122 19371126 A SMALL STREAM OR CLUSTER. 12617 19371123 19371130 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 23; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL NOVEMBER 27 WHEN A FEW SHORT-LIVED SPOTS THEN APPEAR. 12618 19371123 19371127 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 24: ANOTHER PAIR ON NOVEMBER 26 AND 27. 12619 19371125 19371130 A SHORT-LIVED, COMPACT STREAM. 12620 19371126 19371128 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEPARATING IN LONGITUDE; ONE SPOT ALONE REMAINS ON NOVEMBER 28. 12621 19371128 19371204 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 1; TWO OR THREE SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS ON DECEMBER 3 AND 4. 12622 19371129 19371130 A SINGLE SPOT. 12623 19371129 19371201 A SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 29 AND DECEMBER 1. 12624 19371130 19371201 A FAINT SPOT ON NOVEMBER 30: A WIDE PAIR ON DECEMBER 1. 12625 19371202 19371204 A FAINT STREAM NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12626 19371202 19371203 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT. 12627 19371202 19371210 A SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 2 AND 3: A SMALL STREAM ON DECEMBER 7, DIMINISHING TO ONE COMPONENT SPOT BY DECEMBER 9. 12628 19371202 19371210 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON DECEMBER 4-6. 12629 19371205 19371210 A COMPACT STREAM WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON DECEMBER 7. 12630 19371205 19371217 RETURN OF GROUP 12601. A RATHER SMALL SPOT PERSISTING. IT DIES OUT ON DECEMBER 11-12, BUT A SMALL CLUSTER APPEARS IN THE SAME PLACE ON DECEMBER 14. 12631 19371206 19371210 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM OR CLUSTER, SHOWING A BURST OF ACTIVITY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12632 19371206 19371211 A SLIGHTLY DISTURBED AREA SHOWN BY ONE OR TWO SPOTS. 12633 19371207 19371215 A SINGLE SPOT IN FACULAE ON DECEMBER 7; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL DECEMBER 12, WHEN A SMALL STREAM APPEARS. 12634 19371210 19371221 A LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING IN THE USUAL MANNER AS IT COMES ROUND THE EAST LIMB. AFTER DECEMBER 12, THE LEADER SPOT IS SPLIT BY A BRIGHT ENCROACHMENT OF THE PHOTOSPHERE. 12635 19371210 19371220 A RATHER UNUSUAL DOUBLE STREAM. 12636 19371210 19371219 A SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 10 AND 11; A NEW GROUP DEVELOPS IN ITS PLACE ON DECEMBER 14 AND SOON RUNS ITS COURSE. 12637 19371211 19371214 A SMALL COMPACT STREAM. 12638 19371213 19371216 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12639 19371214 19371217 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12640 19371214 19371227 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BREAKING UP AFTER DECEMBER 21. FOR THE FIRST FEW DAYS, THERE ARE ONE OR TWO SPOTS FOLLOWING. 12641 19371215 19371221 A SMALL, RATHER INDEFINITE GROUP SHOWING A CONSIDERABLE INCREASE AS IT PASSES OUT OF VIEW ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 12642 19371215 19371223 INTERMITTENT; ONE OR SOMETIMES TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 20-22. 12643 19371216 19371225 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE GREATLY LENGTHENING AS IT DEVELOPS. 12644 19371219 19371221 A GROUP GROWING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12645 19371219 19371225 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DECREASING TO A FAINT MARKING ON DECEMBER 25; THERE ARE COMPANIONS ON DECEMBER 23. 12646 19371221 19371224 A SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY DECEMBER 23. 12647 19371222 19371224 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 23. 12648 19371222 19371231 A STREAM DIFFERING SOMEWHAT IN ITS DEVELOPMENT FROM THE NORMAL TYPE. 12649 19371222 19371224 A TINY GROUP N GROUP 12650. 12650 19371222 19380102 A STREAM OF SPOTS. 12651 19371223 19371224 A TINY SPOT. 12652 19371223 19380101 A STREAM OF SPOTS NOT REACHING FULL DEVELOPMENT. 12653 19371223 19380102 A TINY SPOT ON DEC. 23 DEVELOPING INTO A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM OF ACTIVE COMPONENTS. 12654 19371224 19371225 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 12650. 12655 19371225 19380104 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 12631. A REGULAR SPOT WITH VERY VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 12656 19371226 19371231 A SMALL STREAM SUBSIDIARY TO GROUP 12653. 12657 19371227 19371228 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12658 19371229 19380103 A GROUP INCREASING AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 12659 19371229 19380105 A SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 30, DEVELOPING FAIRLY RAPIDLY INTO A BI-POLAR GROUP. 12660 19371230 19380107 A PAIR OF SPOTS BECOMING A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WHICH SOON DECLINES. 12661 19371231 19380110 A REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP INTO SEVERAL PIECES ON JANUARY 4-5. 12662 19380101 19380102 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 12663 19380102 19380213 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JAN.2-3, DEVELOPING ( NOT ENTIRELY ON NORMAL LINES) INTO A VERY LONG STREAM OF MEDIUM-SIZED SPOTS. 12664 19380104 19380108 A PAIR OF SPOTS BECOMING PROMINENT ON JAN. 7. 12665 19380105 19380108 A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JAN. 5 AND 8. 12666 19380105 19380117 A LARGE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WITH COMPARATIVELY SLOW RISE TO MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT. 12667 19380106 19380115 A PAIR OF SPOTS, WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION, REMAINING MUCH THE SAME FROM DAY TO DAY. 12668 19380106 19380113 A FEW SMALL SPOTS INDIVIDUALLY UNSTABLE BUT CONTINUING TO MARK A SMALL DISTURBED AREA. 12669 19380107 19380112 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 12666. 12670 19380107 19380111 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM N GROUP 12666. 12671 19380109 19380115 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12672 19380111 19380121 RETURN OF GROUP 12640. A CLUSTER OF SPOTS WITH ONE SURVIVING MEMBER AFTER JAN.18, NP GROUP 12673. 12673 19380112 19380124 A GREAT SPOT CONTAINING A SERIES OF UMBRAE. A MEDIUM-SIZED REGULAR SPOT APPEARS AS AN OFF-SHOOT BETWEEN JAN. 13 AND 14. A LANE OF BRIGHT PHOTOSPHERIC MATTER BEGINS TO INVADE THE CENTRAL PART OF THE GREAT SPOT ON JANUARY 18 AND 19, AND IS A CONSPICUOUS FEATURE ALONG ITS MAJOR AXIS ON JANUARY 20-22. 12674 19380114 19380119 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE NUCLEUS. 12675 19380115 19380120 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS OF GROUP 12673. 12676 19380115 19380117 A SMALL SPOT. 12677 19380117 19380119 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 12678 19380118 19380128 RETURN OF GROUP 12653. A SHORT STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE ONLY IMPORTANT COMPONENT. 12679 19380119 19380127 A TYPICAL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; THERE IS LESS THAN THE NORMAL SEPARATION IN LONGITUDE BETWEEN THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS. 12680 19380119 19380123 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON JAN.22. 12681 19380119 19380122 RETURN OF GROUP 12658. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RATHER SUDDENLY. 12682 19380120 19380201 RETURN OF GROUP 12659. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12683 19380122 19380125 A SMALL GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE REDUCED TO ONE COMPONENT SPOT BY JAN. 24. 12684 19380122 19380128 SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS IN A STREAM WHICH LENGTHENS RAPIDLY. 12685 19380122 19380124 A FEW SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 12686 19380122 19380126 RETURN OF GROUP 12660. A PAIR OF SPOT-CENTRES WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. 12687 19380122 19380124 A SINGLE SPOT. 12688 19380123 19380127 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL CLUSTER ON JAN.23 WHICH RE-APPEARS ON JAN.26-27. 12689 19380123 19380124 A SMALL GROUP IN WELL-DEFINED FACULAE. 12690 19380126 19380127 A SMALL SPOT S GROUP 12682. 12691 19380126 19380128 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM. 12692 19380126 19380127 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 12691. 12693 19380127 19380208 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 12694 19380128 19380131 A PAIR OF SPOTS REPRESENTING THE SIMPLEST FORM OF A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. 12695 19380129 19380131 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON JAN.31. 12696 19380129 19380207 A SMALL GROUP WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY FEB.3; A SMALL SPOT RE-APPEARS ON FEB.7. 12697 19380131 19380211 A REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY SMALL COMPANIONS INCREASING TO A SMALL STREAM ABOUT FEB.4. THE REGULAR SPOT PARTLY BREAKS UP ON FEB.7-8 BUT CONTINUES TO THE WEST LIMB. 12698 19380201 19380205 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 12699 19380202 19380212 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT GRADUALLY DYING OUT; THERE IS AN OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANION. 12700 19380203 19380212 A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RATHER SUDDENLY. GROUP 12703 DEVELOPS CLOSELY SOUTH-FOLLOWING. 12701 19380204 19380206 A TINY STREAM ON FEB.4: A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON FEB. 5 AND 6. 12702 19380204 19380211 ONE OR MORE VERY SMALL SPOTS IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 12699. 12703 19380204 19380216 A VERY LARGE STREAM OF SPOTS BEGINNING AS A TINY SPOT ON FEB.4. THE STREAM IS APPROXIMATELY OF NORMAL TYPE, BUT IT BECOMES SOMEWHAT COMPLEX AFTER FEB.9. THE REAR PORTION IS DYING OUT RAPIDLY AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 12704 19380206 19380207 A TINY EPHEMERAL STREAM. 12705 19380207 19380208 TWO SMALL SPOTS WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE ON FEB.7; ONE SPOT REMAINS ON FEB. 8. 12706 19380207 19380218 WITH GROUP 12707, A RETURN OF GROUP 12673. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12707 19380208 19380220 A STREAM, APPARENTLY IN ITS DECLINING STAGES, WITHIN AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE. THE CHIEF COMPONENTS ARE AT THE REAR; THROUGHOUT THERE ARE CONSIDERABLE CHANGES. 12708 19380209 19380219 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS BECOMING A SMALL STREAM FROM FEB.14-16. 12709 19380210 19380213 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 12710 19380210 19380222 A STREAM IN WHICH BOTH COMPONENTS - LEADER AND FOLLOWER - ARE DOUBLE ON FEB.12 AND 13. 12711 19380211 19380219 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS REPRESENTED BY A CLUSTER ON FEB.18. 12712 19380211 19380223 A TYPICAL EXAMPLE OF A BIPOLAR GROUP; THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT HAS DIED OUT BY FEB.21. 12713 19380212 19380213 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 12711. 12714 19380212 19380222 A SPOT ALMOST IN CONTACT WITH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT OF GROUP 12712. THIS SPOT BECOMES TEMPORARILY A SHORT STREAM. 12715 19380212 19380222 A VIGOROUS STREAM OF SPOTS THAT INDIVIDUALLY ARE NOT DISTINCTIVE. 12716 19380212 19380223 A BIPOLAR GROUP. WHILE THE FOLLOWING MEMBER BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER, THE LEADER BECOMES LARGER FOR A FEW DAYS. 12717 19380213 19380217 A PAIR OF SPOTS SEPARATING RAPIDLY IN LONGITUDE. 12718 19380214 19380219 A DISTURBED AREA BETWEEN GROUPS 12708 AND 12710 MARKED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12719 19380214 19380217 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 12720 19380216 19380223 A SMALL STREAM. 12721 19380218 19380302 A REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON FEB.22-24. A SUDDEN DECREASE IN AREA OCCURS BETWEEN FEB.27 AND MAR.1. 12722 19380221 19380302 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FOLLOWER ON FEB.21-23, BREAKING UP ON FEB. 21-23, DYING OUT BY FEB. 26. THREE DAYS LATER A FEW TINY EPHEMERAL SPOTS APPEAR IN THE SAME AREA. 12723 19380222 19380224 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12724 19380222 19380227 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12725 19380222 19380226 A TINY STREAM P GROUP 12721. 12726 19380223 19380225 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12727 19380223 19380303 RETURN OF GROUP 12693. A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY AFTER FEB.27; TWO OR THREE SMALL COMPANION SPOTS ARE SEEN ON FEB.28, MAR.1 AND 3. 12728 19380224 19380301 ONE TINY SPOT ON FEB.24; A PAIR ON MAR.1. 12729 19380225 19380303 A STREAM PASSING RAPIDLY THROUGH ITS PHASES OF DEVELOPMENT AND DECAY. 12730 19380226 19380301 SMALLISH SPOTS IN STREAM FORMATION. 12731 19380227 19380306 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 12732 19380301 19380312 TWO OR MORE SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MAR. 8 AND 9. THE GROUP, REVIVING ON MAR. 10, CONTAINS A LARGER SPOT AS FOLLOWER. 12733 19380303 19380315 RETURN OF GROUP 12703. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. GROUP 12742 FORMS CLOSELY NF ON MAR. 10. 12734 19380304 19380315 A LARGE SINGLE SPOT WITH MARKED CHANGES IN ITS UMBRA. A NEBULOUS CLUSTER OF SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWS. 12735 19380306 19380310 A TINY STREAM ON MAR. 6 AND 7, THE LEADER ALONE BEING LEFT AFTERWARDS. 12736 19380307 19380318 A REGULAR SPOT OF WHICH THE NORTHERN PART BREAKS AWAY AS AN ENTITY AND SEPARATES IN LATITUDE. 12737 19380308 19380310 A TINY SPOT ON EACH DAY F GROUP 12733. 12738 19380308 19380318 A FAIRLY LARGE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE CONTAINING SPOTS THAT INDIVIDUALLY UNDERGO CONSIDERABLE DAY-TO-DAY CHANGES. BY MARCH 16, THE LEADER HAS FINALLY STABILIZED AS A REGULAR SPOT. 12739 19380309 19380313 A FEEBLE GROUP N GROUP 12736. 12740 19380309 19380311 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT IN EXTENSIVE FACULAE. 12741 19380309 19380321 A SMALL, STABLE REGULAR SPOT. GROUP 12755 FORMS N ITS POSITION ON MAR.18. 12742 19380310 19380315 A SHORT STREAM APPEARING NF GROUP 12733; ONE SPOT REMAINS ON MAR.12. 12743 19380311 19380312 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 12744 19380311 19380321 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 12745 19380313 19380314 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAR. 13: A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 14. 12746 19380313 19380314 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MAR. 13: A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 14. 12747 19380313 19380316 A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 13: A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MAR. 15-16. 12748 19380314 19380317 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 12744. 12749 19380315 19380317 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12750 19380316 19380319 A SMALL BUT FULLY-FORMED STREAM WHICH SUDDENLY APPEARS AND RAPIDLY DIES OUT. 12751 19380316 19380318 A FEEBLE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 12752 19380316 19380319 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 12753 19380316 19380320 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING SUDDENLY BETWEEN MAR. 18 AND 19. A TINY MARKING IS SEEN NEAR ITS PLACE ON MAR. 20. 12754 19380316 19380327 RETURN OF GROUP 12730. A COMPACT STREAM IN WHICH THE COMPONENTS ARE ALMOST TOUCHING ON MAR. 16 TO 19. 12755 19380318 19380321 A SMALLISH GROUP FORMING N GROUP 12741. 12756 19380320 19380321 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH ONE SURVIVES ON MAR. 21. 12757 19380320 19380402 RETURN OF GROUP 12731. A PAIR OF VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOTS WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. ON MOST DAYS, THERE IS AN ABSENCE OF COMPANION SPOTS. A SMALL PART OF THE FOLLOWER SPOT TENDS TO BREAK AWAY AFTER MAR. 27. 12758 19380321 19380323 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 12759 19380323 19380324 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS NF GROUP 12754. 12760 19380323 19380325 A TINY GROUP NP GROUP 12757. 12761 19380324 19380326 A SMALL GROUP IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. 12762 19380327 19380408 A REGULAR SPOT NEAR WHICH COMPANIONS FORM AND DISAPPEAR BETWEEN MARCH. 30 AND APRIL 4-5, LEAVING THE ORIGINAL SPOT UNALTERED. ON APRIL 6 ANOTHER FORMATION APPEARS JUST SOUTHWARDS, AND THIS TIME, THE REGULAR SPOT IS ABSORBED INTO THE NEW LARGE SPOT WITH ITS DOUBLE UMBRA THAT RESULTS. 12763 19380328 19380405 A VERY SMALL GROUP, NOT SEEN ON APRIL 2 AND 3, N GROUP 12762. 12764 19380329 19380401 A SMALL GROUP OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 12765 19380329 19380405 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 12762 ON MAR. 29: A FAINT MARKING ON APR. 5. 12766 19380331 19380406 A FEEBLE BUT PERSISTENTLY DISTURBED AREA REPRESENTED BY A FEW TINY SPOTS ON EACH DAY. 12767 19380331 19380413 RETURN OF GROUP 12733: 3RD. APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANION. 12768 19380331 19380408 A SPOT BREAKING UP AFTER APR. 2 INTO THREE COMPONENTS THAT SLIGHTLY SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. 12769 19380401 19380405 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON APR. 1 AND 5, NEAR GROUP 12766. 12770 19380402 19380408 A SMALL SPOT BECOMING A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON APRIL 4. 12771 19380402 19380403 A TINY SPOT. 12772 19380402 19380414 RETURN OF GROUP 12738. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12773 19380403 19380404 A SINGLE SPOT ON APR. 3: A PAIR ON APR. 4. 12774 19380406 19380410 A PAIR OF SPOTS WITH A COMPANION ON APR. 9; THERE IS ONLY ONE SPOT ON APR. 10. 12775 19380406 19380417 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT; THE TRAIN IS OF DIMINISHING IMPORTANCE AND HAS DIED OUT BY APR. 16. 12776 19380408 19380418 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT IN FRONT OF GROUP 12777. 12777 19380408 19380420 RETURN OF GROUP 12758. A STREAM WITH WELL-DEFINED LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS. AFTER APR. 14, THE FOLLOWER SHOWS A PRONOUNCED ELONGATION IN LONGITUDE AND IS ITSELF DRAWN OUT INTO A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS WHICH PRACTICALLY TOUCH EACH OTHER. THE AXIS OF THE WHOLE GROUP IS INCLINED CONSIDERABLY TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 12778 19380409 19380422 A LARGE SPOT NEARLY REGULAR IN STRUCTURE. 12779 19380410 19380422 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BREAKING ON APR. 15 INTO TWO PARTS OF UNEQUAL SIZE. 12780 19380412 19380416 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12781 19380415 19380427 A LARGE SPOT WITH A SHORT TRAIN DEVELOPING AS THE DISK IS CROSSED. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER APR. 25. 12782 19380416 19380417 A SMALL SPOT. 12783 19380416 19380428 WITH GROUP 12785 A RETURN OF GROUP 12757: 3RD APPEARANCE. A LARGE SPOT REGULAR IN STRUCTURE EXCEPT FOR A BULGE ON ITS EASTERN SIDE; THIS BREAKS AWAY AS A SEPARATE SPOT ON APR. 20-21. THE UMBRA OF THE ORIGINAL SPOT IS NOTICEABLY WELL-DEFINED AND CIRCULAR. 12784 19380416 19380423 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT NP GROUP 12783. 12785 19380417 19380429 WITH GROUP 12783, A RETURN OF GROUP 12757: 3RD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT IN THE WAKE OF GROUPS 12781 AND 12783. THERE ARE COMPANION SPOTS ON APRIL 22. 12786 19380418 19380419 A SMALL GROUP SP GROUP 12781. 12787 19380419 19380420 A SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON APR. 20. 12788 19380421 19380422 A TINY STREAM. 12789 19380423 19380504 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY COMPANION ON APR. 27 AND 28. 12790 19380423 19380430 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED CLOSELY BY A SMALLER ONE. 12791 19380424 19380504 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 12792 19380424 19380505 RETURN OF GROUP 12762. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12793 19380425 19380429 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM. 12794 19380426 19380509 A SPOT, WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, WHICH FINALLY SEPARATES INTO TWO PARTS ON MAY 6-7. 12795 19380427 19380508 A REGULAR SPOT ON APR.27, NEARLY CLEFT IN TWO ON APR. 28 AND FINALLY DIVIDING WITHIN THE NEXT 24 HOURS. THE TWO PARTS SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE, THE LEADING PART SURVIVING AS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AFTER MAY 5. 12796 19380427 19380509 A REGULAR SPOT FROM WHICH A PART BREAKS AWAY ON ITS F SIDE AND BECOMES A STREAM IN MINIATURE. THE MAIN SPOT HAS COMPLETELY REGAINED ITS REGULAR OUTLINE BY MAY 4. 12797 19380428 19380501 A SMALL SPOT. 12798 19380428 19380502 RETURN OF GROUP 12767: 4TH APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON APR. 29 AND MAY 1, F GROUP 12794. 12799 19380428 19380509 A REGULAR SPOT BECOMING UNSTABLE AFTER APR. 30. THE SPOT IS ELONGATED ON MAY 2 AND PART OF IT BREAKS AWAY ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 12800 19380428 19380510 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS WHICH ARE REPRESENTED BY A SINGLE SPOT AFTER MAY 3. 12801 19380501 19380502 A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 1: A PAIR OF LARGER ONES ON MAY 2. 12802 19380502 19380509 A STREAM OF APPROXIMATELY NORMAL TYPE SUDDENLY FORMING BETWEEN GROUPS 12795 AND 12800. 12803 19380502 19380509 RETURN OF GROUP 12775. A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 2 BREAKING UP INTO A PAIR OF COMPONENTS BETWEEN MAY 2 AND 3. 12804 19380504 19380505 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12805 19380504 19380513 A STREAM OF SPOTS ARISING WITH GROUP 12806. 12806 19380504 19380510 A COMPOSITE SPOT IN HIGH LATITUDE, RESULTING FROM THE FUSION OF A PAIR OF SPOTS NEAR GROUP 12805. 12807 19380504 19380506 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAY 5. 12808 19380504 19380516 A GROWING COMPACT STREAM WHEN FIRST SEEN. FROM MAY 8 TO 13, THE PENUMBRAE OF THE COMPONENTS MERGE TO FORM ONE VERY LONG SPOT BUT WITH TWO DISTINCT NUCLEI. [THESE HAVE OPPOSITE MAGNETIC POLARITES ACCORDING TO THE MOUNT WILSON OBSERVATIONS]. 12809 19380505 19380513 A GROUP OF SLIGHT BUT PERSISTENT ACTIVITY. GROUP 12813 COMES IMMEDIATELY IN FRONT ON MAY 7. 12810 19380505 19380516 RETURN OF GROUP 12777. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 12811 19380506 19380507 A TINY EPHEMERAL GROUP. 12812 19380506 19380510 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON MAY 6 AND 10. 12813 19380507 19380514 A SMALL STREAM, FEEBLY DEVELOPED. 12814 19380507 19380518 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENTS ARE MORE PROMINENT THAN THE LEADER. 12815 19380508 19380513 A SMALL VARIABLE GROUP S GROUP 12808. 12816 19380508 19380513 A SMALL STREAM. 12817 19380508 19380520 RETURN OF GROUP 12778. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12818 19380509 19380510 THREE TINY SPOTS ON MAY 9: ONE ON MAY 10. 12819 19380509 19380521 A REGULAR SPOT HAVING TEMPORARILY A DOUBLE UMBRA ON MAY 12-13. THERE IS A SMALL FOLLOWER ON MAY 10-11, 13 AND 14. 12820 19380509 19380516 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 12821 19380510 19380523 A TYPICAL BIPOLAR GROUP, WITH WELL DEFINED REGULAR SPOTS AS LEADER AND FOLLOWER RESPECTIVELY. THERE IS AN OCCASIONAL SMALL ATTENDANT SPOT IN BETWEEN. 12822 19380511 19380524 RETURN OF GROUP 12781. A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, THE LARGER ONE LEADING. 12823 19380514 19380526 RETURN OF GROUP 12783: 4TH APPEARANCE. A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WITH THE LARGEST COMPONENT (A REGULAR SPOT) AS FOLLOWER; THIS ALONE REMAINS AFTER MAY 22. 12824 19380516 19380517 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 12823. 12825 19380517 19380527 A STREAM IN RAPID CHANGE UNTIL ABOUT MAY 24. 12826 19380518 19380530 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 12827 19380520 19380529 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER MAY 25. 12828 19380521 19380523 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP, F GROUP 12827. 12829 19380522 19380530 A LARGE ACTIVE STREAM OF RAPID INITIAL GROWTH. 12830 19380522 19380523 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 12831 19380522 19380526 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. 12832 19380523 19380527 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM NP GROUP 12829. 12833 19380523 19380527 A SMALL GROUP HAVING ITS AXIS HIGHLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 12834 19380523 19380524 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS F GROUP 12829. 12835 19380523 19380528 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 12836 19380525 19380527 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT. 12837 19380525 19380605 RETURN OF GROUP 12796. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON MAY 26, 28 AND 29; NEW SPOTS COME IN ON JUNE 2. 12838 19380526 19380601 A STREAM OF RAPID RISE AND DECLINE LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 12839 19380526 19380527 RETURN OF GROUP 12794. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 12840 19380529 19380604 A STREAM OF RAPID RISE AND DECLINE. 12841 19380529 19380607 A LONG STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER DEVELOPS FIRST BUT IS SURVIVED BY THE LEADER AS IS USUALLY THE CASE. 12842 19380530 19380731 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12843 19380530 19380603 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 12840. 12844 19380531 19380612 RETURN OF GROUP 12808. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL TINY COMPANIONS. 12845 19380601 19380604 A SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 12847. 12846 19380601 19380605 A SMALL GROUP F GROUP 12841. 12847 19380601 19380607 A SMALL STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS COMING INTO BRIEF PROMINENCE ON JUNE 4. 12848 19380602 19380613 A TYPICAL BI-POLAR GROUP IN WHICH THE TWO COMPONENTS ARE OF NEARLY EQUAL SIZE. 12849 19380604 19380606 A SMALL STREAM. 12850 19380605 19380611 A GROUP, LONG-LIVED FOR ITS SMALL SIZE. 12851 19380605 19380617 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT BEHIND WHICH A COMPOUND TRAIN IS FORMING; THIS DECREASES FOR A FEW DAYS BUT COMES IN WITH RENEWED ACTIVITY ON JUNE 13. MEANWHILE THE REGULAR SPOT HAS BROKEN INTO TWO COMPONENTS BY JUNE 12; THE LEADING ONE, REPRESENTING THE ORIGINAL NUCLEUS, BECOMES THE NEW LEADER OF THE STREAM AND ALONE SURVIVES ON JUNE 17. 12852 19380606 19380616 A SMALL STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER SURVIVES AS A REGULAR SPOT AFTER JUNE 9. A TINY NEW CLUSTER APPEARS ON JUNE 13. 12853 19380607 19380612 A STREAM DEVELOPING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 12854 19380607 19380608 A TINY EPHEMERAL GROUP. 12855 19380607 19380609 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 12856 19380607 19380612 A FEW SMALL SPOTS S GROUP 12851. 12857 19380607 19380611 RETURN OF GROUP 12821. A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RAPIDLY. 12858 19380608 19380609 A GROUP NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12859 19380608 19380610 SOME SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 12851. 12860 19380610 19380611 A SMALL SPOT P GROUP 12851. 12861 19380610 19380614 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 10 AND 14: A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JUNE 11-13. 12862 19380611 19380621 RETURN OF GROUP 12823: 5TH APPEARANCE. A SMALL GROUP, LONG-LIVED FOR ITS SIZE. 12863 19380612 19380614 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON JUNE 12: ONE SPOT SURVIVES ON JUNE 13 AND 14. 12864 19380613 19380617 A SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 13 AND 17: A PAIR ON JUNE 15 AND 16. 12865 19380613 19380616 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT S GROUP 12862. 12866 19380613 19380622 A SMALL STREAM NOT SEEN ON JUNE 19 AND 20. 12867 19380613 19380625 RETURN OF GROUP 12829. A LARGE STABLE SPOT, COMPLETELY REGULAR IN STRUCTURE. 12868 19380614 19380623 A SMALL GROUP N GROUP 12866; NEW SPOTS COME IN ON JUNE 20. 12869 19380614 19380615 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 14; ONE COMPONENT IS LEFT ON JUNE 15. 12870 19380615 19380617 A TINY SPOT ON EACH DAY DIFFERING IN POSITION. 12871 19380616 19380618 A SMALL SPOT P GROUP 12873. 12872 19380617 19380621 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 19 AND 20. 12873 19380617 19380628 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH CONSPICUOUS COMPONENTS IN THE CENTRAL PART ABOUT JUNE 21. 12874 19380619 19380623 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 12875 19380620 19380621 A SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 12867. 12876 19380620 19380625 ONE OR TWO SPOTS UNTIL JUNE 22: A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 25. 12877 19380621 19380629 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 12878 19380621 19380623 A FEW FAINT UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12879 19380622 19380625 A PAIR OF SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 12880 19380626 19380629 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DIVERGING WIDELY IN LONGITUDE. 12881 19380626 19380708 A LONG STREAM OF UNSTABLE COMPONENTS. 12882 19380627 19380628 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 12883 19380627 19380702 A GROUP REPRESENTING FEEBLE BUT PERSISTENT ACTIVITY. 12884 19380627 19380701 INTERMITTENT: A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12885 19380627 19380707 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART SHOWS FRESH ACTIVITY ON JULY 4-5, WHILE THE ORIGINAL LEADER IS DECREASING. 12886 19380627 19380708 AN ACTIVE STREAM OF THE SAME GENERAL APPEARANCE AS GROUP 12881 NEAR WHICH IT IS SITUATED. AFTER JULY 4, THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER STAND OUT AS REGULAR SPOTS WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. 12887 19380627 19380709 RETURN OF GROUP 12844: 3RD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12888 19380629 19380630 A GROUP APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB; APPARENTLY IT IS SHORT-LIVED. 12889 19380629 19380702 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 12890 19380701 19380703 A SMALL SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 12881. 12891 19380702 19380710 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION WHICH HAS DISAPPEARED BY JULY 6; ANOTHER TINY SPOT COMES IN ON JULY 10. 12892 19380702 19380712 RETURN OF GROUP 12851. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DECREASING TO A TINY MARKING. 12893 19380703 19380704 A SPOT NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12894 19380703 19380713 A LARGE TYPICAL BI-POLAR GROUP IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES ELONGATED, DEVELOPS A DOUBLE UMBRA AND IS DIVIDING INTO TWO PARTS WHEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 12895 19380704 19380717 A LARGE ACTIVE STREAM IN WHICH THE TWO PRINCIPAL COMPONENTS - LEADER AND FOLLOWER - ARE CLUSTERS OR COMPOSITE SPOTS. BY JULY 12, THE FOLLOWER HAS CONDENSED TO A LARGE SPOT WITH MULTIPLE UMBRAE. 12896 19380704 19380716 A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA DIMINISHING FAIRLY RAPIDLY AFTER JULY 10. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL SMALL FOLLOWERS AND A CLUSTER ON JULY 10-11. 12897 19380706 19380709 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12898 19380706 19380713 A STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 12899 19380706 19380710 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH COMPANIONS AFTER JULY 7, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 12895 BUT QUITE DISTINCT FROM IT. 12900 19380706 19380717 TWO REGULAR SPOTS SLOWLY DIVERGING; THE FOLLOWING ONE DIES OUT AFTER JULY 13, WHILE THE LEADER DIVIDES INTO TWO PARTS ON JULY 14-15. THERE ARE USUALLY TINY COMPANIONS. 12901 19380707 19380709 A WIDELY SEPARATED PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, THE LEADER ALONE BEING SEEN ON JULY 9. 12902 19380708 19380721 A GREAT SPOT, DEVELOPING FIRST AS A STREAM WHEN IT COMES INTO VIEW ROUND THE EAST LIMB. IN A FEW DAYS OTHER SPOTS ARE FORMING SOUTHWARDS, AND THESE GROW AND AMALGAMATE WITH THE ORIGINAL SPOT TO FORM A GREAT COMPOSITE SPOT ROUGHLY RECTANGULAR IN SHAPE ON JULY 15 AND 16. A FEW DAYS LATER, THE LOWER HALF OF THIS EXTENSIVE FORMATION IS BREAKING UP AS THE GROUP PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. MEANWHILE DISCRETE PARTS OF THE NORTHERN HALF OF THE SPOT BECOME LINKED UP BY PENUMBRAE ON JULY 19, THUS GIVING A TEMPORARY INCREASE IN AREA. 12903 19380709 19380721 RETURN OF GROUP 12867: 3RD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT NORTH PRECEDED BY SMALL SPOTS SCATTERED OVER AN EXTENSIVE AREA AND DYING OUT BY JULY 16. 12904 19380710 19380714 A PAIR OF SPOTS, THE LARGER ONE LEADING AND ALONE REMAINING AFTER JULY 12. 12905 19380710 19380714 A SMALL SPOT WITH A DEFINITE UMBRA IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 12902. 12906 19380711 19380714 A SMALL GROUP CLOSE TO GROUP 12896. 12907 19380712 19380713 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 12: THREE TINY SPOTS ON JULY 13. 12908 19380712 19380716 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT IDENTICAL WITH ONE ANOTHER BUT IN THE SAME FEEBLE AREA OF DISTURBANCE. 12909 19380713 19380714 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 12910 19380713 19380715 A VERY SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12911 19380713 19380725 RETURN OF GROUP 12873. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. A NEW SPOT APPEARS IN THE FACULAE FOLLOWING ON JULY 25. 12912 19380714 19380717 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON JULY 16 WHICH ALONE ARE SEEN ON JULY 17. 12913 19380714 19380719 A SMALL GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE; THE FOLLOWER HAS DIED OUT BY JULY 18, AND THERE IS A NEW SHORT-LIVED COMPANION TO THE LEADER. 12914 19380715 19380717 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NOT OBVIOUSLY DEVELOPING. 12915 19380715 19380723 A SMALL GROUP NP GROUP 12911. 12916 19380716 19380720 A GROUP OF SMALL BUT ACTIVE SPOTS. 12917 19380716 19380719 A SMALL FEEBLE STREAM, ONE SPOT BEING LEFT ON JULY 18-19. 12918 19380716 19380720 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS NOT IDENTICAL FROM DAY TO DAY. 12919 19380718 19380719 A SMALL SPOT. 12920 19380718 19380729 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT SHOWING SIGNS OF BREAKING UP ABOUT JULY 22. THREE DAYS LATER, DIVISION INTO TWO PARTS HAS ACTUALLY TAKEN PLACE AND COMPLETE EXTINCTION SOON FOLLOWS. 12921 19380719 19380720 A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 19: A PAIR ON JULY 20. 12922 19380719 19380729 A SMALL CHANGING GROUP SHOWING RENEWED ACTIVITY ON JULY 27. 12923 19380719 19380726 A SMALL PERSISTENT GROUP. 12924 19380719 19380730 A SMALL STREAM LENGTHENED ON JULY 24-25 BY THE ADDITION OF NEW SPOTS THAT MIGHT POSSIBLY REPRESENT A SEPARATE GROUP. 12925 19380719 19380730 RETURN OF GROUP 12893. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING SLOWLY OUT; THERE ARE TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS ON JULY 27. 12926 19380720 19380724 A SMALL BIPOLAR GROUP OF RAPID RISE AND DECAY. 12927 19380720 19380801 A STREAM LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 12928 19380722 19380724 A FEW SMALL SPOTS MERGING INTO GROUP 12924 ON JULY 25. 12929 19380722 19380725 A SMALL SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON JULY 23. 12930 19380722 19380802 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A PAIR OF SMALL FOLLOWERS ON JULY 23 TO 25. 12931 19380723 19380729 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY. 12932 19380723 19380727 A SMALL GROUP. 12933 19380723 19380804 RETURN OF GROUP 12886. A LARGE SPOT WITH MULTIPLE UMBRAE FOLLOWED BY SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. A PART OF THE SPOT BREAKS AWAY ON JULY 29 FROM ITS FOLLOWING SIDE. 12934 19380724 19380805 RETURN OF GROUP 12887: 4TH APPEARANCE. AN ACTIVE BI-POLAR GROUP IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT IS MUCH THE LARGER. A CLUSTER OF SPOTS APPEARS AFTER JULY 27 NEAR THE FOLLOWER, WHICH ITSELF IS BREAKING UP INTO SEVERAL COMPONENTS. THE COMPLETE CONTINUITY WITH GROUP 12887 IS DOUBTFUL. IN ANY CASE, THE PRESENT GROUP HAS OBVIOUSLY DEVELOPED ANEW. 12935 19380728 19380730 ONE OR MORE TINY SPOTS. 12936 19380729 19380804 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL INTERMITTENT SPOTS. 12937 19380731 19380811 RETURN OF GROUP 12895. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12938 19380801 19380802 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 1: A SINGLE SPOT ON AUG. 2. 12939 19380801 19380802 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 1: A SINGLE SPOT ON AUG. 2. 12940 19380801 19380810 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DECREASING; A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWS ON AUG. 7. 12941 19380801 19380813 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL TRAIN OF COMPANIONS. 12942 19380801 19380813 WITH GROUP 12937 A RETURN OF GROUP 12895. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLUSTER SP UNTIL AUG. 9. 12943 19380801 19380813 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12944 19380802 19380803 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE IS LEFT ON AUG. 3. 12945 19380802 19380804 TWO OR THREE SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS N GROUP 12941. 12946 19380803 19380811 A SMALL VARIABLE GROUP S GROUP 12937. 12947 19380804 19380806 A GROUP DEVELOPING RAPIDLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB; SUBSEQUENT DEVELOPMENT IS LOST TO VIEW. 12948 19380804 19380815 A BI-POLAR GROUP CONSISTING OF TWO REGULAR SPOTS THE FOLLOWING ONE SURVIVING THE LEADER BY A FEW DAYS. 12949 19380805 19380807 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 12950 19380805 19380817 RETURN OF GROUP 12902. A GROUP CONSISTING OF A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER, ANOTHER SPOT (LESS PERFECTLY FORMED) AS THE FOLLOWER, AND A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. THE AXIS OF THE GROUP IS CONSIDERABLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR, THE LEADER SPOT, CONTRARY TO THE NORMAL POSITION, BEING IN THE HIGHER LATITUDE. 12951 19380805 19380815 A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING; A PAIR OF EPHEMERAL COMPANIONS APPEAR ON AUG.15. 12952 19380805 19380817 RETURN OF GROUP 12903: 4TH APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12953 19380808 19380812 A PAIR OF SPOTS CLOSE TO GROUP 12941. 12954 19380808 19380819 A PAIR OF SPOTS; THE FOLLOWER, AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT, BECOMES ELONGATED AND PARTLY BREAKS UP ON AUG. 15. 12955 19380809 19380810 A TINY SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 12956 19380810 19380813 RETURN OF GROUP 12911: 3RD APPEARANCE. A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 12957 19380811 19380812 A SMALL SPOT. 12958 19380811 19380812 A VERY SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 12959 19380811 19380813 TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 12960 19380811 19380822 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 12961 19380813 19380815 A TINY SHORT-LIVED GROUP P GROUP 12954. 12962 19380813 19380814 A SMALL STREAM NP GROUP 12960. 12963 19380814 19380820 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 14 AND 15: A SMALL STREAM ON AUG. 18-20. 12964 19380815 19380826 A VARIABLE STREAM. 12965 19380815 19380818 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS SPREAD OVER AN AREA OF WEAK DISTURBANCE. 12966 19380815 19380826 RETURN OF GROUP 12927. A REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 12967 19380816 19380825 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM RE-FORMING ON AUG. 19-20. 12968 19380816 19380820 A SMALL GROUP N GROUP 12964. 12969 19380819 19380827 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 19: A SMALL STREAM ON AUG. 23: ONE OR TWO SPOTS AFTERWARDS. 12970 19380819 19380822 A FEW SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 12971 19380820 19380827 RETURN OF GROUP 12933: 3RD APPEARANCE. ONE OR TWO SPOTS, SMALL BUT DISTINCTIVE ON AUG. 25-27. 12972 19380821 19380827 RETURN OF GROUP 12947. A SMALL SPOT, REPLACED ON AUG. 26 BY ANOTHER FOLLOWING THE ORIGINAL POSITION. 12973 19380822 19380826 A SMALL DISTINCT SPOT. 12974 19380823 19380826 A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON AUG. 23 AND 26. 12975 19380823 19380829 A STREAM OF SUDDEN GROWTH. THE FOLLOWER IS THE FIRST IMPORTANT COMPONENT TO FORM; THE LEADER, REPRESENTED BY A CLUSTER, DEVELOPS A FEW DAYS LATER. 12976 19380825 19380826 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 12977 19380825 19380830 A SMALL STREAM. 12978 19380825 19380831 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART IS THE LAST TO DIE OUT. 12979 19380826 19380904 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON AUG. 26-27: A SMALL SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT. 2 AND 4. 12980 19380827 19380907 A LONG IRREGULAR STREAM; THE LARGEST AND MOST PERSISTENT INDIVIDUAL SPOT FOLLOWS. 12981 19380829 19380906 A SMALL VARIABLE STREAM. 12982 19380829 19380901 RETURN OF GROUP 12943. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT. 12983 19380829 19380909 RETURN OF GROUP 12942: 3RD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT; A COMPANION ALSO OF REGULAR STRUCTURE, SUDDENLY APPEARS IN FRONT BETWEEN AUG. 30 AND 31. 12984 19380829 19380904 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 12980. 12985 19380830 19380903 A VERY SMALL GROUP NOT SEEN ON AUG. 31. 12986 19380830 19380911 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE SEEN FROM ITS INITIAL DEVELOPMENT NEAR THE EAST LIMB. 12987 19380901 19380902 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED SPOT. 12988 19380901 19380902 A TINY OUTLYING SPOT TO GROUP 12980. 12989 19380901 19380913 WITH GROUP 12990 A RETURN OF GROUP 12950: 3RD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON SEPT. 4-7 AND ON SEPT. 10. 12990 19380901 19380903 A SMALL SPOT. 12991 19380902 19380903 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 12986. 12992 19380902 19380913 A REGULAR SPOT DISAPPEARING RATHER QUICKLY AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 12993 19380903 19380907 A SMALL GROUP PRECEDING GROUP 12980. 12994 19380904 19380905 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED SPOT. 12995 19380905 19380910 A SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 5 AND 6; A CLUSTER ON SEPT.10. 12996 19380908 19380917 A SMALL STREAM. 12997 19380910 19380912 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 12998 19380910 19380918 RETURN OF GROUP 12964. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PRESERVING ITS IDENTITY WITH RESPECT TO A NEW GROUP, GROUP 12999, WHICH DEVELOPS FIRST SOUTHWARDS. COMPLETE CONTINUITY WITH GROUP 12964 IN THE PREVIOUS ROTATION IS SOMEWHAT DOUBTFUL. 12999 19380911 19380922 A BI-POLAR GROUP IN WHICH THE LEADER SHOWS A SUDDEN INCREASE ON SEPT. 14 TO 15 IN TAKING ITS FINAL FORM AS A REGULAR SPOT. 13000 19380915 19380927 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A PAIR OF FOLLOWERS THAT HAVE DISAPPEARED BY SEPT.19. BETWEEN SEPT. 17 AND 18, THE REGULAR SPOT DIVIDES INTO TWO PARTS WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE; THE NEW LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON SEPT. 26. 13001 19380916 19380917 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 13002 19380917 19380919 A VERY SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 18. 13003 19380917 19380918 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS RATHER WIDELY SEPARATED IN LATITUDE, PRECEDING GROUP 13000. 13004 19380918 19380921 A SMALL SPOT. 13005 19380919 19380920 A SMALL SPOT. 13006 19380919 19381001 A LARGE SPOT WITH A PIECE DETACHED ON ITS FOLLOWING SIDE AND SHOWING LITTLE OR NO TENDENCY TO DRIFT AWAY FROM THE PARENT SPOT. 13007 19380921 19381003 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13008 19380922 19380923 A SMALL SPOT IN FRONT OF GROUP 13006. 13009 19380922 19381003 RETURN OF GROUP 12981. A COMPACT STREAM THAT DIMINISHES RATHER RAPIDLY, LEAVING THE LEADER (A REGULAR SPOT) ON OCT. 2 AND 3. 13010 19380922 19380928 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP, NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 24. 13011 19380924 19381001 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. GROUP 13012 FORMS CLOSELY NORTH OF IT. 13012 19380924 19381004 A SMALL STREAM LONG-LIVED FOR ITS SIZE. 13013 19380926 19380930 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT DIVIDING INTO TWO AND RAPIDLY DYING OUT. 13014 19380926 19381003 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 13015 19380926 19381001 RETURN OF GROUP 12983: 4TH APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 13016 19380926 19381007 RETURN OF GROUP 12986. A SMALL SPOT THAT DISAPPEARS AFTER THE SECOND DAY: A SMALL STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS THEN APPEARS ON SEPT.30. 13017 19380927 19381002 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 13018 19380929 19381010 A TYPICAL BI-POLAR GROUP, THE LEADER OUT-LIVING THE FOLLOWER AS IS USUAL. 13019 19380929 19381008 RETURN OF GROUPS 12989 AND 90: 4TH APPEARANCE. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 13020 19380930 19381001 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN FRONT OF GROUP 13016. 13021 19381004 19381005 SOME RATHER SMALL SPOTS; ONE ALONE REMAINS ON OCT. 5. 13022 19381004 19381011 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH RAPID RISE AND DECLINE. 13023 19381004 19381006 A SMALL SPOT. 13024 19381005 19381018 RETURN OF GROUP 13004. A GIANT GROUP. NEAR THE EAST LIMB IT APPEARS AS A SINGLE COMPOSITE SPOT, BUT ON FULLER PRESENTATION IT IS SEEN TO BE COMPOSED OF TWO SEPARATE COMPLEX SPOTS ALMOST TOUCHING ONE ANOTHER. THE FOLLOWING SPOT BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER WHEN THE GROUP NEARS THE WEST LIMB. 13025 19381007 19381012 A SMALL STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS. 13026 19381008 19381011 A GROUP ORIGINATING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13027 19381009 19381014 A SMALL STREAM. 13028 19381009 19381017 A TYPICAL BI-POLAR GROUP; THE FOLLOWER DIES OUT AFTER OCT. 12. 13029 19381010 19381011 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13030 19381011 19381012 A SMALL SPOT. 13031 19381011 19381015 A SMALL OUT-LYING STREAM TO GROUP 13024. 13032 19381012 19381013 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 13028. 13033 19381012 19381016 RETURN OF GROUP 13000. A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 13034 19381013 19381016 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 13035 19381015 19381022 A SMALL SPOT WHICH HAS DIED OUT BY OCT. 19; ANOTHER SMALL SPOT APPEARS ON OCT. 21-22. 13036 19381017 19381021 A DEVELOPING STREAM WHOSE LATER HISTORY IS LOST TO VIEW AROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13037 19381018 19381029 RETURN OF GROUP 13007. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT; THERE ARE SMALL COMPANIONS ON OCT. 25. 13038 19381020 19381031 A SPOT NOT ALWAYS OF REGULAR STRUCTURE FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION WHICH EXPANDS INTO A CLUSTER FOR A FEW DAYS. 13039 19381020 19381028 A REGULAR SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA. NEW SPOTS APPEAR CLOSELY NP ON OCT. 24, BUT THE WHOLE GROUP DWINDLES RAPIDLY. 13040 19381022 19381027 A MINIATURE STREAM FULLY FORMED ON ONE DAY ONLY (OCT. 23); ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS AFTER OCT. 24. 13041 19381023 19381101 A VIGOROUS STREAM WITH A RAPID DEVELOPMENT BETWEEN OCT. 25 AND 26. THE HEAD OF THE STREAM ALONE SURVIVES AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 13042 19381023 19381029 ONE OR TWO SMALL INTERMITTENT SPOTS. 13043 19381024 19381030 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON OCT. 24. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN OF THIS GROUP UNTIL IT REVIVES ON OCT. 29-30 AS A SMALL CLUSTER. 13044 19381025 19381028 A SMALL VARIABLE GROUP P GROUP 13041. 13045 19381025 19381101 A SMALL VARIABLE STREAM S GROUP 13041. 13046 19381025 19381106 RETURN OF GROUP 13026. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13047 19381026 19381106 RETURN OF GROUP 13029. A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS BECOMING A CLUSTER WHICH SLOWLY DIES OUT. 13048 19381027 19381030 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS INCREASING THEIR SEPARATION. 13049 19381027 19381028 RETURN OF GROUP 13022. A TINY SPOT, F GROUP 13046, PROBABLY THE RETURN OF GROUP 13022. 13050 19381027 19381030 A GROUP OF TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 13051 19381028 19381103 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 13052 19381028 19381030 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 13053 19381028 19381105 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION THAT HAS DIED OUT BY NOV. 2. A CLUSTER OF NEW TINY COMPANIONS COMES ON NOV. 5. 13054 19381029 19381110 A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON NOV. 1-2, 5 AND 8. 13055 19381029 19381108 A REGULAR SPOT WITHOUT COMPANIONS AT FIRST. ON NOV. 1, NEW SPOTS (PERHAPS A SEPARATE GROUP) APPEAR, BUT THESE ARE OUT-LIVED BY THE ORIGINAL SPOT. 13056 19381031 19381104 A SMALL INTERMITTENT SPOT. 13057 19381101 19381102 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13058 19381101 19381108 A SMALL GROUP ON NOV. 1-2: ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 4-5: A PAIR OF DEFINITE SPOTS ON NOV. 7 OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON THE NEXT DAY. 13059 19381101 19381111 RETURN OF GROUP 13024: 3RD APPEARANCE. A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. THERE IS AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE ASSOCIATED WITH THE GROUP. 13060 19381102 19381109 A GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT HAS GONE BY NOV. 5. THE LEADER DEVELOPS A DOUBLE NUCLEUS BUT DOES NOT DIVIDE INTO TWO PARTS UNTIL NOV. 8, WHEN THE NORTHERN PART CONTINUES AS A REGULAR SPOT AND THE SOUTHERN RAPIDLY DISAPPEARS. 13061 19381102 19381103 A WIDE PAIR ON NOV. 2, THE FOLLOWING SPOT REMAINING ON NOV. 3. 13062 19381102 19381107 ONE OR TWO SMALL INTERMITTENT SPOTS. 13063 19381104 19381105 A SMALL SPOT. 13064 19381104 19381117 A GREAT COMPOSITE SPOT. WHEN FULLY PRESENTED ON THE DISK, IT CAN BE CONSIDERED AS ONE MAIN SPOT WITH A COMPACT TRAIN AND OTHER COMPANIONS. THE NUCLEUS OF THIS CHIEF SPOT IS CROSSED BY A WELL-DEFINED "BRIDGE" WHICH IS EVENTUALLY BROKEN BY NOV.14. STARTING AS A SUBSIDIARY NUCLEUS, A PART OF THE NORTHERN BOUNDARY OF THE SPOT SEPARATES AS A PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT AND DRIFTS FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. 13065 19381105 19381106 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT ON NOV.5: A PAIR ON NOV.6. 13066 19381106 19381112 A TYPICAL BI-POLAR GROUP. 13067 19381106 19381110 A SMALL STREAM. 13068 19381106 19381117 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT; THERE IS A SMALL FOLLOWER ON NOV.9. 13069 19381107 19381112 A VERY SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON NOV. 7, 10 AND 12. 13070 19381107 19381109 A SMALL GROUP SF GROUP 13068. 13071 19381107 19381118 A COMPACT STREAM IN RAPID CHANGE. 13072 19381111 19381121 A LARGE GROUP OF UNUSUAL DEVELOPMENT. THE EARLY GROWTH IS THAT OF AN ORDINARY BI-POLAR GROUP BUT IN A FEW DAYS IT IS OF IRREGULAR TYPE LACKING DISTINCTIVE COMPONENTS. A RAPID GROWTH THEN ENSUES BETWEEN NOV. 18 AND 19, WHEN THE COMPONENT PARTS, EMBRACING A NUMBER OF NUCLEI, ARE CROWDED TOGETHER. 13073 19381111 19381112 A SMALL SPOT. 13074 19381112 19381121 A SMALL STREAM WITH THE LARGER COMPONENT - A REGULAR SPOT - SURVIVING AFTER NOV.15. THE AXIS OF THIS GROUP IS INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR IN THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION TO THE NORMAL, I.E. THE FOLLOWER AND NOT THE LEADER SPOT IS NEARER THE EQUATOR. 13075 19381112 19381124 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON NOV. 13 AND 17. 13077 19381113 19381124 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, PREDOMINATES. BETWEEN NOV.21 AND 22, THIS SPOT SPLITS INTO TWO PARTS WHICH REPEL ONE ANOTHER. 13078 19381114 19381119 A SMALL STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 13079 19381116 19381122 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS (BECOMING TEMPORARILY SMALL CLUSTERS ON NOV.17), IN A CONSIDERABLE AREA OF FACULAE. 13080 19381117 19381125 AN IRREGULAR STREAM OF MEDIUM-SIZED SPOTS. 13081 19381119 19381123 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13082 19381120 19381124 A SMALL BI-POLAR GROUP ON NEARLY THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 13077 AND 13080. 13083 19381122 19381125 A SMALL STREAM ON NOV.22: A SINGLE SPOT ON NOV.25. 13084 19381122 19381125 INTERMITTENT: A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOV.22: A SINGLE SPOT ON NOV.25. 13085 19381122 19381130 A SMALL STREAM OF RATHER SLOW DEVELOPMENT, WITH THE LARGEST COMPONENT IN THE REAR. 13086 19381123 19381205 AN EXTENSIVE STREAM, RAPID IN DEVELOPMENT,AND OF APPROXIMATELY NORMAL TYPE. THERE ARE VIGOROUS CHANGES, HOWEVER, ALTERING THE APPEARANCE OF THE GROUP FROM DAY TO DAY. AN EXTENSIVE LATERAL OFFSHOOT FROM THE LEADER SPOT ON NOV.26 NEARLY CLOSES THE GAP BETWEEN THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER, AND THIS LINK, WITH ITS TRAIN OF NUCLEI, CONTINUES FOR SEVERAL DAYS AS A DISTINCTIVE FEATURE. 13087 19381124 19381126 A SMALL SPOT. 13088 19381124 19381125 A TINY CLUSTER. 13089 19381124 19381204 INITIALLY A SMALL STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS. A SUDDEN CHANGE TAKES PLACE BETWEEN NOV.28 AND 30, AND A LARGE REGULAR SPOT FORMS AT THE HEAD OF THE STREAM. 13090 19381127 19381128 ONE SPOT ON NOV.27: A PAIR ON NOV.28. 13091 19381129 19381207 A REGULAR SPOT USUALLY WITH A FEW COMPANIONS. 13092 19381201 19381210 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 13093 19381201 19381214 RETURN OF GROUP 13064. A LARGE SPOT WITH TWO MAIN UMBRAE; THERE IS A "BRIDGE" FROM NORTH TO SOUTH BETWEEN THEM, AND THIS BECOMES A LINE OF CLEAVAGE BY DEC.9. 13094 19381202 19381203 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN THE TRAIN OF GROUP 13086. 13095 19381202 19381203 A SMALL SPOT NP GROUP 13091. 13096 19381202 19381207 A SMALL SPOT DYING OUT;A COMPANION IS PRESENT ON DEC.6. 13097 19381203 19381212 A GROUP SHOWING CONSIDERABLE CHANGES BETWEEN DEC.5 AND DEC.11. 13098 19381204 19381205 A SMALL SPOT LASTING ONLY TWO DAYS FROM THE EAST LIMB. 13099 19381204 19381216 RETURN OF GROUP 13076. A COMPLEX SPOT BREAKING UP COMPLETELY AFTER DEC.8. ONE OF THE PARTS CONTINUES AS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AFTER DEC.12. (SEE GROUP 13106.) 13100 19381205 19381207 A SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 13101 19381206 19381209 A SMALL GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. 13102 19381206 19381208 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT. 13103 19381206 19381214 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS WHICH HAVE DIED OUT BY DEC.8. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION APPEARS IN THE SAME PLACE ON DEC.11. 13104 19381206 19381207 A SMALL SPOT. 13105 19381206 19381219 RETURN OF GROUP 13072. A VERY LONG STRAGGLING STREAM IN AN EXTENSIVE AREA OF FACULAE, HEADED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. ANOTHER REGULAR SPOT AS FOLLOWER DEVELOPS A DOUBLE UMBRA ON DEC.11, AND SPLITS UP TWO DAYS LATER. ALL THE SPOTS HAVE PRACTICALLY DIED OUT BY THE TIME THIS GREAT AREA OF DISTURBANCE HAS REACHED THE WEST LIMB. 13106 19381207 19381216 RETURN OF GROUP 13076. A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE COMING IN BEHIND GROUP 13099. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS BY DEC.14. 13107 19381207 19381215 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONE SHOWS UNUSUAL PERSISTENCY FOR ITS SIZE, NP GROUP 13105. NOTHING IS SEEN ON DEC.14. 13108 19381209 19381211 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 13093. 13109 19381209 19381218 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE AND OF RAPID GROWTH. CONSIDERABLE CHANGES TAKE PLACE BETWEEN DEC.14 AND 15 AFTER WHICH THE GROUP RAPIDLY DECLINES. 13110 19381209 19381221 RETURN OF GROUP 13075. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING ON DEC.19. 13111 19381211 19381217 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON DEC.12 AND 15. 13112 19381211 19381214 RETURN OF GROUP 13080. A SMALL GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE, THE LEADER BEING THE SOLE SURVIVOR ON DEC.4. 13113 19381212 19381219 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS BECOMING A SMALL STREAM BY DEC.5. 13114 19381213 19381225 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL FOLLOWERS FROM DEC.15-20. 13115 19381214 19381226 A STRAGGLING STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING AS THE GROUP COMES ON TO THE DISK. AFTER DEC.19 THE LEADER GROWS CONSIDERABLY AND THERE ARE CHANGES IN THE OTHER COMPONENTS WHICH MARKEDLY ALTER THE APPEARANCE OF THE GROUP WITHIN A FEW DAYS. THE STREAM IS RAPIDLY DIMINISHING BY THE TIME IT REACHES THE WEST LIMB. 13116 19381215 19381218 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON DEC. 15 AND 18, NEAR THE POSITION OF GROUP 13112. 13117 19381215 19381218 A GROUP OF UNSTABLE SPOTS. 13118 19381219 19381221 A PAIR OF SPOTS DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13119 19381219 19381231 RETURN OF GROUP 13086. A SPOT OF NEARLY REGULAR OUTLINE, BUT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, CLOSELY PRECEDING GROUP 13122. 13120 19381220 19381226 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PRECEDING GROUP 13121. 13121 19381220 19390101 RETURN OF GROUP 13089. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A PAIR OF COMPANIONS SOUTH OF IT UNTIL DEC.24. 13122 19381220 19390101 RETURN OF GROUP 13086. A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM OF SPOTS IN WHICH AT FIRST THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT DOMINATES. LATER, A REGULAR SPOT BECOMES ESTABLISHED AS THE LEADER. 13123 19381224 19381225 A SINGLE SPOT ON EACH DAY DIFFERING A COUPLE OF DEGREES IN LATITUDE. 13124 19381224 19390105 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TINY DISTANT FOLLOWER ON DEC.29. 13125 19381226 19381229 A PAIR OF SPOTS, THE LEADER BEING THE MORE STABLE. 13126 19381226 19381227 A SHORT-LIVED SPOT. 13127 19381227 19381230 A PAIR OF SPOTS SP GROUPS 13119 AND 13122. 13128 19381229 19390110 RETURN OF GROUP 13093: 3RD APPEARANCE. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS ON JAN.1 AND 8. 13129 19381230 19381231 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 13128. 13130 19381231 19390111 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPOSITE SPOT THAT DIVIDES UP AND BECOMES A SHORT STREAM. 13131 19390101 19390106 RETURN OF 13099; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 13132 19390102 19390103 A SMALL SPOT. 13133 19390103 19390105 A SINGLE SPOT. 13134 19390103 19390108 SOME SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 4, DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM WITH THE FOLLOWER AS THE LARGEST COMPONENT. 13135 19390104 19390106 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13136 19390105 19390109 A SMALL, DEFINITE SPOT. 13137 19390106 19390117 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, THE LEADING SPOT ALONE REMAINING AFTER JAN. 13. 13138 19390106 19390117 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. RETURN OF GROUP 13110: THIRD APPEARANCE. 13139 19390107 19390113 A SMALL STREAM OF A FEW SPOTS. 13140 19390110 19390115 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH RAPID DEVELOPMENT. 13141 19390110 19390112 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM N GROUP 13140. 13142 19390110 19390120 A STREAM OF COMPOSITE SPOTS OR CLUSTERS, SIMPLIFYING TO TWO OR THREE COMPONENTS BY JAN. 18. 13143 19390110 19390121 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13144 19390110 19390114 A FEW SMALL, UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM. 13145 19390110 19390121 A SPOT THAT PERSISTS ALTHOUGH UNDERGOING CHANGES OF STRUCTURE; A FEW COMPANIONS FORM AND DISAPPEAR NEAR IT. 13146 19390111 19390112 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13147 19390114 19390117 A SMALL STREAM SUDDENLY APPEARING S GROUP 13137. 13148 19390115 19390127 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. ANTECEDENT ACTIVITY IS SHOWN BY THE SMALL GROUP, NO. 13127. 13149 19390116 19390117 A WIDE PAIR OF FAINT SPOTS ON JAN. 16. A SINGLE SPOT ON JAN. 17. 13150 19390118 19390123 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS ON JAN. 18 AND 19; NOTHING IS SEEN ON JAN. 20, BUT A PAIR OF MORE DEFINITE SPOTS APPEARS ON JAN. 21. 13151 19390118 19390124 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL SPOT ON JAN. 18-19. AFTER A LAPSE OF TWO DAYS, A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM APPEARS IN ITS PLACE. 13152 19390119 19390121 A SMALL SPOT P GROUP 13148. 13153 19390120 19390123 ON JAN. 20, A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS A SHORT STREAM, WITH ITS AXIS NEARLY AT RIGHT-ANGLES TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 13154 19390120 19390128 A STREAM OF SMALL, UNSTABLE SPOTS. 13155 19390120 19390128 A PARTIALLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT, WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON JAN. 22. 13156 19390120 19390201 AN ELONGATED SPOT WITH THREE OR FOUR UMBRAE UNTIL AFTER JAN. 28, WHEN IT BECOMES MORE NEARLY CIRCULAR. 13157 19390121 19390128 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER, REPRESENTED BY A CLUSTER, SOON DIES OUT, LEAVING THE FOLLOWER TO CONTINUE ALONE. 13158 19390124 19390127 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED, VIGOROUS STREAM IMMEDIATELY S GROUP 13148 AND FOLLOWING THE POSITION OF GROUP 13152. 13159 19390124 19390204 A BI-POLAR GROUP; BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE REGULAR SPOTS. 13160 19390125 19390206 RETURN OF GROUP 13128; FOURTH APPEARANCE. A NEARLY CIRCULAR SPOT WITH DOUBLE AND, LATER, TRIPLE UMBRAE; IT IS BREAKING UP AFTER FEB. 3. THIS SPOT CLOSELY S PRECEDES GROUP 13161. 13161 19390126 19390129 A SMALL GROUP. 13162 19390126 19390201 INTERMITTENT: A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JAN. 29 AND 30. 13163 19390126 19390206 WITH GROUP 13160, A RETURN OF GROUP 13128. A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART, THOUGH NOT DEVELOPED UNTIL ABOUT JAN. 30, IS THE FIRST TO DISAPPEAR. 13164 19390128 19390131 A SMALL SPOT. 13165 19390130 19390203 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JAN. 31. 13166 19390130 19390210 RETURN OF GROUP 13140. A REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT RATHER QUICKLY AFTER FEB. 5. 13167 19390201 19390203 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED GROUP F GROUP 13163. 13168 19390202 19390205 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL GROUP OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 13169 19390202 19390211 A STREAM, COMPARATIVELY LONG-LIVED FOR ITS SIZE. 13170 19390203 19390204 A TINY STREAM. 13171 19390203 19390209 A BI-POLAR GROUP APPEARING SUDDENLY ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT THROUGHOUT. THE FOLLOWER, REGULAR AT FIRST, SPLITS UP ON FEB. 5 AND IS SOON DISAPPEARING. 13172 19390206 19390210 A SMALL STREAM SEEN FULLY FORMED ON ONLY ONE DAY-FEB. 7. 13173 19390206 19390208 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 13174 19390206 19390207 RETURN OF GROUP 13143. A VERY SMALL SPOT. 13175 19390209 19390218 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 13150. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13176 19390210 19390216 A STREAM OF NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS. 13177 19390211 19390215 A SMALL STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 13178 19390211 19390222 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY ONE OR MORE SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL FEB. 16. 13179 19390211 19390223 A STREAM LED BY A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE REAR COMPONENT IS NOT LARGE AND BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER. 13180 19390212 19390214 A TINY GROUP. 13181 19390216 19390221 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RATHER RAPIDLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13182 19390217 19390222 A SMALL STREAM OF UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 13183 19390218 19390219 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEB. 18, ONE OF WHICH IS LEFT ON THE NEXT DAY. 13184 19390219 19390302 FOR SOME DAYS, A SINGLE SPOT: THEN SMALL COMPANIONS FORM IN A TRAIN BEHIND. THERE ARE SMALL BUT RAPID CHANGES AFTER FEB. 25, WHEN A COMPACT STREAM APPEARS WITH ITS AXIS ABNORMALLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 13185 19390219 19390228 A SMALL STREAM MOSTLY OF SMALL, UNSTABLE SPOTS. 13186 19390220 19390226 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH A BRIEF SPURT OF ACTIVITY ON FEB. 24. 13187 19390220 19390228 A TINY SPOT ON FEB. 20 AND 21. AFTER A BLANK OF TWO DAYS, A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARS ON FEB. 24 FOR ONE DAY, FOLLOWED ON FEB. 25 BY A NEW FORMATION (IN APPROXIMATELY THE SAME POSITION) WHICH PERSISTS TO THE WEST LIMB. 13188 19390221 19390224 A SMALL GROUP OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 13189 19390221 19390304 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13190 19390221 19390305 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLOSE FOLLOWER; THE LATTER HAS GONE BY FEB. 27, BUT THE LEADER CONTINUES TO THE WEST LIMB, ALTHOUGH IT SUFFERS PARTIAL DISRUPTION ON MAR. 2. 13191 19390222 19390307 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT DEVELOPING DOUBLE UMBRAE BY FEB. 27, BETWEEN WHICH A CLEAVAGE OF THE WHOLE SPOT TAKES PLACE BY THE FOLLOWING DAY. THE REAR PART REGAINS A REGULAR OUTLINE, WHILST THE PRECEDING PART DISINTEGRATES FURTHER AND THUS DISAPPEARS. 13192 19390223 19390224 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13193 19390224 19390302 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, NEAR THE POSITION OF GROUP 13168 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. 13194 19390227 19390311 REVIVAL OF GROUP 13166. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 13195 19390301 19390302 A SMALL SPOT. 13196 19390301 19390302 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13197 19390301 19390314 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND ULTIMATELY SURVIVES THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE LEADING PART OF THE STREAM. 13198 19390302 19390303 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13199 19390303 19390308 TWO OR MORE SMALL, WIDELY-SPACED SPOTS N GROUP 13197. 13200 19390307 19390310 SMALL, UNSTABLE SPOTS. 13201 19390307 19390313 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL SPOT ON MAR. 7: A TINY STREAM ON MAR. 12: A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR. 13. 13202 19390308 19390320 RETURN OF GROUP 13181. A SMALL, STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13203 19390309 19390312 A SMALL STREAM OF A FEW COMPONENTS. 13204 19390310 19390323 RETURN OF GROUP 13179. AT FIRST, A FAIRLY LARGE REGULAR SPOT; A LITTLE N OF THIS, A COMPACT STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPS, A REGULAR SPOT EMERGING AS THE LEADER AFTER MAR. 16. THIS NEW FORMATION MIGHT BE CONSIDERED AS A SEPARATE GROUP. 13205 19390311 19390312 A SMALL SPOT. UNBROKEN CONTINUITY WITH GROUP 13182 IS UNCERTAIN. 13206 19390313 19390323 RETURN OF GROUP 13186. A REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON MAR. 13 AND 14. 13207 19390316 19390321 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 13208 19390317 19390319 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAR.18. 13209 19390318 19390320 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13210 19390318 19390319 ONE OR TWO SPOTS F GROUP 13202. 13211 19390318 19390329 A BI-POLAR GROUP, THE FOLLOWER SPOT BREAKING UP INTO A CLUSTER AFTER MAR.22. 13212 19390320 19390321 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13213 19390320 19390326 A DISTURBED AREA CONTAINING VARIABLE SPOTS APPEARING PROGRESSIVELY NEARER THE EQUATOR. 13214 19390320 19390325 RETURN OF GROUP 13190. A SMALL, DEFINITE SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER ON MAR.24. 13215 19390321 19390329 A GROUP OF FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT UNTIL MAR.26, WHEN LARGER SPOTS APPEAR. 13216 19390322 19390326 REVIVAL OF GROUP 13189. A SMALL SPOT. 13217 19390327 19390328 A SMALL, ISOLATED SPOT. 13218 19390329 19390405 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL SPOT; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL APRIL 2, WHEN MORE DEFINITE SPOTS APPEAR. 13219 19390329 19390409 A PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 13197. A STREAM OF SLOW DEVELOPMENT, THE LEADER UNDER-GOING CHANGE BUT RETAINING ITS IDENTITY UP TO THE WEST LIMB. 13220 19390331 19390405 A VERY SMALL BUT PERSISTENT GROUP. 13221 19390401 19390412 A TYPICAL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 13222 19390402 19390404 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 13223 19390402 19390403 A SINGLE SPOT. 13224 19390402 19390406 A SMALL, BUT DEFINITE SPOT. 13225 19390402 19390408 A SMALL, PERSISTENT SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON APRIL 3. 13226 19390404 19390416 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 13209. ONE OR MORE INDEFINITE SPOTS UNTIL APRIL 12. ON THE FOLLOWING DAY A REGULAR SPOT HAS SUDDENLY APPEARED, AND ON APRIL 15 ANOTHER HAS FORMED. 13227 19390406 19390418 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13228 19390407 19390415 AN UNSTABLE STREAM OF GENERALLY UNIMPORTANT SPOTS. 13229 19390407 19390420 RETURN OF GROUP 13204: THIRD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13230 19390409 19390419 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 13231 19390410 19390421 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANION. 13232 19390410 19390414 A FEW SMALL, UNSTABLE SPOTS. 13233 19390411 19390413 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13234 19390412 19390415 SMALL, FAINT SPOTS. 13235 19390413 19390421 A LARGE, COMPACT STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WITH SUDDEN DEVELOPMENT BETWEEN APRIL 13 AND 14. ON APRIL 14, THE PENUMBRAE OF THE COMPONENT SPOTS PRACTICALLY MERGE INTO ONE ANOTHER TO FORM ONE BIG, COMPLEX SPOT. 13236 19390413 19390419 A SMALL, UNSTABLE GROUP NEAR THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 13237 19390414 19390425 A SMALL STREAM OF HALTING DEVELOPMENT; BY APRIL 17, HOWEVER, A SMALL, DEFINITE BI-POLAR GROUP HAS APPEARED. A RELATION TO GROUP 13211 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION SEEMS LIKELY. 13238 19390415 19390416 ONE OR TWO SMALL, SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 13239 19390415 19390417 A SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY. 13240 19390416 19390428 A REGULAR SPOT. A PAIR OF COMPANIONS DEVELOP CLOSELY BEHIND IT ON APRIL 19. 13241 19390417 19390422 A DOUBLE SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION FOR A FEW DAYS. 13242 19390419 19390501 A BI-POLAR GROUP IN WHICH THE SEPARATION BETWEEN THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER SPOTS IS LESS THAN USUAL. AFTER APRIL 22, CONSIDERABLE DEVELOPMENT TAKES PLACE IN AND AROUND THE FOLLOWER, WHICH SURVIVES THE LEADER BY TWO DAYS. 13243 19390420 19390421 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 13244 19390420 19390426 A STREAM OF RAPID GROWTH NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE FOLLOWER SPOT IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT AT FIRST, BUT IT IS NOT SO STABLE AS THE LEADER, AND RAPIDLY BREAKS UP AFTER APRIL 24. 13245 19390420 19390502 A LARGE SPOT WITH MINOR DEPARTURE FROM THE REGULAR STRUCTURE. A CLUSTER OF COM-PANIONS SOUTHWARDS IS FAIRLY PROMINENT FOR THE FIRST FEW DAYS OF ITS TRANSIT ACROSS THE DISK. 13246 19390420 19390501 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13247 19390420 19390502 A LARGE GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE. AT FIRST, THE LEADER HAS A DOUBLE UMBRA, BUT AFTER SOME CHANGES HAVE TAKEN PLACE IT SETTLES DOWN TO A REGULAR SPOT. MEANWHILE, THE FOLLOWER, WHICH EARLIER LOOKED MORE STABLE THAN THE LEADER, BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND BARELY SURVIVES TO THE WESTERN LIMB. 13248 19390421 19390426 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON APRIL 21 AND 26. 13249 19390422 19390503 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 13220. INTERMITTENT. A DISTURBURBED AREA NF GROUP 13247. A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM APPEARS ON APRIL 26 AND 27; ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS SUCCEEDING THIS, MERGE INTO THE GENERAL CONFINES OF GROUP 13247. 13250 19390423 19390429 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT TEMPORARILY WITH A COMPOSITE UMBRA ON APRIL 24 AND 25. THERE ARE SMALL FOLLOWERS UNTIL APRIL 27. 13251 19390423 19390429 A REGULAR SPOT WITH FOLLOWERS. THE GROUP ORIGINATES WITH GROUP 13250. 13252 19390423 19390505 A ROUGHLY CIRCULAR SPOT BECOMING DISTINCTLY ELONGATED FROM APRIL 26-28 AND REGAINING A REGULAR OUTLINE. THERE IS A SMALL, DISTANT FOLLOWER FROM APRIL 25 TO 27. 13253 19390424 19390428 A SMALL SPOT. 13254 19390426 19390507 A SHORT STREAM OF SPOTS LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 13255 19390427 19390503 A RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 13219. A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT GROUP OF A FEW SPOTS. 13256 19390427 19390504 A LONG, SPARSE STREAM. THE FOLLOWING SPOT IS USUALLY THE LARGEST COMPONENT. 13257 19390429 19390503 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAY 1 AND 2. 13258 19390429 19390508 A REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO DISTANT COMPANIONS WHICH HAVE GONE BY MAY 3. 13259 19390429 19390511 A LARGE SPOT OF REGULAR TYPE, BEHIND WHICH A COMPACT TRAIN DEVELOPS. THE UMBRA OF THIS LEADER SPOT IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" UNTIL MAY 6. 13260 19390501 19390502 ONE OR TWO SMALL, SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 13261 19390502 19390511 AN ACTIVE STREAM WITH APPRECIABLE CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. THE ORIGINAL LEADER SPOT IS ABSORBED BY OTHER SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING IT ON MAY 5 AND 6 TO FORM A LARGER SPOT WITH MULTIPLE UMBRAE. 13262 19390502 19390508 RETURN OF GROUP 13209: THIRD APPEARANCE. A GROUP OF RATHER WIDELY SEPARATED AND DIMINUTIVE SPOTS. 13263 19390502 19390514 A STREAM LED BY A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WHICH ALONE REMAINS AFTER MAY 9. 13264 19390504 19390511 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAY 9. 13265 19390507 19390513 A SMALL, DEFINITE SPOT ON EACH DAY EXCEPT MAY 9, WHEN A PAIR OF SPOTS IS PRESENT. 13266 19390507 19390517 RETURN OF GROUP 13235. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER UNTIL MAY 12. 13267 19390507 19390518 RETURN OF GROUP 13231. A SMALLISH REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS UNTIL MAY 14. 13268 19390507 19390517 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RATHER RAPIDLY AFTER ABOUT MAY 14. 13269 19390509 19390513 A SHORT-LIVED GROUP WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON MAY 10, APPEARING S GROUP 13263. 13270 19390509 19390520 A STREAM, NONDESCRIPT IN APPEARANCE AT FIRST, BUT CHANGING RAPIDLY INTO ONE OF BI-POLAR TYPE AFTER MAY 16. 13271 19390509 19390518 A SMALL STREAM OF SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE SURVIVOR REMAINS AFTER MAY 15. 13272 19390510 19390515 A SMALL STREAM WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS FOLLOWER. 13273 19390510 19390515 A SMALL GROUP IN FRONT OF GROUP 13266. 13274 19390511 19390522 RETURN OF GROUP 13244. A SMALL, DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT USUALLY WITH FOLLOWERS. 13275 19390512 19390517 A SMALL EQUATORIAL STREAM PRECEDING GROUP 13268, AND ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 13267 AND 13273. 13276 19390512 19390517 A SMALL STREAM FORMING ON ABOUT THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 13270 AND 13271. 13277 19390512 19390513 A TINY EPHEMERAL GROUP. 13278 19390513 19390519 A STREAM OF LITTLE IMPORTANCE EXCEPT ON MAY 15 AND 16. 13279 19390514 19390518 ONE OR TWO SPOTS APPEARING ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUPS 13267, 13273 AND 13275. 13280 19390514 19390525 RETURN OF GROUP 13240. A REGULAR SPOT DECREASING FAIRLY RAPIDLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13281 19390517 19390529 RETURN OF GROUP 13247. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13282 19390518 19390520 A SMALL SPOT. 13283 19390518 19390530 INTERMITTENT: A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE"; THE SPOT HAS BROKEN UP INTO THREE SMALL NUCLEI ON MAY 27. NOTHING IS SEEN ON MAY 28 AND 29, BUT A SMALL SPOT REAPPEARS ON MAY 30. 13284 19390519 19390522 A GROUP OF A FEW TINY SPOTS. 13285 19390521 19390522 A SPOT SEEN ONLY FOR TWO DAYS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13286 19390521 19390523 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAY 22. 13287 19390521 19390530 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE AND OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT. 13288 19390521 19390528 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO FOLLOWERS. 13289 19390523 19390525 A VERY SMALL GROUP. 13290 19390523 19390603 A DEVELOPING STREAM LED BY A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA. BY MAY 27, THIS SPOT HAS DEFINITELY DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS, THE FORMER CONTINUING IN ITS CIRCULAR STRUCTURE TO THE WEST LIMB. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM CONTINUES ACTIVE FOR RATHER LONGER THAN THE USUAL TIME. 13291 19390523 19390604 RETURN OF GROUP 13254. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER ON MAY 26. 13292 19390524 19390602 THOUGH NOT VERY LARGE, A GROUP OF SUBSTANTIAL ACTIVITY. 13293 19390525 19390527 A SMALL SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER. 13294 19390526 19390527 A PAIR OF SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13295 19390526 19390527 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 13290. 13296 19390526 19390530 A SMALL DEFINITE SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON MAY 27-29. 13297 19390527 19390530 USUALLY A PAIR OF SPOTS. 13298 19390527 19390608 A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, FINALLY SEVERING INTO TWO SPOTS BETWEEN JUNE 5 AND 6. 13299 19390528 19390606 ONE OR TWO SMALL INTERMITTENT SPOTS. 13300 19390528 19390605 RETURN OF GROUP 13265. A DISTURBED AREA CONTAINING SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 13298. 13301 19390528 19390601 A SMALL, DEFINITE SPOT. 13302 19390528 19390608 A SMALL BI-POLAR GROUP. 13303 19390529 19390610 RETURN OF GROUP 13263. A REGULAR SPOT DEVELOPING A DOUBLE UMBRA BY JUNE 5. AND DIVIDING INTO TWO BY JUNE 7. 13304 19390529 19390607 A STREAM OF SPOTS WITH ITS MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT JUST SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB. 13305 19390531 19390603 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13306 19390531 19390604 A SHORT-LIVED REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL FOLLOWER ON JUNE 2 SP GROUP 13302. 13307 19390601 19390602 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED SPOT. 13308 19390603 19390609 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 13309 19390603 19390610 REVIVAL OR RETURN OF GROUP 13267: THIRD APPEARANCE. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 13310 19390603 19390614 RETURN OF GROUP 13278. A STREAM, WHOSE LARGEST COMPONENT IS THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT. THIS REMAINS AFTER THE REST OF THE STREAM HAS DISAPPEARED. 13311 19390605 19390606 A SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY. 13312 19390605 19390614 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER SPOT IS USUALLY COMPOSITE; THE TRAIN DISAPPEARS RATHER RAPIDLY. 13313 19390606 19390609 A PAIR OF DEFINITE SPOTS PRECEDING GROUP 13303. 13314 19390606 19390610 A SMALL GROUP OF FEEBLE BUT PROTRACTED ACTIVITY. 13315 19390607 19390611 INTERMITTENT: ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 8 AND 9. 13316 19390608 19390619 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FOLLOWING SPOT IS AT FIRST THE LARGEST COMPONENT, BUT THIS DIMINISHES MORE RAPIDLY THAN THE LEADER DURING THE RAPID FADING OUT OF THE GROUP AFTER JUNE 15. 13317 19390609 19390619 A REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL FOLLOWERS UNTIL JUNE 15. THE SPOT DEVELOPS A DOUBLE UMBRA ON JUNE 14 AND THEN RAPIDLY BREAKS UP, THE PRECEDING PART BEING THE LAST TO DISAPPEAR. 13318 19390610 19390612 RETURN OF GROUP 13280: THIRD APPEARANCE. SOME SMALL SPOTS FOLLOWING GROUP 13317. 13319 19390611 19390612 A TINY EPHEMERAL GROUP. 13320 19390611 19390621 AT FIRST, A SMALL GROUP OF INDEFINITE DEVELOPMENT. ON JUNE 15, HOWEVER, A STREAM OF BI-POLAR TYPE EMERGES, BUT THE LEADER IS SOON THE ONLY SURVIVING SPOT. 13321 19390612 19390624 A FEW SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 13322 19390612 19390613 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13323 19390613 19390616 A SINGLE SPOT. 13324 19390614 19390626 A REGULAR SPOT WITH VARIABLE COMPANIONS THAT ARE OF SOME IMPORTANCE ON JUNE 19-22. 13325 19390614 19390625 REVIVAL NEAR GROUP 13281. REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION SPOT ON JUNE 17. 13326 19390615 19390618 INTERMITTENT: ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 16. 13327 19390617 19390622 A SINGLE SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JUNE 17, 21 AND 22, REPRESENTING A FEEBLY DISTURBED AREA PRECEDING GROUP 13324. 13328 19390618 19390619 A SMALL SPOT. 13329 19390619 19390621 A SMALL GROUP FORMING BEHIND GROUP 13320. 13330 19390622 19390624 A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 22: TWO SPOTS AFTERWARDS IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA. 13331 19390623 19390703 A VARIABLE STREAM; COMPONENTS AT MAXIMUM GROWTH TEND TO GROUP THEMSELVES IN TWO OR THREE CLUSTERS. 13332 19390623 19390705 RETURN OF GROUP 13298. A REGULAR SPOT ON THE SAME MERIDIAN AS GROUP 13331. 13333 19390624 19390705 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS ON JUNE 27 AND 30. 13334 19390625 19390628 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13335 19390625 19390704 A SMALL STREAM OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART DIES OUT BY JUNE 30. 13336 19390626 19390628 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13337 19390626 19390628 TWO SPOTS ON JUNE 26 AND 27: ONLY ONE ON JUNE 28. 13338 19390626 19390708 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13339 19390627 19390629 TWO TINY CLUSTERS DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13340 19390627 19390703 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 28 AND 29. 13341 19390627 19390705 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT. ITS POINT OF ORIGIN IS MARKED BY A SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 27. 13342 19390628 19390629 A SMALL SPOT. 13343 19390628 19390708 RETURN OF GROUP 13322. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 13344 19390629 19390703 A SMALL STREAM OF INDEFINITE SPOTS QUICKLY DYING OUT. 13345 19390630 19390708 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JULY 1 AND 6. 13346 19390703 19390706 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13347 19390703 19390704 A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 3: A PAIR ON JULY 4. 13348 19390703 19390715 A LARGE STREAM OF COMPOSITE SPOTS. THE LEADER DIVIDES INTO TWO BY JULY 9, AND THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM DIES OUT BEFORE THE WEST LIMB IS REACHED. 13349 19390703 19390715 A CLUSTER OF SPOTS BECOMING, WITH ADDITIONAL SPOTS, A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM AFTER JULY 6. 13350 19390704 19390714 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH RAPID GROWTH FROM A TINY SPOT ON JULY 4. 13351 19390707 19390708 A TINY SPOT. 13352 19390708 19390713 SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM DISAPPEARING ABRUPTLY. 13353 19390709 19390711 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 13354 19390711 19390724 A REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED THROUGHOUT BY A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT. FROM JULY 12 TO 15, THE UMBRA OF THE REGULAR SPOT IS INTERSECTED BY A "BRIDGE". 13355 19390712 19390716 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM ORIGINATING FROM A TINY SPOT. 13356 19390713 19390719 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL CLUSTER ON JULY 13: ONE SMALL SPOT ON JULY 19. 13357 19390713 19390724 A REGULAR SPOT ALONE UNTIL JULY 17, WHEN A SMALL CLUSTER FORMS BEHIND. THE GROUP DIES OUT TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 13358 19390714 19390717 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 13359 19390714 19390726 A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH MAXIMUM GROWTH ABOUT JULY 20, AFTER WHICH IT BEGINS TO BREAK UP. 13360 19390715 19390722 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING IN FRONT OF GROUP 13354. 13361 19390719 19390720 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 13362 19390720 19390729 A STREAM WHOSE ORIGIN AND INITIAL GROWTH OCCUR ON THE FULLY PRESENTED PART OF THE SOLAR DISK. 13363 19390721 19390724 RETURN OF GROUP 13341. A SINGLE SPOT. TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 2. 13364 19390721 19390731 A REGULAR SPOT; THERE IS A SMALL COMPANION ON JULY 26-28. 13365 19390725 19390731 TWO SPOTS ON JULY 25-27: ONE ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 13366 19390725 19390803 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 13338. INTERMITTENT. A SMALL REGION OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 13367 19390728 19390731 A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13368 19390728 19390809 RETURN OF GROUP 13350. A REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON AUG. 1 AND 2. 13369 19390729 19390803 A SMALL SPOT. 13370 19390731 19390811 A SMALL NORMAL STREAM DYING OUT TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 13371 19390801 19390813 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 13372 19390803 19390809 A STREAM FORMING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN ON AUG. 3 AND NORTH OF GROUP 13368. 13373 19390806 19390817 AT FIRST AN EXTENDED STREAM. AFTER AUG. 13, THE LEADER SPOT COALESCES WITH SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING IT, AND A REGULAR SPOT EMERGES. THE REAR OF THE STREAM DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 13374 19390808 19390813 A SMALL STREAM FORMING JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13375 19390808 19390817 A TYPICAL STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS ON AUG. 8. 13376 19390808 19390819 UNTIL AUG. 12, A REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS. ON AUG. 13, THE SPOT BECOMES ELONGATED AND COMPLEX BEFORE BREAKING UP ON AUG. 16 INTO A STREAM THAT DOES NOT LONG SURVIVE. 13377 19390808 19390820 RETURN OF GROUP 13354. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13378 19390810 19390812 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 13379 19390810 19390821 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENTS HAVE DIED OUT BY AUG. 15. 13380 19390811 19390812 A TINY STREAM ON AUG. 11; ONE SPOT REMAINS ON THE NEXT DAY P GROUP 13377. 13381 19390811 19390817 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING S GROUP 13376. 13382 19390812 19390817 A COMPACT STREAM ORIGINATING JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13383 19390812 19390819 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT BREAKING UP INTO A CLUSTER. THIS DIES OUT ON AUG. 16, BUT SMALL SPOTS RE-APPEAR FOR A DAY ON AUG. 19. 13384 19390813 19390814 A SMALL SPOT. 13385 19390813 19390825 RETURN OF GROUP 13362. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13386 19390815 19390821 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING FROM A FAINT CLUSTER. 13387 19390815 19390828 A LARGE STREAM LED BY A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT IS FIRST REPRESENTED BY A CLUSTER, BUT A SINGLE SPOT EMERGES BY AUG. 24. 13388 19390816 19390827 RETURN OF GROUP 13367. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH SLOW DECLINE IN AREA. 13389 19390818 19390822 THE SAME SMALL SPOT FOR FOUR DAYS, IF NOT FOR FIVE. 13390 19390820 19390823 A SMALL CLUSTER. 13391 19390820 19390901 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, THE FOLLOWER SPOT DYING OUT BY AUG. 27. 13392 19390822 19390826 A TINY SPOT FROM AUG. 22-25; A PAIR ON AUG. 26. 13393 19390823 19390829 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS DYING OUT RATHER QUICKLY. 13394 19390826 19390907 A SINGLE SPOT AT THE EAST LIMB GROWING RAPIDLY INTO A GREAT COMPLEX STRUCTURE. FROM THIS, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT EMERGES, BUT THE REST OF THE GROUP REMAINS COMPLEX. THE AGGREGATE AREA CONTINUES TO RISE UNTIL THE GROUP BEGINS TO PASS OUT OF SIGHT ON SEPT. 7 AT THE WEST LIMB. 13395 19390827 19390907 A STREAM OF SPOTS DEVELOPING N GROUP 13394. THE FOLLOWER IS MORE STABLE THAN THE LEADER SPOT. 13396 19390829 19390830 RETURN OF GROUP 13374. A FEW FAINT SPOTS. 13397 19390829 19390908 A SMALL SPOT DYING OUT ON SEPT. 5. A TINY SPOT IS NEAR THE PLACE ON SEPT. 7 AND 8. A REVIVAL OF GROUP 13374. 13398 19390830 19390905 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 13399 19390830 19390901 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON AUG. 31. 13400 19390831 19390906 INTERMITTENT: ONE TINY SPOT ON EACH DAY EXCEPT SEPT. 1 AND 3. 13401 19390831 19390910 RETURN OF GROUP 13375. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. 13402 19390902 19390909 INTERMITTENT: A TINY SPOT ON SEPT. 2, 8 AND 9. 13403 19390902 19390913 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 13373. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING. 13404 19390904 19390914 A CLUSTER, GROWING TO A MAXIMUM BY SEPT. 7 AND THEN DISSOLVING TO A SINGLE SPOT BY SEPT. 12. 13405 19390904 19390916 REVIVAL OF GROUP 13376. A GIANT COMPLEX GROUP. THE TWO MAIN NUCLEI IN THE FORWARD PART OF THE GROUP RETAIN THEIR FORM AND RELATIVE POSITION. A REGULAR SPOT AT THE REAR OF THE GROUP REMAINS FAIRLY CONSTANT IN AREA BUT TENDS TO DROP BEHIND. 13406 19390905 19390906 A SMALL SPOT NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13407 19390905 19390908 INTERMITTENT. A SPOTLET ON SEPT. 5: A SMALL CLUSTER ON SEPT. 8. 13408 19390905 19390909 RETURN OF GROUP 13377: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SINGLE SPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT. 13409 19390906 19390612 A FEEBLY DISTURBED AREA 0 GROUP 13403; ONE SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY. 13410 19390906 19390918 RETURN OF GROUP 13379. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH SLOW DECREASE IN AREA. 13411 19390907 19390910 A SMALL SPOT DYING OUT. 13412 19390908 19390910 A TINY STREAM ON SEPT.8: A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT.10. 13413 19390908 19390915 A SMALL CLUSTER CONDENSING BY SEPT.12 TO A REGULAR SPOT OF SHORT DURATION. 13414 19390909 19390912 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13415 19390909 19390914 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13416 19390909 19390921 RETURN OF GROUP 13385: THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT OF UNUSUAL STABILITY. IT HAS DRIFTED 1 DEGREE IN LATITUDE TOWARDS THE SUN'S EQUATOR SINCE ITS PREVIOUS TRANSIT OF THE DISK AND OVER 2 DEGREES SINCE ITS ORIGIN ON JULY 20 OR 21. 13417 19390910 19390919 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS BECOMING A SHORT COMPACT STREAM BUT DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 13418 19390912 19390919 RETURN OF GROUP 13387. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING TO A DOT; THERE ARE A FEW TINY COMPANIONS. 13419 19390916 19390917 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON SPET.16: A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT.17. 13420 19390916 19390927 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; THE FOLLOWING PART BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER THAT DOES NOT SURVIVE TO THE WEST LIMB. 13421 19390917 19390923 A SMALL STREAM. 13422 19390918 19390921 TINY SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON SEPT. 18 AND 21. 13423 19390918 19390922 A TINY SPOT APPARENTLY INDENTICAL FROM DAY TO DAY. 13424 19390918 19390929 A SPOT OF MODERATE SIZE, DISINTERGRATING INTO A CLUSTER THAT IS TEMPORARILY INCREASED BY VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 13425 19390919 19390921 A SPOTLET SEEN ONLY ON SEPT.19 AND 21. 13426 19390920 19390929 INTERMITTENT: A FEW SMALL SPOTS THAT HAVE GONE BY SEPT.26: A TINY SPOT APPEARS IN THEIR PLACE ON SEPT.29. 13427 19390922 19391003 RETURN OF GROUP 13394. A LARGE ELONGATED SPOT, WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, THAT FINALLY DIVIDES INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. THERE ARE NUMEROUS COMPANIONS THROUGHOUT. 13428 19390924 19390929 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13429 19390924 19391007 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 13430 19390926 19390928 A SMALL STREAM. 13431 19390926 19391006 A CLUSTER OF SPOTS BECOMING A STREAM BY MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT ON SEPT. 30; THE DECREASE AFTERWARDS IS RATHER RAPID. 13432 19390927 19391004 A SMALL STREAM OF SUDDEN DEVELOPMENT AND RAPID DECAY, NP GROUP 13429. 13433 19390928 19390930 O9NE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13434 19390928 19391010 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 13435 19390928 19391009 A STREAM; THE FOLLOWER DIES OUT BY OCT. 4, ON WHICH DAY THE LEADER SHOWS A TEMPORARY AREA INCREASE IN ITS GENERAL DECLINE. 13436 19390929 19391001 A SMALL STREAM FORMING CLOSE (SP) TO GROUP 13432. 13437 19390209 19391005 INTERMITTENT: A SMALL SPOT LASTING FOR FOUR DAYS; AFTER A BREAK OF TWO DAYS, A TINY SPOT APPEARS NEAR THE ORIGINAL POSITION. 13438 19390930 19391005 A STREAM FORMING IN THE REAR OF GROUP 13427 AND INCREASING IN AREA AS IT PASSES AROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13439 19390930 19391004 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 13440 19390930 19391004 ONE SMALL SPOT. 13441 19391001 19391013 RETURN OF GROUP 13405. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON OCT. 5 AND 7. 13442 19391002 19391003 A FAINT CLUSTER. 13443 19300903 930909 A TINY STREAM. 13444 19391005 19391011 INTERMITTENT: ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS NOT SEEN ON OCT. 6 AND 7. 13445 19391005 19391015 A SINGLE SPOT ON OCT. 5 AND 6; ON THE NEXT DAY NEW SPOTS APPEAR, FORMING A SCATTERED CLUSTER WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON OCT. 9. 13446 19391006 19391017 RIVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 13416. SPOTS IN A COMPLEX CLUSTER, BECOMING A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 13447 19391007 19391008 A TINY CLUSTER. 13449 19391012 19391020 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE ORIGINATING ABOUT 30 EAST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13450 19391013 19391016 A TINY STREAM ON OCT.13 AND 14: A SINGLE SPOT AFTERWARDS. 13451 19391015 19391023 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH ITS EARLY DEVELOPMENT WELL PRESENTED ON THE SUN'S DISK. 13452 19391015 19391023 RAPID CHANGES ARE EXHIBITED: A TINY DOUBLE SPOT ON OCT.15 DEVELOPS INTO A CLUSTER AND THEN INTO A STREAM, WHOSE FOLLOWING HALF QUICKLY DIES OUT. 13453 19391018 19391027 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCT.18 AND 19. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND THE FOLLOWER A CLUSTER, WHICH DIES OUT AFTER OCT.21. 13454 19391018 19391026 SLOWLY DIMINISHING SPOTS ENDING RATHER ABRUPTLY. 13455 19391019 19391029 RETURN OF GROUP 13427: THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING IN SIZE TO A TINY SPOT, LAST SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13456 19391020 19391101 RETURN OF GROUP 13438. A VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA AND A PENUMBRAE APPENDAGE SOUTHWARDS. THERE ARE RELATIVELY STABLE NUCLEAR SPOTS BOTH PRECEDING AND FOLLOWING. 13457 19391022 19391103 RETURN OF GROUP 13429. A REGULAR SPOT IN DECLINE WITH A COMPANION UNTIL OCT.27. 13458 19391023 19391026 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 13459 19391025 19391029 ONE, SOMETIMES TWO, SMALL SPOTS. 13460 19391025 19391106 RETURN OF GROUP 13434. A SLOWLY DECREASING REGULAR SPOT. 13461 19391027 19391107 A SLOWLY DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 13462 19391029 19391107 A STREAM WITH ITS ORIGIN WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN AND GROWING RAPIDLY TO A MAXIMUM IN THREE DAYS. IT DOES NOT SURVIVE TO THE NEXT ROTATION. 13463 19391029 19391101 RETURN OF GROUP 13441: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 13464 19391101 19391109 RETURN OF GROUP 13446. A CLUSTER OF SPOTS BECOMING A STREAM BY NOV.6 THAT SOON DIES OUT. 13465 19391102 19391111 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE BORN EAST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE STREAM HAS REACHED ITS MAXIMUM ON THE THIRD DAY OF ITS LIFE; ITS DECLINE IS RAPID AS IT NEARS THE WEST LIMB. 13466 19391103 19391106 ONE SMALL SPOT ON NOV.3: A PAIR ON NOV.6. 13467 19391105 19391106 ONE TINY SPOT ON EACH DAY. 13468 19391108 19391117 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS NOT SEEN ON NOV.15 AND 16. 13469 19391108 19391111 RETURN OF GROUP 13451. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 13470 19391109 19391120 A TINY STREAM WHEN FIRST SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB. IT GROWS RAPIDLY AT FIRST, REACHES MAXIMUM AREA ON NOV.16 AND THEN QUICKLY DECLINES. 13471 19391110 19391114 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARING WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN AND DEVELOPING INTO A SHORT STREAM BY NOV.12. 13472 19391111 19391120 A MODERATE-SIZED STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A SPOT NEAR THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY NOV.17, REPRESENTED AS A CLUSTER. 13473 19391112 19391118 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON NOV.12: A SINGLE SPOT UNTIL NOV.18. 13474 19391112 19391119 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT, STABLE IN POSITION, AND IN FAIRLY HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE. 13475 19391114 19391125 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WHOSE ORIGIN, MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT AND FIRST STAGES OF DECLINE ALL OCCUR ON THE SUN'S VISIBLE HEMISPHERE. THE GROUP DOES NOT SURVIVE TO THE NEXT ROTATION IN SPITE OF ITS CONSIDERABLE SIZE. 13476 19391116 19391128 RETURN OF GROUP 13456: THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT TENDING TO DECREASE BUT VERY STABLE IN POSITION. THERE ARE A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ON NOV.23. 13477 19391119 19391126 A SINGLE TINY SPOT ON NOV.19 HERALDS THE DEVELOPMENT OF A STREAM, RISING IN AREA AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 13478 19391121 19391203 A REGULAR SPOT RAPIDLY ON THE DOWNGRADE TO EXTINCTION AS IT REACHES THE WEST LIMB. THERE ARE DISTANT COMPANION SPOTS UNTIL NOV. 27. 13479 19391124 19391205 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE SUN'S EQUATOR. THE LEADER ALONE SURVIVES AFTER NOV.29. 13480 19391125 19391127 TWO SPOTS ON NOV.25: ONE SPOT ON NOV.26-27. 13481 19391126 19391129 FAINT SPOTS IN A STREAM. ONLY ONE SPOT IS LEFT ON NOV. 29. 13482 19391127 19391205 A GROUP ORIGINATING AS A PAIR OF SPOTS, WITH A RAPID RISE TO PEAK AREA ON DEC. 1. IT THEN CONSISTS OF A LEADER WITH A PAIR OF SPOTS BEHIND. 13483 19391201 19391212 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS AFTER DEC. 6. 13484 19391203 19391204 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON DEC. 4. 13485 19391206 19391212 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH ONE IS LEFT AFTER DEC. 9. 13486 19391208 19391218 A SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT WHILE DRIFTING ABOUT 1 1/2 SOUTHWARDS IN LATITUDE. 13487 19391208 19391213 A SMALL SPOT DYING OUT. 13488 19391209 19391219 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS ON DEC. 9-11. 13489 19391210 19391223 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT IN RELATIVELY HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE. 13490 19391212 19391223 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 13477. A FEW SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB DEVELOPING INTO A BIGGISH STREAM. THE LEADER CONTINUES ALONE AFTER DEC. 20. 13491 19391213 19391214 ONE SMALL SPOT. 13492 19391213 19391217 RETURN OF GROUP 13476: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON DEC. 17. 13493 19391214 19391216 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13494 19391218 19391224 A SMALL SPOT, STABLE IN POSITION, THAT PETERS OUT NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13495 19391220 19391231 RETURN OF GROUP 13482. TWO REGULAR SPOTS WITH SMALL COMPANIONS. THE LEADING SPOT IS THE FIRST TO BREAK UP AND DISAPPEAR; NO PART OF THE GROUP SURVIVES RIGHT TO THE WEST LIMB. THE REGULAR SPOT WITH THE SMALLER LATITUDE IS A RETURN OF GROUP 13482, THE OTHER SPOT MUST REPRESENT A CLOSELY ADJACENT GROUP ORIGINATING ON THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE. 13496 19391221 19400101 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SHOWING DEFINITE SIGNS OF SHRINKING AS IT PASSES AROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13497 19391224 19391227 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON DEC. 24 AND 27. 13498 19391227 19391229 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON DEC. 27: ONE SPOT ON DEC. 29. 13499 19391228 19391231 A TINY CLUSTER, REPRESENTED BY A SINGLE SPOT ONLY ON DEC. 31. 13500 19391230 19400110 A SMALL STREAM NOT SEEN ON JAN. 1, CLOSELY P GROUP 13502. 13501 19391230 19400109 AT FIRST, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. ON JAN 4, SEVERAL COMPANIONS APPEAR, FORMING A CLUSTER THAT SOON DIES OUT. 13502 19400101 19400111 A GIANT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 1. BOTH OF THE CHIEF COMPONENTS, I.E., THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER, ARE VERY LARGE REGULAR SPOTS OF REMARKABLE STABILITY OVER SEVERAL WEEKS. 13503 19400103 19400104 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 13504 19400104 19400108 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON JAN. 6 AND 7. 13505 19400108 19400116 AT FIRST A SMALL SPOT BECOMING A TINY STREAM THAT DIES DOWN TO A SINGLE SPOT ON JAN. 11. REVIVING ACTIVITY THEN RESULTS IN A SMALL STREAM OR CLUSTER. 13506 19400109 19400111 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 9 AND 10: A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 13507 19400111 19400112 A TINY SPOT. 13508 19400111 19400122 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB DEVELOPING INTO A LONG STREAM OF CHANGING COMPONENTS. 13509 19400113 19400115 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 13 AND 14: ONE SPOT ON JAN. 15. 13510 19400113 19400120 A SMALL CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JAN. 18 AND 19. 13511 19400114 19400115 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JAN. 14: A SINGLE SPOT ON JAN. 15. 13512 19400116 19400123 A CLUSTER FORMING 50 EAST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, RISING TO A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON JAN. 18 AND DISSIPATING BEFORE THE WEST LIMB IS REACHED. 13513 19400116 19400120 A SMALL SPOT REPRESENTING A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 13495. 13514 19400117 19400127 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS WITH A SUDDEN INCREASE IN AREA ON JAN. 23. 13515 19400119 19400123 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 13516 19400120 19400127 A SMALL STREAM OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER JAN. 23. 13517 19400120 19400131 A SMALL STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 13518 19400126 19400207 TOGETHER WITH GROUP 13519, THIS IS A RETURN OF GROUP 13502. A BIG REGULAR SPOT WITH VARIABLE COMPANIONS UNTIL FEB. 4. 13519 19400127 19400208 LINKED WITH GROUP 13518 AS A RETURN OF GROUP 13502. A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLUSTER OF VARIABLE COMPANIONS PRECEDING IT UNTIL FEB. 4. 13520 19400130 19400211 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA UNTIL IT REACHES THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. A NUMBER OF SMALL COMPANIONS THEN EMERGE, BUT THE WHOLE GROUP APPEARS TO BE NEARING EXTINCTION AS IT PASSES AROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13521 19400131 19400201 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 13522 19400131 19400211 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING PERCEPTIBLY AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13523 19400203 19400206 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 13524 19400206 19400217 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A SINGLE SPOT ON FEB. 6. THE LEADER IS THE CHIEF COMPONENT AND IS THE LONGEST LIVED. 13525 19400207 19400216 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WHOSE WHOLE LIFE HISTORY IS PRESENTED ON THE VISIBLE HEMISPHERE. 13526 19400209 19400219 A FEW INERT SPOTS FOR SOME DAYS. ON FEB. 14, A STREAM BEGINS TO DEVELOP QUITE RAPIDLY AND THIS IS STILL GROWING AS IT PASSES AROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13527 19400209 19400214 A PAIR OF SPOTS DYING OUT JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13528 19400211 19400220 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT, BREAKING UP INTO A CLUSTER BY FEB. 17 AND THEN RAPIDLY DYING OUT. 13529 19400213 19400223 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT ON FEB. 13. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT BY FEB. 16. THE FOLLOWER IS REPRESENTED BY A VARIABLE CLUSTER THAT HAS DIED OUT BY FEB. 20. 13530 19400215 19400222 INTERMITTENT. A SINGLE SPOT ON FEB. 15. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL FEB. 19 WHEN A CLUSTER APPEARS NOT FAR FROM THE PREVIOUS POSITION. BY THE NEXT DAY, THE CLUSTER HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION, BUT THE GROUP SOON DIES OUT. 13531 19400219 19400226 A SMALL SHORT LIVED STREAM STARTING WITH A SINGLE SPOT ON FEB.19. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON FEB.24-26. 13532 19400219 19400226 USUALLY A SMALL SINGLE SPOT, BUT A PAIR ON FEB.20 AND 21. 13533 19400220 19400302 A SMALL DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON FEB.23 AND 24. 13534 19400222 19400305 A RETURN OF GROUP 13518: 3RD APPEARANCE. A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT RELATED TO GROUP 13535. 13535 19400224 19400302 RETURN OF GROUP 13519: 3RD APPEARANCE. INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT (RELATED TO GROUP 13534)E REPRESENTING THE END OF THE BIG FOLLOWER SPOT OF GROUP 13502. 13536 19400225 19400303 A WIDE, FEEBLE AREA OF DISTURBANCE DENOTED BY A TINY SPOT THAT IS LOST ON FOUR OF THE EIGHT DAYS. 13537 19400225 19400308 A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT OF MARKED STABILITY. 13538 19400228 19400301 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEB.28: A SINGLE SPOT AFTERWARDS. 13539 19400229 19400304 A STREAM DEVELOPING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 13540 19400229 19400301 A SMALL SPOT. 13541 19400301 19400308 A SMALL COMPACT STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A SINGLE SPOT ON MAR.1. 13542 19400303 19400308 A STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY INTO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE. 13543 19400303 19400310 A SMALL SPOT; A COMPANION FOLLOWS ON MAR.5. RETURN OF GROUP 13524. 13544 19400304 19400313 A MEDIUM-SIZED SPOT WITH COMPANIONS DYING OUT RATHER ABRUPTLY. RETURN OF GROUP 13526. 13545 19400305 19400316 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. PROBABLY ITS FULL LIFE HISTORY IS SEEN FROM A SINGLE SPOT NEAR THE EAST LIMB TO ITS LAST STAGES AS A PAIR OF SPOTS AT THE WEST LIMB. 13546 19400308 19400317 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 13547 19400312 19400316 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS THAT HAS GONE BY MAR.15; ON THE FOLLOWING DAY A SINGLE SPOT IS SEEN A FEW DEGREES OF LONGITUDE 0 THE ORIGINAL POSITION. 13548 19400312 19400319 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 13549 19400313 19400314 A SMALL CLUSTER ON THE FIRST DAY: A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT. 13550 19400314 19400325 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON MAR.19, 20 AND 23. 13551 19400315 19400319 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 13552 19400318 19400324 A TINY SPOT ON MAR.18 AND 19, SUDDENLY DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FOLLOWER SPOT DOES NOT SURVIVE TO THE WEST LIMB. 13553 19400318 19400328 A MEDIUM-SIZED SPOT COMES OVER THE EAST LIMB AND, DIVIDING INTO TWO PARTS BY MAR.21, DIES OUT BEFORE LONG. 13554 19400319 19400324 A RETURN OF GROUP 13539. A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT BREAKING UP INTO A TINY CLUSTER BEFORE DYING OUT. 13555 19400320 19400401 A BIG COMPLEX SPOT WHICH, THOUGH SHOWING AT TIMES GREAT CHROMOSPHERIC ACTIVITY, RETAINS ITS GENERAL SHAPE THROUGHOUT. ITS POSITION, 10 DEGREES OF LONGITUDE IN FRONT OF GROUP 13557 WITH ITS LONG LIFE HISTORY DATING FROM EARLY JANUARY, IS PERHAPS NOT MERELY FORTUITOUS. 13556 19400321 19400322 A TINY CLUSTER ON MAR.21: ONE SPOT ONLY ON MAR.22. 13557 19400321 19400402 RETURN OF GROUP 13534: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT F THE COMPLEX SPOT (GROUP 13555). 13558 19400323 19400331 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE OF WHICH THE LEADER SPOT ALONE REMAINS AFTER MAR.27. 13559 19400323 19400330 ONE SMALL SPOT ON MAR.23: A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS BY MAR.26; A FEW DAYS LATER ONLY ONE TINY COMPONENT IS LEFT. 13560 19400323 19400403 A RETURN OF GROUP 13537. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION UNTIL MAR.29. 13561 19400324 19400326 A FAINT SPOT 0 GROUP 13558. 13562 19400324 19400327 ONE SMALL SPOT ON MAR.24, 25 AND 27: A TINY CLUSTER ON MAR.26. PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 13542. 13563 19400324 19400327 A SMALL SPOT IN RATHER HIGH LATITUDE. 13564 19400326 19400405 A TINY STREAM IN FRONT OF GROUP 13566. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER MAR. 30. 13565 19400327 19400329 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 13566 19400327 19400405 A SMALL STREAM PASSING THROUGH ITS LIFE HISTORY ON THE SUN'S VISIBLE HEMISPHERE. 13567 19400327 19400329 ONE VERY SMALL SPOT. 13568 19400327 19400408 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS UNTIL APR. 4. 13569 19400331 19400407 INTERMITTENT. ONE SMALL SPOT ON MAR. 31 AND APR. 7: A PAIR ON APR. 5 AND 6. 13570 19400401 19400408 A SMALL STREAM. 13571 19400403 19400412 A SMALL STREAM; THE LEADER REMAINS STABLE AFTER THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE DIED OUT BY APR. 8. 13572 19400406 19400416 A DOUBLE SPOT FOLLOWED BY COMPANIONS UNTIL APR. 11 AFTER WHICH IT IN TURN SLOWLY DIES OUT. 13573 19400407 19400413 ONE SMALL SPOT PERSISTING FOR SEVERAL DAYS WITH VARIABLE COMPANIONS. NOTHING IS SEEN ON APR. 12. 13574 19400409 19400411 ONE SMALL SPOT ON APR. 9 AND 11: A PAIR ON APR. 10. 13575 19400409 19400412 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB; IT DOES NOT SURVIVE TO THE NEXT ROTATION. 13576 19400411 19400421 A VARIABLE STREAM RISING TO A MAXIMUM NEAR ITS CENTRAL MERIDIAN PASSAGE AND THEN DISSIPATING AS THE WEST LIMB IS REACHED. 13577 19400412 19400413 A TINY EPHEMERAL GROUP NEAR THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 13578 19400412 19400413 A TINY SPOT. 13579 19400414 19400415 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APR. 14 A SINGLE SPOT ON APR. 15. 13580 19400414 19400425 A SLOWLY DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 13581 19400415 19400417 A FEW EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 13582 19400416 19400427 RETURN OF GROUP 13555: 2ND APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 13583 19400417 19400422 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON APR. 19 AND 20. RETURN OF GROUP 13557. 13584 19400418 19400428 A CHANGING GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS. 13585 19400419 19400430 RETURN OF GROUP 13560: 3RD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13586 19400419 19400421 A PAIR OF SPOTS WITHIN 1 DEGREES OF THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 13587 19400421 19400422 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APR. 21: ONE SPOT ON APR. 22. 13587 19480216 19480222 A TINY SPOT, APPEARING ON THE C.M. A SPECTACULAR DEVELOPMENT TAKES PLACE AFTER FEBRUARY 17, AND BY FEBRUARY 20 THE GROUP HAS BECOME A VERY LARGE ELONGATED COMPOSITE SPOT, CLOSELY PRECEDED BY A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. 13588 19400421 19400424 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT. 13589 19400423 19400424 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APR. 23: ONE SPOT ON APR. 24. 13590 19400424 19400425 A PAIR OF DOTS. 13591 19400425 19400428 A PAIR OF SPOTS DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13592 19400425 19400504 A MEDIUM-SIZED SPOT WITH COMPANIONS UP TO MAY 2. ON MAY 3, THE SPOT DISINTEGRATES AND SO DIES OUT. 13593 19400501 19400510 AT FIRST A FEW SMALL SPOTS. ON MAY 5-6 THERE IS INCREASED ACTIVITY RESULTING IN A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 13594 19400503 19400504 A TINY SPOT. 13595 19400506 19400511 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13596 19400508 19400518 A VARIABLE GROUP. 13597 19400509 19400520 A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 9 WHICH DEVELOPS INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT OF MODERATE SIZE. IT BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER ON MAY 14 AND IS DYING OUT BY THE TIME THE WEST LIMB IS REACHED. 13598 19400512 19400516 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, THE LEADER BEING THE FIRST TO BREAK UP AND DISAPPEAR. 13599 19400512 19400524 RETURN OF GROUP 13582: 3RD APPEARANCE. A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS BOTH DIVIDING ON MAY 17. THE MINOR PORTIONS DIE OUT, THOSE OF THE FOLLOWING SPOT BEING THE FIRST TO GO. 13600 19400513 19400525 AN ELONGATED SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS. 13601 19400514 19400519 AN UNSTABLE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, FORMING S GROUP 13597. 13602 19400515 19400517 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13603 19400518 19400523 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 13604 19400520 19400524 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 13605 19400521 19400529 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING QUICKLY FROM THE PLACE OF A SMALL BRIGHT PATCH OF FACULAE ON MAY 20. THE FOLLOWING SPOT DIES OUT FIRST. 13606 19400523 19400531 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ON MAY 27 AND 28. ONE OF THESE GROWS AND ALONE SURVIVES ON MAY 29. 13607 19400522 19400602 ON MAY 22 AND 23, A SINGLE SMALL SPOT THAT HAS GONE BY MAY 24. A VARIABLE STREAM THEN APPEARS A FEW DEGREES OF LONGITUDE IN ADVANCE OF THE ORIGINAL POSITION. 13608 19400523 19400525 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13609 19400523 19400604 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINING AFTER MAY 30. 13610 19400526 19400528 A DOT F GROUP 13609. 13611 19400529 19400607 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT AT FIRST THAT HAS GONE BY JUNE 1. ON JUNE 2, A SMALL CLUSTER APPEARS A LITTLE IN ADVANCE OF THE ORIGINAL POSITION. 13612 19400530 19400604 INTERMITTENT: ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 13614 19400603 19400604 TWO TINY SPOTS ON JUNE 3: ONE ON JUNE 4. 13615 19400603 19400611 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE FORMING ON THE DISK. THE LEADER DIVIDES INTO TWO ON JUNE 8; THE REAR SPOT OF THE STREAM BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT, AND IS MORE STABLE. GROUP 13617 IS CLOSE BY. 13616 19400603 19400611 A REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING AND SO DYING OUT. 13617 19400604 19400611 A SMALL STREAM, FORMING CLOSELY NORTH OF GROUP 13615 WITH WHICH IT INTERMINGLES. 13618 19400606 19400608 A TINY SPOT ON JUNE 6 THAT HAS GONE BY JUNE 7. ANOTHER SPOT EMERGES ON JUNE 8, 5 DEGREES BEHIND IN LONGITUDE. 13619 19400606 19400618 A STREAM WITH A STABLE REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. THE REST OF THE FORMATION UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGES BEFORE DYING OUT. 13620 19400606 19400617 A LARGISH SPOT, VERY STABLE IN POSITION, BUT SPLITTING INTO TWO AND DECREASING. ON JUNE 17, A COMPANION APPEARS NF. 13621 19400607 19400610 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE IS MISSING ON JUNE 8. 13622 19400607 19400613 INTERMITTENT. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 7 AND 9; A SMALL SHORT-LIVED CLUSTER APPEARS ON JUNE 11. 13623 19400608 19400618 A VARIABLE GROUP OF NONDESCRIPT SPOTS, NONE BEING SEEN ON JUNE 13. 13624 19400610 19400611 ONE SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 10: A TINY CLUSTER ON JUNE 11. 13625 19400611 19400619 TWO OR THREE VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 14 AND 15, IN FAIRLY HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE, MATCHED IN SOUTHERN LATITUDE BY GROUP 13626. 13626 19400612 19400616 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 13627 19400615 19400616 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13628 19400616 19400628 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 13629 19400619 19400701 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER BECOMES A DOUBLE SPOT; THE FOLLOWER EMERGES AS A REGULAR SPOT ON JUNE 29. 13630 19400620 19400701 A SMALL DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON JUNE 27. RETURN OF GROUP 13609. 13631 19400621 19400630 A SMALL STREAM. 13632 19400623 19400624 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13633 19400624 19400625 A PAIR OF GROWING SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13634 19400624 19400625 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13635 19400624 19400705 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER, AT FIRST LARGER THAN THE LEADER SPOT. DOES NOT SURVIVE TO THE WEST LIMB. 13636 19400624 19400705 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS UNTIL JUNE 28. THE REMAINING ONE SHRINKS TO A SMALL SPOT LAST SEEN WITHIN 30 DEGREES OF THE WEST LIMB. 13637 19400625 19400627 A STREAM IN MINIATURE FORMING CLOSE TO THE REAR SPOT OF GROUP 13631. 13638 19400625 19400627 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS F GROUP 13629. 13639 19400626 19400704 A SMALL CLUSTER WHEN FIRST SEEN, BECOMING A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. ITS AXIS IS MARKEDLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 13640 19400627 19400701 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 29 AND 30. 13641 19400627 19400702 RETURN OF GROUP 13615: ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 28. 13642 19400701 19400706 A PAIR OF SPOTS; ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JULY 5 AND 6. 13643 19400703 19400707 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 5. 13644 19400703 19400704 ONE TINY SPOT. 13645 19400703 19400712 RETURN OF GROUP 13626. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. 13646 19400703 19400708 RETURN OF GROUP 13619. A SMALL SPOT. 13647 19400705 19400713 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 13648 19400706 19400713 A STREAM WITH RAPID RISE TO A BRIEF MAXIMUM. THE LEADER SPOT IS THE LONGEST LIVED. 13649 19400708 19400714 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13650 19400708 19400715 A VARIABLE CLUSTER OR STREAM. 13651 19400709 19400716 A SHORT-LIVED CLUSTER OR STREAM. 13652 19400710 19400716 A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 13625. A SMALL STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER SPOT IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT. 13653 19400710 19400722 A FAIRLY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BREAKING UP INTO SEPARATE SPOTS WHICH THEN DIMINISH. THE ORIGIN OF THE GROUP IS PROBABLY REPRESENTED BY GROUP 13633. 13654 19400712 19400718 INTERMITTENT. A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS DYING OUT ON JULY 14. A TINY SINGLE SPOT REPRESENTS ITS POSITION ON JULY 16 AND 18. 13655 19400715 19400718 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON JULY 15, 16 AND 18: A PAIR ON JULY 17. 13656 19400715 19400720 A SMALL SPOT EXCEPT ON JULY 18 AND 20 WHEN THERE IS A SMALL CLUSTER. 13657 19400716 19400719 A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 13657. TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 13658 19400718 19400727 INTERMITTENT. ONE TINY SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JULY 18, 23 AND 27. 13659 19400719 19400720 A PAIR OF SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13660 19400719 19400722 A VARIABLE CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 13661 19400719 19400722 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT DIMINISHING TO A DOT. PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 13639. 13662 19400720 19400722 A TINY CLUSTER. 13663 19400720 19400721 A TINY SPOT, POSSIBLY REPRESENTING THE RETURN OF GROUP 13635. 13664 19400721 19400726 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL JULY 24: A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JULY 26. 13665 19400722 19400727 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 13666 19400722 19400729 A SMALL STREAM FORMING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13667 19400723 19400724 ONE SMALL SPOT. 13668 19400725 19400804 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY JULY 31 WHICH IN TURN IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES AROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13669 19400727 19400806 A STREAM OF SPOTS; THE FOLLOWER DIES OUT LEAVING THE LEADER AS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13670 19400728 19400810 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. RETURN OF GROUP 13649. 13671 19400729 19400802 A SMALL STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 13672 19400731 19400806 A SMALL STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 13673 19400803 19400815 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 13659. A COMPLEX SPOT IN WHICH THE LEADING NUCLEUS BREAKS AWAY AND ADVANCES IN LONGITUDE, CONVERTING THE GROUP INTO A STREAM THAT IS DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AS IT PASSES AROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13674 19400804 19400815 A VARIABLE STREAM. 13675 19400804 19400808 A TINY SPOT. 13676 19400806 19400816 RETURN OF GROUP 13653. A SLOWLY CONTRACTING REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON AUG. 8 AND 11, CLOSELY PRECEDING GROUP 13678. 13677 19400807 19400816 A QUICKLY GROWING STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS LARGE AND APPARENTLY STABLE. 13678 19400807 19400818 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS COMPLEX AND THE FOLLOWER CONSISTS OF TWO NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS GROW UNTIL THEY CONNECT THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER. THE GROUP IS AT THE CENTRE OF THE DISK ON AUG. 12. 13679 19400811 19400822 A STREAM OF WHICH THE F PART SOON DIES OUT. THE LARGE LEADER SPOT THAT SURVIVES BECOMES ELONGATED AS IT NEARS THE WEST LIMB, PERHAPS INDICATING AN EARLY DECAY, SINCE IT DOES NOT LAST TO THE FOLLOWING ROTATION, ALTHOUGH ITS PLACE IS MARKED BY GROUP 13702. 13680 19400811 19400822 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 13681 19400813 19400822 A REGULAR SPOT THAT QUICKLY DIES OUT AFTER AUG. 20. RETURN OF GROUP 13666. 13682 19400816 19400818 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13683 19400816 19400826 A LARGE GROUP OF RAPID GROWTH AND SUBSEQUENT DECLINE. THE LEADER -THE LARGER COMPONENT- BECOMES ELONGATED AND FINALLY BREAKS INTO TWO AS ITS AREA DECREASES. THE REAR SPOT LARGELY MAINTAINS ITS SHAPE. 13684 19400817 19400819 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS SPREAD IN LATITUDE. 13685 19400819 19400825 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13686 19400820 19400821 A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS. 13687 19400820 19400829 A CLUSTER OF CHANGING SPOTS. ON AUG.23 ANOTHER SMALL CLUSTER FORMS IN FRONT, THE WHOLE GROUP DYING OUT BY AUG.26. ON AUG.27 ACTIVITY REVIVES, AND A STREAM IS SEEN DEVELOPING RAPIDLY AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13688 19400820 19400901 TWO REGULAR SPOTS, RATHER WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. THE LEADING SPOT IS THE LARGER AND LONGER LIVED. A RETURN OF GROUP 13669. 13689 19400820 19400824 A PAIR OF SPOTS; EACH HAS BROKEN UP BY AUG. 24. 13690 19400821 19400824 A SPOT RAPIDLY DIMINISHING TO A DOT. 13691 19400824 19400825 A SMALL SPOT WITH TINY COMPANIONS. 13692 19400826 19400906 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING FROM THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE SURVIVES TO THE WEST LIMB. 13693 19400827 19400830 INTERMITTENT: A TINY SPOT ON AUG. 27: A PAIR OF AUG. 30. 13694 19400827 19400904 A STREAM DECREASING RAPIDLY AFTER A MAXIMUM AROUND AUG.30. 13695 19400828 19400830 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS SPREAD IN LONGITUDE. 13696 19400829 19400910 A REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING RAPIDLY AFTER SEPT.6. 13697 19400829 19400908 A DOUBLE SPOT, SHRINKING RAPIDLY BEFORE EXTINCTION. 13698 19400901 19400910 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 13699 19400901 19400912 RETURN OF GROUP 13677. A SMALLISH COMPLEX SPOT PRECEDED BY VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 13700 19400905 19400907 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 13701 19400907 19400917 A CHANGING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 13702 19400909 19400911 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON SEPT. 10. 13704 19400913 19400914 ONE TINY SPOT ON SEPT. 13: OTHERS IN A DIMINUTIVE STREAM ON SEPT. 14. 13705 19400913 19400922 AT FIRST, SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM. ON SEPT. 18, THERE IS A SUDDEN INCREASE OF ACTIVITY, AND THE GROUP RAPIDLY DEVELOPS. THE FOLLOWER BECOMES A SHORT-LIVED REGULAR SPOT; THE LEADING PART OF THE STREAM IS AN UNSTABLE CLUSTER. 13706 19400914 19400925 A SMALL SPOT ON SEPT. 14: AFTER A GAP OF TWO DAYS, A TINY CLUSTER APPEARS WHICH DEVELOPS INTO A MAJOR STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH A LARGE STABLE LEADER SPOT. 13707 19400915 19400918 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 13708 19400916 19400928 RETURN OF GROUP 13688: 3RD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT, STABLE IN AREA AND POSITION. 13709 19400917 19400922 A SMALL DECREASING REGULAR SPOT, WITH A COMPANION TILL SEPT. 20, PERHAPS RELATED TO GROUP 13708. 13710 19400919 19400926 A STREAM ALREADY IN RAPID DECLINE AS IT COMES ROUND THE EAST LIMB. 13711 19400921 19401003 RETURN OF GROUP 13692. A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 13712 19400923 19400925 A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT. 23: A PAIR ON SEPT. 24 AND 25. 13713 19400927 19401002 A SHORT STREAM GROWING TO ITS MAXIMUM NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13714 19400927 19400928 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT. 27: A DOT ON SEPT. 28. 13715 19400929 19401008 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A VARIABLE STREAM AND THEN RAPIDLY DYING OUT. 13716 19401004 19401012 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS UNTIL OCT. 7; ON OCT. 8 A STREAM APPEARS IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER SPOT IS THE MOST STABLE. 13717 19401004 19401013 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO EPHEMERAL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON OCT. 9-12. 13718 19401004 19401007 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 4: A PAIR ON OCT. 7. 13719 19401005 19401006 A SMALL SPOT. 13720 19401007 19401018 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 13721 19401007 19401018 REVIVAL OF GROUP 13704. A LARGE COMPLEX SPOT WHICH UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE AS IT CROSSES THE DISK. IT IS PRECEDED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. THE GROUP IS RAPIDLY DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13722 19401010 19401022 RETURN OF GROUP 13706. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT THAT IS VERY STABLE IN POSITION. FROM OCT. 18, HOWEVER, THE SPOT BECOMES ELONGATED, AND BY OCT. 21 HAS COMPLETELY DIVIDED INTO TWO SPOTS. 13723 19401012 19401021 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON OCT. 17. 13724 19401015 19401027 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; THE LEADER SPOT ALONE REMAINS AFTER OCT. 24. 13725 19401018 19401030 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 13711. 3RD APPEARANCE. A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH AT FIRST 13726 19401021 19401022 A SMALL SPOT S GROUP 13722. 13727 19401022 19401031 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 22 AND 23: A SMALL CLUSTER ON OCT. 31. 13728 19401022 19401023 A SMALL SPOT. 13729 19401024 19401101 A SMALL STREAM SHOWING RAPID DECAY AFTER ITS MAXIMUM AROUND OCT. 28-29. 13730 19401025 19401030 A SMALL CLUSTER OR STREAM S GROUP 13725. 13731 19401028 19401101 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13732 19401030 19401106 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS. 13733 19401030 19401109 A VARIABLE STREAM: THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 13734 19401103 19401105 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13735 19401103 19401105 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13736 19401103 19401107 A SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY EXCEPT NOV. 6. 13737 19401103 19401113 A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A SINGLE SPOT ON NOV. 3. THE F PART BECOMES A CLUSTER AND DIES OUT AFTER NOV. 9. 13738 19401105 19401108 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13739 19401107 19401109 A TINY STREAM. 13740 19401107 19401108 A TINY CLUSTER F GROUP 13737. 13741 19401107 19401118 RETURN OF GROUP 13722. 3RD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT SHOWING A SOUTHWARD DRIFT IN LATITUDE. 13742 19401107 19401115 A VARIABLE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 13743 19401109 19401118 A STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY IN FRONT OF GROUP 13742. THE LEADER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT AND THE FOLLOWER A CLUSTER. 13744 19401109 19401119 A SINGLE SPOT ON NOV. 9; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL NOV. 13 WHEN A CLUSTER APPEARS SOME DISTANCE IN ADVANCE OF THE ORIGINAL POSITION. THIS CLUSTER RAPIDLY DEVELOPS INTO A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE REGULAR SPOTS. 13745 19401109 19401113 A SPOT SHRINKING RAPIDLY FROM ITS FIRST APPEARANCE AT THE EAST LIMB. 13746 19401112 19401118 RETURN OF GROUP 13724. A SMALL SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. 13747 19401113 19401114 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13748 19401113 19401119 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 13749 19401114 19401121 A STREAM SUDDENLY DEVELOPING FROM A TINY CLUSTER ON NOV. 14. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS AFTER NOV. 19. 13750 19401115 19401116 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT REPRESENTING A RETURN OR REVIVAL (ON THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE) OF GROUP 13730. 13751 19401116 19401127 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT THAT FINALLY DIES ON NOV. 23. ON THE NEXT DAY, FRESH ACTIVITY IS SHOWN A SHORT DISTANCE AWAY NF BY THE FORMATION OF A SMALL STREAM. 13752 19401117 19401129 AT FIRST, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT: ON NOV. 19 OTHER SPOTS APPEAR F MAKING A SMALL VARIABLE STREAM. 13753 19401118 19401122 INTERMITTENT. ONE VERY SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 18: A PAIR ON NOV. 22, 7 DEGREES BEHIND THE FIRST SPOT. 13754 19401123 19401130 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 13755 19401125 19401207 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 13756 19401127 19401202 A STREAM DEVELOPING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 13757 19401128 19401130 A TINY STREAM ON NOV. 28: ONE SPOT ON NOV. 29 AND 30. 13758 19401203 19401213 A VARIABLE EQUATORIAL STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE LONGEST LIVED SPOT. 13759 19401203 19401213 RETURN OF GROUP 13743. A REGULAR SPOT THAT IS VERY STABLE FOR ITS SMALL SIZE. 13761 19401203 19401215 A STREAM, DEVELOPING F GROUP 13759, IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART DISAPPEARS AFTER DEC. 10. 13762 19401204 19401214 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 4; THE LEADING ONE DEVELOPS INTO A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH WHICH THE FOLLOWER MERGES TO FORM A SOMEWHAT COMPOSITE STRUCTURE WHICH THEN DISSIPATES. 13763 19401205 19401214 RETURN OF GROUP 13744. A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 13764 19401207 19401218 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING TO A DOT BY DEC. 12. AFTER A LAPSE OF TWO DAYS, ANOTHER SPOT APPEARS 2 DEGREES NEARER THE EQUATOR AS THE ORIGIN OF A SMALL STREAM. 13765 19401208 19401215 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 13766 19401208 19401220 A SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, SLOWLY DECREASING AND DIVIDING INTO TWO SPOTS AS THE WEST LIMB IS APPROACHED. 13767 19401209 19401216 A VARIABLE STREAM, NEAR THE SUN'S EQUATOR, DEVELOPING FROM A TINY CLUSTER ON DEC. 9. 13768 19401210 19401213 A STREAM OF RAPID INITIAL GROWTH ON DEC. 10 AND 11. 13769 19401210 19401211 A SMALL SPOT. 13770 19401210 19401221 A VARIABLE STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A FEW SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON DEC. 10. 13771 19401212 19401215 A SMALL SPOT WITH TWO COMPANIONS ON DEC. 12. 13772 19401213 19401215 AN EQUATORIAL GROUP ORIGINATING NEAR THE WEST LIMB, SO THAT ITS SUBSEQUENT DEVELOPMENT IS LOST TO VIEW. 13773 19401213 19401218 A REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT. 13774 19401213 19401216 A SMALL SPOT, PERHAPS RELATED TO GROUP 13773. 13775 19401214 19401225 A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DISAPPEARING. A SMALL SPOT APPEARS ON DEC. 24 AND 25 WITHIN THE SAME GENERAL AREA. 13776 19401217 19401220 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13777 19401220 19401230 A COMPACT STREAM RISING SHARPLY TO A MAXIMUM BY DEC. 23: THE DECLINE IS RELATIVELY SLOW. 13778 19401221 19401231 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 13779 19401223 19401226 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13780 19401225 19401227 A SMALL STREAM ORIGINATING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13781 19401228 19410103 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER BECOMES THE LARGEST COMPONENT. THE GROUP DIES OUT WHEN JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13782 19401229 19410106 ONE OR TWO VARIABLE SPOTS: THEN A STREAM A LITTLE NORTH OF THEM. THE GROUP DISAPPEARS RATHER SUDDENLY SOON AFTER MERIDIAN PASSAGE. 13783 19401229 19410105 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 13768. A SINGLE SPOT. 13784 19401230 19410109 RETURN OF GROUP 13761. A REGULAR SPOT COMING OVER THE EAST LIMB IS JOINED BY SMALL COMPANIONS ON JAN. 1 TO FORM A STREAM. 13785 19410101 19410108 A TINY SPOT UNTIL JANUARY 4; ON JANUARY 5 OTHER SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS APPEAR. 13786 19410101 19410110 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL CLUSTER ON JANUARY 1. NOTHING IS SEEN UNTIL JANUARY 7, WHEN A SMALL STREAM APPEARS, NP THE ORIGINAL POSITION. 13787 19410101 19410105 A SMALL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JANUARY 1 AND 5. 13788 19410104 19410105 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JANUARY 4: A CLUSTER ON JANUARY 5. 13789 19410105 19410109 A GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE FORMING WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13790 19410107 19410113 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DYING OUT. 13791 19410107 19410118 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 13792 19410109 19410112 A SMALL CLUSTER ON JANUARY 9, BECOMING A NORMAL-TYPE STREAM AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13793 19410111 19410114 ONE OR TWO SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 13794 19410116 19410128 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 13795 19410119 19410127 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 19. ON JANUARY 23, THE LEADER DIVIDES BUT OUTLIVES THE FOLLOWER THAT HAS GONE BY JANUARY 25. 13796 19410122 19410128 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 13797 19410125 19410205 A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS SOMEWHAT ELONGATED AND COMPLEX. THE FOLLOWER DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 13798 19410126 19410129 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 29. 13799 19410128 19410205 A REGULAR SPOT JUST SOUTH OF THE SUN'S EQUATOR. THERE IS A COMPANION ON JANUARY 30. 13800 19410128 19410209 ON JANUARY 28 AND 29, A SINGLE SPOT: THEN OTHER SPOTS APPEAR FORMING A LONG STREAM THAT HAS NEARLY DIED OUT BY THE TIME THAT THE WEST LIMB IS REACHED. 13801 19410129 19410201 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 13802 19410129 19410204 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13803 19410202 19410204 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 2: A SINGLE SPOT AFTERWARDS. 13803*19410202 19410203 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13804 19410203 19410209 A SPOT FROM THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE DYING OUT ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13804*19410204 19410205 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13805 19410206 19410207 A SMALL CLUSTER. 13806 19410205 19410211 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13807 19410206 19410211 A SMALL STREAM SLOWLY DYING OUT. 13808 19410209 19410211 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13809 19410209 19410221 A SLOWLY DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 16 AND 17. 13810 19410210 19410216 A VARIABLE STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER SPOT SURVIVES TO THE WEST LIMB. 13811 19410213 19410216 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13812 19410216 19410220 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13813 19410220 19410222 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB, SO THAT ITS SUBSEQUENT HISTORY IS LOST. 13814 19410221 19410305 A SMALL SPOT NEAR THE EAST LIMB GROWING RAPIDLY TO A LARGE SPOT WITH MULTIPLE UMBRAE. ITS MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT ON FEBRUARY 27-28 IS FOLLOWED BY A RAPID DECLINE, AND THE GROUP DOES NOT RETURN. THE MOUNT WILSON CLASSIFICATION OF THE SPOT'S MAGNETIC POLARITY IS Y (GAMMA). THIS GROUP IS ASSOCIATED WITH AN INTENSE GEOMAGNETIC STORM COMMENCING ON MARCH 1 AT 3H 57M U.T. 13815 19410222 19410223 A TINY SPOT. 13816 19410224 19410302 A SMALL STREAM. 13817 19410224 19410307 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS FROM MARCH 3 ONWARDS. 13818 19410227 19410228 A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 27: A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 28. 13819 19410228 19410306 A SMALL STREAM SOON DYING OUT. 13820 19410303 19410309 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 13821 19410304 19410309 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 13822 19410305 19410306 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13823 19410308 19410312 A STREAM OF NORMAL (OR BI-POLAR) TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. ITS DECLINING PHASE IS REPRESENTED BY GROUP 13838 IN THE NEXT ROTATION. 13824 19410309 19410316 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS AFTER MARCH 15. 13825 19410310 19410316 ONE OR TWO VARIABLE SPOTS. 13826 19410311 19410317 A VARIABLE STREAM WITH THE LEADER AS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 13827 19410314 19410325 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 14 AND 15. ON MARCH 17 A STREAM BEGINS TO DEVELOP MORE RAPIDLY THAN IS USUAL. DECLINE AT ONCE SETS IN AFTER A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON MARCH 20. 13828 19410314 19410316 A SMALL SPOT. 13829 19410314 19410324 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 13830 19410316 19410327 A REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING RAPIDLY AFTER THE DISAPPEARANCE OF A COMPANION ON MARCH 23. THERE IS A SMALL BUT DEFINITE TREND EQUATORWARDS. PERHAPS A RETURN OF GROUP 13818. 13831 19410318 19410323 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT P GROUP 13827. 13832 19410318 19410324 A SHORT-LIVED VARIABLE STREAM CLOSE TO GROUP 13827. 13833 19410320 19410322 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 13834 19410323 19410403 RETURN OF GROUP 13817. A REGULAR SPOT, SLOWLY CONTRACTING, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 13835 19410325 19410327 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 25 AND 26: A PAIR ON MARCH 27. 13836 19410327 19410401 INTERMITTENT. A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 29-30. 13837 19410327 19410329 A TINY STREAM ON MARCH 27-28: A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 29. 13838 19410327 19410407 RETURN OF GROUP 13823. A RAPIDLY DECAYING SPOT ENDING PROBABLY ON APRIL 1. ON APRIL 2 AND AGAIN ON APRIL 7 ANOTHER SPOT APPEARS JUST NORTH AND EAST OF THE POINT OF DISAPPEARANCE. 13839 19410401 19410402 A SMALL EPHEMERAL STREAM. 13840 19410403 19410410 A PAIR OF SPOTS, 3 1/2 DEGREES APART IN LATITUDE. BY APRIL 6, THE MORE SOUTHERLY SPOT HAS GONE. 13841 19410404 19410405 A TINY PAIR ON APRIL 4: ONE SPOT ON APRIL 5. 13842 19410406 19410413 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS. 13843 19410407 19410413 A SMALL COMPACT STREAM FADING OUT RATHER SUDDENLY. 13844 19410407 19410419 A SMALL SPOT, SUGGESTING THE LAST PHASE OF A REGULAR SPOT WITH ITS DEVELOPMENT ON THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE. FOR THE FIRST THREE DAYS, THERE IS A COMPANION SPOT ABOUT 3 DEGREES SOUTH AND 3 DEGREES BEHIND IN LONGITUDE. FRESH ACTIVITY COMES IN ON APRIL 17, WHEN A CLUSTER APPEARS. 13845 19410408 19410409 TINY SPOTS SPREAD IN LONGITUDE. 13846 19410416 19410418 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 13847 19410419 19410430 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE SHOWING SOME DEPARTURE FROM THE USUAL SEQUENCE OF EVENTS. BY APRIL 24, THE LEADER HAS SPLIT INTO TWO PARTS, THE UMBRA, BEGINNING TO DIVIDE THREE DAYS EARLIER. THE FOLLOWER OF THE STREAM REMAINS SMALL THROUGHOUT. 13848 19410423 19410429 A SMALL STREAM. 13849 19410426 19410508 A SPOT WITH COMPANIONS, WITHIN 1 DEGREE OF THE SUN'S EQUATOR. ON MAY 1 DIVISION OF THE SPOT INTO TWO PARTS BEGINS, AND SUBSEQUENT DECLINE IS RAPID. 13850 19410429 19410502 A SMALL EPHEMERAL GROUP. 13851 19410430 19410502 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. ACTIVITY HERE REVIVES IN THE FOLLOWING ROTATION IN GROUP 13865. 13852 19410430 19410505 ONE OR MORE INDEFINITE SPOTS. 13853 19410501 19410510 A CLUSTER OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 13854 19410509 19410521 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE EXCEPT THAT THE LEADER SPOT IS THE FIRST TO DIE OUT, BUT IS REPRESENTED BY A SMALL SPOT FOR TWO DAYS AFTER THE FOLLOWER HAS GONE. 13855 19410510 19410516 A PAIR OF SPOTS: ONE REMAINS FOR A DAY ON MAY 14. A DOT COMES IN NEARLY THE SAME POSITION ON MAY 16. 13856 19410512 19410514 A SMALL SPOT. 13857 19410515 19410525 RETURN OF GROUP 13847. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. 13858 19410516 19410519 A TINY SPOT NOT IDENTICAL FROM DAY TO DAY. 13859 19410517 19410518 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13860 19410517 19410524 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM HALTING FOR A DAY IN ITS EARLY DEVELOPMENT. 13861 19410518 19410519 TWO TINY SPOTS. 13862 19410520 19410521 A SMALL SPOT. 13863 19410521 19410522 A SMALL SPOT. 13864 19410521 19410601 A SMALL STREAM OF WEAK DEVELOPMENT. 13865 19410522 19410528 A SHORT STREAM OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. THE LEADER SPOT REMAINS FROM MAY 25 TO 28. 13866 19410524 19410526 A SMALL SPOT ON EACH OF THE THREE DAYS. 13867 19410528 19410608 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR MORE VARIABLE SPOTS. 13868 19410530 19410610 AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT, ON JUNE 2 OTHER SPOTS BEGIN TO APPEAR, INCREASING IN NUMBER TO FORM A COMPACT CLUSTER WHICH IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13869 19410530 19410602 A SMALL SPOT. 13870 19410530 19410611 A SLOWLY DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WITH A TREND IN LATITUDE AWAY FROM THE EQUATOR. 13871 19410603 19410615 AT FIRST A SINGLE COMPLEX SPOT. BY RAPID CHANGES INVOLVING THE PARTIAL DISINTEGRATION OF THE ORIGINAL SPOT, THE GROUP IS TRANSFORMED INTO A STREAM WITH COMPLEX, UNSTABLE COMPONENTS AT THE HEAD AND TAIL. A DOUBLE STRING OF SPOTLETS CONNECTS THE TWO ON JUNE 8. THE GROUP, WHICH COLLAPSES AFTER JUNE 11, IS CLASSIFIED BY MOUNT WILSON AS Y (GAMMA) ACCORDING TO THE MAGNETIC POLARITIES OF THE COMPONENT SPOTS. 13872 19410608 19410612 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 13873 19410608 19410616 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER ALONE IS LEFT ON JUNE 16. 13874 19410609 19410610 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 13875 19410609 19410613 A SMALL SPOT. 13876 19410609 19410620 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER A REGULAR SPOT ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 18. 13877 19410617 19410622 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM. 13878 19410618 19410621 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 13879 19410620 19410625 ANOTHER SMALL SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 13880 19410621 19410701 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS INCREASING IN SIZE RATHER SLOWLY TO A MORE STABLE CONDITION BY JUNE 26. 13881 19410623 19410703 A STREAM OF RAPID DEVELOPMENT FROM TINY SPOTS ON JUNE 23. THE FOLLOWER, COMPLEX IN STRUCTURE, BECOMES TEMPORARILY LARGER THAN THE LEADER, BUT BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON JUNE 29. THE DECLINE OF THE LEADER, OF MORE REGULAR STRUCTURE, IS SLOWER, BUT THE SPOT DOES NOT LAST TO THE NEXT ROTATION. 13882 19410623 19410630 A STREAM IN DECLINE. 13883 19410625 19410627 ONE SMALL SPOT. 13884 19410626 19410627 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS THAT REVIVE ON JULY 1 AS GROUP 13888. 13885 19410627 19410709 A REGULAR SPOT WITH SEVERAL COMPANIONS UNTIL JULY 3. THE MAGNETIC POLARITIES ARE IRREGULAR (P.A.S.P. 53, 259, 1941). 13886 19410627 19410710 TWO SPOTS NEARLY REGULAR IN OUTLINE. THE LEADER SLOWLY DIES OUT BY JULY 7; THE FOLLOWER REMAINS FAIRLY STABLE UNTIL JULY 6; THEN CHANGES BEGIN TO OCCUR, NOT ONLY IN THE SPOT ITSELF, BUT IN THE FORMATION OF PENUMBRAL FILAMENTS AND SPOT NUCLEI NEARBY, AND THE GROUP HAS RISEN CONSIDERABLY IN AREA AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT AT THE WEST LIMB. ON JULY 8, AN EXTENSIVE SOLAR FLARE WAS RECORDED AT 15H 41M TO 16H 08M AT THE MOUNT WILSON OBSERVATORY (P.A.S.P. 53, PLATE XXIII, 1941). AN EARLIER MAJOR FLARE ON JULY 3, LASTING FROM 15H 09M TO 20H 40M U.T., WAS PROBABLY INTIMATELY RELATED TO THE CAUSE OF THE "GREAT" GEOMAGNETIC STORM OF JULY 4-5. 13887 19410628 19410703 VARIABLE SPOTS IN A SMALL STREAM. 13888 19410701 19410702 SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 13889 19410701 19410705 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 13871. A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON JULY 3. 13890 19410702 19410703 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 13891 19410703 19410704 SMALL SPOTS IN A CLUSTER FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13892 19410703 19410710 A VARIABLE STREAM OF TINY SPOTS. 13893 19410705 19410713 RETURN OF GROUP 13876. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. 13894 19410706 19410710 A SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY EXCEPT JULY 8. 13895 19410709 19410715 A SMALL CLUSTER OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 13896 19410710 19410712 TINY EPHEMERAL SPOTS IN A STREAM. 13897 19410716 19410722 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE GROWING RAPIDLY FROMA TINY SPOT ON JULY 16. 13898 19410716 19410727 RETURN OF GROUP 13880. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. THE SPOT ON JULY 26-27 REPRESENTS A FEEBLE REVIVAL OF ACTIVITY A FEW DEGREES AWAY. 13899 19410717 19410727 A SLOWLY DECLINING REGULAR SPOT NOT RECORDED ON JULY 26. 13900 19410717 19410724 A GROUP OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 13901 19410718 19410721 A SMALL STREAM FORMING SUDDENLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB AND DECLINING AS ABRUPTLY. 13902 19410720 19410728 A REVIVAL IN THE PLACE OF GROUP 13882. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT BY ITSELF UNTIL JULY 24, THEN SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR MAKING A CLUSTER WHICH, HOWEVER, SOON DISAPPEARS. 13903 19410721 19410802 A SMALL STREAM DIMINISHING UNTIL JULY 26. THERAFTER THERE IS A FULLER DEVELOPMENT OF THE FOLLOWER SPOT WHICH BECOMES MORE REGULAR IN STRUCTURE. 13904 19410721 19410802 A LARGE STREAM IN DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER AT FIRST IS COMPLEX, SHOWING CONSIDERABLE CHANGES UNTIL JULY 24 WHEN IT ASSUMES A MORE REGULAR OUTLINE. MEANWHILE THE FOLLOWER IS GROWING INTO A COMPLEX SPOT LARGER THAN THE LEADER. 13905 19410724 19410803 RETURN OF GROUP 13885. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY SHRINKING TO A DOT WHEN LAST SEEN. 13906 19410724 19410806 RETURN OF GROUP 13886. A LARGE PRINCIPAL SPOT WITH A FEW UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 13907 19410727 19410730 A DWARF GROUP IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 13904. 13908 19410728 19410806 A STREAM ALREADY IN DECAY WHEN FIRST SEEN. THE LEADER, A COMPLEX SPOT IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS BY JULY 31, BUT DOES NOT SURVIVE FOR LONG. 13909 19410731 19410812 A BIG SPOT OF NEARLY REGULAR OUTLINE, WITH A FEW COMPANIONS. ON AUGUST 6, IT BEGINS TO DIVIDE INTO TWO PORTIONS, EACH BECOMING A REGULAR SPOT BEFORE THE GROUP PASSES OUT OF SIGHT ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 13910 19410801 19410803 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 2. 13911 19410803 19410812 A SMALL STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS. NOTHING IS SEEN ON AUGUST 10. 13912 19410803 19410814 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT SHOWING A SMALL DRIFT IN LATITUDE FROM THE EQUATOR. ITS UMBRA IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" ON AUGUST 11 AND 12. 13913 19410804 19410806 A SMALL, SHORT-LIVED SPOT. 13914 19410804 19410808 SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM; ONLY ONE MEMBER REMAINS ON AUGUST 7 AND 8. 13915 19410804 19410811 A SMALL NONDESCRIPT GROUP. 13916 19410806 19410812 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 13897. A SMALL SPOT DYING OUT. 13917 19410810 19410812 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 13918 19410811 19410814 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT ON AUGUST 11, JOINED BY ANOTHER ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS. 13919 19410816 19410828 RETURN OF GROUP 13904. A SLOWLY DECAYING SPOT WITH SEVERAL VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 13920 19410819 19410823 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS, REPRESENTING A FEEBLE REVIVAL OF GROUP 13903. 13921 19410820 19410822 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS PERHAPS RELATED TO GROUP 13924. 13922 19410820 19410902 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 13906. WHEN FIRST SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB, THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A LARGE REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY PRECEDED AND FOLLOWED BY CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS. BY AUGUST 24, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT HAS FORMED IN FRONT, BUT A MARKED DECLINE OF THE WHOLE GROUP SETS IN, AND BY AUGUST 31, THE PARENT SPOT ALONE SURVIVES. 13923 19410821 19410827 SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM THAT SOON DISINTEGRATES. 13924 19410824 19410828 ONE OR TWO UNSTABLE SPOTS, PERHAPS RELATED TO GROUP 13921. 13924*19410826 19410827 A TINY SPOT. 13925 19410826 19410904 RETURN OF GROUP 13909. A SINGLE SPOT DISINTEGRATING INTO A SHORT STREAM AND SO DYING OUT. 13926 19410828 19410829 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 13927 19410829 19410830 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 13928 19410829 19410830 A PAIR ON AUGUST 29: A SINGLE SPOT ON THE FOLLOWING DAY. 13929 19410829 19410901 A FEW SPOTS DECLINING AS THEY COME MORE FULLY ON TO THE SUN'S DISK. 13930 19410830 19410904 RETURN OF GROUP 13912. A SMALL DYING SPOT. 13931 19410831 19410907 A LONG STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS; DECAY IS RAPID AFTER SEPTEMBER 4. 13932 19410831 19410912 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF CHANGING COMPANIONS. 13933 19410901 19410903 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13934 19410905 19410906 A SMALL SPOT. 13935 19410907 19410911 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP FIRST SEEN NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 13936 19410909 19410910 A SMALL SPOT NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 13937 19410910 19410923 A GIANT GROUP IN DEVELOPMENT. WHEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB, THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A LARGER LEADER SPOT FOLLOWED BY A REGULAR SPOT THAT REMAINS STABLE THROUGHOUT IN CONTRAST TO THE GREAT CHANGES THAT TAKE PLACE IN FRONT OF IT. FROM SEPTEMBER 13, THE LEADER BECOMES VERY ELONGATED AND DEVELOPS MULTIPLE UMBRAE. AT THE SAME TIME, SPOTS JUST SOUTH OF IT GROW RAPIDLY AND MERGE WITH IT INTO ONE EXTENSIVE COMPLEX STRUCTURE. IN ADDITION SOME SPOTS NEARER THE STABLE FOLLOWER INCREASE TO YET ANOTHER, THOUGH SMALLER, MULTIPLE SPOT, SO THAT AT MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT THE GROUP APPEARS ALMOST AS ONE LONG, LOOSELY COMPACTED ENTITY TERMINATING IN A TYPICAL REGULAR SPOT. A GREAT MAGNETIC STORM BEGAN AT ABINGER ON SEPTEMBER 18 AT 4 8H U.T., ABOUT 20 1/2 HOURS AFTER THE ONSET OF AN INTENSE SOLAR FLARE OVER THE GROUP. 13938 19410911 19410913 A PAIR OF DIMINUTIVE SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 11 AND 12; A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 13. 13939 19410911 19410922 A LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY NORTH OF THE GIANT GROUP (NO. 13937). BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER TEND TO BECOME COMPLEX BEFORE BREAKING UP AFTER RATHER A SHORT LIFE FOR THEIR SIZE. 13940 19410915 19410917 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 15 AND 16; A SPOTLET ON SEPTEMBER 17. 13941 19410915 19410920 UNSTABLE SPOTS IN A SMALL STREAM. 13942 19410915 19410920 A SMALL BUT PERSISTENT SPOT (NOT RECORDED ON SEPTEMBER 17) IN THE WAKE OF GROUP 13937. 13943 19410916 19410927 REVIVAL OF GROUPS 13921 AND 13924. A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT; THE FOLLOWER IS REPRESENTED BY A CLUSTER OF VARIABLE SPOTS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 23. 13944 19410917 19410924 REVIVAL OF GROUP 13928. A SMALL SPOT WHICH IF IDENTICAL FROM DAY TO DAY SHOWS A PRONOUNCED DRIFT IN LATITUDE EQUATORWARDS. 13945 19410917 19410919 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS POSSIBLY MARKING THE DISAPPEARANCE OF A LARGER SPOT FORMED ON THE INVISIBLE SOLAR HEMISPHERE. 13946 19410922 19410926 A STREAM FORMING RATHER RAPIDLY WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. ITS SUBSEQUENT HISTORY IS LOST TO VIEW. 13947 19410922 19410927 A SMALL NONDESCRIPT GROUP. 13948 19410926 19411008 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT NEARLY ON THE SUN'S EQUATOR WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL ATTENDANTS UNTIL OCTOBER 3. ITS UMBRA IS DIVIDED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE FROM OCTOBER 2 ONWARDS. 13949 19410927 19411003 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS ON THE OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE EQUATOR TO GROUP 13948. 13950 19410927 19411003 RETURN OF GROUP 13932. TWO OR THREE GROUPINGS OF SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM. 13951 19411004 19411007 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FORMING 3 DEGREES SOUTH OF GROUP 13948. 13952 19411006 19411018 WITH GROUP 13954, A RETURN OF GROUP 13937. A DECAYING REGULAR SPOT ENDING RATHER ABRUPTLY. SMALL VARIABLE CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS BOTH PRECEDE AND FOLLOW THE PARENT SPOT UNTIL OCTOBER 16. 13953 19411007 19411012 A SMALL STREAM WITH GREATLY SHORTENED TIME-SCALE FOR ITS LIFE HISTORY. 13954 19411008 19411020 WITH GROUP 13952, A RETURN OF GROUP 13937. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT IN SLOW DECLINE, WITH A COMPANION ON OCTOBER 18 AND 19. 13955 19411013 19411023 A DEVELOPING STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER EMERGES AS A REGULAR SPOT BY OCTOBER 17, WHILE THE TRAILER PORTION SLOWLY DIES OUT. 13956 19411016 19411021 A CLUSTER OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS ON THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 13957 19411017 19411026 A STREAM RISING TO ITS MAXIMUM AREA ON THE 5TH DAY. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT BY OCTOBER 22 AND ALONE SURVIVES AFTER OCTOBER 24. 13958 19411023 19411027 A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT SHRINKING TO A DOT. 13959 19411028 19411101 RETURN OF GROUP 13948. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING TO ZERO AREA. THERE IS A SMALL EQUATORWARD DRIFT IN LATITUDE NOTICEABLE IN THE PREVIOUS ROTATION, BUT THE CENTRE OF THE SPOT NEVER SUCCEEDS IN CROSSING THE EQUATOR. 13960 19411023 19411105 AN IMPORTANT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE REACHING MAXIMUM SIZE JUST BEFORE CENTRAL MERIDIAN PASSAGE. THE LEADER IS A LARGE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER IS A COMPLEX STRUCTURE AND INCLUDES A SPOT OF MORE REGULAR SHAPE THAT LARGELY RETAINS ITS IDENTITY THROUGHOUT. 13961 19411028 19411031 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13962 19411031 19411106 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. POSSIBLY ITS FULL DEVELOPMENT IS LOST TO VIEW. 13963 19411101 19411106 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS, SCATTERED IN LONGITUDE. 13964 19411102 19411105 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 2; ANOTHER ON NOV. 5, 5 DEGREES AWAY IN LONGITUDE. 13965 19411102 19411103 A SMALL SPOT. 13966 19411103 19411104 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13967 19411112 19411120 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 13968 19411113 19411122 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS WITH AN INCREASE ON NOVEMBER 19. 13969 19411114 19411115 A SMALL SPOT. 13970 19411119 19411120 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 13971 19411121 19411201 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 13962. A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WITH VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 13972 19411122 19411203 A LARGE STREAM IN SLOW DECAY. THE LEADER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER HAS A DOUBLE UMBRA AND BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON NOVEMBER 28 AND DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 13973 19411123 19411130 A STREAM OF RAPID GROWTH AND DECAY. 13974 19411123 19411205 A SPOT IN STEADY DECLINE AS IT CROSSES THE DISK WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS AFTER NOVEMBER 25. 13975 19411126 19411127 A SMALL SPOT. 13976 19411128 19411209 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, STABLE IN SIZE AND POSITION UNTIL DECEMBER 6. AS IT DISAPPEARS IT DRIFTS FROM THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 13977 19411129 19411203 A SHORT-LIVED CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 13977*19411203 19411205 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 13978 19411203 19411205 A SMALL SPOT, PROBABLY REPRESENTING THE END OF A REGULAR SPOT. 13979 19411204 19411208 A STREAM DEVELOPING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 13980 19411205 19411206 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT. 13981 19411205 19411216 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS UP TO DECEMBER 10. ON THE NEXT DAY, A STREAM IS FORMING RAPIDLY, BUT AS RAPIDLY IT BEGINS TO FADE AWAY. 13982 19411208 19411219 A COMPACT CLUSTER OF SPOTS; A REGULAR SPOT IS LEFT BY DECEMBER 17. 13983 19411211 19411217 A SHORT STREAM; ONLY ONE MEMBER REMAINS BY DECEMBER 15. 13984 19411215 19411216 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 13985 19411216 19411217 A GROUP SEEN FOR ONLY TWO DAYS BEFORE PASSING OVER THE WEST LIMB. 13986 19411222 19420103 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING SLOWLY. ITS UMBRA IS DOUBLE ON DECEMBER 24 AND TRIPLE BY DECEMBER 28. 13987 19411227 19420101 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING SUDDENLY JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. IT IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 13988 19411227 19420102 A PAIR OF SPOTS, SP GROUP 13987, WITH SYNCHRONOUS DEVELOPMENT. 13989 19411227 19411228 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 13990 19420101 19420105 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 13991 19420101 19420106 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON JANUARY 4. 13992 19420102 19420110 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, DEVELOPING FROM A SINGLE SPOT ON JANUARY 2. 13993 19420103 19420109 A SMALL CHANGING STREAM OF WHICH ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS BY JANUARY 7. 13994 19420104 19420111 A STREAM OF TINY CHANGING SPOTS. 13995 19420104 19420115 RETURN OF GROUP 13982; THIRD APPEARANCE. WHEN FIRST SEEN, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT; ON JANUARY 7 SMALL SPOTS BEGIN TO FORM BEHIND IT AS A LOOSE CLUSTER. THE WHOLE GROUP DECLINES RAPIDLY AFTER JANUARY 11. 13996 19420105 19420113 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS RISING TO A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON JANUARY 8 ON THE FORMATION OF A NEW UNSTABLE COMPONENT OF COMPLEX STRUCTURE. 13997 19420105 19420116 A SHORT STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER BEGINS TO DEVELOP INTO A COMPLEX SPOT FROM JANUARY 8. THE FOLLOWER SPOT REMAINS WITH LITTLE CHANGE. 13998 19420113 19420125 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 13999 19420118 19420125 A SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 14000 19420123 19420126 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS APPEARING RATHER ABRUPTLY. 14001 19420129 19420210 A REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. ON FEBRUARY 4, MORE DEFINITE SPOTS BEGIN TO APPEAR AND FORM A TRAIN TO THE ORIGINAL SPOT. 14002 19420201 19420207 RETURN OF GROUP 13997. A SMALL SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. 14003 19420203 19420207 SOME VIGOROUS SPOTS FORMING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 14004 19420203 19420210 A SHORT STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS WITH PEAK DEVELOPMENT ON FEBRUARY 7-8. 14005 19420205 19420208 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 5 AND 8; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 6 AND 7. 14006 19420206 19420207 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14007 19420209 19420215 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM. 14008 19420210 19420220 RETURN OF GROUP 13998. A REGULAR SPOT IN SLOW DECLINE. 14009 19420211 19420212 A TINY SPOT. 14010 19420212 19420213 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 12; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 13. 14011 19420212 19420224 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; THE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP AND SO DIES OUT BY FEBRUARY 20 LEAVING THE MORE STABLE LEADER AS A REGULAR SPOT. 14012 19420212 19420223 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14013 19420219 19420223 THREE SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 19 BECOMING A BIPOLAR GROUP. THE LEADER GROWS INTO A REGULAR SPOT, BUT THE FOLLOWER IS SHORT-LIVED. 14014 19420220 19420302 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. ON FEBRUARY 25 THERE IS AN INCREASE, AND THE AREA IS MAINTAINED TO THE WEST LIMB. 14015 19420223 19420307 RETURN OF GROUP 14003. A BIG COMPLEX SPOT WITH TWO CHIEF UMBRAE. WHEN FIRST SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB, A FORWARD PART OF THE SPOT, WITH A SUBSIDIARY UMBRA, IS SEPARATING FROM THE MAIN BODY, ONLY TO DISINTEGRATE. THE PARENT SPOT PRESERVES ITS DOUBLE UMBRA WITHIN ITS ROUGHLY CIRCULAR PENUMBRA, BUT A MARKED DECLINE SETS IN AFTER FEBRUARY 28. THE SPOT IS NOTABLE FOR A BRILLIANT AND EXTENSIVE FLARE OBSERVED IN H-ALPHA ON FEBRUARY 28 THAT WAS FOLLOWED 19 1/2 HOURS LATER BY A "GREAT" GEOMAGNETIC STORM. SOLAR RADIATION OBSERVABLE ON RADIO WAVE-LENGTHS OF ABOUT 5 METRES WAS FIRST RECORDED WITH THE APPEARANCE OF THIS ACTIVE SPOT. 14016 19420224 19420306 A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 24 DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE THREE DAYS LATER. DECAY IS RAPID, AND THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY MARCH 5. 14017 19420224 19420302 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; AFTER FEBRUARY 28, ONLY ONE REMAINS. 14018 19420225 19420302 A SMALL SPOT STEADY IN POSITION. 14019 19420301 19420302 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 14020 19420302 19420303 A SMALL CLUSTER ON MARCH 2: A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MARCH 3. 14021 19420306 19420308 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MARCH 6 AND A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 7 AND 8 IN THE PLACE OF GROUP 14018. 14022 19420312 19420321 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT. 14023 19420313 19420321 SMALL SPOTS IN AN EXTENDED STREAM. 14024 19420315 19420327 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DECREASING. ON MARCH 17 THE UMBRA BECOMES ELONGATED; A SMALL SPOT FORMS ON THE CIRCUMFERENCE OF THE PENUMBRA AND SEPARATES FROM IT ON MARCH 23 BUT DIES OUT THREE. DAYS LATER. THERE IS A SMALL DISTANT COMPANION ON MARCH 16 AND 17. 14025 19420317 19420327 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IN CLUSTERS DEVELOPING FROM TWO SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB. THE GROUP RAPIDLY DIES OUT AFTER MARCH 25. 14026 19420318 19420327 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 14914. A SPARSE CLUSTER GROWING FROM A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 18. DECLINE TO A SINGLE SPOT AGAIN ON MARCH 27 IS RAPID. 14027 19420318 19420328 A REGULAR SPOT. ON MARCH 23 TWO CLUSTERS OF TINY SPOTS APPEAR BEHIND IT, AND THESE HAVE COALESCED INTO SINGLE SPOTS BY THE FOLLOWING DAY. 14028 19420319 19420323 A TINY SPOT ON MARCH 19: A PAIR ON MARCH 21-23. 14029 19420319 19420328 A SMALL STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 27. 14030 19420321 19420402 RETURN OF GROUP 14015; 3RD APPEARANCE. FOR THE FIRST THREE DAYS A COMPLEX GROUP OF BIGGISH SPOTS. THE LEADER OF THESE THEN BEGINS TO ADVANCE, THUS GIVING THE GROUP MORE THE APPEARANCE OF A STREAM. THE FOLLOWER SPOT IS FAIRLY STABLE UNTIL MARCH 30, WHEN RAPID DECLINE FOR THE WHOLE GROUP IS EVIDENT. 14031 19420322 19420323 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 14032 19420325 19420326 ONE SMALL SPOT. 14033 19420329 19420404 A SPOT DYING OUT. GROUP 14035 IS PROBABLY RELATED TO IT. 14034 19420330 19420402 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14035 19420331 19420404 A SMALL SPOT PROBABLY RELATED TO GROUP 14033. 14036 19420403 19420405 A SMALL SPOT. 14037 19420403 19420408 USUALLY A SINGLE SPOT BUT NOT IDENTICAL THROUGHOUT. 14038 19420404 19420405 A TINY SPOT. 14039 19420404 19420416 ONE OR MORE SPOTS SEEN SINGLY EACH DAY IN NEARLY THE SAME POSITION CLOSE TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 14040 19420407 19420415 A COMPLEX CLUSTER APPEARING SUDDENLY ON APRIL 7 AND GROWING RAPIDLY FOR A FEW DAYS. ON APRIL 11, IT BEGINS TO CONDENSE INTO AN ELONGATED SPOT WHICH, HOWEVER BREAKS INTO TWO BY APRIL 15. 14041 19420411 19420421 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT ON APRIL 11. THE LEADER BECOMES APPROXIMATELY REGULAR AND ALONE REMAINS ON APRIL 21. THE FOLLOWER IS REPRESENTED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14042 19420411 19420423 RETURN OF GROUP 14024. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14043 19420412 19420422 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A BIGGISH STREAM. THE LEADER SPOT BECOMES THE LARGEST COMPONENT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA, AND CLOSELY APPROACHES GROUP 14041. 14044 19420413 19420414 ONE SMALL SPOT ON EACH DAY. 14045 19420415 19420419 A VERY SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 15: A PAIR AFTERWARDS. 14046 19420417 19420427 A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 17: A CLUSTER BY APRIL 19 AND A STREAM BY APRIL 21. AFTER FURTHER CHANGES, TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS EMERGE WITH THE LARGER ONE AHEAD. 14046*19420418 19420419 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS NEAR THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 14047 19420418 19420428 A STREAM WITH RAPID DEVELOPMENT TO ONE OF NORMAL TYPE. THE FOLLOWER BECOMES A DOUBLE SPOT FOR A FEW DAYS. 14048 19420418 19420427 POSSIBLE RETURN OF GROUP 14030, OR MERELY A REVIVAL NEAR THE ORIGINAL POSITION, FOURTH APPEARANCE. INTERMITTENT; A SMALL SPOT, USUALLY NOT IDENTICAL FROM ONE DAY TO ANOTHER. 14049 19420419 19420425 ONE OR TWO SPOTS BECOMING A SHORT-LIVED STREAM. 14050 19420419 19420501 A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF CHANGING SPOTS. 14051 19420422 19420428 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT FOR THE FIRST THREE DAYS: THEN A GAP OF THREE DAYS BEFORE ANOTHER SPOT APPEARS IN NEARLY THE SAME PLACE. 14052 19420422 19420427 INTERMITTENT. A SPOTLET ON APRIL 22 AND 26: A PAIR OF SPOTS ON APRIL 27. 14053 19420424 19420425 A SINGLE SPOT ON APRIL 24: A PAIR ON APRIL 25. 14054 19420425 19420506 A GROUP OF IRREGULAR AND RETARDED DEVELOPMENT. A REGULAR SPOT HAS EMERGED AS LEADER BY MAY 5. 14055 19420426 19420501 A SMALL SHORT-LIVED GROUP. 14056 19420427 19420501 A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS BECOMING A STREAM. 14057 19420428 19420501 A LITTLE STREAM. 14058 19420429 19420508 RETURN OF GROUP 14040. A REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT RAPIDLY AFTER MAY 4. 14059 19420507 19420517 RETURN OF GROUP 14041. TWO DECREASING REGULAR SPOTS 7 DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE. THE FOLLOWER, THE LARGER SPOT, IS THE LAST TO DISAPPEAR. 14060 19420509 19420519 RETURN OF GROUP 14042; 3RD APPEARANCE. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 14061 19420509 19420521 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH BEGINS TO DEVELOP A DOUBLE UMBRA ON MAY 11, WHILE PENUMBRAL SPOTS APPEAR AT THE F EDGE OF THE SPOT. THESE, HOWEVER, DIE OUT AFTER MAY 16. 14062 19420513 19420515 A TINY SPOT, PROBABLY THE SURVIVOR OF GROUP 14046. 14063 19420514 19420519 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 14064 19420516 19420527 RETURN OF GROUP 14050. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT PERSISTING FOR A COMPLETE DISK-PASSAGE. 14065 19420527 19420530 A SMALL SPOT. 14066 19420601 19420611 USUALLY A PAIR OF SPOTS. 14067 19420613 19420615 A DIMINUTIVE CLUSTER ON JUNE 13-14; A SPOTLET ON JUNE 15. 14068 19420616 19420627 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CHANGING CLUSTER OF SMALL COMPONENTS. 14069 19420619 19420627 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL STREAM DYING OUT AFTER JUNE 22. A SMALL CLUSTER COMES NEAR ITS POSITION ON JUNE 25. 14070 19420621 19420623 A TINY EQUATORIAL SPOT. 14071 19420623 19420624 A TINY SPOT ON JUNE 23; A PAIR ON JUNE 24. 14072 19420627 19420628 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14073 19420701 19420709 A SMALL DEVELOPING STREAM. THE LEADER IS REGULAR AND THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 14074 19420704 19420713 AN EQUATORIAL STREAM OF VIGOROUS DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE ONLY LONG-LIVED COMPONENT. 14075 19420712 19420713 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS; ONE SPOT IS LEFT ON JULY 13. 14076 19420713 19420715 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 14077 19420715 19420717 A SMALL GROUP. 14078 19420720 19420723 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 14079 19420725 19420730 A SINGLE SPOT EXCEPT ON JULY 27 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 14080 19420728 19420809 RETURN OF GROUP 14074. A STABLE EQUATORIAL REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ON AUGUST 3 AND 5. 14081 19420729 19420801 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 14082 19420802 19420812 A SMALL GROUP WITH A SPURT OF ACTIVITY ON AUGUST 8-9. 14083 19420813 19420818 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT SUGGESTING THAT IT IS THE SURVIVOR OF SOMETHING LARGER ORIGINATING ON THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE. 14084 19420820 19420831 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF UNSTABLE COMPANIONS THAT HAVE DISAPPEARED BY AUGUST 28. 14085 19420821 19420822 A PAIR OF SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOTS. 14086 19420822 19420823 A PAIR OF VERY SMALL SPOTS. 14087 19420823 19420829 A SHORT STREAM CONSISTING OF A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH SEVERAL COMPANIONS. 14088 19420826 19420902 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. THE GROUP FADES OUT FAIRLY RAPIDLY. 14089 19420827 19420829 A SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOT. 14090 19420903 19420905 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 14091 19420903 19420910 TWO OR THREE SPOTS EXPANDING INTO A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 14092 19420907 19420914 A PAIR OF SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 9. 14093 19420913 19420916 RETURN OF GROUP 14087. A SMALL SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 13; AFTERWARDS A CLUSTER. 14094 19420913 19420923 A REGULAR SPOT RAPIDLY CONTRACTING AFTER SEPTEMBER 19. 14095 19420921 19420926 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14096 19420924 19420927 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 25. 14097 19420925 19421003 A SMALL CLUSTER BECOMING A SHORT STREAM AFTER SEPTEMBER 26. 14098 19421002 19421003 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT. 14099 19421007 19421012 INTERMITTENT. A GROUP DEVELOPING RAPIDLY AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT AROUND THE WEST LIMB. INCIPIENT DISTURBANCE IS SHOWN ON OCTOBER 7 BY THE PRESENCE OF A SMALL SPOT. 14099*19421007 19421008 A TINY SPOT. 14100 19421008 19421012 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14101 19421010 19421022 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14101*19421018 19421019 A SMALL SPOT. 14102 19421020 19421024 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14103 19421021 19421023 A SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 21-22; A PAIR ON OCTOBER 23. 14104 19421026 19421103 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14105 19421027 19421029 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 28. 14106 19421027 19421109 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 14099. TWO SPOTS 7 DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE. ON OCTOBER 31, A REGULAR SPOT COMES IN BETWEEN, AND THE ORIGINAL FOLLOWER GROWS INTO A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT FOR A FEW DAYS. THE LEADER REMAINS A REGULAR SPOT THROUGHOUT. 14107 19421028 19421030 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14108 19421030 19421102 A SMALL SPOT IDENTICAL FROM DAY TO DAY. 14109 19421102 19421104 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 14110 19421106 19421114 RETURN OF GROUP 14101. A SMALL STEADY SPOT. 14111 19421109 19421115 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS FROM WHICH EMERGES TWO NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 13. 14112 19421109 19421110 ONE SMALL SPOT ON BOTH DAYS. 14113 19421117 19421118 A DOT. 14114 19421120 19421122 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 14115 19421120 19421128 A SMALL VARIABLE STREAM. 14116 19421121 19421203 AT FIRST, A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE WITH AN ELONGATED COMPONENT AS LEADER AND A REGULAR SPOT AS FOLLOWER. ON NOVEMBER 25, OTHER SPOTS BEGIN TO FORM IN BETWEEN, AND THE WHOLE COALESCES INTO A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH IS IN STEADY DECLINE AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 14117 19421124 19421205 RETURN OF GROUP 14106; 3RD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. BY NOVEMBER 29, COMPANION SPOTS APPEAR AND WITH THE ORIGINAL SPOT FORM A STREAM. 14118 19421129 19421205 A STREAM OF RAPID GROWTH NEAR THE C.M. DECAY HAS SET IN AS THE GROUP NEARS THE WEST LIMB. 14119 19421130 19421207 A SMALL GROUP SLOWLY DYING OUT. 14120 19421204 19421208 A SMALL SPOT STABLE IN POSITION IN A LATITUDE APPRECIABLY HIGHER THAN THE AVERAGE FOR THIS EPOCH. SEE ALSO GROUP 14121. 14121 19421207 19421216 A SMALL GROUP OF UNUSUAL DEVELOPMENT. STARTING FROM A PAIR OF SPOTS, OTHERS APPEAR PROGRESSIVELY IN FRONT WHILE THE TAIL SPOTS DIE OUT, THUS MAKING A STREAM THAT IS NEVER EXTENSIVE BUT APPEARING TO MOVE SEVERAL DEGREES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. 14122 19421207 19421219 A SMALL BUT VERY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14123 19421212 19421215 A SMALL SPOT. 14124 19421221 19421226 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14125 19421224 19430104 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION BEHIND UNTIL DECEMBER 30. 14126 19430106 19430114 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS, UNDERGOING CHANGES AFTER JANUARY 12. 14127 19430116 19430117 A PAIR ON JANUARY 16; A SINGLE SPOT ON JANUARY 17. 14128 19430118 19430123 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COUPLE OF DISTANT SATELLITES ON JANUARY 20. 14129 19430119 19430125 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 14125. A SMALL STEADY SPOT. 14130 19430121 19430125 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 14131 19430124 19430129 A SMALL SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ON JANUARY 25-27. 14132 19430129 19430204 USUALLY, ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS; OTHERS FORM A STREAM ON FEBRUARY 3. 14133 19430203 19430204 A TINY CLUSTER. 14134 19430203 19430204 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 14135 19430209 19430218 A LARGE STREAM WITH ABRUPT DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT; THE FOLLOWER IS COMPLEX AND DIVIDES LATER INTO TWO SPOTS. 14136 19430209 19430211 A SMALL SPOT. 14137 19430218 19430222 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14138 19430220 19430303 A STREAM OF NOTABLE DEVELOPMENT, IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A BIG COMPLEX SPOT. AS FOLLOWER, A NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS COALESCE INTO A COMPLEX STRUCTURE. FROM FEBRUARY 22 TO 25, THE LEADER IS PRECEDED BY A SMALL COMPANION. 14139 19430221 19430225 A SMALL SPOT IN FRONT OF GROUP 14138. 14140 19430222 19430227 A SMALL STREAM REACHING PEAK AREA WITHIN TWO OR THREE DAYS OF ITS ORIGIN. 14141 19430225 19430301 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14142 19430304 19430316 RETURN OF GROUP 14135. A LARGE STREAM WITH ITS FULL DEVELOPMENT NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE LEADER, AT FIRST A COMPLEX SPOT, SIMPLIFIES TO ONE OF REGULAR FORMATION. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP REMAINS COMPLEX. 14143 19430311 19430313 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14144 19430314 19430316 ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS. 14145 19430318 19430329 RETURN OF GROUP 14138. A REGULAR SPOT CONTRACTING TO A DOT; THERE ARE OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 14145 19430319 19430321 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 19; TWO SPOTS ON MARCH 20 AND 21. 14146 19430321 19430331 STARTING WITH A SMALL SPOT, THERE DEVELOPS A REGULAR SPOT WITH TWO OR THREE SMALLER FOLLOWERS WHICH HAVE DIED OUT BY MARCH 29. 14147 19430329 19430406 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE MEMBER AND ALONE REMAINS AFTER APRIL 4. 14148 19430331 19430412 RETURN OF GROUP 14142: 3RD APPEARANCE. A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14149 19430402 19430404 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 14150 19430409 19430420 A STREAM CONSISTING OF A LEADING REGULAR SPOT AND A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS AS FOLLOWER THAT HAS GONE BY APRIL 18. 14151 19430415 19430427 RETURN OF GROUP 14146. A NOTABLE STREAM RISING TO PEAK AREA ON THE SEVENTH DAY FROM ITS ORIGIN, VERY CLOSE TO A SMALL EXISTING REGULAR SPOT FROM THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. THE NEW GROUP DEVELOPS VIGOROUSLY FROM A STREAM-FORMATION OF TWO LEADING REGULAR SPOTS WITH FOLLOWING CLUSTERS. BY APRIL 22 THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A SINGLE BIG REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A STRING OF COMPLEX SPOTS THAT BEGIN TO DIE OUT RAPIDLY AFTER APRIL 24. 14152 19430427 19430509 RETURN OF GROUP 14148: 4TH APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT OF REMARKABLE STABILITY, DRIFTING VERY SLOWLY FROM THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 14153 19430509 19430510 A STREAM OF TINY SPOTS ON MAY 9; A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 10. 14154 19430511 19430523 RETURN OF GROUP 14151: 3RD APPEARANCE. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT IN DECLINE. THERE ARE SMALL COMPANIONS BOTH P AND F. 14155 19430514 19430524 WITH GROUP 14154, A RETURN OF GROUP 14151. A FAINT CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 14154. 14156 19430516 19430520 A STREAM OF SMALL COMPOSITE SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE-THE FIRST OF THE NEW CYCLE SPOTS. 14157 19430524 19430603 RETURN OF GROUP 14152: 5TH APPEARANCE. A PAIR OF DECREASING SPOTS PROBABLY REPRESENTING THE LAST PHASE OF THE REGULAR SPOT OF REMARKABLE STABILITY OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. THE FOLLOWING NUCLEUS OF THE PAIR ALONE REMAINS ON JUNE 2. THE LATITUDE-DRIFT FROM THE FIRST APPEARANCE OF THE GROUP SHOULD BE NOTED. 14158 19430608 19430619 RETURN OF GROUP 14154: 4TH APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING. (THE ENDING OF A VERY STABLE SPOT). 14159 19430611 19430619 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 18. 14159*19430617 19430618 A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 17; SPOTS ON JUNE 18. 14160 19430621 19430628 A FEEBLE EQUATORIAL GROUP. 14161 19430707 19430719 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER, OF COMPOSITE STRUCTURE, DECAYS RAPIDLY AFTER JULY 14. 14161*19430708 19430713 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL VARIABLE STREAM NOT SEEN ON JULY 11 AND 12. 14161#19430721 19430722 SCATTERED SPOTS ON JULY 21; A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 22. 14162 19430724 19430729 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS INCREASING AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 14163 19430727 19430801 A REGULAR SPOT CONTRACTING TO A SMALL NUCLEUS BEFORE EXTINCTION. 14164 19430803 19430815 RETURN OF GROUP 14161. A REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING RAPIDLY AFTER AUGUST 12. 14165 19430805 19430809 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14166 19430808 19430820 A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY CONTRACTING. 14167 19430814 19430825 A REGULAR SPOT REDUCING RAPIDLY AFTER CENTRAL MERIDIAN PASSAGE. THERE ARE ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS UNTIL AUGUST 20. 14167*19430817 19430818 A SINGLE SPOT ON AUGUST 17; A SMALL STREAM ON AUGUST 18. 14168 19430817 19430821 A SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOT REDUCING TO A SPECK. 14169 19430819 19430823 A LITTLE GROUP. 14170 19430823 19430831 A LITTLE GROUP WITH A TEMPORARY INCREASE ON AUGUST 28. 14171 19430824 19430825 A SMALL SPOT. 14172 19430907 19430912 A STREAM OF VIGOROUS DEVELOPMENT. CHANGES ARE RAPID AND RESULT IN A COMPOSITE SPOT AS LEADER AND A MORE STABLE-LOOKING FOLLOWER. 14173 19430911 19430912 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT. 14174 19430918 19430924 A SHORT STREAM OF ABRUPT ORIGIN ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN AND SUBSEQUENT RAPID DECLINE. 14175 19430926 19431009 RETURN OF GROUP 14172. A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION FROM SEPTEMBER 28 TO OCTOBER 7. 14176 19431009 19431012 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS OF RELATIVELY HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. (A NEW CYCLE SPOT). 14177 19431024 19431105 RETURN OF GROUP 14175: 3RD APPEARANCE. A VERY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14178 19431113 19431117 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE COMPONENT REMAINS ON NOVEMBER 16. 14179 19431115 19431116 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14180 19431116 19431118 A SMALL SPOT. 14181 19431120 19431202 RETURN OF GROUP 14177: 4TH APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS UNTIL NOVEMBER 30. 14182 19431128 19431208 A SPARSE VARIABLE STREAM. 14183 19431206 19431218 A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DECLINING. 14184 19431209 19431213 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 12. 14185 19431214 19431226 A GROUP OF STREAM-TYPE IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE AT FIRST COMPOSITE SPOTS. THE LEADER, HOWEVER, STABILISES INTO A REGULAR SPOT BY DECEMBER 19. THE FOLLOWER, ALTHOUGH THE LARGER COMPONENT, BEGINS TO DISINTEGRATE AND SO DIES OUT. 14186 19431218 19431220 RETURN OF GROUP 14181: 5TH APPEARANCE. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14187 19431227 19431228 A TINY SPOT. 14188 19440120 19440121 A SMALL SPOT, PROBABLY OF THE NEW CYCLE FROM ITS LATITUDE. 14189 19440122 19440203 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON JANUARY 27 BUT LASTS TO THE WEST LIMB. 14190 19440314 19440326 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL GROUP OF RAPIDLY CHANGING SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON MARCH 19-20. (A NEW CYCLE GROUP.) 14191 19440318 19440330 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION DIRECTLY NORTH OF IT. FROM MARCH 24 THE SPOT BECOMES ELONGATED AND RAPIDLY DISINTEGRATES. 14192 19440322 19440324 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MARCH 22-23: A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 24. 14193 19440324 19440326 A SMALL SPOT. 14194 19440407 19440408 A SMALL SPOT WITHOUT A DEFINITE NUCLEUS. 14195 19440528 19440530 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 14196 19440529 19440602 A COMPACT EQUATORIAL STREAM DEVELOPING WHERE ONLY A DOT IS SEEN ON MAY 29 AND 30. 14197 19440605 19440616 INTERMITTENT; ONE OR TWO VERY SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 9 AND 14. 14198 19440616 19440628 RETURN OF GROUP 14196. A SMALL BUT VERY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14199 19440702 19440706 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JULY 2-3: A SINGLE SPOT AFTERWARDS. 14200 19440705 19440706 A SMALL INDEFINITE SPOT. 14200*19440710 19440711 A SMALL STREAM ON JULY 10; ONE OR TWO SPOTS ON JULY 11. 14201 19440719 19440720 A SMALL SPOT. REVIVES AS GROUP 14202. 14202 19440727 19440730 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL COMPONENTS FORMING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 14203 19440805 19440813 A STREAM OF TINY SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS AFTER AUGUST 10. THE AXIS OF THE STREAM IS MARKEDLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 14204 19440805 19440815 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14205 19440811 19440815 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR MORE SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOTS IN RELATIVELY HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE. 14206 19440814 19440818 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14207 19440816 19440819 A SMALL GROUP OF WEAK DEVELOPMENT. 14208 19440817 19440822 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS; NONE IS SEEN ON AUGUST 18 AND 19. 14209 19440822 19440824 A TINY SPOT ON AUGUST 22-23; A PAIR ON AUGUST 24. 14210 19440823 19440825 A SMALL SPOT. 14211 19440825 19440826 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 14212 19440825 19440830 A FEW SPOTS IN STREAM FORMATION. 14213 19440828 19440830 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 14214 19440902 19440903 A STREAM FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14215 19440909 19440921 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A VARIABLE CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. ON SEPTEMBER 12 A SMALL COMPANION APPEARS DIRECTLY IN FRONT OF THE LEADER AND OTHERS ON ITS NORTHERN EDGE. FROM SEPTEMBER 18 ONLY THE REGULAR SPOT WITH ITS SMALL PRECEDING COMPANION REMAINS. 14216 19440913 19440915 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN RELATIVELY HIGH LATITUDE. 14217 19440913 19440914 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 13; A SINGLE ONE ON SEPTEMBER 14. 14218 19440920 19440929 A GROUP DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS FORM THE TRAIN. 14219 19440930 19441006 A STREAM OF SUDDEN ORIGIN NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE LEADER IS A FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOT; SMALL CHANGING SPOTS REPRESENT THE FOLLOWER. 14220 19441001 19441005 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14221 19441001 19441005 A SMALL VARIABLE STREAM. 14222 19441001 19441012 A SMALL BUT STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DRIFT EQUATORWARDS. 14223 19441006 19441010 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN RELATIVELY HIGH LATITUDE. 14224 19441008 19441009 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 14225 19441009 19441010 A PAIR OF SPOTS DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14226 19441015 19441019 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14227 19441015 19441027 RETURN OF GROUP 14218. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. SMALL EPHEMERAL COMPANIONS APPEAR ON OCTOBER 20-25; THESE MIGHT BE A SUBSIDIARY GROUP. 14228 19441020 19441021 A SMALL INDEFINITE SPOT. 14228*19441028 19441030 INTERMITTENT. A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 29. 14229 19441028 19441031 A SMALL SPOT OF THE OLD CYCLE. 14230 19441029 19441106 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS OF THE OLD CYCLE. 14231 19441104 19441106 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT. 14232 19441113 19441114 A VERY SMALL SPOT. RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 14227. 14233 19441116 19441128 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH TINY COMPANIONS ON NOVEMBER 19. 14234 19441122 19441126 A DIMINUTIVE STREAM. 14235 19441127 19441129 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 14236 19441205 19441206 A SMALL SPOT. 14237 19441206 19441214 A SMALL STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER DECEMBER 11. 14238 19441208 19441221 A CLOSELY PACKED STREAM OF COMPLEX SPOTS BREAKING UP AFTER DECEMBER 16. 14239 19441211 19441215 A VARIABLE CLUSTER OF FAINT SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 14238. 14240 19441213 19441226 RETURN OF GROUP 14233; 3RD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14241 19441217 19441222 SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM. 14242 19441217 19441221 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14243 19441218 19441228 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON DECEMBER 25. 14244 19441220 19441222 A TINY SPOT, STEADY IN ITS POSITION. 14245 19441221 19450101 A CLUSTER ON DECEMBER 21 WITH ANOTHER FORMING BEHIND IT ON DECEMBER 24. THE STREAM WHICH IS THEREBY FORMED SOON FADES OUT, AND ONLY THE LEADING SPOT REMAINS ON DECEMBER 31. 14246 19441223 19441227 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 25. 14247 19441227 19441228 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 14248 19450101 19450102 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JAN. 1: A SINGLE SPOT ON JAN. 2. 14249 19450105 19450108 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14250 19450106 19450107 A SMALL SPOT ON JAN. 6; TWO ON JAN. 7. 14251 19450106 19450117 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL CLUSTER IN ITS WAKE ON JAN. 12 AND 13. 14252 19450108 19450109 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14253 19450110 19450122 A RETURN OF GROUP 14240: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14254 19450111 19450112 A TINY SPOT. 14255 19450118 19450128 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON JAN. 19, 20, 27, AND 28. 14256 19450121 19450126 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14257 19450122 19450123 A SMALL SPOT. 14258 19450127 19450201 A GROUPING OF SMALL SPOTS, JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, DEVELOPING INTO A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER. 14259 19450201 19450209 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 14260 19450202 19450206 A SMALL SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS ON FEB. 3-5. 14261 19450213 19450221 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS DYING OUT AFTER REACHING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 14262 19450223 19450306 A DECLINING STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 14263 19450302 19450315 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, STABLE IN POSITION, WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 14264 19450309 19450314 SMALL SPOTS FORMING IN FRONT OF GROUP 14263. 14265 19450316 19450321 A SINGLE SPOT ON EACH DAY EXCEPT MAR. 18 AND 19 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 14266 19450321 19450403 A REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY VARIABLE COMPANIONS WHICH HAVE DIED OUT BY APR. 2. 14267 19450326 19450407 A STREAM GROWING RAPIDLY AS IT PASSES CLEAR OF THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT WITH CLOSE COMPANIONS; THE FOLLOWER, WHICH DEVELOPS AS A COMPOSITE SPOT, SLOWLY BECOMES REGULAR AS IT DIMINISHES. 14268 19450327 19450408 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT. 14269 19450402 19450410 A REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY VANISHING. 14270 19450414 19450420 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 14271 19450417 19450429 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. THE FOLLOWING PART CONSISTS OF A STRING OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14272 19450419 19450502 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS AFTER APR. 25. PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 14266. 14273 19450422 19450504 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT IN THE SAME GENERAL AREA ON EACH OF THE DAYS. 14274 19450425 19450507 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT OF AN INVERTED V-SHAPE UNTIL MAY 2 WHEN THE FOLLOWING PART BEGINS TO DIE OUT AND THE PRECEDING PART TO ASSUME A CIRCULAR OUTLINE. 14275 19450430 19450510 AT FIRST A SMALL SPOT; AFTER A LAPSE OF TWO DAYS A SHORT STREAM APPEARS A LITTLE AHEAD OF THE ORIGINAL POSITION. 14276 19450430 19450510 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS AFTER MAY 5. 14277 19450501 19450502 SMALL SPOTS. 14278 19450503 19450505 A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 3 AND 5: A PAIR ON MAY 4. 14279 19450509 19450511 A TINY SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAY 10. 14280 19450510 19450514 SOME VERY SMALL SPOTS. 14281 19450514 19450524 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON MAY 16. 14282 19450515 19450519 A SHORT STREAM WITH ITS ORIGIN WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN AND STILL GROWING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 14283 19450516 19450528 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT UNTIL MAY 18; AFTER A LAPSE OF SIX DAYS A SMALL STREAM APPEARS IN NEARLY THE SAME PLACE. 14284 19450518 19450521 A SMALL SPOT. 14285 19450518 19450527 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 14286 19450523 19450524 A TINY SPOT. 14287 19450523 19450531 A SMALL SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. 14288 19450525 19450526 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 14289 19450529 19450603 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 14290 19450531 19450601 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 14291 19450603 19450608 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON JUNE 8. 14292 19450609 19450614 A SHORT STREAM WITH RAPID RISE AND QUICK DECAY. 14293 19450611 19450619 A PERSISTENT SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON JUNE 18. 14294 19450611 19450623 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14295 19450613 19450618 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 16. 14296 19450613 19450622 A TINY SPOT UNTIL JUNE 17; A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS APPEAR NEAR THE SAME POSITION ON JUNE 20. 14297 19450613 19450624 A PAIR OF SPOTS. ON JUNE 17, SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR AND FORM A TEMPORARY CLUSTER. BY JUNE 23, A REGULAR SPOT REPRESENTS THE DISTURBANCE. 14298 19450613 19450621 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14299 19450615 19450625 A SINGLE SPOT NOT SEEN ON JUNE 17-18. COMPANIONS APPEAR ON JUNE 20 TO FORM A SHORT STREAM. 14300 19450619 19450701 A STREAM DEVELOPING AS IT COMES ROUND THE EAST LIMB. THE FOLLOWER, A SMALL NEARLY REGULAR SPOT, DISINTEGRATES INTO A CLUSTER WHICH SOON DIES OUT, AND THE LEADER (A REGULAR SPOT) ALONE REMAINS AFTER JUNE 28. 14301 19450627 19450701 SMALL SPOTS. 14302 19450630 19450707 INTERMITTENT. A TINY VARIABLE SPOT. 14303 19450704 19450706 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JULY 4: A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 5 AND 6. 14304 19450706 19450707 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14305 19450706 19450708 A SINGLE SPOT ON EACH DAY. 14306 19450708 19450716 A PAIR OF NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS. 14307 19450709 19450721 A PAIR OF WIDELY SEPARATED REGULAR SPOTS. THE LEADER IS STABLE THROUGHOUT, BUT THE UMBRA OF THE FOLLOWER BEGINS TO DIVIDE INTO TWO ON JULY 13. A FEW SMALL FAINT COMPANIONS COME BETWEEN THESE REGULAR SPOTS AFTER JULY 12. 14308 19450709 19450720 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14309 19450709 19450717 A SMALL CLUSTER RISING TO A BRIEF MAXIMUM AND THEN DECLINING RAPIDLY. 14310 19450710 19450719 RETURN OF GROUP 14296. A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT. 14311 19450712 19450715 A PAIR OF DEVELOPING SPOTS. 14312 19450714 19450724 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE COMPONENTS. 14313 19450715 19450719 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF SUDDEN GROWTH AND RAPID DECAY. 14314 19450715 19450726 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS WHICH BY JULY 20 DEVELOP INTO A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 14315 19450718 19450720 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 14316 19450721 19450722 A SINGLE SPOT ON EACH DAY. 14317 19450723 19450726 A SMALL CLUSTER. 14318 19450725 19450727 A TINY SPOT NOT SEEN ON JULY 26. 14319 19450726 19450807 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14320 19450728 19450729 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14321 19450729 19450804 ONE OR MORE TINY SPOTS. 14322 19450802 19450804 A SMALL SPOT. 14323 19450804 19450808 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, ONE DISAPPEARING BY AUG. 6. 14324 19450806 19450820 AT FIRST A COMPOSITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW COMPANIONS THAT ARE SMALL UNTIL AUG. 10. TWO FAIRLY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS THEN QUICKLY DEVELOP FROM THIS TRAIN, AND THE AGGREGATE AREA OF THE GROUP RISES TO 1000 MILLIONTHS OF THE SUN'S HEMISPHERE. BUT THE LEADER SPOT SOON DECREASES AND DIES OUT BY AUG. 18; THE REST OF THE GROUP IS FAST DECLINING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 14325 19450810 19450815 INTERMITTENT. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 14326 19450810 19450811 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUG. 10: A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 14326*19450812 19450813 A FAINT SPOT. 14327 19450815 19450819 A SINGLE SPOT ON EACH DAY. 14328 19450818 19450819 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14329 19450819 19450823 A TINY SPOT ON AUG. 19 AND 23 ONLY. 14330 19450823 19450825 A SMALL SPOT. 14331 19450827 19450902 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14331*19450829 19450830 A SMALL INDEFINITE SPOT. 14332 19450831 19450904 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER REMAINS ON SEPT. 4. 14333 19450901 19450903 A GROUP WITH ORIGIN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14334 19450901 19450911 A REGULAR SPOT. DIVISION INTO TWO, BEGINNING ON SEPT. 6, PRECEDES ITS RAPID DISSOLUTION. 14335 19450904 19450905 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 14336 19450905 19450911 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE COMPONENTS DYING OUT NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 14337 19450906 19450908 ONE SMALL SPOT. 14338 19450907 19450914 SMALL SPOTS. 14339 19450910 19450911 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPT 10: A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT. 11. 14340 19450916 19450924 A PERSISTENT SMALL SPOT WITH THE ADDITION OF ANOTHER ON SEPT. 19-21. 14341 19450922 19450924 A TINY SPOT. 14342 19450922 19450928 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. THE LEADING PART CONDENSES INTO A REGULAR SPOT BY SEPT. 26. 14343 19450922 19450930 A LARGE BI-POLAR GROUP OF RAPID GROWTH. ON SEPT. 27, THE FOLLOWER SPOT BEGINS TO SPLIT INTO TWO PARTS, AND THESE ARE SEPARATING AS THE GROUP PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 14344 19450923 19450926 A SMALL SPOT. 14345 19450927 19451009 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14346 19450928 19451002 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 14347 19450928 19451010 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WITH INITIAL RAPID DEVELOPMENT FROM A SMALL SPOT FIRST SEEN NEAR THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER REMAINS FAIRLY STABLE, BUT THE FOLLOWER BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON OCT. 3 INTO A CLUSTER. 14348 19450930 19451002 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14349 19450930 19451010 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS REPRESENTED BY TWO SPOTS THAT COALESCE TO MAKE A NEARLY REGULAR SPOT BY OCT. 6. THE FOLLOWER BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON OCT. 3 AND FADES AWAY FAIRLY RAPIDLY. 14350 19450930 19451009 A DOUBLE SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. 14351 19451006 19451007 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS ON OCT. 7. 14352 19451006 19451013 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON OCT. 8. 14353 19451007 19451016 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 14354 19451009 19451010 A DOT ON OCT. 9: A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 10. 14355 19451013 19451016 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14356 19451013 19451024 RETURN OF GROUP 14342. A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL, VERY DISTANT COMPANION. THE UMBRA OF THE REGULAR SPOT BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON OCT. 17 AFTER WHICH THE WHOLE SPOT DIES OUT RATHER RAPIDLY. 14357 19451014 19451025 RETURN OF GROUP 14343. A SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA, PRECEDED BY A SMALL CLUSTER WHICH DIES OUT BY OCT. 23. FRESH ACTIVITY IN THIS AREA IS REPRESENTED BY GROUP 14375. 14358 19451016 19451028 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL COMPONENTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST, BECOMING A REGULAR SPOT BY OCT. 20. THIS REMAINS FAIRLY STABLE TO THE WEST LIMB. 14359 19451018 19451023 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 18-20. AFTER A BREAK OF TWO DAYS, A TINY SPOT APPEARS NEAR THE ORIGINAL PLACE. 14360 19451019 19451021 SMALL SPOTS. 14361 19451019 19451020 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 19; A SINGLE SPOT ON OCT. 20. 14362 19451019 19451029 SOME SMALL SPOTS EXPANDING ON OCT. 22 INTO A SHORT STREAM. THE LEADING PART HAS GROWN INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT BY THE TIME IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 14363 19451019 19451020 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14364 19451024 19451102 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS INCREASING IN NUMBER ON OCT. 30 TO FORM A LONGISH STREAM IN FAIRLY HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. 14365 19451025 19451105 RETURN OF GROUP 14347. A SCATTERED CLUSTER OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS SLOWLY FADING OUT. 14366 19451025 19451106 RETURN OF GROUP 14345. A REGULAR SPOT OF UNUSUAL STABILITY. 14367 19451027 19451102 A SHORT STREAM FORMING SUDDENLY, JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 14368 19451027 19451106 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT AND THE LAST TO DIE OUT. 14369 19451031 19451111 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DECREASING. 14370 19451102 19451103 A TINY SPOT. 14371 19451103 19451107 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT EXCEPT ON NOV. 6, WHEN A SMALL CLUSTER IS SEEN. 14372 19451109 19451120 TWO SMALL REGULAR SPOTS, THE FOLLOWER DYING OUT BY NOV. 17. BY THE NEXT DAY, THE LEADER HAS BROKEN UP AND SO FADES OUT. 14373 19451110 19451111 A DOT ON EACH DAY DIFFERING IN LONGITUDE BY 3 1/2 DEGREES. 14374 19451111 19451115 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WITH SLOW INCREASE FORMING PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 14375 19451111 19451119 A SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ON NOV. 14-15. 14376 19451113 19451116 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 13 FROM WHICH ONE SURVIVES ON THE FOLLOWING THREE DAYS. 14377 19451113 19451118 RETURN OF GROUP 14362. A SMALL SPOT. 14378 19451113 19451121 RETURN OF GROUP 14358. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. OTHERS APPEAR ON NOV. 17 AND FORM A SHORT-LIVED CLUSTER. 14379 19451116 19451122 SMALL SPOTS FORMING ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. ON NOV. 20-21, THE AREA RISES SHARPLY WITH THE GROWTH OF A NEW DOUBLE SPOT. 14380 19451119 19451121 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 14364. A SMALL SPOT. 14381 19451121 19451128 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH BY NOV. 25 BECOMES A SHORT STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 14382 19451122 19451126 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 22-23: A SINGLE SPOT AFTERWARDS. 14383 19451123 19451129 A SHORT STREAM FORMING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE FOLLOWER SOON DIES OUT. 14384 19451123 19451124 RETURN OF GROUP 14366: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SINGLE SPOT. 14385 19451124 19451126 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE COMPONENT REMAINS ON NOV. 26. 14386 19451126 19451201 A SMALL STREAM OF RATHER FEEBLE DEVELOPMENT. 14387 19451127 19451130 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14388 19451128 19451202 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON NOV. 29 AND 30. 14389 19451127 19451209 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A SHORT STREAM, CONSISTING OF A NEARLY REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A GROUPING OF SMALL SPOTS. ON DEC. 4, THE LEADER BEGINS TO BREAK UP, AND THE WHOLE GROUP DISAPPEARS AS A CLUSTER. 14390 19451130 19451202 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14391 19451203 19451206 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14392 19451207 19451215 A PAIR OF SPOTS DYING OUT. 14393 19451207 19451215 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 14379. A SMALL SPOT WITH AN ATTENDANT ON DEC. 11-13. PERHAPS A REVIVAL ONLY AND NOT A TRUE RETURN OF GROUP 14379. 14394 19451212 19451215 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 12 AND 15; A PAIR ON DEC. 13-14. 14395 19451213 19451214 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14396 19451214 19451217 TINY SPOTS. 14397 19451214 19451224 A SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. ALTHOUGH APPARENTLY A RETURN OF GROUP 14381, UNBROKEN CONTINUITY OF ACTIVITY IS DOUBTFUL. 14398 19451215 19451218 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 15 AND 18: A PAIR ON DEC. 16 AND 17. 14399 19451216 19451228 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL DRIFT EQUATORWARDS. 14400 19451217 19451219 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT REMAINS ON DEC. 19. 14401 19451224 19460105 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 14389. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14402 19451231 19460104 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JAN. 4. 14403 19460101 19460103 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14404 19460102 19460111 ONE OR TWO SMALL PERSISTENT SPOTS. 14405 19460109 19460112 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14406 19460110 19460113 TWO SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 13. 14407 19460110 19460117 A DIMINISHING SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON JANUARY 12. 14408 19460113 19460119 A STREAM FORMING ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN AND REACHING MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT WITHIN THREE DAYS. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE COMPOSITE SPOTS. 14409 19460113 19460118 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 16 AND 17. 14410 19460113 19460123 A CLUSTER, WHEN FIRST SEEN ON JANUARY 13, QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A LARGE STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER, AT FIRST COMPOSITE, ALSO BECOMES REGULAR BY JANUARY 20. 14411 19460113 19460123 A SINGLE SPOT SF GROUP 14410. ON JANUARY 16, A SMALL STREAM BEGINS TO FORM, BUT THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 22. 14412 19460113 19460125 A RETURN OF GROUP 14399. A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14413 19460113 19460124 A REGULAR SPOT DIMINISHING RAPIDLY AFTER JANUARY 21. THERE IS AN OCCASIONAL SMALL DISTANT COMPANION. 14414 19460120 19460202 A FULLY DEVELOPED STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT. THE FOLLOWER SOON BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT, LEAVING THE LEADER TO PASS ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 14415 19460124 19460202 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 1. 14416 19460127 19460208 INTERMITTENT. A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 4-6. 14417 19460129 19460212 AN IMMENSE GROUP CONSISTING OF A GIANT COMPOSITE SPOT PRECEDED BY AN ELONGATED COMPONENT OF RELATIVELY MINOR IMPORTANCE. THE LATTER MAINTAINS ITS SIZE AND GENERAL OUTLINE UNTIL FEBRUARY 6, WHEN A GRADUAL DISINTEGRATION BEGINS. THE GIANT PRIMARY HAS AN INTENSE PRINCIPAL UMBRA WHICH IS COMPLETELY DIVIDED BY FEBRUARY 4. THE WHOLE MASS BECOMES LONGITUDINALLY ELONGATED DURING ITS DISK PASSAGE, AND IS OBVIOUSLY DISINTEGRATING AS IT NEARS THE WEST LIMB. THE MEASURED AREAS SUGGEST A DOUBLE PEAK ABOUT FEBRUARY 3 AND 7. THIS GROUP IS THE LARGEST AS YET RECORDED AT GREENWICH AND IS NOTABLE IN CONNEXION WITH THE DETECTION OF SOLAR RADIATION OBSERVABLE ON RADIO WAVELENGTHS (PHIL. MAG., 37, 73, 1946). AN INTENSE SOLAR FLARE OCCURRED ON FEBRUARY 6 (P.A.S.P., 58, 87, 1946) AND A GREAT GEOMAGNETIC STORM BEGAN 17 1/2 HOURS LATER. 14418 19460130 19460131 A SMALL SPOT NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14419 19460130 19460205 A DYING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, ONLY ONE REMAINING BY FEBRUARY 4. 14420 19460131 19460207 A BI-POLAR GROUP DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM TWO SMALL SPOTS APPEARING ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 14421 19460201 19460202 A TINY SPOT. 14422 19460202 19460214 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL FEBRUARY 8. 14423 19460203 19460205 A SMALL SPOT. 14424 19460204 19460214 A FEW FAINT CHANGING SPOTS. 14425 19460204 19460205 A SMALL SPOT. 14426 19460204 19460208 A SINGLE TINY SPOT ON FEBRUARY 4-5, A PAIR OF WIDELY SEPARATED SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 7 AND 8. 14427 19460205 19460208 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14428 19460207 19460210 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 8. 14429 19460207 19460216 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS BECOMING A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 13 AND 16. 14430 19460207 19460208 A TINY SPOT. 14431 19460207 19460219 A RETURN OF GROUP 14410. A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. BY FEBRUARY 13, THE UMBRA IS DIVIDED INTO TWO BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE". 14432 19460209 19460215 A SMALLISH STREAM FORMING ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE FOLLOWING PART SOON DIES OUT. 14433 19460209 19460216 A SCATTERED CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOT, BECOMING AN UNSTABLE STREAM. 14434 19460211 19460217 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGER. 14435 19460211 19460215 A RETURN OF GROUP 14412. A SMALL SPOT. 14436 19460213 19460224 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH BY FEBRUARY 20 HAS BECOME REGULAR. THERE ARE ONE OR TWO CHANGING COMPANIONS. 14437 19460215 19460226 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LEADING PART CONDENSES INTO A NEARLY REGULAR SPOT, AS THE FOLLOWING SECTION DIES OUT. 14438 19460217 19460301 A RETURN OF GROUP 14414. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14439 19460219 19460228 INITIALLY, A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, IN WHICH THE LEADER GROWS RAPIDLY AFTER FEBRUARY 23 INTO A SIZABLE REGULAR SPOT. ON FEBRUARY 24, THE FOLLOWER ALSO BEGINS TO DEVELOP INTO A REGULAR SPOT OF COMPARABLE SIZE. THE WHOLE GROUP IS APPARENTLY STILL GROWING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 14440 19460221 19460222 A SMALL SPOT. 14441 19460221 19460224 A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 21; A FAINT CLUSTER ON THE OTHER DAYS. 14442 19460221 19460305 A RETURN OF GROUP 14420. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14443 19460222 19460306 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL FEBRUARY 26, WHEN OTHER SPOTS TOGETHER FORM A STREAM. ON MARCH 3, A SUDDEN INCREASE OCCURS IN THE REAR. 14444 19460223 19460226 ONE OR TWO SPOTS. 14445 19460224 19460301 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14446 19460226 19460227 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 26; A PAIR ON FEBRUARY 27. 14447 19460226 19460305 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT EXCEPT ON FEBRUARY 28 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 14448 19460226 19460309 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS WITH A LEADER WHICH BECOMES A NEARLY REGULAR SPOT FOR A FEW DAYS. THE GROUP SOON DECAYS. 14449 19460227 19460302 A TINY SPOT. 14450 19460227 19460308 A SCATTERED CLUSTER OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, BECOMING A STREAM ON MARCH 5. 14451 19460228 19460312 A RETURN OF GROUP 14417. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. A PART OF THE LEADING EDGE BREAKS AWAY ON MARCH 5, DRIFTING FORWARD IN LONGITUDE AND DIMINISHING TO A DOT IN A FEW DAYS. ON MARCH 3 PART OF THE REAR EDGE ALSO BREAKS OFF TO FORM A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WHICH SOON BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT, LEAVING THE REDUCED COMPOSITE SPOT TO PASS ROUND THE LIMB. 14452 19460301 19460302 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14453 19460301 19460313 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE AND LONGEST-LIVED COMPONENT. 14454 19460303 19460304 A TINY SPOT. 14455 19460306 19460311 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 8 AND 9. 14456 19460307 19460320 A PAIR OF SPOTS, THE LEADER OF WHICH SURVIVES ON MARCH 16 AS A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 14457 19460309 19460315 A SHORT STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 9. 14458 19460310 19460314 SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON MARCH 11. 14459 19460310 19460323 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. THE LEADER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT. 14460 19460311 19460314 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14461 19460314 19460322 A RETURN OF GROUP 14439. AT FIRST A COMPACT STREAM LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. ON MARCH 18 IT BEGINS TO SPREAD IN LONGITUDE AND RAPIDLY DISINTEGRATES. 14462 19460316 19460319 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 14463 19460317 19460319 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14464 19460317 19460326 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MARCH 24. 14465 19460317 19460318 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 17; A PAIR ON MARCH 18. 14466 19460318 19460323 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY ON MARCH 18. ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS AFTER MARCH 20. 14467 19460318 19460328 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING IN THE REAR OF GROUP 14465. ONLY THE LEADING SPOTS REMAIN AFTER MARCH 25. THE DIVISION OF THIS GROUP FROM GROUP 14465 IS SOMEWHAT ARBITRARY. 14468 19460320 19460324 A SHORT STREAM OF RAPID GROWTH. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE DOUBLE SPOTS. 14469 19460321 19460327 A PAIR OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 14470 19460321 19460323 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 14471 19460321 19460401 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 14472 19460322 19460324 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14473 19460323 19460403 A RETURN OF GROUP 14443. A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS (RELATED TO GROUP 14471), OF WHICH THE CHIEF COMPONENT DEVELOPS MULTIPLE UMBRAE. ON MARCH 29, THIS SPOT DIVIDES INTO TWO AS THE WHOLE GROUP DIES OUT. 14474 19460325 19460326 A SMALL SPOT. 14475 19460328 19460330 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS ON MARCH 30. 14476 19460328 19460409 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE FIRST TO DIE OUT. THE FOLLOWER IS ALSO A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH VERY CLOSE COMPANIONS ON SEVERAL DAYS. 14477 19460329 19460409 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH SLOWLY DECREASES. 14478 19460329 19460410 A RETURN OF GROUP 14451. A CLUSTER OF SPOTS BECOMING A BIGGISH STREAM BY APRIL 2. THE PRINCIPAL COMPONENT IS A REGULAR SPOT, WHICH REMAINS STABLE THROUGHOUT AND BECOMES THE LEADER OF THE STREAM. THE FOLLOWING SPOTS OF THE STREAM ARE DYING OUT AS THEY APPROACH THE WEST LIMB. THE AXIS OF THE STREAM IS HIGHLY INCLINED TO THE SOLAR EQUATOR. 14479 19460330 19460401 A TINY SPOT. 14480 19460330 19460410 A RETURN OF GROUP 14457. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 14481 19460331 19460401 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14482 19460402 19460403 A SPECK. 14483 19460402 19460403 A TINY SPOT. 14484 19460402 19460415 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FOLLOWING COMPANION UNTIL APRIL 6. 14485 19460403 19460405 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON APRIL 5. 14486 19460403 19460416 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14487 19460405 19460406 A TINY SPOT. 14488 19460405 19460408 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS. 14489 19460406 19460407 A CLUSTER OF FAINT SPOTS. 14490 19460407 19460421 A RETURN OF GROUP 14459. A STREAM IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE FAIRLY STABLE SPOTS OF NEARLY REGULAR OUTLINE. THE UMBRAE OF BOTH ARE ELONGATED. 14491 19460408 19460418 A RETURN OF GROUP 14468. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 14492 19460409 19460410 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS. 14493 19460411 19460413 A SMALL SPOT. 14494 19460411 19460412 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 11; A PAIR ON APRIL 12. 14495 19460413 19460414 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14496 19460415 19460427 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 23. 14497 19460418 19460423 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14498 19460418 19460420 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 18-19; A SINGLE SPOT ON APRIL 20. 14499 19460418 19460430 A RETURN OF GROUP 14471. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14500 19460419 19460420 A TINY SPOT. 14501 19460420 19460501 A STREAM; THE LEADER SOON BECOMES THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT. THE FOLLOWER SLOWLY DECREASES AND DOES NOT SURVIVE TO THE WEST LIMB. 14502 19460422 19460501 A SHORT STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS DEVELOPING FROM A SPOT FIRST SEEN ON APRIL 22. THERE IS A FURTHER INCREASE IN AREA AFTER APRIL 27. 14503 19460424 19460506 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DRIFTING APART IN LONGITUDE. THE FOLLOWING MEMBER DEVELOPS INTO A CLUSTER OF CHANGING SPOTS. 14504 19460426 19460508 A RETURN OF GROUP 14478. A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14505 19460428 19460430 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14506 19460428 19460509 A SHORT STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER ON MAY 1 BEGINS TO BREAK UP INTO A CLUSTER AND RAPIDLY DIES OUT AFTER MAY 5. THE MORE STABLE FOLLOWER LASTS A FEW DAYS LONGER. 14507 19460428 19460429 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14508 19460429 19460502 A CHANGING CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 14509 19460429 19460508 A VARIABLE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 14510 19460430 19460510 A FEW DOTS ON APRIL 30 DEVELOPING RAPIDLY INTO A FAIR-SIZED COMPOSITE SPOT. ON MAY 4, THIS BEGINS TO BREAK UP, BUT THE COMPONENTS BECOME A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER, WHICH IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT, REMAINS COMPOSITE. 14511 19460501 19460502 A SMALL SPOT. 14512 19460501 19460511 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHEN FIRST SEEN, GROWING RAPIDLY AND DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM CONSISTING OF A NEARLY REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF VARIABLE SPOTS. THESE DIE OUT LEAVING THE LEADER ALONE AS THE LIMB IS APPROACHED. 14513 19460501 19460507 A RETURN OF GROUP 14484. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14514 19460503 19460514 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. ON MAY 6 THE REGULAR BEGINS TO BREAK UP INTO SMALL SPOTS, FORMING A STREAM WHICH SLOWLY DIES OUT. 14515 19460506 19460514 A RETURN OF GROUP 14490. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 14516 19460508 19460509 A TINY SPOT. 14517 19460510 19460511 A SMALL SPOT. 14518 19460510 19460520 TWO SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 10, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY INTO A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER IS LESS STABLE AND DIMINISHES TO A SMALL SPOT AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 14519 19460516 19460519 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON MAY 16, 18 AND 19: A PAIR ON MAY 17. 14520 19460516 19460522 A RETURN OF GROUP 14499. A SMALL SPOT. 14521 19460516 19460522 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14522 19460517 19460519 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14523 19460517 19460528 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS UNTIL MAY 19. THERE IS A SUDDEN INCREASE IN AREA BY MAY 20 WHEN A STREAM IS FORMED, THE LEADER OF WHICH IS A MASS OF CHANGING SPOTS WHILE THE FOLLOWER TENDS TO BECOME A REGULAR SPOT. 14524 19460518 19460526 A CLUSTER OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. ON MAY 22 THERE IS A FRESH OUTBURST FOR A FEW DAYS. 14525 19460518 19460530 A RETURN OF GROUP 14508. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 14526 19460520 19460527 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL MAY 23; THEN A CLUSTER APPEARS FOR A FEW DAYS. 14527 19460520 19460531 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING FROM A TINY CLUSTER OF SPOTS, FIRST SEEN ON MAY 20. 14528 19460521 19460523 TINY SPOTS IN A CLUSTER. 14529 19460523 19460529 NONDESCRIPT SPOTS, SCATTERED IN LONGITUDE. 14530 19460526 19460606 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT UNTIL MAY 31. THE NEXT DAY OTHER SPOTS APPEAR, FORMING TWO CLUSTERS. 14531 19460527 19460529 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14532 19460529 19460530 A SMALL SPOT. 14533 19460530 19460608 A SHORT STREAM WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON JUNE 4. 14534 19460605 19460606 ONE SPOT ON EACH DAY. 14535 19460605 19460608 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14536 19460605 19460616 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14537 19460606 19460613 A SHORT STREAM; THE FOLLOWER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND IS THE ONLY SURVIVOR AFTER JUNE 9. 14538 19460607 19460608 A SMALL SPOT. 14539 19460609 19460610 A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS. 14540 19460609 19460616 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW TINY COMPANIONS MAKING UP A SHORT STREAM. 14541 19460611 19460612 A TINY SPOT. 14542 19460612 19460619 A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH SOON BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER OF SMALL COMPONENTS AND DIES OUT JUST PAST THE C.M. 14543 19460613 19460615 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 13: A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 14 AND 15. 14544 19460613 19460614 A SMALL SPOT. 14545 19460614 19460620 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 14542. 14546 19460614 19460619 A SMALL, PERSISTENT, FAINT SPOT. 14547 19460614 19460626 A RETURN OF GROUP 14527. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14548 19460615 19460620 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14549 19460615 19460626 A RETURN OF GROUP 14525. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 14550 19460615 19460628 AT FIRST, A SCATTERED CLUSTER OF SPOTS WHICH BY JUNE 18 IS FORMING INTO A PAIR OF DISTINCT CLUSTERS. THESE SLOWLY SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE. BY JUNE 22, THE LEADING ONE IS REDUCED TO ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, WHILE THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER TENDS TO CONDENSE TO A SINGLE SPOT BEFORE ITS FINAL DISINTEGRATION. 14551 19460618 19460620 A SHORT STREAM FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14552 19460618 19460623 INTERMITTENT. A FAINT SPOT SEEN ON JUNE 18, 21 AND 23. 14553 19460620 19460625 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS FORMING A SHORT STREAM. 14554 19460620 19460621 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14555 19460620 19460623 A SPOT, LITTLE MORE THAN A DOT. 14556 19460620 19460702 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER. ON JUNE 29, THE FORMER BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT AS IT REACHES THE LIMB. 14557 19460621 19460625 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JUNE 25. 14558 19460622 19460702 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 14559 19460623 19460703 A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH BREAK UP INTO TWO SMALL CLUSTERS ON JUNE 29. THESE DISAPPEAR LEAVING A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 14560 19460623 19460703 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JULY 2. 14561 19460624 19460625 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JUNE 24; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 14562 19460626 19460628 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS APPEARING IMMEDIATELY NORTH OF GROUP 14560. 14563 19460627 19460628 A SMALL SPOT. 14564 19460628 19460709 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT. 14565 19460629 19460712 A REGULAR SPOT WHOSE UMBRA DIVIDES INTO TWO BY JULY 5. BY JULY 7 THE WHOLE SPOT SPLITS INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS. THERE ARE A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 14566 19460630 19460702 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14567 19460701 19460711 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION WHEN FIRST SEEN. ON JULY 4, SMALL SPOTS APPEAR IN BETWEEN FORMING A GROUP OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY JULY 11. 14568 19460701 19460711 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 14569 19460701 19460713 A CLUSTER OF SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE TO FORM A STREAM; THE FOLLOWING PART BECOMING A SIZABLE COMPOSITE SPOT. THE GROUP IS DYING OUT RAPIDLY AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 14570 19460701 19460707 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 14571 19460705 19460707 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14572 19460708 19460709 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14573 19460708 19460717 A SMALL STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 16. 14574 19460710 19460721 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JULY 20. 14575 19460712 19460720 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN STREAM FORMATION. BY JULY 16, THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A REGULAR SPOT AND ONE OR TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS. 14576 19460712 19460717 A TINY SPOT, EXCEPT ON JULY 14 AND 15 WHEN A PAIR IS SEEN. 14577 19460712 19460725 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION FROM JULY 21 ONWARDS. 14578 19460714 19460724 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 14 RAPIDLY DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM, IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER, A CLUSTER OF CHANGING SPOTS, DIES OUT AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 14579 19460716 19460724 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL VARYING SPOTS. THE FOLLOWER BECOMES COMPOSITE FOR A FEW DAYS. 14580 19460717 19460720 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT IN RELATIVELY HIGH LATITUDE. 14581 19460717 19460722 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS DYING OUT BEFORE IT REACHES THE C.M. 14582 19460717 19460718 A TINY SPOT. 14583 19460718 19460720 A CLUSTER OF SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14584 19460719 19460728 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS UNTIL JULY 23. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL JULY 26 WHEN A CLUSTER APPEARS, BUT THIS QUICKLY DIES OUT. 14585 19460719 19460803 A MASSIVE GIANT SPOT, WITH MULTIPLE UMBRAE. THE LEADING NUCLEUS BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT JUST SEPARATED FROM THE MAIN BODY OF THE GROUP. THE LARGEST INDIVIDUAL COMPONENTS ARE A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS COALESCING AT THE REAR. AS A WHOLE, THE GROUP IS REMARKABLY STABLE, UNDERGOING VERY LITTLE RADICAL CHANGE THROUGHOUT ITS TRANSIT. IT IS THE SECOND LARGEST GROUP SO FAR RECORDED AT GREENWICH, THE LARGEST BEING GROUP 14417. A SOLAR FLARE OF EXCEPTIONAL MAGNITUDE OCCURED ON JULY 25 WITH MAXIMUM AT 16H 27M U.T. (M.N.R.A.S. 106, 500, 1946 AND P.A.S.P. 58, 315, 1946) AND A GREAT GEOMAGNETIC STORM BEGAN AT ABINGER 263 HOURS LATER. 14586 19460721 19460730 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS IN THE FORM OF A STREAM. ON JULY 26 THIS LEADER SPOT BEGINS TO BREAK UP, AND THE WHOLE DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 14587 19460722 19460727 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT ON JULY 22 AND 23. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL THE APPEARANCE OF A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 27. 14588 19460722 19460725 A FEW TINY SPOTS ON JULY 22 OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS FOR THE NEXT FEW DAYS. 14589 19460722 19460724 A PAIR OF SMALL DEVELOPING SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14590 19460723 19460724 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JULY 23; A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 24. 14591 19460726 19460805 A GROWING CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS SHOWING A MORE DEFINITE INCREASE FROM AUG. 1. 14592 19460726 19460807 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS AND FOLLOWED BY A MORE DEFINITE SPOT. 14593 19460727 19460809 A STREAM IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE FAIRLY STABLE SPOTS. THE MULTIPLE UMBRA OF THE FOLLOWER COALESCES BY AUG. 4 WHEN THE SPOT IS OF NEARLY REGULAR OUTLINE. THE SPOTS IN BETWEEN HAVE DIED OUT BY AUG. 5. 14594 19460728 19460801 A SMALL CLUSTER FOLLOWED BY A SINGLE SPOT (IMMEDIATELY BEHIND GROUP 14591). 14595 19460728 19460809 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. BOTH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER BEGIN TO BREAK UP ON AUG. 4 AND ARE DYING OUT AS THE GROUP PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 14596 19460729 19460801 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT EXCEPT ON JULY 30, WHEN A PAIR IS SEEN. 14597 19460730 19460808 A SHORT LIVED STREAM OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. 14598 19460730 19460802 A RETURN OF GROUP 14569. A SMALL CLUSTER OF SPOTS ON JULY 30; ONLY ONE COMPONENT REMAINS ON THE NEXT THREE DAYS. 14599 19460803 19460815 RETURN OR REVIVAL OF GROUP 14575. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ON AUG. 13 AND 14. 14600 19460804 19460816 A RETURN OF GROUP 14583. A COMPOSITE SPOT BECOMING REGULAR BY AUG. 10. NUMEROUS COMPANIONS SURROUNDING THE SPOT QUICKLY DIE OUT. 14601 19460805 19460806 A TINY SPOT. 14602 19460806 19460817 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON AUG. 6; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL AUG. 9 WHEN SOME SMALL SPOTS GROW RAPIDLY INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. 14603 19460806 19460812 A SPARSE STREAM DYING OUT JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 14604 19460807 19460813 A FEW SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY AUG. 11. 14605 19460808 19460820 A RETURN OF GROUP 14578. A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT DRIFTING EQUATORWARDS. 14606 19460809 19460811 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 14607 19460809 19460813 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON AUG. 10. 14608 19460809 19460817 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON AUG. 15. THERE IS APPRECIABLE DEVELOPMENT AT THE WEST LIMB. 14609 19460809 19460811 A SMALL SPOT. 14610 19460812 19460813 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 14611 19460812 19460816 A TINY SPOT EXCEPT ON AUG. 13 WHEN THERE IS A SMALL CLUSTER. 14612 19460813 19460815 A TINY SPOT. 14613 19460814 19460817 A SMALL SPOT. 14614 19460814 19460815 A SMALL SPOT. 14615 19460814 19460821 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT NOT SEEN ON AUG. 19 AND 20. 14616 19460814 19460826 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A CLOSELY-PACKED, CHANGING STREAM WHICH DIES OUT FAIRLY RAPIDLY AFTER REACHING ITS MAXIMUM ON AUG. 20. 14617 19460815 19460826 A CLUSTER OF CHANGING SPOTS SLOWLY DYING OUT. 14618 19460816 19460824 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS SPREAD IN LONGITUDE. 14619 19460817 19460829 A RETURN OF GROUP 14585. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION UNTIL AUG. 21. ON THE NEXT DAY, OTHER SPOTS APPEAR TO FORM A STREAM WHICH IS DYING OUT, HOWEVER, AS IT COMES TO THE WEST LIMB. 14620 19460817 19460830 A RETURN OF GROUP 14585. A COMPOSITE SPOT. BY AUG. 24 THIS SPLITS INTO TWO, THE NORTHERN PORTION BECOMING TWO CLOSE REGULAR SPOTS AND THE SOUTHERN STILL REMAINING MORE OR LESS COMPOSITE. 14621 19460820 19460821 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14622 19460822 19460902 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14623 19460822 19460903 A RETURN OF GROUP 14593. A VERY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14624 19460823 19460828 A RETURN (OR POSSIBLY ONLY A REVIVAL) OF GROUP 14592. INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT EXCEPT ON AUG. 24, WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 14625 19460826 19460904 A SMALL BI-POLAR GROUP OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON SEPT. 2. 14626 19460827 19460904 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A TINY SPOT FIRST SEEN ON AUG. 27. THE STREAM HAS NEARLY DIED OUT BY THE TIME IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 14627 19460829 19460904 A SINGLE SPOT PRECEDING THE DEVELOPMENT OF A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS COALESCING TO FORM A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. THIS GROUP IS VERY CLOSE TO THE HEAD OF GROUP 14626. 14628 19460829 19460906 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, REACHING MAXIMUM AREA THREE OR FOUR DAYS AFTER ITS BIRTH. THE DECLINE OF THE GROUP IS WELL ADVANCED AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT ON SEPT. 6. 14629 19460830 19460907 A STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT AND THE FOLLOWER A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LATTER HAS DIMINISHED TO ONLY COMPONENT BY SEPT. 6. 14630 19460830 19460831 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUG.30; A SINGLE SPOT ON AUG. 31. 14631 19460831 19460911 A RETURN OF GROUP 14599. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS UNTIL SEPT. 7. 14632 19460831 19460904 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPT.1. 14633 19460831 19460903 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON SEPT.2. 14634 19460831 19460912 A RETURN OF GROUP 14602. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL SEPT.8, AFTER WHICH TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS REPRESENT ITS POSITION. 14635 19460901 19460904 A SMALL SPOT N GROUP 14631. 14636 19460902 19460904 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14637 19460903 19460914 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE FOLLOWER RETAINS A REGULAR OUTLINE UNTIL SEPT.7. 14638 19460909 19460919 A SMALL STREAM, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS AFTER SEPT. 16. 14639 19460909 19460920 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 14640 19460911 19460921 A TINY SPOT, FIRST SEEN ON SEPT. 11, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY INTO AN ELONGATED CLUSTER OF SPOTS. BY SEPT.15, THESE HAVE SEPARATED OUT INTO A LARGE STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WHILE THE FOLLOWER IS A COMPOSITE ONE, SOON IN DECLINE. 14641 19460912 19460916 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14642 19460913 19460925 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH SOME VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 14643 19460913 19460924 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. BY SEPT.16, IT BEGINS TO BREAK UP INTO A CLUSTER WHICH DECLINES VERY RAPIDLY AFTER SEPT.22. 14644 19460915 19460919 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14645 19460917 19460918 A TINY SPOT. 14646 19460918 19460930 A REGULAR SPOT WITH ACCELERATED DECLINE AFTER SEPT.25. ITS POSITION PRECEDES THAT OF GROUP 14627 IN THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. 14647 19460918 19460930 A RETURN OF GROUP 14623. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT DRIFTING FULLY 1 DEGREE EQUATORWARDS DURING ITS DISK PASSAGE. 14648 19460919 19460929 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON SEPT.19; A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPT. 20. NOTHING IS RECORDED ON THE NEXT DAY, BUT ON SEPT. 22 A FEW SMALL SPOTS APPEAR AND GROW RAPIDLY INTO A STREAM CONSISTING OF A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY ONE THAT IS COMPOSITE AND LESS STABLE. 14649 19460920 19460922 A SMALL SPOT. 14650 19460921 19461003 A COMPACT STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM TWO TINY SPOTS FIRST SEEN ON SEPT. 21. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE COMPOSITE SPOTS. 14651 19460922 19460923 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 14652 19460923 19460926 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT EXCEPT ON SEPT. 26 WHEN A PAIR IS SEEN. 14653 19460923 19461002 A STREAM OF NONDESCRIPT SPOTS. 14654 19460923 19461003 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DISINTEGRATING INTO A CLUSTER ON SEPT. 26. THE TINY COMPONENTS SLOWLY DIE OUT EXCEPTING ONE SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 2. 14655 19460923 19460930 A RETURN OF GROUP 14629. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 14656 19460924 19460928 A PAIR OF SPOTS GROWING WITH UNUSUAL RAPIDITY WEST OF THE C.M. ON SEPT. 27 THE TWO SPOTS APPEAR TO BE COALESCING WITH A RESULTANT AREA THAT IS LARGE FOR A GROUP ONLY FOUR DAYS OLD. 14657 19460925 19461003 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. 14658 19460926 19460928 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14659 19460926 19460927 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 14660 19460928 19461009 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. ON OCT. 5, OTHER SPOTS APPEAR, AND WITH IT FORM A STREAM. 14661 19460929 19461004 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 14662 19461001 19461010 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS RISING TO A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON OCT. 5. 14663 19461001 19461002 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCT. 1; A SINGLE SPOT ON OCT. 2. 14664 19461002 19461003 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 14665 19461002 19461005 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON OCT. 2 AND 5; A PAIR ON OCT. 3 AND 4. 14666 19461002 19461008 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN AFTER OCT. 5, BUT THE SAME GENERAL REGION IS AGAIN REPRESENTED BY A SPOT ON OCT. 7-8. 14667 19461004 19461007 A SMALL SPOT. 14668 19461005 19461015 A SMALL DEVELOPING STREAM. THE LEADER TEMPORARILY SPLITS INTO TWO ON OCT. 10. 14669 19461005 19461010 A RETURN OF GROUP 14638. A SINGLE SPOT DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 14670 19461009 19461014 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCT. 11. 14671 19461009 19461020 SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM. 14672 19461010 19461019 A SMALL STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY OCT. 15. 14673 19461011 19461021 A CLUSTER DYING OUT AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 14674 19461012 19461018 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING SPOT, NOT SEEN ON OCT. 17. 14675 19461013 19461014 A SINGLE SPOT ON OCT. 13; A PAIR ON OCT. 14. 14676 19461013 19461025 A RETURN OF GROUP 14656. A SIZABLE STREAM; THE LEADER IS A COMPOSITE SPOT UNTIL OCT. 17, AFTERWARDS BECOMING REGULAR. THIS BREAKS UP, HOWEVER, ON OCT. 21 AND DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. THE FOLLOWER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT THROUGHOUT AND ALONE REMAINS BY OCT. 24. 14677 19461014 19461017 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 14678 19461014 19461021 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY ON OCT. 14, 19 AND 21. 14679 19461014 19461026 A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN ELONGATED UMBRA WHICH DIVIDES INTO TWO BY OCT. 22. BY OCT. 24 THE DIVISION HAS EXTENDED TO THE WHOLE SPOT. 14680 19461014 19461027 A RETURN OF GROUP 14648. A REGULAR SPOT WHICH DIVIDES INTO TWO BY OCT. 24. 14681 19461015 19461017 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 14682 19461016 19461023 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 14683 19461016 19461027 A RETURN OF GROUP 14647. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON OCT. 22. 14684 19461016 19461024 A RETURN (OR PERHAPS ONLY A REVIVAL) OF GROUP 14646. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT. 14685 19461018 19461026 A RETURN OF GROUP 14650. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, SLOWLY DYING OUT. 14686 19461019 19461030 A RETURN OF GROUP 14664. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DECREASING IN AREA AS IT CROSSES THE DISK. 14687 19461021 19461028 A SMALL STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE C.M. THE LEADING SPOT IS THE LONGEST-LIVED. 14688 19461021 19461101 A STREAM, GROWING RAPIDLY TO A MAXIMUM WITHIN A FEW DAYS. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE COMPOSITE SPOTS WHICH UNDERGO CONSIDERABLE CHANGES. 14689 19461022 19461103 A LONG STREAM. THE LEADER CONSISTS OF A CLUSTER WHICH, AFTER A FEW DAYS, COALESCES AND BECOMES A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER IS A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW COMPANIONS AT FIRST. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS HAVE ALL DIED OUT BY OCT. 29. 14690 19461024 19461104 A FEEBLE STREAM. AFTER OCT. 30, IT IS REPRESENTED BY ONLY ONE SPOT. 14691 19461025 19461106 A RETURN OF GROUP 14660. A PAIR OF NEARLY EQUAL REGULAR SPOTS. THE FOLLOWER BEGINS TO CHANGE AND DIMINISH FROM NOV. 1. 14692 19461026 19461029 A RETURN OF GROUP 14662. ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS. 14693 19461027 19461102 A SMALL SPOT, ENDING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 14694 19461028 19461110 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, SHOWING FEEBLE BUT SUSTAINED ACTIVITY IN THIS REGION. 14695 19461029 19461101 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14696 19461030 19461105 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. THE FOLLOWER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 14697 19461101 19461103 A SMALL SPOT FORMING IMMEDIATELY F GROUP 14689. 14698 19461101 19461112 A STREAM, CONSISTING OF CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS IN CONTINUAL CHANGE. 14699 19461102 19461103 A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS ON NOV. 2; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOV. 3. 14700 19461104 19461108 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, WITH A TINY COMPANION IN BETWEEN ON NOV. 7. 14701 19461104 19461116 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT UNATTENDED UNTIL NOV. 13 WHEN OTHER SPOTS APPEAR AND MERGE WITH IT TO FORM A LARGE IRREGULAR CLUSTER. 14702 19461105 19461106 A TINY SPOT. 14703 19461105 19461111 A RETURN OF GROUP 14671. A FEW TINY SPOTS. 14704 19461105 19461118 AN EXTENDED STREAM. THE FOLLOWER, THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT, IS A MORE OR LESS REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. 14705 19461106 19461108 A SHORT STREAM, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB, SO THAT ITS FURTHER DEVELOPMENT IS LOST. 14706 19461106 19461109 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON NOV. 6 AND 8; A PAIR ON NOV. 7 AND 9. 14707 19461106 19461111 A SMALL SPOT. 14708 19461106 19461117 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. ON NOV. 10 TO 12 THERE ARE TWO SMALL COMPANIONS. 14709 19461108 19461120 A RETURN OF GROUP 14682. A REGULAR SPOT WITH SEVERAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 14710 19461110 19461120 A STREAM, IN WHICH A LEADING CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS BECOMES A SIZABLE REGULAR SPOT. A FOLLOWING CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS IS DYING OUT AS IT NEARS THE SUN'S LIMB. 14711 19461110 19461121 A RETURN OF GROUP 14676. AT FIRST, A SINGLE REGULAR SPOT. BETWEEN NOV. 16 AND 17, ANOTHER REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS SUDDENLY APPEAR, TOGETHER FORMING A CLUSTER. 14712 19461110 19461112 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14713 19461111 19461120 A RETURN OF GROUP 14679. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT; SLOWLY DYING OUT. 14714 19461112 19461121 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, ONE OF WHICH BECOMES A STABLE REGULAR SPOT SURVIVING THE OTHER COMPONENTS. 14715 19461112 19461122 A RETURN OF GROUP 14680. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, SLOWLY DYING OUT. 14716 19461114 19461127 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, 2 DEGREES APART IN LONGITUDE; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER NOV. 20. 14717 19461115 19461127 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION FOR A FEW DAYS. ON NOV. 19 OTHER SPOTS APPEAR, THE WHOLE GROWING INTO A LARGE COMPACT STREAM. 14718 19461117 19461118 A TINY SPOT. 14719 19461117 19461124 A RETURN OF GROUP 14689. A SMALL SPOT. 14720 19461118 19461121 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SPOTS ON NOV. 18; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOV. 21. 14721 19461118 19461123 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, INCREASING RAPIDLY AS THEY PASS ROUND THE LIMB. 14722 19461118 19461120 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOV. 18; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOV. 19 AND 20. 14723 19461118 19461130 A BIG, CLOSELY-PACKED STREAM OF COMPOSITE STRUCTURE WHICH DEVELOPS RAPIDLY FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS. ON NOV. 26, THE GROUP BEGINS TO BREAK UP INTO A WIDESPREAD CLUSTER. 14724 19461119 19461201 A STREAM IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING GROUP 14723. THE FOLLOWER IS THE MOST STABLE AND LONGEST-LIVED COMPONENT. 14725 19461121 19461127 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14726 19461121 19461126 A RETURN OF GROUP 14691. A SMALL SPOT. 14727 19461122 19461201 A SMALL STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AND THE FOLLOWER A SMALL CLUSTER DYING OUT BY NOV. 30. 14728 19461122 19461123 A SMALL SPOT. 14729 19461122 19461126 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON NOV. 24 AND 25. 14730 19461125 19461206 A SMALL, SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS ON DEC. 6. 14731 19461126 19461127 A TINY SPOT. 14732 19461127 19461206 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DYING OUT WITH A COMPANION ON DEC. 6. 14733 19461128 19461209 A RETURN OF GROUP 14698. A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON DEC. 1-3. 14734 19461129 19461201 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14735 19461129 19461130 A SMALL SPOT. 14736 19461201 19461207 A STREAM, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY DEC. 6. 14737 19461201 19461202 A TINY SPOT. 14738 19461201 19461202 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 1; A SINGLE SPOT ON DEC. 2. 14739 19461201 19461212 A RETURN OF GROUP 14701. A CLUSTER OF SPOTS REACHING A MAXIMUM NEAR THE EAST LIMB. AFTER DEC. 3 THE WHOLE TAKES THE FORM OF A STREAM AS IT SLOWLY DIES OUT. 14740 19461203 19461208 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS COALESCING INTO A SINGLE SPOT AND DYING OUT. 14741 19461204 19461207 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARING IMMEDIATELY N GROUP 14736. 14742 19461204 19461206 A SINGLE SPOT ON DEC. 4; A PAIR ON DEC. 5-6. 14743 19461204 19461205 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14744 19461205 19461211 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS UNTIL DEC. 9; THERE IS THEN A SUDDEN INCREASE IN AREA AS THE GROUP PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 14745 19461207 19461208 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14746 19461207 19461218 A RETURN OF GROUP 14711. A SCATTERED CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS BECOMING A STREAM AFTER DEC. 11. THE LEADER IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AND THE FOLLOWER A SMALL UNSTABLE CLUSTER. 14747 19461208 19461214 A RETURN OF GROUP 14721. A SMALL REGULAR WITH A COUPLE OF COMPANIONS ON DEC. 14 AS IT DISAPPEARS. 14748 19461209 19461215 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS GROWING INTO REGULAR SPOTS BY ACCRETION. 14749 19461210 19461212 A PAIR OF SPOTS THAT APPEAR SUDDENLY AND AS RAPIDLY DISINTEGRATE. 14750 19461210 19461223 A VERY LARGE STREAM WITH A STABLE REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. THE FOLLOWER IS COMPOSITE, CONSISTING OF A NUMBER OF SMALL NUCLEI AROUND A LARGER NUCLEUS. THIS TRANSFORMS INTO A REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY DEC. 22. 14751 19461211 19461222 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT (CLOSELY S GROUP 14750) WHICH HAS BECOME REGULAR IN STRUCTURE BY DEC. 18, THOUGH MUCH REDUCED IN SIZE. 14752 19461211 19461222 A SMALL STREAM; THE LEADER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS BY DEC. 21. 14753 19461212 19461222 A RETURN OF GROUP 14717. A FEW SMALL SPOTS, (CLOSELY F GROUP 14750) GROWING INTO AN UNSTABLE COMPOSITE SPOT. 14754 19461214 19461226 A STREAM, CONSISTING OF A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CLUSTER. THESE SMALL COMPONENTS INCREASE IN AREA UNTIL DEC. 20 AND THEN RAPIDLY DECLINE. 14755 19461215 19461217 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DEC. 15, A SINGLE SPOT ON DEC. 16 AND 17. 14756 19461215 19461219 A SMALL STREAM, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14757 19461215 19461227 A RETURN OF GROUP 14723. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 14758 19461216 19461217 A SMALL SPOT. 14759 19461217 19461218 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 17; A PAIR ON DEC. 18. 14760 19461218 19461229 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT WHEN FIRST SEEN. ON DEC. 20 OTHER SPOTS ARE FORMING A LONG STREAM, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE SOLE SURVIVOR ON DEC. 29. 14761 19461219 19461229 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DISAPPEARING AFTER DEC. 23. ON DEC. 27 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS REPRESENT THE POSITION. 14762 19461220 19461231 A PAIR OF SPOTS SLOWLY DYING OUT. 14763 19461222 19461231 A LARGE STREAM, GROWING RAPIDLY FROM A SMALL SPOT ON DEC. 22. THE STABLE LEADER SPOT IS REGULAR, AND THE FOLLOWER COMPOSITE. THE INTERMEDIATE CLUSTER CONDENSES INTO A SINGLE SPOT BY DEC. 29. 14764 19461222 19470102 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. A FEW COMPANIONS FOLLOW UNTIL DEC. 28. 14765 19461223 19470102 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL DEC. 28. 14766 19461223 19461231 A RETURN OF GROUP 14730. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 14767 19461224 19470101 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 14768 19461226 19470107 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY JAN. 5. 14769 19461227 19461230 A SMALL SPOT. 14770 19461228 19470108 A RETURN OF GROUP 14744. A STREAM WHOSE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT BY JAN. 6. THE LEADER REMAINS FAIRLY STABLE. ON JAN. 7, NEW SPOTS APPEAR AND ARE GROWING AS THE GROUP PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 14771 19461229 19461230 ONE SMALL SPOT. 14772 19470101 19470112 RETURN OF GROUP 14755. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. BY JANUARY 5, IT BEGINS TO DIVIDE INTO TWO, THE FOLLOWING PART DYING OUT FIRST. THERE ARE ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS IMMEDIATELY S ON JANUARY 7 AND 8. 14773 19470103 19470105 A SMALL SPOT. 14774 19470103 19470106 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 14775 19470105 19470109 A SMALL HIGH-LATITUDE SPOT, BECOMING A PAIR ON JANUARY 6 AND 7. 14776 19470106 19470118 A LONG STREAM CONSISTING OF THREE COMPOSITE SPOTS. THE LEADER BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER AND DIES OUT BY JANUARY 16. THE FOLLOWING SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING DISAPPEARS ON THE SAME DAY. THE SURVIVING CENTRAL SPOT IS SLOWLY DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 14777 19470106 19470118 RETURN OF GROUP 14750. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14778 19470108 19470109 A TINY SPOT. 14779 19470108 19470120 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY SOME CHANGING COMPANIONS. 14780 19470109 19470120 REVIVAL NEAR GROUP 14754. A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FOLLOWING COMPANION ON JANUARY 19. 14781 19470110 19470119 A STREAM SUDDENLY APPEARING CLOSELY SF GROUP 14777. THE LEADER SOON BECOMES REGULAR WHILE THE FOLLOWER REMAINS COMPOSITE. 14782 19470110 19470121 A SMALL SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION EXCEPT ON JANUARY 12-16. 14783 19470112 19470123 RETURN OF GROUP 14757: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 14784 19470113 19470125 A STREAM IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER BECOME REGULAR SPOTS. AFTER JANUARY 17, THE SMALL SPOTS IN BETWEEN HAVE GONE. 14785 19470114 19470115 A TINY SPOT. 14786 19470115 19470116 ANOTHER TINY SPOT. 14787 19470115 19470121 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS IN THE FORM OF A STREAM. 14788 19470115 19470116 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14789 19470115 19470122 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS IMMEDIATELY S GROUP 14784. 14790 19470115 19470126 A STREAM CONSISTING OF NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS. THE LEADING PORTION COALESCES INTO A REGULAR SPOT BY JANUARY 22 WHILE THE FOLLOWING SPOTS UNDERGO SLIGHT CHANGE AND SLOWLY FADE OUT. 14791 19470115 19470126 RETURN OF GROUP 14763. A REGULAR SPOT SHRINKING RAPIDLY AFTER JANUARY 22. 14792 19470116 19470127 A REGULAR SPOT. ON JANUARY 25, ITS UMBRA BECOMES ELONGATED, AND BY THE NEXT DAY THE WHOLE SPOT HAS SPLIT LATITUDINALLY INTO TWO. 14793 19470117 19470123 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS; ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 23. 14794 19470117 19470124 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, SLOWLY DYING OUT. 14795 19470118 19470128 A LONG STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS WITH A CONSIDERABLE SPREAD IN LATITUDE. BY JANUARY 22, THE LEADER HAS BECOME THE MOST STABLE MEMBER. 14796 19470118 19470121 RETURN OF GROUP 14764. PROBABLY THE END OF A REGULAR SPOT. 14797 19470120 19470123 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM. 14798 19470121 19470127 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 25 AND 26. 14799 19470121 19470126 A SMALL CLUSTER OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 14800 19470122 19470129 A STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS FIRST SEEN ON JANUARY 22. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 14801 19470122 19470127 A FEW SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 26. 14802 19470123 19470202 A BI-POLAR GROUP GROWING QUICKLY FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 23. THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 14803 19470124 19470126 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 24-25; A PAIR ON JANUARY 26. 14804 19470127 19470131 ONE OR TWO SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 14805 19470129 19470202 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 2. 14806 19470130 19470211 A BIG COMPOSITE SPOT WITH SEVERAL VARIABLE COMPANIONS THAT HAVE DIED OUT BY FEBRUARY 10. 14807 19470201 19470205 A STREAM DEVELOPING. ONLY A FEW DAYS GROWTH OF THIS GROUP, WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, IS VISIBLE. 14808 19470201 19470212 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE GROWING RAPIDLY FROM TINY SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 1. THE LEADER REMAINS A REGULAR SPOT, THE FOLLOWER BEING COMPOSITE. 14809 19470203 19470215 RETURN OF GROUP 14777: THIRD APPEARANCE. A STABLE EQUATORIAL SPOT. 14810 19470204 19470208 A SMALL STREAM; ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS AFTER FEBRUARY 6. 14811 19470204 19470205 A SMALL SPOT. 14812 19470205 19470206 A SMALL SPOT. 14813 19470205 19470218 THE ORIGIN OF A GREAT COMPLEX GROUP- A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 5; ON THE NEXT DAY OTHER SPOTS APPEAR AND GROW RAPIDLY, AND BY FEBRUARY 8 THE LEADING THREE HAVE COALESCED INTO A LARGE COMPOSITE STRUCTURE WHICH UNDERGOES CONTINUAL CHANGE DURING FURTHER GROWTH; AFTER FEBRUARY 10, HOWEVER, IT REMAINS FAIRLY STABLE ALMOST TO THE WEST LIMB. THE REAR COMPONENT OF THE GROUP REMAINS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT THROUGHOUT. 14814 19470206 19470212 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14815 19470207 19470214 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT NEAR THE EQUATOR ON FEBRUARY 7; ON THE NEXT DAY OTHER SPOTS APPEAR IN A LONG STREAM, BUT THIS DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 14816 19470208 19470212 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE COMPONENT REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 12. 14817 19470208 19470211 A DOT SEEN ONLY ON FEBRUARY 8 AND 11. 14818 19470208 19470220 RETURN OF GROUP 14783; FOURTH APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DIMINSHING. 14819 19470209 19470214 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14820 19470210 19470221 A SMALL DECREASING REGULAR SPOT WITH A DRIFT IN LATITUDE. 14821 19470211 19470213 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 11; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 12-13. 14822 19470211 19470223 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS WHEN FIRST SEEN FULLY IN VIEW AT THE EAST LIMB. FROM FEBRUARY 13, UNSTABLE SPOTS APPEAR, AND FINALLY MERGE WITH THE ORIGINAL PAIR, WHICH THUS BECOME COMPOSITE SPOTS. BY FEBRUARY 20 THE FOLLOWING SPOT BEGINS TO BREAK UP RAPIDLY AND DISAPPEARS BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 14823 19470212 19470221 AN UNSTABLE GROUP COMING INTO BRIEF PROMINENCE ON FEBRUARY 19. 14824 19470212 19470219 RETURN OF GROUP 14792. A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONE COMPONENT IS ALONE VISIBLE ON FEBRUARY 12 AND 18. 14825 19470213 19470215 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 14826 19470214 19470217 RETURN OF GROUP 14795. A SMALL SPOT. 14827 19470214 19470216 A SMALL SPOT. 14828 19470215 19470216 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14829 19470216 19470218 A SMALL PAIR; ONE SPOT REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 18. 14830 19470217 19470221 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14831 19470217 19470301 RETURN OF GROUP 14802. NUMEROUS SPOTS IN A LONG STREAM. BY FEBRUARY 23 THE LEADING PART BEGINS TO CONDENSE INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH CONTINUES TO GROW. MEANWHILE THE FOLLOWING SPOTS ARE IN SLOW DECLINE. 14832 19470218 19470226 A PAIR OF SMALLISH SPOTS; THE LEADING SPOT REMAINS AFTER FEBRUARY 20. 14833 19470219 19470222 A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 19 AND 21; A PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 14834 19470219 19470303 RETURN OF GROUP 14807. A LONG STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. AFTER FEBRUARY 28, ONLY TWO OR THREE DYING SPOTS REMAIN. 14835 19470220 19470221 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 20; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 21. 14836 19470221 19470226 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 14837 19470223 19470224 A TINY SPOT. 14838 19470223 19470306 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHEN FIRST SEEN, EXPANDING STEADILY INTO A LARGE STREAM FORMATION BY FEBRUARY 27. THE LEADING PORTION CONSISTS OF A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN APPENDAGE WHICH, ON MARCH 2, BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND HAS GONE BY MARCH 4. THE REAR OF THE GROUP, WHICH AS A WHOLE SPREADS 7 IN LATITUDE, REMAINS COMPLEX. 14839 19470224 19470228 A STRING OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARING NEAR THE C.M. IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. 14840 19470224 19470309 A TINY SPOT UNTIL MARCH 1 WHEN A BURST OF ACTIVITY PRODUCES IN A FEW DAYS A STREAM CONSISTING OF TWO FAIR-SIZED COMPOSITE SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING ONE IS BREAKING UP AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 14841 19470225 19470302 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING FROM A CLUSTER OF DOTS FIRST SEEN ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 14842 19470225 19470309 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL MARCH 1. 14843 19470226 19470302 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FORMING IN FRONT OF GROUP 14841 AND MOVING FORWARDS 7 1/2 IN FIVE DAYS. 14844 19470226 19470227 A TINY SPOT ON FEBRUARY 26; A PAIR ON FEBRUARY 27. 14845 19470226 19470310 RETURN OF GROUP 14806. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14846 19470227 19470302 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 27 OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MARCH 1. 14847 19470227 19470228 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT. 14848 19470227 19470308 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY SMALL COMPANIONS AFTER MARCH 1. FROM THIS DATE, THE PARENT SPOT BEGINS TO DIVIDE INTO TWO SMALL SPOTS WHICH DRIFT APART AS THE WHOLE GROUP DIES OUT. 14849 19470302 19470314 RETURN OF GROUP 14809: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SLIGHT DRIFT FROM THE EQUATOR. 14850 19470303 19470315 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE REAR PART INCREASES AND AFTER MARCH 10 TENDS TO CONSOLIDATE INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT, WHILE THE PRECEDING PART OF THE GROUP DIES OUT. 14851 19470303 19470317 RETURN OF GROUP 14813. A GREAT COMPLEX GROUP: AT FIRST A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, THE PRINCIPAL NUCLEUS OF WHICH IS ROUGHLY CIRCULAR. BY MARCH 7, THE WHOLE HAS BECOME A MASSIVE ELONGATED FORMATION CONSISTING OF TWO LARGE COMPOSITE SPOTS LINKED TOGETHER BY A PENUMBRAL STRUCTURE. FROM MARCH 7 TO 12, THERE IS LITTLE CHANGE IN GENERAL APPEARANCE, BUT ON MARCH 13 A DIVISION BETWEEN THE TWO PARTS BECOMES MORE PRONOUNCED. THE LEADING SECTION APPEARS TO BE DECREASING AS IT APPROACHES THE WEST LIMB. 14852 19470304 19470308 A SMALL STREAM WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON MARCH 6. 14853 19470304 19470309 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 8. 14854 19470304 19470307 A TINY SPOT, EXCEPT ON MARCH 5 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 14855 19470304 19470316 A LARGE COMPLEX GROUP; TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE LARGER. THE GROUP BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON MARCH 7. THE SEPARATE PIECES SPREAD OUT IN LONGITUDE, FORMING A LARGE STREAM WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. MEANWHILE THE SECOND COMPOSITE SPOT ISDISINTEGRATING. 14856 19470305 19470315 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS. BY MARCH 13 IT BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND QUICKLY DIES OUT. 14857 19470307 19470314 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14858 19470307 19470319 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DECREASING SLOWLY. 14859 19470310 19470322 RETURN OF GROUP 14822. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH COMPANIONS ON MARCH 14 AND 16. 14860 19470311 19470316 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; THE LEADER REMAINS AFTER MARCH 14. 14861 19470311 19470313 PERHAPS THE END OF A REGULAR SPOT. 14862 19470315 19470326 A BI-POLAR GROUP; SMALL SPOTS MARK ITS PLACE SOME DAYS BEFORE ITS DEFINITE GROWTH BEGINS NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 14863 19470315 19470327 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON MARCH 22. 14864 19470316 19470319 RETURN OF GROUP 14831: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT - PROBABLY THE END OF A REGULAR SPOT BY ITS STEADY POSITION. 14865 19470317 19470325 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON MARCH 24. 14866 19470320 19470329 A REGULAR SPOT AND FOLLOWER DEVELOPING FROM A CLUSTER OF DOTS ON MARCH 22. TWO DAYS EARLIER, A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT APPEARED 2 NORTHWARDS. 14867 19470320 19470321 A TINY SPOT. 14868 19470321 19470322 A TINY SPOT ON MARCH 21; A PAIR ON MARCH 22. 14869 19470321 19470324 A SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON MARCH 23, WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 14870 19470321 19470402 RETURN OF GROUP 14838. A VERY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14871 19470323 19470325 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 14872 19470323 19470329 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MARCH 27. 14873 19470323 19470401 A SMALL STREAM OF PROTRACTED DEVELOPMENT LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 14874 19470323 19470404 RETURN OF GROUP 14840. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT THAT UNDERGOES LITTLE CHANGE DURING ITS DISK PASSAGE. 14875 19470324 19470326 ONE OR TWO SPOTS. 14876 19470324 19470326 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 14877 19470325 19470404 SMALL SPOTS THAT DEVELOP INTO A LONGISH STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 14878 19470326 19470330 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER THAT DEVELOPS FROM A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 14879 19470327 19470406 A STREAM OF NONDESCRIPT SPOTS. THE LEADING ONES HAVE FUSED BY MARCH 30 INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT THAT REMAINS THE CHIEF FEATURE OF THE GROUP. 14880 19470327 19470407 UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH BY APRIL 3 CONDENSE INTO TWO SMALL COMPOSITE SPOTS. 14881 19470328 19470401 A SMALL SPOT. 14882 19470328 19470331 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14883 19470329 19470402 RETURN OF GROUP 14849: FIFTH APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 14884 19470330 19470331 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14885 19470330 19470403 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS IN HIGH LATITUDE. 14886 19470330 19470414 RETURN OF GROUP 14851: THIRD APPEARANCE. A VAST GROUP-THE LARGEST EVER RECORDED AT GREENWICH (I.E. SINCE 1874) AND EXCEEDING BY 15 PER CENT THE MEAN AREA OF THE PREVIOUS LARGEST SPOT, GROUP 14417 OF 1946 FEBRUARY. THE CHIEF COMPONENT IS A HUGE ELLIPTICAL SPOT WITH MANY NUCLEI AND ITS AXIS INCLINED NEARLY 60 TO THE DIRECTION OF THE SUN'S EQUATOR. PRECEDING THIS IS A COMPLEX SPOT, MORE OR LESS LINKED BY SPOT STRUCTURES TO ITS GREAT COMPANION UNTIL APRIL 7 WHEN THE DIVISION BETWEEN THEM BECOMES MORE DISTINCT. APART FROM THIS, THERE IS A REMARKABLE ABSENCE OF CHANGE. ALTHOUGH COMPLETE CONTINUITY OF THIS GROUP WITH THE GIANT SPOTS (NOS. 14813 AND 14815) OF THE TWO PRECEDING ROTATIONS MUST BE ACCEPTED, THE RUN OF THE DAILY AREAS SHOWS CLEARLY THAT TWO SUCCESSIVE GROWTH IMPULSES MUST HAVE TAKEN PLACE ON THE SUN'S INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE TO PRODUCE THE PEAK AREA ABOUT MARCH 11-12 AND APRIL 6. 14887 19470401 19470404 A TINY SPOT. 14888 19470401 19470402 A SMALL SPOT. 14889 19470401 19470403 RETURN OF GROUP 14855. A TINY SPOT. 14890 19470402 19470408 A MINOR STREAM, WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON APRIL 4. THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGER COMPONENT. 14891 19470402 19470413 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 14892 19470403 19470409 A BI-POLAR GROUP GROWING VERY RAPIDLY FROM NEAR THE C.M. AND ALREADY OF CONSIDERABLE SIZE AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 14893 19470404 19470414 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON APRIL 8-9. 14894 19470405 19470416 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 14895 19470406 19470410 A SHORT SLOWLY-GROWING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 14896 19470406 19470411 AN AREA OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 14897 19470407 19470415 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS BECOMING A SHORT-LIVED STREAM BY APRIL 10. 14898 19470408 19470411 A LITTLE GROUP. 14899 19470408 19470412 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF LIMITED DEVELOPMENT. 14900 19470410 19470412 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS ON APRIL 12. 14901 19470410 19470414 A SMALL SPOT (OR SPOTS) SEEN OVER A 4 RANGE IN LONGITUDE. 14902 19470410 19470419 RETURN OF GROUP 14862. THREE SMALL SPOTS IN A LINE OF WHICH THE LEADING TWO ARE THE MORE STABLE. 14903 19470413 19470420 AN AREA OF MINOR DISTURBANCE WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON APRIL 19. 14904 19470413 19470415 A TINY SPOT. 14905 19470414 19470425 A GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE, WITH THE FOLLOWER, A COMPOSITE SPOT, TEMPORARILY THE CHIEF COMPONENT BY APRIL 19. 14906 19470415 19470425 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS OVER A PROGRESSIVE RANGE OF 4 IN LATITUDE. 14907 19470416 19470419 ONE OR TWO LITTLE SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY N GROUP 14906. 14908 19470418 19470420 A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 18 AND 20; A PAIR ON APRIL 19. 14909 19470418 19470427 INTERMITTENT. A GROUP DEVELOPING TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB FROM A DOT ON APRIL 23. FIVE DAYS EARLIER A SMALL SPOT HAD MARKED THE POSITION. 14910 19470419 19470430 RETURN OF GROUP 14870: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS FROM APRIL 22 WHICH LATER INCREASES TO VARIABLE CLUSTER. 14911 19470419 19470421 RETURN OF GROUP 14874: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT REDUCING TO A SPECK. 14912 19470420 19470429 A SMALL DYING REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON APRIL 25. 14913 19470421 19470422 A SINGLE SPOT. 14915 19470422 19470504 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; A REGULAR SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA LEADS; THE FOLLOWER, OF COMPOSITE STRUCTURE, BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON APRIL 28 AND DISAPPEARS AS A CLUSTER. 14916 19470423 19470502 A BIGGISH STREAM DEVELOPING FROM ONE OR TWO DOTS ON APRIL 23. BY APRIL 26, THE LEADER HAS BECOME A STABEL REGULAR SPOT WHICH OUTLIVES THE REST OF THE GROUP. 14917 19470423 19470505 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 14918 19470423 19470503 RETURN OF GROUP 14892. A STREAM IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER SOON BEGIN TO BREAK UP INTO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING CLUSTER IS THE FIRST TO DIE OUT. 14919 19470424 19470429 CHANGING SPOTS IN A SMALL STREAM. 14920 19470425 19470427 A SMALL SPOT NORTH OF GROUP 14909. 14921 19470425 19470503 A STREAM OF RAPID RISE AND DECAY. THE CHIEF COMPONENT, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS WHEN THE LIMB IS REACHED. 14922 19470425 19470427 A TINY SPOT. 14923 19470425 19470429 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14924 19470426 19470502 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS; THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE. 14925 19470426 19470507 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 14926 19470427 19470506 WITH GROUP 14933, A RETURN OF GROUP 14886: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL REGULAR SPOTS; THE LEADER BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON MAY 3, AND THEN THE FOLLOWER TWO DAYS LATER. 14927 19470428 19470429 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14928 19470428 19470502 SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS WIDELY SPREAD. 14929 19470428 19470501 A FEW TINY SPOTS. CONTINUES AS GROUP 14937. 14930 19470428 19470508 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF MINOR IMPORTANCE. THE LEADER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, REMAINS BY MAY 4, JOINED TEMPORARILY BY A SMALL COMPANION ON MAY 7. 14931 19470429 19470508 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT THAT HAS GONE BY MAY 3: FOUR DAYS LATER, SMALL SPOTS APPEAR IN A STREAM. 14932 19470429 19470504 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14933 19470429 19470511 WITH GROUP 14926, A RETURN OF GROUP 14886: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, THE LEADING PART OF WHICH SEPARATES FROM THE MAIN BODY AND DIES OUT, WHILE THE LATTER CONTINUES TO DECREASE. 14934 19470430 19470506 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MAY 5. 14935 19470501 19470502 A TINY SPOT. 14936 19470501 19470513 A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH TWO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS IN ITS WAKE. THESE CLUSTERS DIE OUT LEAVING THE LEADER ALONE BY MAY 11. 14937 19470503 19470508 A STREAM, SUDDENLY APPEARING WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN WHOSE MAXIMUM IS PROBABLY REACHED ON THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT; THE FOLLOWER, A COMPOSITE SPOT, IS THE LARGER COMPONENT. 14938 19470503 19470512 A BI-POLAR GROUP OF RAPID GROWTH. THE LEADER IS A PARTIALLY FORMED REGULAR SPOT BUT MORE STABLE THAN THE FOLLOWER, WHICH IS COMPOSITE AND BREAKS UP BY MAY 9. 14939 19470503 19470505 A SMALL SPOT. 14940 19470504 19470507 A FEW FAINT VARIABLE SPOTS. 14941 19470505 19470516 A STREAM, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT. 14942 19470506 19470516 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A FEW SMALL SPOTS INTO A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPONENTS. 14943 19470507 19470515 A FEW SMALL SPOTS GROWING INTO A CHANGING STREAM WHICH DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 14944 19470507 19470511 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14945 19470508 19470521 A STREAM WHOSE LEADER IS AT FIRST A DOUBLE SPOT. FROM MAY 11, A GROWING SPOT NEAR THIS LEADER IS ABSORBED BY IT TO FORM A FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER IS COMPOSITE AND UNDERGOES MINOR CHANGES. 14946 19470509 19470510 TWO TINY SPOTS ON MAY 9; A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 10. 14947 19470509 19470521 A REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 14948 19470512 19470514 A SHORT STREAM FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14949 19470512 19470515 A SMALL SPOT WHICH, FROM ITS STABILITY, IS PROBABLY THE END OF A REGULAR SPOT. 14950 19470512 19470523 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL DRIFT NORTHWARDS. 14951 19470513 19470517 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14952 19470513 19470515 A SMALL SPOT. 14953 19470513 19470517 A SMALL SPOT SHRINKING TO A SPECK. 14954 19470515 19470516 TINY VARIABLE SPOTS. 14955 19470515 19470526 AN AREA OF FEEBLE BUT PROTRACTED DISTURBANCE UNTIL MAY 23, WHEN A BI-POLAR GROUP BEGINS TO DEVELOP. 14956 19470516 19470517 TWO SMALL SPOTS. 14957 19470516 19470527 FROM A TINY SPOT A BIG GROUP QUICKLY DEVELOPS IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE AT FIRST REGULAR SPOTS. FROM MAY 21, COMPANIONS BETWEEN THEM GROW AND COALESCE WITH THE PARENT SPOTS WHICH, BY MAY 25, HAVE MERGED INTO A COMPLEX ENTITY OF APPARENT INSTABILITY. 14958 19470516 19470520 A SMALL SPOT. 14959 19470517 19470520 A GROUP OF BI-POLAR TYPE GROWING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 14960 19470517 19470526 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 14961 19470517 19470521 A SMALL SPOT VANISHING. 14962 19470517 19470529 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, PRECEDED AND FOLLOWED BY CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS. THESE GROW UNTIL MAY 21 WHEN THE GROUP HAS BECOME A LONG STREAM OF IRREGULAR SPOTS THAT ARE FAST DYING OUT AT THE WEST LIMB. 14963 19470518 19470529 WITH GROUP 14964, A RETURN OF GROUP 14916. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 14964 19470518 19470526 WITH GROUP 14963, A RETURN OF GROUP 14916. A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT DYING OUT. 14965 19470518 19470530 A STREAM REACHING ITS PEAK AREA A FEW DAYS FROM THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADING REGULAR SPOT IS SUPPLEMENTED BY ANOTHER CLOSELY FOLLOWING IT BY THE FUSION OF SUBSIDIARY SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING COMPONENT OF THE GROUP IS MEANWHILE DECREASING TO A TINY SPOT. 14966 19470518 19470530 A RETURN OF GROUP 14921. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON MAY 26-27. 14967 19470519 19470525 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 14968 19470519 19470601 A STREAM WHOSE LEADER IS CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS WHICH IT ABSORBS BY MAY 28. THE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT BY MAY 28, ALTHOUGH SUBSIDIARY SPOTS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREAM SHOW AN INCREASE. 14969 19470520 19470526 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS: THE LEADER IS LEFT AFTER MAY 24. 14970 19470520 19470531 THE ORIGIN AND RISE TO MAXIMUM OF A LARGE GROUP FROM A PAIR OF NUCLEI. THE LEADER BECOMES A COMPOSITE SPOT AND THE CHIEF COMPONENT. THE FOLLOWER IS REPRESENTED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH BEGIN TO DIE OUT AFTER MAY 27. 14971 19470521 19470526 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER. 14972 19470521 19470528 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS; THE LEADER BECOMES A SMALL REGULAR AND IS LEFT BY MAY 27. 14973 19470521 19470528 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 14974 19470521 19470531 A STREAM, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A SMALL SPOT AND REACHING ITS MAXIMUM AREA ON THE FOURTH DAY. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE SURVIVES BY MAY 30. 14975 19470522 19470528 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON MAY 22 AND 28. 14976 19470523 19470528 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14977 19470524 19470525 A SMALL SPOT JUST SOUTH OF GROUP 14968. 14978 19470524 19470603 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE GROWING RAPIDLY FROM A FEW NUCLEI. THE FOLLOWER DIES OUT BY JUNE 1. 14979 19470524 19470603 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 14980 19470525 19470606 A STREAM, LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 4. 14981 19470526 19470527 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 14982 19470526 19470605 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, GROWING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE BY MAY 28. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE REGULAR SPOTS, THE FORMER SURVIVING BY JUNE 3. 14983 19470528 19470605 A PAIR OF IRREGULAR SPOTS FORMING JUST S GROUP 14982 AND SOON ON THE DOWNGRADE. 14984 19470528 19470603 WITH GROUP 14985, A RETURN OF GROUP 14938. A FEW SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. 14985 19470528 19470603 WITH GROUP 14984, A RETURN OF GROUP 14938. A SMALL SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE CLOSE COMPANIONS. 14986 19470528 19470609 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 14948. A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DISPERSING RAPIDLY AFTER JUNE 3. 14987 19470528 19470604 RETURN OF GROUP 14936. A LONG STREAM IN RAPID DECLINE. BY JUNE 3 ONLY THE MIDDLE COMPONENTS REMAIN BUT ON JUNE 4 A SMALL FAINT CLUSTER APPEARS AT THE REAR. 14988 19470529 19470607 A SMALL GROUP, INDECISIVE IN DEVELOPMENT. 14989 19470531 19470603 A SMALL SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 14990 19470531 19470603 A PAIR OF SPOTS; THE LEADER IS LEFT ON JUNE 3. 14991 19470531 19470606 A FAINT CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 14992 19470601 19470602 A CLUSTER OF SPOTS LOST TO VIEW AT THE WEST LIMB. 14993 19470601 19470603 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JUNE 1; A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 3. 14994 19470601 19470608 RETURN OF GROUP 14942. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT JOINED ON JUNE 5 BY A SHORT STRING OF SMALL SPOTS CLOSELY S OF IT. BUT EXTINCTION OF THE WHOLE GROUP SOON FOLLOWS. 14995 19470603 19470615 A LARGE GROUP OF STREAM TYPE CONSISTING OF TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS. THE FOLLOWER GROWS UNTIL JUNE 8, AFTERWARDS BREAKING UP AND SO DYING OUT. THE LEADER UNDERGOES LITTLE CHANGE BUT IS SLOWLY DIMINISHING AS IT GOES ROUND THE LIMB. 14996 19470604 19470615 A RETURN OF GROUP 14945. A STREAM CONSISTING OF TWO CLUSTERS OF SMALL SPOTS. ON JUNE 9 THEY BEGIN TO DISPERSE AND DIE OUT. 14997 19470605 19470607 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 14998 19470606 19470614 A FEW SMALL SPOTS REACHING A MAXIMUM BY JUNE 9 AS A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT; THIS ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 14. 14999 19470607 19470610 A FAINT SPOT, SEEN ONLY ON JUNE 7 AND 10. 15000 19470607 19470610 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15001 19470607 19470610 A SMALL PAIR ON JUNE 7; AFTERWARDS A SINGLE SPOT. 15002 19470610 19470612 A TINY SPOT NEAR THE EAST LIMB. 15003 19470610 19470611 ANOTHER TINY SPOT. 15004 19470611 19470612 ONE OR TWO EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 15005 19470612 19470623 A NONDESCRIPT GROUP TILL MORE DEFINITE GROWTH OCCURS TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 15006 19470613 19470623 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15007 19470613 19470615 RETURN OF GROUP 14957. A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 14. 15008 19470613 19470616 RETURN OF GROUP 14972. A SMALL SPOT DECREASING TO A SPECK. 15009 19470614 19470626 RETURN OF GROUPS 14963 AND 14964: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT UNTIL JUNE 22. THEN, OTHER SPOTS APPEAR GROUPED IN AN UNSTABLE CLUSTER OF WHICH ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS BY JUNE 25. 15010 19470615 19470619 APPARENTLY A MINOR GROUP, ALTHOUGH ITS LATER HISTORY IS LOST TO OBSERVATION. 15011 19470615 19470616 A SHORT-LIVED PAIR. 15012 19470615 19470621 RETURN OF GROUP 14966: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT PROBABLY THE END OF A REGULAR SPOT. 15013 19470615 19470626 A STREAM. ITS LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. THE COMPOSITE FOLLOWER DISINTEGRATES FROM JUNE 21 INTO SMALL FRAGMENTS WHICH SPREAD OUT IN LONGITUDE. THE GROUP DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 15014 19470615 19470627 RETURN OF GROUP 14970. A LARGE NEARLY CIRCULAR SPOT WITH TRIPLE UMBRA AND OCCASIONAL CLOSE COMPANIONS. DECREASING SLOWLY IN SIZE, ITS POSITION IS STEADY WITH A LATITUDE TREND NORTHWARDS. 15015 19470615 19470625 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. BECAUSE OF THE CHANGE IN LATITUDE, THIS GROUP IS TAKEN AS A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 14968. 15016 19470616 19470619 A FEW SMALL SPOTS GROWING RAPIDLY AS THEY PASS ROUND THE LIMB. 15017 19470616 19470627 THE DEVELOPMENT TO MAXIMUM OF A LARGE STREAM FROM A SMALL SPOT NEAR THE EAST LIMB. BY JUNE 21, LEADING SPOTS BEGIN TO COALESCE INTO A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WHICH REMAINS STABLE. THE SLOW DISSOLUTION OF THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM IS OFFSET BY CONDENSATION OF INTERMEDIATE SPOTS INTO A SUBSIDIARY REGULAR SPOT WHEN THE PEAK AREA OF THE GROUP IS REACHED. 15018 19470617 19470623 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS, WHEN FIRST SEEN NEAR THE C.M., DEVELOPING INTO A SHORT STREAM. 15019 19470617 19470624 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO VARIABLE SPOTS. 15020 19470618 19470622 A PAIR OF GROWING SPOTS. 15021 19470618 19470622 TWO CLUSTERS OF DEVELOPING SPOTS. 15022 19470618 19470625 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 24. 15023 19470618 19470626 RETURN OF GROUP 14992. A SINGLE SPOT DYING OUT; WEAK ACTIVITY IS RENEWED 5 FOLLOWING IN LONGITUDE AFTER A LAPSE OF TWO DAYS, WHICH DIES OUT BY JUNE 26. 15024 19470619 19470625 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, THE LEADER OF WHICH BECOMES A SMALL REGULAR SPOT OUTLIVING ITS COMPANION. 15025 19470619 19470621 A SMALL FAINT SPOT. 15026 19470621 19470624 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, IMMEDIATELY S GROUP 15012. 15027 19470622 19470624 A RESTRICTED THREE DAYS' RECORD OF NEW SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15028 19470622 19470625 SMALL FLEETING SPOTS IN A SHORT STREAM. 15029 19470623 19470630 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE INITIAL VIGOROUS GROWTH IS SOON HALTED, AND THE SPOTS ARE INDIVIDUALLY UNSTABLE. 15030 19470623 19470626 A SMALL SPOT. 15031 19470624 19470702 ONE OR TWO LITTLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 1. 15032 19470625 19470704 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NOT SEEN ON JUNE 30, JULY 1 AND 3. 15033 19470625 19470708 A BI-POLAR GROUP REACHING ITS PEAK AREA THREE DAYS AFTER ITS ENTRY ON TO THE SUN'S DISK AS A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER. BY JULY 1 THE LEADER HAS SPLIT INTO TWO AND ON THE NEXT DAY THE LEADING PART LIKEWISE DIVIDES AS IT APPROACHES THE LIMB. THE CLUSTER IN THE REAR SPREADS OUT AFTER JUNE 30 AND SO FADES AWAY BY JULY 7. 15034 19470626 19470629 ONE OR TWO VARIABLE SPOTS. 15035 19470626 19470630 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15036 19470627 19470703 A PAIR OF SPOTS, EXCEPT ON JUNE 30, WHEN ONE IS SEEN. 15037 19470628 19470702 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15038 19470628 19470704 A PAIR OF SPOTS; THE FOLLOWER REMAINS BY JULY 2. 15039 19470628 19470705 A FEW SPOTS DEVELOPING INTO A SHORT STREAM OF WHICH THE REAR PART IS THE FIRST TO DIE OUT. 15040 19470629 19470701 FAINT SPOTS. 15041 19470629 19470710 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 15042 19470629 19470630 A SMALL SPOT. 15043 19470630 19470709 RETURN OF GROUP 14995. A SINGLE SPOT UNTIL JULY 3; AFTERWARDS ONE OR TWO VARIABLE SPOTS REPRESENT THE POSITION. 15044 19470701 19470709 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS CLOSELY F GROUP 15041. 15045 19470701 19470702 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 1; A PAIR ON JULY 2. 15046 19470702 19470705 A PAIR OF WIDELY-SEPARATED SMALL SPOTS IN HIGH SOUTHERN LATITUDE. 15047 19470702 19470711 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH DISINTEGRATES AND DIES OUT. 15048 19470703 19470715 A WEAK INTERMITTENT GROUP LAPSING FROM JULY 9 - 12 INCLUSIVE. 15049 19470704 19470711 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION UNTIL JULY 7. 15050 19470704 19470716 RETURN OF GROUP 15016. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL CHANGING COMPANION UNTIL JULY 10. 15051 19470705 19470713 RETURN OF GROUP 15010. A SMALL SPOT IMMEDIATELY S GROUP 15050. 15052 19470707 19470710 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15053 19470707 19470713 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, APPEARING JUST NORTH OF GROUP 15050, WHICH SEPARATE IN LONGITUDE AND DIE OUT. 15054 19470707 19470715 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS AFTER JULY 11. 15055 19470708 19470714 A SINGLE SPOT, STEADY IN POSITION, DECREASING TO A DOT. 15056 19470708 19470715 RETURN OF GROUP 15005. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. ON JULY 10 COMPANIONS APPEAR ROUND THE FOLLOWER TO FORM A SHORT-LIVED CLUSTER. 15057 19470709 19470710 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 9; A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 10. 15058 19470709 19470710 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS ON JULY 9, OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON THE NEXT DAY. 15059 19470709 19470721 AN ELONGATED SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA THAT COALESCES BY JULY 17, WHEN THE WHOLE SPOT BECOMES CIRCULAR. THERE ARE A FEW TINY COMPANION FOLLOWING UNTIL JULY 14. 15060 19470710 19470722 A SINGLE SPOT UNTIL JULY 12 WHEN OTHERS APPEAR FORMING A STREAM. THESE NEWER SPOTS SOON DIE OUT LEAVING THE LEADER ALONE BY JULY 19. 15061 19470710 19470723 A DIMINISHING COMPOSITE SPOT WITH A MARKED DROP IN AREA BETWEEN JULY 19 AND 20. 15062 19470712 19470724 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT WITH THREE PRINCIPAL NUCLEI GROWING FROM A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 12. THE LEADING NUCLEUS BECOMES THE CENTRE OF A REGULAR SPOT WHICH JUST SEPARATES FROM THE MAIN BODY AS IT NEARS THE WEST LIMB. 15063 19470712 19470724 A LARGE STABEL REGULAR SPOT WHOSE ONLY ABNORMALITY IS A SMALL PROTRUSION FROM THE UMBRA ON JULY 18 - 21. 15064 19470713 19470722 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS FADING OUT BY JULY 21; A SINGLE SPOT REPRESENTS THE POSITION ON JULY 23. 15065 19470713 19470723 RETURN OF GROUP 15017. A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA UNTIL JULY 19. 15066 19470714 19470715 A RETURN OF GROUP 15014: THIRD APPEARANCE. A TINY SPOT. 15067 19470714 19470717 A DIMINUTIVE SPOT. 15068 19470714 19470718 A TINY SPOT. 15069 19470714 19470726 A STREAM, CONSISTING OF TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS, WHICH GROW FAIRLY RAPIDLY. AFTER JULY 19, HOWEVER, THE LEADING SUNSPOT DISINTEGRATES, BUT REFORMING AS A COMPOSITE SPOT BY JULY 24, RISES SHARPLY IN AREA AS IT PASSES ROUND THE SUN'S LIMB. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP IS FAIRLY STABLE UNTIL JULY 23 WHEN IT BEGINS RAPIDLY TO DIE OUT. 15070 19470715 19470716 A TINY SPOT. 15071 19470716 19470718 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 16 AND 17; A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 18. 15072 19470717 19470718 A TINY SPOT. 15073 19470717 19470729 A STREAM OF VERY UNSTABLE SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON JULY 21. 15074 19470718 19470721 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15075 19470718 19470726 A FEEBLE DISTURBANCE, NO SPOTS BEING SEEN ON JULY 19 AND 20. 15076 19470719 19470720 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15077 19470719 19470731 A STREAM, IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE REGULAR SPOTS EACH WITH A FEW COMPANIONS UNTIL JULY 26. 15078 19470719 19470731 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 19; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL JULY 23, WHEN A FEW SMALL SPOTS GROW INTO A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 15079 19470721 19470729 A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM, NOT SEEN ON JULY 23 AND 24. 15080 19470723 19470728 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT. 15081 19470724 19470727 ONE OR TWO EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 15082 19470725 19470726 A TINY SPOT ON JULY 25; A PAIR ON JULY 26. 15083 19470725 19470803 A SMALL SPOT WITH A CLOSE COMPANION FROM JULY 27-AUGUST 1. 15084 19470726 19470727 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 26; A PAIR ON JULY 27. 15085 19470727 19470731 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 27-28 REPLACED BY ANOTHER 2 1/2 SOUTH ON JULY 30-31. 15086 19470727 19470728 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 15087 19470727 19470806 A REGULAR SPOT DEVELOPING WITH A TRAIN OF VARIABLE COMPANIONS THAT DIE OUT BY AUGUST 4. 15088 19470728 19470809 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL AUGUST 5. 15089 19470729 19470809 A LONG STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER, BOTH COMPOSITE SPOTS, ARE LINKED BY A CONTINUOUS STRING OF CHANGING SPOTS. THE FOLLOWER IS THE FIRST TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 15090 19470730 19470731 A TINY SPOT. 15091 19470731 19470804 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 31 AND AUGUST 2; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER DAYS. 15092 19470731 19470812 A REGULAR SPOT, STABLE UNTIL AUGUST 7. IT THEN SPLITS INTO TWO BUT SOON REFORMS AS AN ELONGATED SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. 15093 19470731 19470812 RETURN OF GROUP 15050: THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT OF MARKED STABILITY. 15094 19470801 19470813 A SIZABLE STREAM. THE LARGE REAR SPOT IS COMPOSITE AND CHANGES SLOWLY, BUT AFTER AUGUST 8 IT DECREASES AND BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. THE LEADING SECTION OF THE STREAM CONSISTS OF SMALL SPOTS THAT INCREASE AND FORM ANOTHER COMPOSITE SPOT. AFTER AUGUST 9 THIS, TOO, BECOMES A REGULAR FORMATION. 15095 19470802 19470805 A TINY SPOT. 15096 19470802 19470812 A PAIR OF GROWING SPOTS SEPARATING IN LONGITUDE TO FORM A LONG STREAM WITH A FEW TINY SPOTS IN BETWEEN. 15097 19470803 19470814 A REGULAR SPOT, DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 15098 19470804 19470815 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 10 AND 11. 15099 19470804 19470816 SMALL SPOTS DEVELOPING BY AUGUST 11 INTO A TYPICAL BI-POLAR GROUP. 15100 19470805 19470816 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR, ALONE SURVIVES AT THE WEST LIMB. 15101 19470806 19470817 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. BY AUGUST 10 THIS BEGINS TO BREAK UP INTO A CLUSTER. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE STREAM DIES OUT BY AUGUST 12. 15102 19470807 19470813 A STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, RISING TO MAXIMUM GROWTH IN THREE DAYS AND ALREADY IN FULL DECLINE AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT AND THE FOLLOWER A COMPOSITE ONE. 15103 19470807 19470812 A SMALL SPOT. 15104 19470807 19470813 A SHORT STREAM CLOSELY PRECEDING GROUP 15106 WHICH ABSORBS IT. 15105 19470807 19470818 RETURN OF GROUP 15059. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15106 19470807 19470819 A LARGE AND ACTIVE COMPLEX GROUP. FROM A SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 7-9, A COMPLEX SPOT DEVELOPS AND EXPANDS IN LONGITUDE. BY AUGUST 13, CONTINUED GROWTH CHANGES HAVE PRODUCED FOUR COMPOSITE SPOTS IN LINE, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE BIGGEST AND SHOWING LEAST CHANGE. 15107 19470807 19470819 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION FOLLOWING UNTIL AUGUST 10; THEN OTHER SPOTS APPEAR IN THE REAR, BUT BY AUGUST 17 THIS TRAIN HAS DIED OUT LEAVING THE ORIGINAL SPOT AND ONE SMALL COMPANION. 15108 19470808 19470818 RETURN OF GROUPS 15062 AND 15063. A REGULAR SPOT IN DECLINE WHICH IS ADVANCED AFTER AUGUST 14. A DRIFT TOWARDS THE EQUATOR IS APPARENT. 15109 19470808 19470820 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS ALMOST IN CONTACT AND SLOWLY MERGING INTO A SINGLE REGULAR SPOT. AFTER AUGUST 18 THIS SHRINKS RAPIDLY. 15110 19470809 19470820 A STREAM OF RAPID GROWTH BUT SOON IN DECLINE. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS AFTER AUGUST 16. 15111 19470809 19470822 RETURN OF GROUP 15069. A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS. 15112 19470811 19470815 A FEW SMALL SPOTS N GROUP 15110. 15113 19470813 19470817 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15114 19470813 19470817 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 15115 19470813 19470814 A SINGLE SPOT. 15116 19470813 19470825 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS UNTIL AUGUST 20. 15117 19470813 19470820 A FEW FAINT VARIABLE SPOTS. 15118 19470814 19470815 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 15119 19470814 19470815 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15120 19470815 19470822 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15121 19470815 19470825 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER, AS USUAL, IS THE MOST STABLE MEMBER. 15122 19470815 19470826 RETURN OF GROUP 15077. A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15123 19470817 19470821 A SPOT DECREASING TO A SPECK. 15124 19470818 19470823 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 15125 19470820 19470823 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15126 19470821 19470901 RETURN OF GROUP 15087. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO VARIABLE COMPANIONS. AFTER AUGUST 29, A GROWTH OCCURS OF NEW AND LARGER SPOTS. 15127 19470821 19470827 A SMALL SPOT; ON ONE DAY (AUGUST 26) THERE IS A COMPANION. 15128 19470822 19470901 A STREAM GROWING FROM A SINGLE NUCLEUS AND LED BY A REGULAR SPOT THAT ALONE SURVIVES BY AUGUST 29, IN THE GENERAL DISSOLUTION OF THE GROUP TOWARDS THE WEST LIMB. 15129 19470824 19470831 A SMALL GROUP, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT, QUICKLY PASSING THROUGH ITS LIFE HISTORY. 15130 19470824 19470905 RETURN OF GROUP 15088. A LONG STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS PAST ITS MAXIMUM GROWTH. THE FOLLOWER SPOT IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AND THIS REMAINS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 15131 19470826 19470827 A SMALL SPOT. 15132 19470827 19470904 A SHORT STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS FIRST SEEN ON AUGUST 27. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE SMALL COMPOSITE SPOTS. 15133 19470827 19470831 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT. 15134 19470827 19470901 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT RAPIDLY DYING OUT. 15135 19470827 19470908 RETURN OF GROUP 15092. A DISTINCTIVE SPOT IN SLOW DECLINE AND CHANGING FROM COMPLEX TO REGULAR STRUCTURE BY SEPTEMBER 3. CONCURRENTLY, OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS BECOME NUMEROUS SOUTH OF THE PARENT SPOT, THOUGH THE REFERENCE OF THOSE TO THIS GROUP OR TO GROUP 15136 IS SOMEWHAT ARBITRARY ON SOME DAYS AFTER SEPTEMBER 1. 15136 19470827 19470907 A PAIR OF SPOTS SOON BECOMING REGULAR IN OUTLINE. THE FOLLOWER BEGINS TO DIE OUT RAPIDLY AFTER SEPTEMBER 3. ON SEPTEMBER 6 ANOTHER SPOT APPEARS FOR ONE DAY CLOSELY FOLLOWING THE LEADER. 15137 19470827 19470908 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL DRIFT EQUATORWARDS. 15138 19470828 19470901 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT. 15139 19470828 19470909 A SMALL STREAM IN CONSTANT CHANGE, BUT TYPICALLY BI-POLAR ON AUGUST 31 AND SEPTEMBER 1. 15140 19470828 19470909 PROBABLE RETURN OF GROUP 15093: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15141 19470828 19470909 RETURN OF GROUP 15094. A FEW SPOTS WITH OTHERS FORMING BEHIND AFTER AUGUST 31. THE LEADING PART OF THE RESULTING STREAM COALESCES INTO A SMALL IRREGULAR SPOT, AND THIS ALONE REMAINS AFTER SEPTEMBER 4. 15142 19470829 19470831 A FAINT SPOT WITHOUT UMBRA, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 30. 15143 19470829 19470903 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 30 AND 31. 15144 19470829 19470903 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15145 19470829 19470830 A SMALL SPOT. 15146 19470830 19470910 RETURN OF GROUP 15097. A VERY STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DRIFT EQUATORWARDS. 15147 19470831 19470911 RETURN OF GROUP 15099. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW TRAILER SPOTS THAT GROW RAPIDLY FROM SEPTEMBER 3 INTO A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT. THIS, HOWEVER, IS UNSTABLE AND FROM SEPTEMBER 7 IT DISINTEGRATES, AND THE DISSOLUTION OF THE WHOLE GROUP SOON FOLLOWS. 15148 19470901 19470908 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS WITHIN 1 DEGREE OF THE SUN'S EQUATOR, THE LEADER ALONE REMAINING BY SEPTEMBER 4. 15149 19470902 19470909 FROM A FEEBLE START, A STREAM DEVELOPS AND IS STILL GROWING AS IT PASSES FROM VIEW. 15150 19470902 19470913 A LONG STREAM OF NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS IN GENERAL DECLINE WHICH IS HASTENED AFTER ABOUT SEPTEMBER 7. 15151 19470902 19470909 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 6, 7 AND 9. 15152 19470903 19470907 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15153 19470903 19470905 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15154 19470904 19470913 A SMALL GROUP OF VIGOROUS GROWTH FROM A PAIR OF SPOTS BUT SOON DISPERSING. 15155 19470905 19470916 DEVELOPING SPOTS IN A STREAM WHICH ARE INDIVIDUALLY UNSTABLE. THE DISSOLUTION OF THE GROUP IS NEARLY COMPLETE BEFORE IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 15156 19470906 19470912 A SHORT STREAM, SUDDENLY APPEARING IN FRONT OF GROUP 15150. THE SMALL SPOTS IN BETWEEN HAVE DISAPPEARED BY SEPTEMBER 8. 15157 19470906 19470918 RETURN OF GROUP 15111: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SPOT WITH TWIN UMBRAE THAT COALESCE AFTER SEPTEMBER 14 WHEN THE SPOT AS A WHOLE ASSUMES A REGULAR OUTLINE. 15158 19470907 19470913 A SMALL INDECISIVE GROUP. 15159 19470907 19470915 A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING FROM TWO SPOTS; HOWEVER, ONLY THE LEADER, A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT, AND A TINY FOLLOWER REMAIN. 15160 19470908 19470909 A SMALL SPOT. 15161 19470908 19470918 A TINY SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 8 AND 9; ON THE NEXT DAY A STREAM OF SPOTS SUDDENLY APPEARS. THE LEADING PAIR COMBINE TO FORM A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 14. 15162 19470909 19470910 A SMALL SPOT. 15163 19470909 19470914 RETURN OF GROUP 15116. A SMALL SPOT WHICH DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 15164 19470910 19470917 A VARIABLE STREAM, APPEARING JUST SOUTH OF GROUP 15155, AND DEVELOPING FURTHER AS IT PASSES OUT OF VIEW. 15165 19470911 19470914 A MASS OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15166 19470912 19470922 A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A SMALL SPOT. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 15167 19470912 19470918 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 15168 19470912 19470925 A REGULAR SPOT; A FEW COMPANIONS APPEAR AFTER SEPTEMBER 21 NORTH OF IT. 15169 19470913 19470924 A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH BREAK UP BY SEPTEMBER 16. THE SMALL STREAM THAT RESULTS INCREASES TEMPORARILY BEFORE FADING AWAY. 15170 19470915 19470922 A PAIR OF DYING SPOTS; THE FOLLOWER JUST OUTLASTS ITS COMPANION. 15171 19470916 19470919 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15172 19470916 19470917 A TINY SPOT, PROBABLY RELATED TO GROUP 15170. 15173 19470917 19470929 RETURN OF GROUP 15126: THIRD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT IN SLOW DECLINE. 15174 19470920 19471001 A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A TINY SPOT. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE ONLY SURVIVOR AT THE WEST LIMB. 15175 19470920 19471002 A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION UNTIL SEPTEMBER 24. 15176 19470923 19471004 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON SEPTEMBER 25. 15177 19470923 19470927 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 15178 19470923 19471004 A DECREASING REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 29. 15179 19470924 19470927 A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 24; A PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 15180 19470924 19470928 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 15181 19470924 19471004 THE RAPID DEVELOPMENT FROM SEPTEMBER 30 OF A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN UNSTABLE FOLLOWER, IS PRECEDED BY SEVERAL DAYS OF FEEBLE ACTIVITY. 15182 19470925 19471004 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS UNDERGOING SLIGHT CHANGES AND DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 15183 19470925 19470929 A TINY SPOT OF UNCERTAIN INDIVIDUAL CONTINUITY. 15184 19470925 19471002 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 28. 15185 19470926 19471004 A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS DUE SOUTH OF GROUP 15176. 15186 19470926 19471005 RETURN OF GROUP 15146: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL BUT DEFINITE SPOT FADING OUT BY SEPTEMBER 29. WEAK ACTIVITY IS CONTINUED FOR A FEW DAYS 2 SOUTHWARDS BY SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM. 15187 19470926 19471008 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, EACH WITH VARIABLE COMPANIONS. THE LEADER IS THE FIRST TO DIE OUT. 15188 19470928 19471010 RETURN OF GROUP 15156. A LONG STREAM, THE LEADING PART OF WHICH AT FIRST CONSISTS OF THREE SPOTS ALMOST IN CONTACT. THESE THEN JOIN TOGETHER, FORMING AN ELONGATED COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH SURVIVES THE REST OF THE GROUP. 15189 19470929 19470930 A COUPLE OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 29; A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 30. 15190 19470930 19471004 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15191 19470930 19471010 A STREAM OF COMPLEX SPOTS GROWING RAPIDLY FROM SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB AND REACHING A MAXIMUM ON OCTOBER 3. DECAY IS ALSO RAPID, THE REAR PART OF THE GROUP BEING THE LAST TO GO. 15192 19470930 19471013 A LARGE STREAM OF COMPOSITE SPOTS WHICH BY OCTOBER 5 HAVE JOINED TOGETHER TO FORM A COMPLEX STRUCTURE. TWO DAYS LATER, THIS SEPARATES, THE LEADING SPOT REMAINING THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 15193 19471001 19471007 AN EQUATORIAL STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT FIRST SEEN NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER SOON BECOME REGULAR SPOTS, THE FOLLOWER BEING THE LARGER. 15194 19471001 19471002 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15195 19471002 19471013 SMALL SPOTS IN A STREAM. 15196 19471002 19471013 A SMALL SPOT, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 15192, WHICH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ON OCTOBER 3 AND 4. 15197 19471002 19471013 RETURN OF GROUP 15164. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON OCTOBER 8. 15198 19471003 19471006 A SMALL STREAM APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15199 19471003 19471006 A STRING OF SMALL SPOTS LASTING FOR A FEW DAYS ONLY. 15200 19471003 19471006 RETURN OF GROUP 15157: FOURTH APPEARANCE. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15201 19471004 19471008 A PAIR OF SPOTS; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON OCTOBER 8 AS A DOT. 15202 19471004 19471011 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT ON OCTOBER 4. FIVE DAYS LATER THE REGION IS WEAKLY ACTIVE. 15203 19471006 19471008 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15204 19471008 19471016 ON OCTOBER 8 TWO NUCLEI WHICH QUICKLY DEVELOP INTO REGULAR SPOTS. 15205 19471008 19471019 WEAK BUT SUSTAINED SPOT-OCCURRENCE. 15206 19471008 19471018 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT UNTIL OCTOBER 11; A LAPSE OF FOUR DAYS - THEN A PAIR OF SPOTS FROM OCTOBER 16. 15207 19471008 19471021 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT IN SLOW DECLINE. 15208 19471009 19471019 A SMALL AREA OF WEAK INTERMITTENT DISTURBANCE, MARKED BY A SMALL SPOT EXCEPT ON OCTOBER 14, 16 AND 18. 15209 19471009 19471020 A COMPOSITE SPOT, DISAPPEARING RATHER ABRUPTLY. 15210 19471012 19471014 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 13. 15211 19471014 19471026 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT DEVELOPS IN FRONT, AS THE FOLLOWING SECTION DIES OUT. AFTER OCTOBER 22, THE LEADER DISTENDS IN LONGITUDE AND BREAKS UP. 15212 19471016 19471023 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS OVER A 5 DEGREE RANGE IN LONGITUDE. 15213 19471016 19471022 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONLY ONE IS SEEN ON OCTOBER 21 AND 22. 15214 19471016 19471028 RETURN OF GROUP 15174. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15215 19471018 19471029 A REGULAR SPOT ALONE UNTIL OCTOBER 24. THEN SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR, WHILE THE PARENT SPOT BREAKS UP AND SO DIES OUT. 15216 19471019 19471028 A NEW STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, SOON BREAKS UP BUT EVENTUALLY SURVIVES THE FOLLOWING PART WHICH DIES OUT BY OCTOBER 27. 15217 19471019 19471023 A SMALL SPOT. 15218 19471020 19471029 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15219 19471020 19471031 A STREAM PROBABLY NEAR ITS MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT AT THE EAST LIMB. THE FOLLOWING PART IS DIMINISHING THROUGHOUT, LEAVING THE LEADER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, ALONE AT THE WEST LIMB. 15220 19471021 19471026 A SMALL SPOT RAPIDLY DYING OUT. 15221 19471021 19471101 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW COMPANIONS ON OCTOBER 23 AND 27. 15222 19471022 19471030 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS DEVELOPING FROM A FAINT SPOT ON OCTOBER 22, THAT IS PROBABLY THE NUCLEUS OF THE LEADER. 15223 19471022 19471102 RETURN OF GROUP 15193. A REGULAR SPOT IN THE EQUATORIAL BELT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 15224 19471023 19471024 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON OCTOBER 23; A SINGLE SPECK ON OCTOBER 24. 15225 19471023 19471104 RETURN OF GROUP 15187. A SLOWLY DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION UNTIL OCTOBER 27. 15226 19471024 19471030 A STREAM OF RAPID GROWTH AND DECAY APPEARING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS TO PASS ROUND THE LIMB. 15227 19471024 19471028 TINY SPOTS, SEEN ONLY ON OCTOBER 24 AND 28. 15228 19471024 19471029 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 27. 15229 19471024 19471105 A REGULAR SPOT IN GENERAL DECLINE. 15230 19471025 19471026 A SMALL SPOT NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15231 19471025 19471105 RETURN OF GROUP 15188: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 15232 19471026 19471028 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 26; A PAIR ON OCTOBER 28. 15233 19471027 19471028 A TINY SPOT. 15234 19471027 19471109 RETURN OF GROUP 15192. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLOSE COMPANION UNTIL OCTOBER 30. 15235 19471028 19471109 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL VARIABLE COMPANIONS BETWEEN NOVEMBER 1 AND 5. 15236 19471029 19471030 A SMALL EPHEMERAL SPOT. 15237 19471030 19471103 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 2. 15238 19471103 19471110 A STRING OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15239 19471104 19471106 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS SEEN NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15240 19471105 19471107 A SMALL SPOT NEAR THE EAST LIMB ON NOVEMBER 5: A DOT ON NOVEMBER 7. 15241 19471106 19471112 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 10. 15242 19471106 19471116 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH DISINTEGRATES AFTER NOVEMBER 12 AND SO DIES OUT RAPIDLY. 15243 19471107 19471109 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 7 AND 8; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 9. 15244 19471107 19471119 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A STRING OF SMALL COMPANIONS ON NOVEMBER 9-14. 15245 19471109 19471117 A DEVELOPING STREAM; THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS TO PASS ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 15246 19471112 19471124 AN IRREGULAR STREAM, THE LEADER OF WHICH IS, HOWEVER, A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING PART CONSISTS OF A STRING OF SPOTS, WHICH, UNDERGOING CONSIDERABLE CHANGES, ARE ON THE DECLINE AS THE LIMB IS REACHED. 15247 19471112 19471124 A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 15232. A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL CLOSE COMPANION. 15248 19471113 19471115 A PAIR OF SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 15249 19471113 19471116 ANOTHER PAIR OF SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 15250 19471113 19471118 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15251 19471113 19471125 RETURN OF GROUP 15214: THIRD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 22. 15252 19471114 19471126 RETURN OF GROUP 15226. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT DRIFTING BACKWARDS IN LONGITUDE. 15253 19471115 19471116 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15254 19471115 19471117 TWO OR THREE UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15255 19471115 19471121 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS PRECEDE THE RAPID DEVELOPMENT OF THIS GROUP WHICH OCCURS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15256 19471115 19471120 SMALL NONDESCRIPT SPOTS. 15257 19471115 19471122 RETURN OF GROUP 15222. A SMALL SPOT, WITH OTHERS ON NOVEMBER 19 AND 20. 15258 19471116 19471118 A TINY SPOT. 15259 19471116 19471127 A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 15215. A SMALL DECREASING ELONGATED SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 15260 19471116 19471127 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. AS USUAL, THE FOLLOWER IS THE FIRST TO DIE OUT. 15261 19471117 19471126 A SMALL SPOT BECOMING REGULAR BY NOVEMBER 22. THIS IS PRECEDED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS WHICH HAVE A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON NOVEMBER 24-25. 15262 19471118 19471127 A SMALL SPOT, PRECEDING THE DEVELOPMENT OF A REGULAR SPOT, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL SPOTS. THE LATTER DIE OUT LEAVING THE REGULAR SPOT ALONE BY NOVEMBER 25. 15263 19471118 19471127 THE COMPRESSED LIFE-HISTORY OF THIS SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IS COMPLETED IN TEN DAYS. 15264 19471119 19471129 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE. ON NOVEMBER 23, OTHER SPOTS APPEAR IN FRONT, AND A BIG INCREASE THEN FOLLOWS RESULTING IN TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS WHICH ARE STILL GROWING AS THEY PASS OUT OF VIEW. 15265 19471119 19471130 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15266 19471122 19471123 A TINY EPHEMERAL SPOT. 15267 19471123 19471126 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 15268 19471123 19471124 A TINY SPOT. 15269 19471123 19471129 ONE OR TWO VARIABLE SPOTS NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 27 AND 28. 15270 19471124 19471201 RETURN OF GROUP 15234: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 25 TO 27 AND DECEMBER 1. 15271 19471125 19471128 A FEW FEEBLE EQUATORIAL SPOTS. 15272 19471125 19471203 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON DECEMBER 1. 15273 19471125 19471202 RETURN OF GROUP 15235. A PERSISTENT SMALL SPOT. 15274 19471125 19471205 A PAIR OF COMPOSITE SPOTS WHICH BREAKS UP INTO A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS AND SO DIES OUT. 15275 19471125 19471201 A PAIR OF SPOTS, OF WHICH ONE REMAINS AFTER NOVEMBER 26. 15276 19471126 19471130 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; THE LEADER REMAINS ON NOVEMBER 30. 15277 19471126 19471205 A SMALL VARIABLE STREAM. 15278 19471128 19471202 A PAIR OF SPOTS, THE LEADER ALONE REMAINING AFTER NOVEMBER 29. 15279 19471129 19471209 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 29. THE FOLLOWER BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON DECEMBER 5 WHILE THE LEADER REMAINS FAIRLY STABLE THROUGHOUT. 15280 19471129 19471130 A SMALL SPOT. 15281 19471201 19471202 A SMALL SPOT. 15282 19471201 19471207 A SMALL SPOT; NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 5. 15283 19471201 19471204 A SMALL SPOT SHRINKING TO A SPECK. 15284 19471202 19471214 RETURN OF GROUP 15245. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT IN SLOW DECLINE WITH ONE OR TWO VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 15285 19471204 19471211 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; OTHERS APPEAR AFTER DECEMBER 8, TO FORM A SMALL UNSTABLE CLUSTER. 15286 19471205 19471209 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS THAT COME TO NOTHING. 15287 19471205 19471213 A PAIR OF SPOTS, ONE COMPONENT NOT BEING PRESENT ON DECEMBER 9, 12 AND 13. 15288 19471205 19471207 A SMALL SPOT. 15289 19471205 19471214 A SMALL SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS ON SEVERAL DAYS. 15290 19471205 19471217 A SPOT F GROUP 15292 WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON DECEMBER 6. THERE ARE ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 15291 19471206 19471210 A SMALL STREAM OF BRIEF DURATION. 15292 19471206 19471218 RETURN OF GROUP 15255. A SPOT WHICH GROWS RAPIDLY INTO A LARGE COMPOSITE STRUCTURE. THE LEADING PART GRADUALLY CONDENSES INTO A SPOT OF NEARLY REGULAR OUTLINE. THE FOLLOWING PORTION REMAINS BROKEN AND SLOWLY DIMINISHES. 15293 19471210 19471214 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15294 19471210 19471216 RETURN OF GROUP 15246. A SMALL SPOT REDUCED FINALLY TO A SPECK. 15295 19471210 19471222 RETURN OF GROUP 15252: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT UNTIL DECEMBER 16; ON THE NEXT DAY A STREAM DEVELOPS WITH ITS AXIS HIGHLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. AS THIS STREAM GROWS IT SEPARATES INTO THREE SPOTS WHICH ARE DECLINING AS THEY PASS ROUND THE LIMB. 15296 19471212 19471214 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 12; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER DAYS. 15297 19471213 19471220 THE RAPID GROWTH IS SEEN OF A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER APPEAR TO ABSORB THE COMPANION SPOTS BETWEEN THEM. 15298 19471213 19471221 A PERSISTENT SMALL SPOT REDUCED FINALLY TO A DOT. 15299 19471214 19471221 A SMALL STREAM OF RAPID RISE AND DECAY. 15300 19471214 19471215 A SMALL SPOT. 15301 19471215 19471216 A PAIR OF SPOTS; ONE REMAINS VERY NEAR THE WEST LIMB ON DECEMBER 16. 15302 19471215 19471226 A SPOT OF NEARLY REGULAR OUTLINE WHICH SHEDS A SMALL SATELLITE ON DECEMBER 20. A DISTANT COMPANION IS INCLUDED IN THE GROUP UNTIL DECEMBER 19. 15303 19471216 19471222 RETURN OF GROUP 15265. A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING SPOT LAST SEEN ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 15304 19471217 19471223 ONE OR TWO SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. ALTHOUGH LISTED AS A RETURN OF GROUP 15265, A REVIVAL OF SPOT FORMATION MUST OBVIOUSLY HAVE TAKEN PLACE ON THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE. 15305 19471218 19471229 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FOLLOWER THAT GROWS INTO A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT BEFORE DYING OUT BY DECEMBER 27. MEANWHILE, THE LEADER BECOMES ELONGATED AND THEN DIVIDES INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER SOON DISAPPEARS. 15306 19471219 19471220 A TINY EQUATORIAL SPOT. 15307 19471219 19471231 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS UNTIL DECEMBER 27; ON THE NEXT DAY FRESH ACTIVITY IS PRODUCING A STREAM. 15308 19471220 19471222 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15309 19471220 19471221 A SINGLE SPOT ON DECEMBER 20; A PAIR ON DECEMBER 21. 15310 19471221 19471229 A FEW SMALL SPOTS; ONLY ONE REMAINS AFTER DECEMBER 23. 15311 19471222 19471223 A PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15312 19471222 19471230 FOUR DAYS AFTER THE INITIAL APPEARANCE OF A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, ACTIVITY MOUNTS, AND THE STREAM IS RESOLVED INTO A STRING OF COMPOSITE SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING COMPONENTS APPEAR, HOWEVER, TO BE DECLINING AS THE GROUP PASSES OUT OF VIEW. 15313 19471222 19471228 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A FEW COMPANIONS, APPEARING NEAR THE EAST LIMB AND THEN RAPIDLY DYING OUT. 15314 19471222 19471223 A SMALL SPOT. 15315 19471223 19471226 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 23 AND 24; A MINIATURE STREAM ON DECEMBER 26. 15316 19471224 19480104 A STREAM SEEN FROM ITS ORIGIN, IN WHICH THE LEADER, A NEARLY REGULAR SPOT, ALMOST DIVIDES INTO TWO AND THEN COALESCES AGAIN. THE FOLLOWING PART OF THE GROUP REMAINS A COLLECTION OF SMALL SPOTS, SLOWLY DIMINISHING. 15317 19471224 19480105 A NONDESCRIPT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 15318 19471225 19480105 A COLLECTION OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY TWO REMAIN BY JANUARY 4. 15319 19471225 19480106 RETURN OF GROUP 15279. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. THE UMBRA IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" ON DECEMBER 31. 15320 19471226 19471228 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 26; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER TWO DAYS. 15321 19471226 19480106 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE DEVELOPING FROM TWO SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS AT THE WEST LIMB. 15322 19471229 19480108 A CLUSTER REACHING A MAXIMUM BY JANUARY 3 AND DECLINING RAPIDLY TO A SINGLE SMALL SPOT AT THE WEST LIMB. 15323 19471231 19480104 A FEW SPOTS P GROUP 15321. 15324 19471231 19480104 A SMALL SPOT. 15325 19471231 19480109 A SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHING TO A SPECK. 15326 19480101 19480103 A TINY SPOT GROWING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 15327 19480101 19480105 A STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY WEST OF THE C.M., WHOSE MAXIMUM AREA OCCURS ON THE FIRST DAY. 15328 19480101 19480110 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 4 AND 5; ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 9. 15329 19480101 19480111 SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS IN A STREAM. 15330 19480104 19480116 RETURN OF GROUP 15297. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, SHOWING A SLIGHT DRIFT IN LATITUDE. 15331 19480105 19480110 A SMALL STREAM OF BRIEF DURATION. 15332 19480105 19480113 A SMALL STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE FIRST TO BREAK UP INTO A CLUSTER. THE WHOLE DIES OUT AFTER A FEW DAYS. 15333 19480106 19480111 TWO CLOSE PAIRS OF SMALL SPOTS; THE LEADING PAIR ALONE REMAINS AFTER JANUARY 8. 15334 19480107 19480112 A SMALL SPOT, SPLITTING INTO TWO PARTS BY JANUARY 11 AND QUICKLY DYING OUT. 15335 19480107 19480113 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE C.M. 15336 19480108 19480112 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON JANUARY 10 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 15337 19480109 19480110 A TINY SPOT ON JANUARY 9; A PAIR ON JANUARY 10. 15338 19480109 19480110 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15339 19480112 19480119 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS DEVELOPING FROM A SMALL PAIR FIRST SEEN JUST EAST OF THE C.M. THE GROUP IS STILL GROWING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15340 19480112 19480124 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15341 19480112 19480119 A SMALL STREAM WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON JANUARY 15; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 19. 15342 19480112 19480120 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT, WITH A COMPANION UNTIL JANUARY 16. 15343 19480113 19480115 A SMALL SPOT. 15344 19480114 19480124 RETURN OF GROUP 15312. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS AFTER JANUARY 18. 15345 19480114 19480118 RETURN OF GROUP 15305. A FEW SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 18. 15346 19480115 19480116 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JANUARY 15; A SINGLE SPOT ON JANUARY 16. 15347 19480115 19480121 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL JANUARY 17, AFTER WHICH ONE SPOT REMAINS. 15348 19480116 19480125 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL JANUARY 18. BY THE NEXT DAY THE FOLLOWER HAS DEVELOPED INTO A CLUSTER WHICH COALESCES BY JANUARY 22 AND THEN RAPIDLY DIES OUT. THE LEADER INCREASES RAPIDLY IN AREA AFTER JANUARY 19, BECOMING A REGULAR SPOT BY JANUARY 21 AND REMAINING STABLE TO THE LIMB. 15349 19480116 19480119 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON JANUARY 19 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 15350 19480118 19480119 A TINY SPOT. 15351 19480118 19480119 A DOT. 15352 19480118 19480128 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 21. ON THE NEXT DAY THERE IS A SMALL CLUSTER WHICH SOON CHANGES INTO A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 15353 19480119 19480201 RETURN OF GROUP 15316. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL PERSISTENT DRIFT AWAY FROM THE EQUATOR. 15354 19480119 19480124 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 15355 19480120 19480201 RETURN OF GROUP 15317. A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. BETWEEN JANUARY 22 AND 25, THE NF PORTION OF THE REGULAR SPOT BREAKS AWAY. ALL THE FOLLOWING SPOTS HAVE DIED OUT BY FEBRUARY 1. 15356 19480120 19480131 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPOSITE FOLLOWER WHICH SOON BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT. THE LEADER HAS DIMINISHED TO A TINY SPOT BY JANUARY 29 AND IS NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 30. 15357 19480121 19480201 RETURN OF GROUP 15321. A SINGLE SPOT UNTIL JANUARY 25, WHEN OTHER SMALL SPOTS BEHIND FORM A CLUSTER BY JANUARY 28. THE WHOLE GROUP DIES BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 15358 19480122 19480127 RETURN OF GROUP 15319: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL UNSTABLE STREAM. 15359 19480125 19480127 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15360 19480125 19480201 INTERMITTENT. SMALL SPOTS, SEEN ONLY ON JANUARY 25-27 AND FEBRUARY 1. 15361 19480125 19480130 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON JANUARY 27 AND 28, WHEN THERE IS A SMALL STREAM. 15362 19480126 19480129 A VERY SMALL SPOT. 15363 19480127 19480130 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 15364 19480127 19480129 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15365 19480127 19480131 A PAIR OF DYING SPOTS. 15366 19480130 19480211 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE; THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE AND LONGEST-LIVED. THE FOLLOWER BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT AFTER FEBRUARY 6. 15367 19480201 19480208 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS IN A STREAM. 15368 19480201 19480208 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS CLOSELY F GROUP 15366. 15369 19480201 19480212 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 1 AND 2; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER DAYS. 15370 19480201 19480209 ONE OR TWO SMALL CHANGING SPOTS UNTIL FEBRUARY 7. ON THE NEXT TWO DAYS THE POSITION IS REPRESENTED BY A STREAM OF FAINT SPOTS. 15371 19480203 19480214 RETURN OF GROUP 15339. A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL CHANGING COMPANIONS AFTER FEBRUARY 5. 15372 19480204 19480206 A TINY SPOT. 15373 19480204 19480211 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS UNTIL FEBRUARY 7. BY THE NEXT DAY FRESH ACTIVITY HAS TAKEN PLACE, THE GROUP TAKING ON BI-POLAR FORM AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15374 19480204 19480215 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS, DEVELOPING FROM A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 4. THE LEADER BECOMES REGULAR FOR A DAY OR TWO AND THEN BEGINS TO BREAK UP. 15375 19480206 19480208 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 15376 19480206 19480212 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS AFTER FEBRUARY 9. 15377 19480207 19480210 TINY SPOTS. 15378 19480210 19480213 A COLLECTION OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15379 19480210 19480215 A PAIR OF DIMINISHING SPOTS WHOSE MAXIMUM APPARENTLY OCCURRED ON THE INVISIBLE HEMISPHERE. 15380 19480210 19480211 A LITTLE GROUP. 15381 19480214 19480226 A REGULAR SPOT OF MARKED STABILITY. 15382 19480215 19480218 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 15; A PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 15383 19480215 19480221 A SHORT EQUATORIAL STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON FEBRUARY 20. 15384 19480215 19480223 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING INTO A CLOSE PAIR OF COMPOSITE SPOTS BY FEBRUARY 18; THESE BEGIN TO DIE OUT AFTER FEBRUARY 21. 15385 19480215 19480217 A TINY SPOT. 15386 19480215 19480227 RETURN OF GROUP 15355: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT DIVIDING INTO TWO ON FEBRUARY 18, WHEN SOME SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR, BUT THE WHOLE GROUP HAS NEARLY DISAPPEARED BY THE TIME IT REACHES THE WEST LIMB. 15388 19480217 19480226 A SMALL SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 15389 19480218 19480219 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 18; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 19. 15390 19480218 19480221 A PAIR OF SPOTS, WIDELY SEPARATED IN LONGITUDE UNTIL FEBRUARY 20; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 21. 15391 19480220 19480223 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15392 19480220 19480225 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 22. 15393 19480220 19480226 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS AFTER FEBRUARY 23. 15394 19480220 19480227 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS IN A STREAM. ON FEBRUARY 23 AND 24, A SINGLE ONE REPRESENTS THE POSITION. 15395 19480223 19480224 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15396 19480223 19480303 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 15397 19480224 19480225 A SMALL SPOT. 15398 19480225 19480306 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IN THE FORM OF A STREAM WHICH BY MARCH 2 HAVE COALESCED INTO TWO SMALL COMPOSITE SPOTS WHICH ARE DYING OUT AS THE LIMB IS REACHED. 15399 19480225 19480309 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRIPLE UMBRA AND A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. BY FEBRUARY 29, TWO OF ITS UMBRAE HAVE JOINED, WHILE THE THIRD BEGINS TO BREAK AWAY FROM THE MAIN BODY OF THE SPOT, ONLY JUST SEPARATING AS IT DISAPPEARS FROM VIEW. 15400 19480226 19480309 RETURN OF GROUP 15366. A SMALL SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL COMPANIONS ON MARCH 6 AND 7. 15401 19480227 19480303 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS S GROUP 15396. 15402 19480227 19480304 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL FEBRUARY 29; A PAIR AFTERWARDS. 15403 19480227 19480306 RETURN OF GROUP 15373. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 15404 19480228 19480305 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 28 AND 29; A PAIR ON MARCH 3-5. 15405 19480228 19480302 A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 28 AND MARCH 2; A PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 15406 19480301 19480304 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 1; A SINGLE SPOT AFTERWARDS. 15407 19480302 19480307 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MARCH 2; A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 3, 6 AND 7. 15408 19480304 19480313 AT ITS BRIEF MAXIMUM, THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS. 15409 19480306 19480312 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15410 19480306 19480308 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15411 19480307 19480312 A STREAM, DEVELOPING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. A PRECURSOR SPOT IS SEEN THREE DAYS EARLIER. 15412 19480308 19480320 WITH GROUP 15415, A RETURN OF GROUP 15387. A PAIR OF STABLE SPOTS, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS ON MARCH 11, 12 AND 13. THIS GROUP MAY BE ASSOCIATED WITH GROUP 15415. 15413 19480308 19480321 A STREAM, WHOSE LEADER IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT; THIS CONSISTS OF AN ELONGATED SPOT WITH AN UMBRA CROSSED BY TWO BRIDGES. AS IT SLOWLY DECLINES, THIS SPOT BECOMES MORE REGULAR IN OUTLINE. 15414 19480309 19480313 A SMALL DYING SPOT DECREASING TO A DOT. 15415 19480309 19480321 WITH GROUP 15412, A RETURN OF GROUP 15387. A FAIRLY LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH BY MARCH 14 BEGINS TO BREAK UP TO FORM A STREAM IN WHICH BOTH THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE COMPOSITE, THE WHOLE MAY BE ASSOCIATED WITH THE PRECEDING GROUP 15412. 15416 19480311 19480313 A TINY SPOT. 15417 19480312 19480320 INTERMITTENT. A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 15-17, IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING GROUP 15413. 15418 19480312 19480318 A SHORT-LIVED EXTENDED STREAM OF NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS. 15419 19480312 19480315 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 12 AND 13; AFTERWARDS, A SINGLE SPOT. 15420 19480313 19480317 RETURN OF GROUP 15381. A SMALL SPOT DECREASING TO A DOT. 15421 19480314 19480315 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15422 19480316 19480323 A FEW CHANGING SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS AFTER MARCH 20. 15423 19480317 19480318 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 15424 19480317 19480327 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT ON MARCH 17; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL MARCH 22, WHEN A SMALL SPOT APPEARS, WHICH, AFTER A DAY OR TWO, DEVELOPS INTO A SHORT STREAM. 15425 19480318 19480320 A SMALL SPOT. 15426 19480324 19480327 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15427 19480324 19480325 A TINY SPOT ON MARCH 24; A PAIR ON THE NEXT DAY. 15428 19480324 19480404 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. THE LEADING PART COALESCES INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT BY MARCH 30 BUT BREAKS UP AGAIN BY APRIL 3; THE FOLLOWING PORTION REMAINS BROKEN AND UNDERGOES MINOR CHANGES THROUGHOUT. 15429 19480324 19480329 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 15430 19480324 19480405 RETURN OF GROUP 15399. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WHICH BY MARCH 28 BEGINS TO DEVELOP AN APPENDAGE ON ITS NF EDGE. THIS ONLY JUST SEPARATES BY APRIL 2. 15431 19480325 19480328 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 25; A PAIR OF THE OTHER DAYS. 15432 19480325 19480326 A SPECK. 15433 19480326 19480407 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY APRIL 6. 15434 19480327 19480328 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15435 19480327 19480330 A SHORT STREAM. THE CENTRE OF THE FOLLOWER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS APPARENTLY OBSCURED BY A PATCH OF FACULAE ON MARCH 30. 15436 19480327 19480402 A SMALL SPOT, DECREASING TO A SPECK BEFORE DYING OUT. 15437 19480329 19480405 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15438 19480329 19480407 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 15439 19480329 19480409 A DEVELOPING STREAM WHOSE LEADER IS A FAIRLY LARGE REGULAR SPOT AND THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. THE FOLLOWING PORTION CONSITS OF A COLLECTION OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. A CURIOUS FEATURE OF THE LEADER IS THE HORSE-SHOE SHAPE OF THE UMBRA ON APRIL 2, FOR THIS DAY ONLY. 15440 19480329 19480410 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A SMALLER ONE WHICH SOON BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 15441 19480330 19480404 A STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY NORTH OF GROUP 15429 AND GROWING RAPIDLY. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT WHILE THE FOLLWER IS A CLUSTER. 15442 19480330 19480409 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS UNTIL APRIL 2, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP GROWS RAPIDLY INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER BECOME REGULAR SPOTS, THE LATTER IS THE LARGER BUT IS SOON IN DECLINE. 15443 19480331 19480406 A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING WITH ITS AXIS GREATLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR. 15444 19480401 19480404 A PAIR OF SPOTS, SUDDENLY APPEARING BETWEEN GROUPS 15439 AND 15442. THEY QUICKLY BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 15445 19480402 19480403 A SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 2; A FEW TINY SPOTS ON THE NEXT DAY. 15446 19480402 19480411 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, UNDERGOING CONSIDERABLE CHANGES DURING ITS DISK PASSAGE. 15447 19480403 19480415 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE SURVIVES BY APRIL 12. 15448 19480404 19480410 RETURN OF GROUP 15417. A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, CLOSELY F GROUP 15447. 15449 19480405 19480416 A VERY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15450 19480405 19480414 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 11. 15451 19480406 19480416 RETURN OF GROUPS 15412 AND 15415: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWING COMPANION UNTIL APRIL 9. 15452 19480407 19480410 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15453 19480407 19480418 A STREAM, GROWING RAPIDLY FROM TWO TINY SPOTS SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADING COMPONENT BECOMES A PAIR OF NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS IN CONTACT WHICH APPEAR TO ROTATE IN A CLOCKWISE DIRECTION BETWEEN APRIL 11 AND 13, AND BY APRIL 16 HAVE SEPARATED. IN THE MEANTIME THE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT. BY APRIL 17 FURTHER SMALL SPOTS HAVE APPEARED IN THE REAR. 15454 19480407 19480415 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT. 15455 19480408 19480419 A STREAM, INCREASING TO A MAXIMUM ON APRIL 14. BETWEEN APRIL 12 AND 14 CONSIDERABLE CHANGES TAKE PLACE AFTER WHICH THE VARIOUS COMPONENTS DRIFT APART. A REGULAR SPOT IN THE FRONT PART OF THE GROUP IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT. 15456 19480409 19480416 A STRING OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS DYING OUT JUST PAST THE C.M. 15457 19480409 19480420 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH MULTIPLY AND FORM A LONG STREAM. THE LEADING PART ON APRIL 18 BECOMES A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, WHILE THE REAR PART SLOWLY DIES OUT. 15458 19480409 19480413 A SINGLE SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON APRIL 13. 15459 19480410 19480411 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON APRIL 10; A SINGLE SPOT ON APRIL 11. 15460 19480410 19480411 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 10; A DOT ON APRIL 11. 15461 19480411 19480416 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH LENGTHENS OUT INTO A STREAM AS IT DECLINES. 15462 19480411 19480412 A SMALL SPOT. 15463 19480411 19480423 A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALLER COMPANIONS, THE LAST OF WHICH DIES OUT AFTER APRIL 20. BETWEEN APRIL 17 AND 19, THE BIG SPOT SHEDS A PIECE OF PENUMBRA FROM ITS NORTHERN EDGE, AND THIS PERSISTS TO THE LIMB. 15464 19480411 19480419 A SMALL GROUP, PERSISTING UNTIL JUST PAST THE C.M. 15465 19480412 19480413 A SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOT. 15466 19480412 19480414 A PAIR OF GROWING SPOTS. 15467 19480412 19480416 A PAIR OF SPOTS NOT SEEN ON APRIL 15, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON APRIL 16. 15468 19480412 19480420 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS UNTIL APRIL 16, AFTER WHICH THEY GROW INTO A LARGE ELONGATED COMPOSITE SPOT AS THE LIMB IS APPROACHED. 15469 19480412 19480417 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15470 19480413 19480415 A PAIR OF GROWING SPOTS. 15471 19480413 19480416 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON APRIL 14 AND 15. 15472 19480414 19480415 A TINY SPOT ON APRIL 14; A PAIR ON APRIL 15. 15473 19480414 19480426 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS, IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING, BETWEEN APRIL 19 AND 24. A SMALL BUT DEFINITE DRIFT IN LATITUDE IS SHOWN. 15474 19480414 19480419 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT. 15475 19480414 19480426 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON APRIL 17 AND 18. ON APRIL 19 A SMALL STREAM APPEARS IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER BECOMES THE LARGER AND MORE STABLE COMPONENT. 15476 19480415 19480416 A TINY SPOT. 15477 19480415 19480424 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON APRIL 18-21. 15478 19480416 19480419 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15479 19480416 19480427 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO TINY FOLLOWERS UNTIL APRIL 19, AFTER WHICH THE LEADER BREAKS UP. AT THE SAME TIME OTHER SPOTS APPEAR TO FORM A LONG CHANGING STREAM WHICH, AFTER A DAY OR TWO, BEGINS TO DIE OUT. 15480 19480416 19480427 A SPOT SLOWLY DYING OUT. 15481 19480418 19480422 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 15482 19480418 19480424 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY APRIL 23. 15483 19480418 19480425 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS TRANSFORMING BY APRIL 22 INTO A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL SPOTS, THE WHOLE DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 15484 19480419 19480429 A DECLINING SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ON APRIL 24-26. 15485 19480419 19480502 RETURN OF GROUP 15441. A VERY LARGE COMPLEX SPOT WHICH RETAINS ITS GENERAL SHAPE THROUGHOUT, ALTHOUGH THE MAIN NUCLEI TEND TO SEPARATE INTO INDIVIDUAL SPOTS. THE TWO SOUTHERN NUCLEI BECOME REGULAR SPOTS AND ARE THE MOST STABLE. 15486 19480420 19480430 RETURN OF GROUP 15430: THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT IN DECLINE, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL APRIL 28. 15487 19480422 19480429 A SHORT STREAM; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER APRIL 25. 15488 19480423 19480426 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 15489 19480423 19480425 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 15490 19480423 19480429 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON THE FIRST DAY; ONE REMAINS AFTERWARDS. 15491 19480423 19480429 A SMALL SPOT, SLOWLY DYING OUT. 15492 19480424 19480505 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15493 19480424 19480429 RETURN OF GROUP 15442. A SPOT PETERING OUT NEAR THE C.M. 15494 19480424 19480506 RETURN OF GROUP 15439. A LARGE SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA, BECOMING ELONGATED FOR A FEW DAYS AND THEN REVERTING TO ITS CIRCULAR FORM AS IT DIMINISHES. 15495 19480425 19480506 RETURN OF GROUP 15440. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL MAY 1. 15496 19480426 19480508 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH, ON MAY 5, SHEDS A SMALL SPOT FROM ITS LEADING EDGE. THIS OFFSHOOT DRIFTS FORWARD. 15497 19480427 19480505 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE REAR ONE IS THE ONLY STABLE MEMBER FOR MOST OF THE TIME. 15498 19480427 19480429 A SMALL SPOT. 15499 19480430 19480509 SMALL SPOTS UNTIL MAY 4. THEN A LARGE CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARS WHICH, BY MAY 7, IS LED BY A NEWLY-FORMED REGULAR SPOT THAT PERSISTS TO THE LIMB. 15500 19480501 19480504 ONE OR TWO UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15501 19480502 19480504 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT THAT HAS FORMED RAPIDLY WITHIN 24 HOURS, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO DISTANT COMPANIONS. 15502 19480502 19480506 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY THE REAR PAIR REMAIN ON MAY 6. 15503 19480503 19480516 RETURN OF GROUP 15453. A LARGE STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. ON MAY 6 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT APPEARS CLOSELY FOLLOWING THE LEADER AND IS COMPLETELY ABSORBED BY IT BY MAY 10. THE FOLLOWER, THE LARGEST COMPONENT, IS THE FIRST TO BREAK UP AND IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15504 19480504 19480505 A TINY SPOT. 15505 19480504 19480508 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY P GROUP 15503. 15506 19480504 19480509 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15507 19480504 19480515 A REGULAR SPOT. ON MAY 7 OTHER SMALL SPOTS COME IN ITS WAKE; THESE UNDERGO CONSIDERABLE CHANGES AND HAVE DIED OUT BY MAY 14, LEAVING THE DIMINISHED REGULAR SPOT. 15508 19480505 19480506 A TINY SPOT. 15509 19480505 19480511 A STRING OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 15510 19480505 19480513 A SCATTERED CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS, WHOSE LEADING PART COALESCES INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT BY MAY 8; THE WHOLE GROUP IS DECLINING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15511 19480505 19480515 ONE OR TWO SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS UNTIL MAY 9. NOTHING IS SEEN UNTIL MAY 12, WHEN THE GROUP REVIVES AS A SMALL CLUSTER. ON THE NEXT DAY IT HAS BECOME A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS BETWEEN THEM. 15512 19480505 19480516 RETURN OF GROUP 15468. A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH BY MAY 9 HAVE NEARLY COMBINED TOGETHER. BY THE NEXT DAY THEY ARE DISINTEGRATING AND ON MAY 15 ONLY TWO WIDELY-SEPARATED SPOTS ARE LEFT. ON MAY 16 THE FOLLOWER HAS DIED OUT AND THE LEADER HAS BECOME A CLUSTER. 15513 19480505 19480517 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS WHICH RAPIDLY INCREASE IN NUMBER UNTIL MAY 8. ON THE NEXT DAY THESE SMALL COMPANIONS HAVE ALMOST BECOME TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS WHICH BREAK UP RAPIDLY AGAIN AND DIE OUT LEAVING THE ORIGINAL SPOT BY MAY 15. 15514 19480506 19480518 RETURN OF GROUP 15457. A BIG REGULAR SPOT WITH NUMEROUS PENUMBRAL APPENDAGES UNTIL MAY 16. 15515 19480506 19480519 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW COMPANIONS UNTIL MAY 15, CLOSELY SF GROUP 15514. 15516 19480507 19480516 A GROUP IN CONTINUAL CHANGE CLOSELY P GROUP 15514. 15517 19480508 19480515 A SHORT STREAM, SUDDENLY APPEARING JUST NORTH OF THE LEADING SPOT OF GROUP 15503. AS IT GROWS, ITS COMPONENTS FUSE INTO A COMPLEX STRUCTURE OF FAIR SIZE BY MAY 12. THE WHOLE IS DECLINING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15518 19480508 19480519 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO DISTANT COMPANIONS UNTIL MAY 14. 15519 19480508 19480520 WITH GROUP 15520, A RETURN OF GROUP 15463. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15520 19480508 19480516 WITH GROUP 15519, A RETURN OF GROUP 15463. A CLUSTER OF SLOWLY-DYING SMALL SPOTS. 15521 19480509 19480522 AT FIRST, A LARGE BI-POLAR GROUP. THE UMBRA OF THE LEADER IS ELONGATED LONGITUDINALLY, THAT OF THE FOLLOWER, LATITUDINALLY. ON MAY 13, THE LEADER BEGINS TO SPLIT INTO TWO SMALL REGULAR SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE. THE FOLLOWER ALSO DIVIDES, ONE PART REMAINING A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WHILE THE OTHER DISINTEGRATES INTO NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS. THE WEIGHTED CENTRE OF THE WHOLE GROUP DRIFTS SOUTHWARDS. 15522 19480511 19480521 RETURN OF GROUP 15475. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. THE FOLLOWING MEMBER BREAKS UP AND DISAPPEARS BY MAY 18. 15523 19480513 19480514 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 13; A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 14. 15524 19480513 19480518 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP. 15525 19480513 19480524 A PERSISTENT CENTRE OF WEAK ACTIVITY. 15526 19480516 19480518 A SMALL SPOT. 15527 19480516 19480517 A SMALL SPOT. 15528 19480517 19480522 A SMALL SPOT ON MAY 17; A PAIR ON MAY 21 AND 22. 15529 19480517 19480530 RETURN OF GROUP 15485; THIRD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15530 19480518 19480519 A SMALL SPOT. 15531 19480519 19480525 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING COMPONENTS OF WHICH THE LEADER FINALLY BECOMES A SMALL REGULAR SPOT BY THE TIME IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15532 19480519 19480526 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS AFTER MAY 22. 15533 19480522 19480529 ONE OR TWO VARIABLE SPOTS UNTIL MAY 26, AFTER WHICH A SMALL CLUSTER REPRESENTS THE POSITION. 15534 19480522 19480530 RETURN OF GROUP 15494: THIRD APPEARANCE. AT FIRST A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. ON MAY 24 OTHER SPOTS APPEAR, FORMING A LARGE CLUSTER WHICH BEGINS TO SPREAD AND DIE OUT ABRUPTLY AFTER MAY 29. 15535 19480522 19480524 A LITTLE SPOT. 15536 19480522 19480603 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT (IN THE EQUATORIAL ZONE), WHICH, BETWEEN MAY 26 AND 28, SHEDS A PART OF OF ITSELF WHICH DIES OUT, THE REMAINING PORTION THEN SLOWLY DECLINING. 15537 19480523 19480529 A PERSISTENT SMALL SPOT PROBABLY THE END OF A REGULAR SPOT. 15538 19480524 19480531 RETURN OF GROUP 15496. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, BREAKING UP INTO TWO CLUSTERS. NOTHING IS SEEN ON MAY 30; A FEW FAINT SPOTS REAPPEAR ON MAY 31. 15539 19480524 19480601 WITH GROUP 15541, A RETURN OF GROUP 15499. A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 15540 19480525 19480606 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. ON MAY 30 A SMALL SPOT SUDDENLY APPEARS ON THE REAR EDGE OF THE PENUMBRA, AND DURING THE NEXT FOUR DAYS DRIFTS AWAY AND DIES OUT. 15541 19480526 19480605 WITH GROUP 15539, A RETURN OF GROUP 15499. INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON MAY 30 TO JUNE 1. ON JUNE 2 A SMALL GROUP APPEARS AND GROWS RAPIDLY AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15542 19480526 19480608 A PAIR OF STABLE REGULAR SPOTS, SEPARATED IN LATITUDE BY A FEW DEGREES, LEADING A RATHER LONG STREAM. THE FOLLOWER IS A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH TENDS TO DIVIDE INTO TWO PARTS, THE LEADING PART DIMINISHING IN AREA UNTIL JUNE 7 AND THEN SUDDENLY INCREASING ON THE LAST DAY. 15543 19480528 19480601 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15544 19480529 19480531 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15545 19480530 19480610 RETURN OF GROUP 15511. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS UNTIL JUNE 8, AFTER WHICH A SHORT GROWING STREAM APPEARS. 15546 19480530 19480611 RETURN OF GROUP 15503: THIRD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15547 19480531 19480603 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JUNE 3. 15548 19480531 19480603 A TINY GROUP. 15549 19480601 19480605 A TINY VARIABLE SPOT. 15550 19480602 19480603 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15551 19480603 19480614 RETURN OF GROUP 15514: THIRD APPEARANCE. A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH, AFTER THE FIRST FEW DAYS, BECOME JOINED TOGETHER BY A PENUMBRAL STRUCTURE AND THEN SLOWLY DIMINISH. 15552 19480603 19480610 A SMALL SPOT. 15553 19480604 19480605 A LITTLE SPOT. 15554 19480604 19480608 A FEW SCATTERED SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JUNE 7. 15555 19480604 19480612 A FEW SMALL SPOTS IMMEDIATELY SOUTH OF GROUP 15551. THERE IS A BRIEF INCREASE IN AREA ON JUNE 8 AND 9. 15556 19480604 19480608 RETURN OF GROUP 15519: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 15557 19480605 19480606 A SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 5; A PAIR OF JUNE 6. 15558 19480605 19480612 INTERMITTENT. A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS ON JUNE 5 TO 7. AFTER A LAPSE OF THREE DAYS ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS APPEAR IN THE SAME AREA. 15559 19480605 19480612 A SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON JUNE 11, WHEN THERE IS A CLUSTER. 15560 19480605 19480608 A SMALL SPOT. 15561 19480606 19480617 RETURN OF GROUP 15521. A STREAM WHOSE LEADER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS ON JUNE 17. THE FOLLOWER, A COMPOSITE SPOT, BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT FROM JUNE 10. 15562 19480607 19480608 A SMALL SPOT. 15563 19480607 19480619 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS UNTIL JUNE 15. 15564 19480609 19480612 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15565 19480609 19480619 A VARIABLE STREAM WHOSE REAR PART BY JUNE 13, HAS COALESCED INTO A REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 18. THERE IS A DISTINCT CREEP IN LATITUDE. 15566 19480609 19480616 RETURN OF GROUP 15531. A SMALL SPOT DYING OUT. 15567 19480611 19480617 UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15568 19480612 19480615 A CLOSE PAIR ON JUNE 12 AND 13; A LONG SPARSE STREAM ON JUNE 14 AND 15. THIS GROUP MAY BE CONNECTED WITH GROUP 15567. 15569 19480614 19480615 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 14; A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 15. 15570 19480614 19480623 A CLUSTER DEVELOPING INTO A BI-POLAR GROUP BY JUNE 19. THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT; THE FOLLOWER IS A MODERATE-SIZED COMPOSITE SPOT. THE WHOLE GROUP IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15571 19480614 19480624 A TINY SPOT ON JUNE 14. NOTHING IS SEEN ON THE FOLLOWING DAY, BUT ON JUNE 16 A GROUP OF STREAM TYPE BEGINS TO DEVELOP. CONTRARY TO THE NORMAL BEHAVIOUR, THE MIDDLE COMPONENT OF THE STREAM BECOMES THE CHIEF SPOT, FIRST AS ONE OF COMPOSITE STRUCTURE AND STABILIZING LATER TO ONE OF REGULAR FORM. 15572 19480614 19480627 RETURN OF GROUP 15529: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 15573 19480615 19480621 TWO SMALL COMPOSITE SPOTS GROWING FROM SCATTERED NUCLEI. 15574 19480616 19480624 A STREAM, IN WHICH THE FOLLOWING PART QUICKLY DIES OUT, LEAVING THE LEADER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, ALONE BY JUNE 21. 15575 19480617 19480618 SMALL SPOTS PRECEDING GROUP 15563. 15576 19480617 19480621 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15577 19480618 19480619 A CLUSTER, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT PAIR OF SPOTS. THIS APPEARS TO BE A REVIVAL OF ACTIVITY IN THE SAME AREA AS GROUPS 15567 AND 15568. 15578 19480619 19480701 A LARGE COMPLEX STRUCTURE WHICH SOON STARTS TO BREAK UP, ALTHOUGH IT IS NOT UNTIL JUNE 26 THAT THE AREA BEGINS TO DROP, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP APPEARS TO BE DYING OUT FAIRLY RAPIDLY. 15579 19480620 19480702 AN ELONGATED SPOT WHICH SOON BREAKS UP INTO AN IRREGULAR STRUCTURE WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 15580 19480621 19480628 THREE SMALL SPOTS IN LINE. THE CENTRE SPOT HAS GONE BY JUNE 27. 15581 19480621 19480629 A FEEBLE AREA OF DISTURBANCE SHOWING NO SPOT FROM JUNE 24-28. 15582 19480622 19480626 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15583 19480622 19480630 RETURN OF GROUP 15540. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, DYING OUT JUST PAST THE C.M. 15584 19480622 19480629 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT. 15585 19480623 19480701 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 23 AND 24. NOTHING IS SEEN ON THE NEXT DAY. THERE IS A FRESH OUTBREAK OF ACTIVITY ON JUNE 27 WHEN A GROUP OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS APPEARS. 15586 19480623 19480627 A SMALL SPOT. 15587 19480623 19480705 RETURN OF GROUP 15542. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT WHOSE PRINCIPAL NUCLEUS IS OF REGULAR FORMATION. REMARKABLY LITTLE CHANGE IN DETAIL TAKE PLACE UP TO JULY 3. 15588 19480624 19480701 A PAIR OF EQUATORIAL SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY AND DEVELOPING WITHIN TWO DAYS INTO A STREAM OF SMALL SCATTERED SPOTS. 15589 19480625 19480626 A SMALL SPOT. 15590 19480625 19480707 A REGULAR SPOT WITH SOME SMALL VARIABLE FOLLOWERS UNTIL JULY 5. 15591 19480628 19480703 A SMALL STREAM. 15592 19480628 19480702 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT; A PAIR ON JULY 1. 15593 19480628 19480708 A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, IN WHICH THE LEADER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE AND ALONE REMAINS ON JULY 8. 15594 19480701 19480708 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 6 AND 7. 15595 19480703 19480704 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON JULY 3; A PAIR ON JULY 4. 15596 19480703 19480708 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15597 19480703 19480715 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT FOLLOWER ON JULY 5-7. THE RESPECTIVE LONGITUDES OF THE REGULAR SPOT ALONE ON JULY 5-7 ARE 134.8, 135.8 AND 135.1. 15598 19480704 19480705 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS. 15599 19480704 19480709 A SMALL SPOT. 15600 19480705 19480711 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JULY 8-10. 15601 19480705 19480714 RETURN OF GROUP 15563. A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ON JULY 10-13. 15602 19480705 19480715 RETURN OF GROUP 15577. A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL VARIABLE COMPANIONS. THE WHOLE GROUP DECLINES, THE NUCLEUS ALONE REMAINING ON JULY 15. 15603 19480705 19480710 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JULY 8 AND 9. 15604 19480707 19480708 A SMALL SPOT. 15605 19480707 19480717 A BI-POLAR GROUP, DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JULY 7. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE FIRST TO MATURE; THE FOLLOWER BECOMES A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT BY JULY 13. 15606 19480707 19480718 A STREAM CONSISTING OF A LARGE NUMBER OF CHANGING SPOTS, WHOSE LEADER BECOMES A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AND IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT, ALONE REMAINING AT THE LIMB. 15607 19480709 19480711 RETURN OF GROUP 15570. A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWING GROUP 15606. 15608 19480709 19480717 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A GROUP OF UNSTABLE COMPANIONS WHICH HAVE ALMOST GONE BY JULY 17. 15609 19480710 19480713 A SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOT. 15610 19480711 19480720 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLOSE COMPANION ON JULY 16. 15611 19480712 19480722 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS IN WHICH THE LARGEST COMPONENT IS A COMPOSITE SPOT SITUATED IN THE CENTRE. RISING IN AREA TO A MAXIMUM ON JULY 18, THE GROUP THEN DECREASES UNTIL JULY 20, AFTER WHICH IT APPEARS TO BE AGAIN INCREASING AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 15612 19480713 19480714 A SMALL SPOT. 15613 19480713 19480720 A VARIABLE STREAM, GROWING RAPIDLY FROM A TINY SPOT ON JULY 13. BY JULY 18, THE GROUP HAS SIMPLIFIED TO TWO SPOTS, THE LEADER BEING THE LARGER. 15614 19480714 19480719 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT ON JULY 14-16; A PAIR ON JULY 19. 15615 19480716 19480726 A SMALL SPOT, SLOWLY DYING OUT. 15616 19480717 19480727 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION. ON JULY 20, THE COMPANION BREAKS UP INTO TINY SPOTS, THE WHOLE GROUP SPREADING OUT AND QUICKLY DECLINING AFTER JULY 23. 15617 19480718 19480726 ON THE FIRST DAY, A FEW SMALL SPOTS, WHICH BY JULY 21 HAVE GROWN INTO A LONG STREAM LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. THE WHOLE GROUP UNDERGOES CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. 15618 19480719 19480731 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW CHANGING COMPANIONS UNTIL JULY 24. 15619 19480720 19480802 RETURN OF GROUP 15587: THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT, CLOSELY PRECEDED BY A COMPOSITE SPOT. THE LATTER BECOMES ELONGATED IN A LONGITUDINAL DIRECTION AFTER JULY 26, AND BY JULY 29 THE LEADING PART BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 15620 19480721 19480802 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION. ON JULY 26, THE PARENT SPOT BEGINS TO BREAK UP, DYING OUT BY JULY 30, LEAVING THE SMALL COMPANION. 15621 19480722 19480724 A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 22; A PAIR ON THE NEXT TWO DAYS. 15622 19480723 19480727 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JULY 27. 15623 19480724 19480806 A REGULAR SPOT LEADING A TRAIN OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. THESE ALMOST DIE OUT BY AUGUST 3; ON THE NEXT DAY, HOWEVER, THERE IS A FRESH OUTBURST OF ACTIVITY AS THE GROUP PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15624 19480725 19480727 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 15625 19480725 19480801 A SMALL STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 15626 19480725 19480804 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 15627 19480725 19480728 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON JULY 27. 15628 19480726 19480727 A TINY SPOT. 15629 19480726 19480728 TINY SPOTS. 15630 19480726 19480727 A TINY SPOT. 15631 19480726 19480731 A MINIATURE STREAM, WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON JULY 29. 15632 19480726 19480804 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT. 15633 19480726 19480806 A SMALL SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE FOLLOWERS. 15634 19480727 19480728 A TINY SPOT ON JULY 27; A PAIR ON JULY 28. 15635 19480727 19480801 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 28. 15636 19480728 19480805 A SPARSE STREAM IN WHICH A REGULAR SPOT AT THE REAR IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT UNTIL AUGUST 4. ON AUGUST 5 IT HAS GONE. 15637 19480729 19480804 A SMALL GROUP OF RAPID RISE AND DECAY. 15638 19480729 19480809 A GROUP GROWING RAPIDLY FROM A SMALL SPOT ON JULY 29. THE LEADER BECOMES A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, WHILE THE FOLLOWER REMAINS A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH TEND TO COALESCE. 15639 19480730 19480806 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY AUGUST 6. 15640 19480730 19480809 A SCATTERED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 8. 15641 19480731 19480807 A SMALL STREAM, FORMING IMMEDIATELY SOUTH OF GROUP 15638, BUT NOT SURVIVING TO THE LIMB. 15642 19480731 19480808 RETURN OF GROUP 15597. A SMALL SPOT, SLOWLY DYING OUT. 15643 19480801 19480813 A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. AS THE SPOT SLOWLY DIMINISHES, THE UMBRA BECOMES DOUBLE, AND BY THE TIME THE LIMB IS REACHED THE WHOLE HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15644 19480802 19480803 A TINY EQUATORIAL SPOT. 15645 19480802 19480812 RETURN OF GROUP 15605. A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS JOINED BY COMPANIONS ON AUGUST 6 WHICH TOGETHER FORM A LONG STREAM FOR A FEW DAYS, AFTER WHICH THE WHOLE DIES OUT RAPIDLY. 15646 19480803 19480815 WHEN FIRST SEEN, A PAIR OF LARGE ELONGATED COMPOSITE SPOTS. ON AUGUST 7 THEY BEGIN TO BREAK UP, THE GROUP BECOMING A STREAM WHOSE LARGEST COMPONENT IS THE LEADER. BY THE TIME THE LIMB IS REACHED, THE GROUP HAS SIMPLIFIED TO A PAIR OF SPOTS. 15647 19480804 19480806 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON AUGUST 4; A SINGLE ONE ON AUGUST 6. 15648 19480804 19480807 RETURN OF GROUP 15613. A SMALL SPOT. 15649 19480806 19480818 RETURN OF GROUP 15611. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A PAIR OF SMALL COMPANIONS ON AUGUST 17. 15650 19480810 19480819 A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING FORWARDS FROM THE ORIGINAL POSITION. 15651 19480810 19480821 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 15652 19480811 19480818 RETURN OF GROUP 15617. A PERSISTENT SMALL SPOT. 15653 19480812 19480814 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 15654 19480812 19480824 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY A SMALL COMPANION UNITL AUGUST 16. DURING THE NEXT FEW DAYS, THE REGULAR SPOT GROWS INTO AMODERATE-SIZED COMPOSITE WHICH COLLAPSES RAPIDLY AFTER AUGUST 21. 15655 19480813 19480824 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL AUGUST 20. ON THE NEXT DAY, SEVERAL CLOSER COMPANIONS APPEAR WHICH HAVE GONE AGAIN BY AUGUST 23. 15656 19480814 19480819 SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15657 19480814 19480818 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A TINY COMPANION ON AUGUST 16. 15659 19480815 19480817 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 15660 19480815 19480823 RETURN OF GROUP 15618. A LITTLE SPOT. 15661 19480815 19480825 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW CLOSE COMPANIONS WHICH DRIFT AWAY ON AUGUST 19. THE GROUP THUS BECOMES A STREAM WHICH IS STEEPLY INCLINED TO THE SUN'S EQUATOR. THE GROUP DIES OUT RAPIDLY AFTER AUGUST 22. 15662 19480816 19480827 MARKED CHANGES ARE SEEN CENTRED AROUND A SINGLE SPOT. 15663 19480816 19480825 RETURN OF GROUP 15625. A DIMINISHING SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. 15664 19480816 19480822 WITH GROUP 15667, A RETURN OF GROUP 15619: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON AUGUST 22, WHEN THERE IS A TINY CLUSTER. 15665 19480817 19480828 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF COMPANIONS FROM AUGUST 18-26. 15666 19480817 19480828 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15667 19480817 19480829 WITH GROUP 15664, A RETURN OF GROUP 15619: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS. 15668 19480818 19480822 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON AUGUST 18-20; A STRING OF FOUR SMALL SPOTS ON THE NEXT TWO DAYS. 15669 19480819 19480831 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 28-30. 15670 19480821 19480901 A SMALL SPOT UNTIL AUGUST 25, AFTER WHICH A MARKED INCREASE IN ACTIVITY OCCURS, RESULTING IN THE FORMATION OF A BI-POLAR GROUP. THE FOLLOWER TEMPORARILY SPLITS INTO TWO ON AUGUST 28. 15671 19480822 19480825 A SMALL SPOT. 15672 19480823 19480824 A TINY SPOT. 15673 19480823 19480828 A SMALL SPOT. 15674 19480823 19480901 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS WHICH SOON GROW INTO A BI-POLAR GROUP. THIS BEGINS TO BREAK UP AFTER A FEW DAYS AND IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15675 19480824 19480905 RETURN OF GROUP 15638. A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 15676 19480825 19480828 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 15677 19480827 19480828 THREE TINY SPOTS ON AUGUST 27; A PAIR ON AUGUST 28. 15678 19480828 19480902 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, FORMING BEHIND GROUP 15670. 15679 19480829 19480908 RETURN OF GROUP 15643. A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT CLOSELY PRECEDING GROUP 15680. 15680 19480829 19480909 A STREAM, LED BY A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 8. 15681 19480830 19480909 A BI-POLAR GROUP, DEVELOPING FROM A FEW TINY SPOTS ON AUGUST 30. THE LEADER SOON BECOMES A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WHILE THE FOLLOWER IS OF COMPOSITE STRUCTURE AND DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 15682 19480831 19480905 A SMALL SPOT. 15683 19480902 19480903 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 15684 19480902 19480903 RETURN OF GROUP 15649: THIRD APPEARANCE. A TINY SPOT. 15685 19480904 19480908 A TYPICAL BI-POLAR GROUP SUDDENLY FORMING IN FRONT OF GROUP 15681. 15686 19480908 19480913 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 8-11; PROBABLY A NEW SPOT FURTHER SOUTH ON SEPTEMBER 12-13. 15687 19480908 19480913 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 15688 19480908 19480918 RETURN OF GROUP 15655. A SMALL SLOWLY-DIMINISHING SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 15689 19480909 19480915 A SHORT STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A DOT WHEN FIRST SEEN NEAR THE C.M. 15690 19480909 19480918 A SMALL DOUBLE SPOT WITH COMPANIONS AFTER SEPTEMBER 12 FORMING A CLUSTER WHICH SOON DIES OUT. 15691 19480910 19480921 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT, LEADING A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, WHICH INCREASE IN AREA UNTIL SEPTEMBER 15. THE WHOLE GROUP IS DECLINING AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 15692 19480911 19480921 A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH SOON BREAK UP INTO AN INDEFINITE GROUP COMBINING WITH SMALL SPOTS WHICH FORM SOUTHWARDS. 15693 19480912 19480913 A TINY SPOT. 15694 19480912 19480913 A TINY SPOT. 15695 19480912 19480924 AT FIRST, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A MAINLY PENUMBRAL STRUCTURE. THIS FOLLOWING PART INCREASES IN AREA AND BECOMES A TRAIN OF LOOSELY-KNIT COMPOSITE SPOTS WHICH UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE. THE UMBRA OF THE LEADER DIVIDES INTO TWO UNEQUAL PARTS AFTER SEPTEMBER 17. 15696 19480913 19480914 A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 13; A FEW SCATTERED SPOTS ON THE NEXT DAY. 15697 19480913 19480925 RETURN OF GROUPS 15664 AND 15667: FIFTH APPEARANCE. A PAIR OF WIDELY-SEPARATED SMALL SPOTS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 19 WHEN A COMPOSITE SPOT SUDDENLY APPEARS BETWEEN THEM. ON SEPTEMBER 22 THE GROUP HAS BECOME A LONG STRING OF SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADING TWO REMAIN AFTER SEPTEMBER 24. 15698 19480913 19480925 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL VARIABLE COMPANIONS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 22. 15699 19480915 19480919 A TINY SPOT, IMMEDIATELY NP THE LEADER OF GROUP 15691, FROM WHICH IT DRIFTS AWAY. 15700 19480915 19480925 A MEDIUM-SIZED COMPOSITE SPOT, FORMING BEHIND GROUP 15695. 15701 19480915 19480916 A SMALL SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 15; A PAIR ON SEPTEMBER 16. 15702 19480915 19480926 A MINOR SURGE OF SPOT ACTIVITY IN A REGION MARKED EARLIER NEAR THE EAST LIMB BY A SMALL SPOT. 15703 19480916 19480919 A SMALL-LIVED GROUP. 15704 19480916 19480917 A TINY SPOT. 15705 19480916 19480917 A TINY SPOT. 15706 19480916 19480928 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. THE UMBRA OF THE REGULAR SPOT IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT BRIDGE FROM SEPTEMBER 20 UNTIL SEPTEMBER 25, WHEN THE SPOT DIVIDES INTO TWO. 15707 19480916 19480922 A FEW TINY SPOTS N GROUP 15706. 15708 19480917 19480928 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING INTO A BI-POLAR GROUP WITH A MAXIMUM ON SEPTEMBER 23. THE FOLLOWER DIES OUT, LEAVING THE LEADER ALONE AT THE WEST LIMB. 15709 19480920 19480921 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15710 19480920 19480924 SMALL SPOTS. 15711 19480920 19480923 A FEW SMALL SPOTS NORTH OF GROUP 15695. 15712 19480920 19480928 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS GROWING INTO A COMPLEX STREAM AS THE REGION PASSES OUT OF SIGHT AT THE WEST LIMB. 15713 19480920 19480924 A SMALL SPOT. 15714 19480921 19480922 A SMALL SPOT. 15715 19480921 19480924 A SMALL SPOT. 15716 19480922 19480924 SMALL SPOTS, ONE REMAINING ON SEPTEMBER 24. 15717 19480922 19480928 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15718 19480922 19481004 RETURN OF GROUP 15685. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH AN OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANION AND MORE DEFINITE SPOTS LATER, BOTH PRECEDING AND FOLLOWING THE PARENT SPOT. 15719 19480924 19480930 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS; ONE SPOT REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 29. 15720 19480924 19480926 A TINY SPOT. 15721 19480924 19480930 A SMALL SPOT DECREASING TO A DOT. 15722 19480924 19481006 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A CLOSE COMPANION UNTIL SEPTEMBER 28. 15723 19480925 19480926 A TINY SPOT. 15724 19480925 19481002 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A PAIR OF TINY COMPANIONS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 28. 15725 19480928 19480930 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 28; A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 29-30. 15726 19480928 19481003 A PAIR OF SPOTS, THE FOLLOWER BEING THE FIRST TO BREAK UP. 15727 19480928 19481003 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT. 15728 19480930 19481006 A TINY SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 30 AND ANOTHER 3 1/2 DEGREES AWAY ON OCTOBER 1; ON THE NEXT DAY NEW ACTIVITY OCCURS IN THE ORIGINAL POSITION RESULTING IN A STREAM OF SPOTS. THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT. 15729 19480930 19481005 A SMALL UNSTABLE GROUP. 15730 19480930 19481007 A STREAM DEVELOPING RAPIDLY AND CONSISTING OF A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT WITH A TRAIN WHICH IS BECOMING MORE COMPACT AS THE GROUP PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 15731 19481001 19481002 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15732 19481003 19481009 A SMALL GROUP OF VARIABLE SPOTS, WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON OCTOBER 5. 15733 19481004 19481005 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 4; A SINGLE ONE ON OCTOBER 5. 15734 19481004 19481016 A SMALL SPOT, WHICH BEGINS TO BREAK UP BY OCTOBER 9; ON OCTOBER 14 THERE IS AN INCREASE IN AREA, FOLLOWED BY A SHARP DROP ON OCTOBER 16 WHICH APPEARS TO BE REAL AND NOT DUE TO OBSCURATION EFFECTS. 15735 19481006 19481008 A SMALL SPOT. 15736 19481007 19481015 A REGULAR SPOT DIVIDING INTO TWO AND DISAPPEARING ABRUPTLY AFTER OCTOBER 13. A FEW TINY SPOTS APPEAR IN THE REAR FROM OCTOBER 11-14. 15737 19481008 19481012 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15738 19481009 19481017 A STREAM, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS AT THE WEST LIMB. THE REAR PART CONSISTS OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 15739 19481009 19481018 WITH GROUP 15740, A RETURN OF GROUP 15695. A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT, BREAKING UP AFTER OCTOBER 14 AND QUICKLY DYING OUT. 15740 19481009 19481020 WITH GROUP 15739, A RETURN OF GROUP 15695. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 15741 19481009 19481020 RETURN OF GROUP 15698. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO SMALL FOLLOWERS. 15742 19481010 19481019 A COLLECTION OF SMALL FAINT SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY OCTOBER 15. NOTHING IS SEEN ON OCTOBER 17. 15743 19481011 19481023 RETURN OF GROUP 15697: SIXTH APPEARANCE. A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, UNDERGOING ONLY SLIGHT CHANGES, BUT SLOWLY DIMINISHING AFTER ABOUT OCTOBER 15. 15744 19481012 19481013 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON OCTOBER 12; A SINGLE SPOT ON OCTOBER 13. 15745 19481012 19481018 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 16. 15746 19481012 19481023 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, THE LEADER ALONE REMAINING BY OCTOBER 21. 15747 19481013 19481016 A PAIR OF SMALL BROKEN SPOTS. 15748 19481013 19481024 RETURN OF GROUP 15708. A SMALL SPOT UNTIL OCTOBER 20. NOTHING IS SEEN ON THE NEXT DAY, BUT ON OCTOBER 22 A PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARS IN THE SAME POSITION. 15749 19481013 19481025 WITH GROUP 15751, A RETURN OF GROUP 15706. A REGULAR SPOT. ON OCTOBER 18, SOME SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR SOME DISTANCE BEHIND BUT DIE OUT AGAIN BY OCTOBER 24. 15750 19481014 19481019 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 15751 19481014 19481017 WITH GROUP 15749, A RETURN OF GROUP 15706. A SMALL SPOT. 15752 19481016 19481017 A SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 16; A CLOSE PAIR ON OCTOBER 17. 15753 19481018 19481024 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT ON OCTOBER 18; A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 21-24. 15754 19481018 19481024 A SMALL SPOT. 15755 19481019 19481023 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A PAIR OF TINY COMPANIONS ON OCTOBER 20. 15756 19481020 19481022 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15757 19481020 19481022 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS; ONE SPOT REMAINS ON OCTOBER 22. 15758 19481020 19481027 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT. 15759 19481020 19481024 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15760 19481020 19481022 RETURN OF GROUP 15718: THIRD APPEARANCE. A LITTLE SPOT. 15761 19481021 19481022 A SMALL GROUP DEVELOPING SP GROUP 15743. 15762 19481021 19481022 A TINY SPOT. 15763 19481021 19481102 RETURN OF GROUP 15730. A LARGE REGULAR SPOT WHOSE UMBRA BECOMES ELONGATED AND, AFTER OCTOBER 27, IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE". A SMALL LATITUDE DRIFT TOWARDS THE EQUATOR IS SHOWN AFTER OCTOBER 26. 15764 19481022 19481026 A TINY SPOT NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 24. 15765 19481022 19481030 A STREAM GROWING QUICKLY. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AFTER A FEW DAYS, WHILE THE FOLLOWING PART REMAINS A COLLECTION OF SMALL SPOTS UNDERGOING CONSIDERABLE CHANGES. 15766 19481023 19481030 A FEW TINY SPOTS, FIRST SEEN ON OCTOBER 23, DEVELOPING INTO A SMALL STREAM WHOSE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 15767 19481023 19481030 SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15768 19481024 19481025 A GROUP DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB; A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 24 AND A PAIR ON THE NEXT DAY. 15769 19481025 19481029 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ORIGINATING FROM A SINGLE SPOT ON OCTOBER 25. 15770 19481027 19481102 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 15771 19481029 19481102 A PAIR OF GROWING SPOTS, WITH A MAXIMUM ON OCTOBER 31. 15772 19481029 19481104 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 29 AND 30; A SINGLE ONE ON THE OTHER DAYS, NOTHING HOWEVER BEING SEEN ON NOVEMBER 3. 15773 19481029 19481109 A SMALL SPOT UNTIL OCTOBER 31, AFTER WHICH A STREAM APPEARS. THE USUAL REGULAR SPOT IS THE FOLLOWER IN THIS CASE, NOT THE LEADER WHICH IS REPRESENTED BY NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS. THE APPEARANCE OF THE STREAM ALTERS AS IT DIES OUT. 15774 19481031 19481101 A SMALL SPOT. 15775 19481101 19481106 A PAIR OF GROWING SPOTS MERGING INTO A SMALL COMPOSITE ENTITY. 15776 19481101 19481104 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 2. 15777 19481103 19481106 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 15778 19481103 19481105 A SMALL SPOT. 15779 19481103 19481114 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW SMALL VARIABLE FOLLOWERS THAT HAVE DIED OUT BY NOVEMBER 10; BY THIS TIME THE REGULAR SPOT HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLUSTER WHICH QUICKLY DIES OUT. 15780 19481104 19481115 A LONG VARIABLE STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, FOR MOST OF THE TIME, IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 15781 19481105 19481108 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE COMPONENT REMAINS ON NOVEMBER 8. 15782 19481105 19481106 TWO TINY SPOTS. 15783 19481106 19481111 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 6; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 11. 15784 19481106 19481117 A REGULAR SPOT WHOSE UMBRA IS DIVIDED INTO TWO BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" BETWEEN NOVEMBER 10 AND 16. 15785 19481107 19481115 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 15786 19481107 19481111 RETURN OF GROUP 15743: SEVENTH APPEARANCE. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15787 19481108 19481110 A SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 8 AND 9; A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL NOVEMBER 13. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL NOVEMBER 16, WHEN FRESH ACTIVITY RESULTS IN THE FORMATION OF A COMPOSITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS. 15789 19481111 19481115 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE SPOT REMAINS AFTER NOVEMBER 13. 15790 19481112 19481115 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 15784. 15791 19481112 19481113 A SMALL SPOT. 15792 19481112 19481124 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS WHICH MULTIPLY AFTER NOVEMBER 15. WHEN FULLY DEVELOPED, THE GROUP CONSISTS OF AN EXTENDED CLUSTER WITH THE REGULAR SPOT NEAR THE CENTRE. 15793 19481113 19481124 RETURN OF GROUP 15769. A SPOT WITH VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 15794 19481115 19481125 A CLOSELY-PACKED GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH SPREADS OUT AND SLOWLY DECLINES. 15795 19481115 19481122 A DIMINISHING COMPOSITE SPOT, WITH SMALL COMPANIONS ON NOVEMBER 20-22. 15796 19481117 19481125 RETURN OF GROUP 15763: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT DYING OUT BY NOVEMBER 22. A SINGLE SPOT APPEARS NEARBY ON NOVEMBER 23-25. 15797 19481118 19481120 A GROUP GROWING NEAR THE WEST LIMB SO THAT SUBSEQUENT DEVELOPMENT IS LOST. 15798 19481118 19481126 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15799 19481119 19481126 A DECREASING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, WHOSE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AFTER NOVEMBER 24. 15800 19481120 19481121 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 20; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 21. 15801 19481121 19481127 A STRING OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, IN FRONT OF GROUP 15802. NOTHING IS SEEN ON NOVEMBER 22. 15802 19481122 19481130 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, DYING OUT RATHER SUDDENLY. 15803 19481123 19481130 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT, WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 15804 19481124 19481205 A TINY SPOT UNTIL NOVEMBER 25. ON THE NEXT DAY, A REGULAR SPOT HAS FORMED FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15805 19481124 19481128 A SMALL SPOT. 15806 19481125 19481129 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT ON NOVEMBER 25; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 28 AND 29. 15807 19481125 19481205 CONTINUED FEEBLE ACTIVITY REPRESENTED BY ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15808 19481201 19481208 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE SPOT REMAINS BY DECEMBER 6. 15809 19481201 19481211 A DECREASING SPOT DYING OUT. 15810 19481203 19481213 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT IN ITS FINAL STAGE. 15811 19481204 19481211 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE COMPONENT REMAINS AFTER DECEMBER 8. 15812 19481204 19481216 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION UNTIL DECEMBER 12. 15813 19481206 19481209 A SMALL GROUP OF A FEW SPOTS, SUDDENLY APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15814 19481206 19481210 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 15815 19481206 19481218 RETURN OF GROUP 15788: FOURTH APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WHOSE UMBRA IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT 'BRIDGE' AFTER DECEMBER 12. 15816 19481208 19481210 A SMALL SPOT. 15817 19481208 19481214 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS UNTIL DECEMBER 10. NOTHING IS SEEN ON DECEMBER 11, BUT A TINY SPOT IS THERE ON DECEMBER 12-14. 15818 19481208 19481220 A REVIVAL RATHER THAN A RETURN OF GROUP 15792 OF THE PREVIOUS ROTATION. A GIANT STREAM PAST MAXIMUM DEVELOPMENT. THE LEADER IS A FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOT WHEREAS THE FOLLOWER, COMPOSITE AT FIRST, SOON BREAKS UP INTO A NUMBER OF VARIABLE SCATTERED SPOTS. 15819 19481212 19481215 A SMALL GROWING GROUP OF VARIABLE SPOTS, APPEARING SOUTH OF GROUP 15812. 15820 19481212 19481222 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER DIES OUT BY DECEMBER 19. AT THE SAME TIME, FRESH ACTIVITY OCCURS AROUND THE LEADER, AND ON DECEMBER 20 THE GROUP AGAIN CONSISTS OF A PAIR OF SPOTS. 15821 19481213 19481222 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS, IN WHICH THE LEADER GROWS INTO A MODERATE-SIZED REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS AT THE WEST LIMB. 15822 19481214 19481219 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, NF GROUP 15818. 15823 19481214 19481225 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS DYING OUT BY DECEMBER 19. ON THE NEXT DAY A NEW GROUP HAS APPEARED, WHICH BECOMES A SHORT STREAM WHOSE LEADER IS A COMPOSITE SPOT. 15824 19481215 19481224 A TINY SPOT ON DECEMBER 15. DURING THE NEXT FEW DAYS A STREAM DEVELOPS CONSISTING OF A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 22. 15825 19481215 19481226 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM TWO TINY SPOTS FIRST SEEN ON DECEMBER 20, THE LEADING PORTION OF THE STREAM HAS BECOME AN ELONGATED COMPOSITE STRUCTURE. THIS BREAKS UP AND APPEARS TO BE DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15826 19481215 19481227 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS DEVELOPING RAPIDLY FROM A SMALL PAIR WHEN FIRST SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB. THE INTERMIDIATE SPOTS HAVE DIED OUT LEAVING THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER, BY DECEMBER 24. 15827 19481215 19481217 A TINY SPOT. 15828 19481215 19481218 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS ON DECEMBER 18. 15829 19481216 19481217 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON DECEMBER 16; A SINGLE SPOT ON DECEMBER 17. 15830 19481218 19481221 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 15831 19481218 19481230 A GREAT ACTIVE STREAM. STARTING FROM A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS NEAR THE EAST LIMB, AN EXTENSIVE STREAM RAPIDLY DEVELOPS WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER AND ANOTHER AS FOLLOWER; BETWEEN THEM ARE NUMEROUS SPOTS. IN ADDITION TO THE GROWTH CHANGES, AN UNUSUAL METAMORPHOSIS OCCURS ON DECEMBER 23-25 IN THE FRONT HALF OF THE STREAM, AND ON DECEMBER 25 THE LEADER SPOT BY ACCRETION HAS GATHERED AN EXTENDED PENUMBRAL APPENDAGE CONTAINING SEVERAL NUCLEI. BY DECEMBER 27, HOWEVER, THIS STRUCTURE HAS DISINTEGRATED LEAVING THE CIRCULAR FORM OF THE LEADER UNDISTURBED. IN MARKED CONTRAST TO THESE NOTABLE CHANGES, THE FOLLOWER REMAINS ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED IN OUTLINE, THOUGH IT BECOMES ELONGATED IN A LONGITUDINAL DIRECTION AND DEVELOPS A NUMBER OF NUCLEI. 15832 19481219 19481221 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 15833 19481220 19481222 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS ON DECEMBER 22. 15834 19481220 19490101 A SMALL, STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15835 19481221 19481228 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS NF GROUP 15826. 15836 19481223 19481225 A TINY EQUATORIAL SPOT. 15837 19481223 19481227 INTERMITTENT. A TINY SPOT, EXCEPT ON DECEMBER 26, WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 15838 19481223 19490104 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15839 19481224 19481225 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15840 19481224 19481228 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS, EXCEPT ON DECEMBER 27 WHEN ONLY A SINGLE SPOT IS SEEN. 15841 19481224 19490105 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRAIN OF SMALL FOLLOWERS. FROM DECEMBER 30, SMALL SPOTS MULTIPLY NEAR THE LEADER TO FORM AN ATTENDANT CLUSTER UNTIL JANUARY 3. 15842 19481225 19490101 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 30 AND 31. 15843 19481225 19490105 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW SMALL FOLLOWERS UNTIL DECEMBER 28. BY THE NEXT DAY, THESE COMPANIONS HAVE GROWN AND SOON JOIN WITH THE REGULAR SPOT TO FORM AN ELONGATED COMPOSITE SPOT. THIS, HOWEVER, BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON JANUARY 2. 15844 19481227 19490102 A LITTLE SPOT, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 31. A TINY SPOT REAPPEARS ON JANUARY 1 BEHIND THE ORIGINAL POSITION. 15845 19481228 19481231 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, P GROUP 15841. 15846 19481228 19490108 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 15847 19481229 19481231 A TINY SPOT. 15848 19481229 19481231 A TINY SPOT. 15849 19481230 19490107 INTERMITTENT. A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 15850 19490101 19490102 A SMALL SPOT. 15851 19490101 19490106 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 15852 19490103 19490114 RETURN OF GROUP 15815: FIFTH APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT WHOSE UMBRA IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" UNTIL JANUARY 8. 15853 19490103 19490112 A SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT BETWEEN JANUARY 5 AND JANUARY 9, WHEN THERE IS A STREAM. 15854 19490104 19490116 WITH GROUP 15855, A RETURN OF GROUP 15818. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS ON JANUARY 6. 15855 19490105 19490112 WITH GROUP 15854, A RETURN OF GROUP 15818. A SMALL STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, FORMING IMMEDIATELY 0 GROUP 15954, AND DYING OUT RAPIDLY AFTER JANUARY 9. 15856 19490106 19490118 RETURN OF GROUP 15821. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON JANUARY 13, 16 AND 17. 15857 19490107 19490114 A BI-POLAR GROUP WHICH FORMS IMMEDIATELY S GROUP 15854, AND DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 15858 19490108 19490113 A SPOT OF RAPID GROWTH AND DECAY. 15859 19490109 19490114 RETURN OF GROUP 15823. AN UNSTABLE GROUP. 15860 19490111 19490117 ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 15861 19490111 19490122 A GROUP OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. THE LEADING PART BECOMES COMPOSITE AND ALONE REMAINS AT THE WEST LIMB. 15862 19490112 19490116 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 15. 15863 19490113 19490120 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS WITH MAXIMUM AREA ON JANUARY 16. 15864 19490113 19490115 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 14. 15865 19490113 19490126 RETURN OF GROUP 15831. A REGULAR SPOT WHICH BEGINS TO DECLINE AFTER PASSING THE C.M. 15866 19490114 19490125 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, IMMEDIATELY N GROUP 15865. 15867 19490115 19490118 A SMALL SPOT. 15868 19490115 19490122 A GROUP WHICH FORMS NEAR THE C.M. AND STEADILY INCREASES IN AREA THROUGHOUT ITS TRANSIT. 15869 19490115 19490124 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 15870 19490116 19490119 A TINY SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JANUARY 16 AND 19. 15871 19490116 19490129 A LARGE GROUP, IN WHICH THE LEADER IS AN ELONGATED COMPOSITE SPOT, WITH ITS UMBRA DIVIDED INTO TWO BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE". THIS SPOT TAKES ON A MORE CIRCULAR SHAPE FOR TWO OR THREE DAYS, BEFORE BECOMING ELONGATED AGAIN. THE FOLLOWER IS A SMALLER COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH IS BREAKING UP AS IT PASSES FROM VIEW. 15872 19490117 19490123 A COMPARATIVELY SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 15873 19490117 19490126 A SMALL SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON JANUARY 20. 15874 19490118 19490119 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 15875 19490118 19490128 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH BEGINS TO DISINTEGRATE ON JANUARY 23 AND DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. ON JANUARY 26, HOWEVER, THERE IS A TEMPORARY INCREASE IN AREA. 15876 19490119 19490121 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 15877 19490119 19490124 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 23. 15878 19490119 19490125 A TINY SPOT, EXCEPT ON JANUARY 20 WHEN THREE SPOTS ARE PRESENT. NOTHING IS SEEN ON JANUARY 23. 15879 19490121 19490122 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JANUARY 21; A SINGLE SPOT ON JANUARY 22. 15880 19490122 19490128 A SHORT STREAM APPEARING IMMEDIATELY S THE LEADER OF GROUP 15871. 15881 19490123 19490128 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, F GROUP 15877, WITH WHICH IT MAY BE ASSOCIATED. 15882 19490124 19490125 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 24; A PAIR ON THE NEXT DAY. 15883 19490125 19490131 ONE OR TWO SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 15884 19490125 19490126 A TINY SPOT. 15885 19490125 19490206 A REGULAR SPOT WHOSE UMBRA, ON JANUARY 29, HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS. ON THE NEXT DAY THESE PARTS BEGIN TO SEPARATE, THE WHOLE EVENTUALLY FORMING A BI-POLAR GROUP WHICH DIES OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15886 19490126 19490127 A SMALL SPOT. 15887 19490127 19490208 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADING PORTION COALESCES INTO A LARGE COMPOSITE STRUCTURE, WHILE THE FOLLOWING PORTION DIMINISHES TO A SMALL SPOT. 15888 19490128 19490206 A SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 28 AND 29; NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL FEBRUARY 2 WHEN A SHORT STREAM APPEARS, LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 15889 19490129 19490203 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 2. 15890 19490129 19490130 A SMALL SPOT. 15891 19490130 19490210 A LARGE ELONGATED SPOT WHEN FIRST SEEN. DURING THE NEXT FEW DAYS OTHER SPOTS APPEAR IN ITS REAR TO FORM A STREAM WHICH UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE AS IT DIES OUT. THE WHOLE IS INCLINED FAIRLY STEEPLY TO THE EQUATOR. 15892 19490130 19490212 A RAPIDLY-DEVELOPING COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH, BY FEBRUARY 3, HAS BEGUN TO DIVIDE INTO THREE MAIN PORTIONS. LATER, THE LEADING PART IS A LARGE CIRCULAR SPOT WITH A MULTIPLE UMBRA, AND THE OTHER TWO PARTS ARE COMPOSITE. THE LATTER BOTH DIMINISH AS THE GROUP PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15893 19490201 19490203 FOUR TINY APOTS ON FEBRUARY 1; TWO ON FEBRUARY 2; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 3. 15894 19490201 19490205 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 5. 15895 19490201 19490211 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 15896 19490202 19490203 A TINY SPOT. 15897 19490203 19490204 A TINY SPOT. 15898 19490203 19490214 A FEW PERSISTENT FAINT SPOTS. 15899 19490203 19490214 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A STABLE REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS AFTER FEBRUARY 10. 15900 19490204 19490210 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON FEBRUARY 7. 15901 19490205 19490211 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 7 AND 8. 15902 19490206 19490214 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS UNTIL FEBRUARY 11; LATER, A SHORT GROWING STREAM. 15903 19490206 19490218 RETURN OF GROUP 15868. A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 13. ON THE NEXT DAY THIS SPOT BEGINS TO GROW, AND THEN IT BECOMES COMPOSITE. 15904 19490207 19490210 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 10 AND 11; A PAIR ON FEBRUARY 8 AND 9. 15905 19490207 19490213 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 15906 19490207 19490219 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15907 19490208 19490213 A SMALL SPOT. 15908 19490208 19490220 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING INTO A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE BY FEBRUARY 11. THE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT BY FEBRUARY 17, THE LEADER REMAINING A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15909 19490209 19490213 A SMALL SPOT. 15910 19490210 19490216 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 15911 19490210 19490216 A SHORT STREAM LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 15912 19490210 19490212 RETURN OF GROUP 15866. A SMALL SPOT. 15913 19490210 19490221 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, WHOSE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND IS THE LONGEST-LIVED. THE FOLLOWER UNDERGOES MINOR CHANGES AND DIES OUT AFTER FEBRUARY 18. 15914 19490211 19490223 A FAIRLY LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 11. THE LEADER, AT FIRST A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, BECOMES COMPLEX ON FEBRUARY 17 AND 18 BEFORE REFORMING INTO A REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER HAS DEVELOPED INTO A FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOT BY FEBRUARY 17, WHILE THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS HAVE BECOME COMPOSITE BY FEBRUARY 18, BEFORE BREAKING UP AND DYING OUT AS THE GROUP PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15915 19490212 19490218 A SMALL SPOT NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 16. 15916 19490213 19490217 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15917 19490213 19490225 RETURN OF GROUP 15871. A REGULAR SPOT. ON FEBRUARY 16 IT BEGINS TO SHED PIECES OF ITS PENUMBRA TO FORM COMPANIONS, THE LARGEST OF WHICH PRECEDES IT. 15918 19490214 19490217 A TINY SPOT. 15919 19490214 19490225 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT UNTIL FEBRUARY 18; ON THE NEXT DAY OTHER SPOTS APPEAR IN THE REAR TO FORM A STREAM OF WHICH ONLY A SINGLE SMALL COMPONENT REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 22. 15920 19490214 19490227 A STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER SOON BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING PART REMAINS A COLLECTION OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT AS THE LIMB IS REACHED. 15921 19490215 19490217 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 17. 15922 19490215 19490225 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 19. 15923 19490217 19490220 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 15924 19490218 19490223 A PAIR OF SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 2. 15925 19490218 19490223 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 15926 19490218 19490228 ONE OR TWO SMALL, FAINT BUT PERSISTENT SPOTS WHICH ARE NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 24. 15927 19490219 19490220 A SMALL SPOT. 15928 19490219 19490225 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 19 AND 25; A PAIR ON FEBRUARY 24. 15929 19490219 19490302 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15930 19490220 19490224 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, APPEARING IMMEDIATELY P GROUP 15917. 15931 19490220 19490221 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15932 19490222 19490307 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. BY MARCH 5 ONLY THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER, BOTH REGULAR SPOTS, REMAIN. 15933 19490224 19490225 A PAIR OF SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY N GROUP 15929. 15934 19490224 19490305 A BI-POLAR GROUP DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS APPEARING P GROUP 15932. BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER BECOME COMPOSITE IN STRUCTURE. 15935 19490226 19490309 RETURN OF GROUP 15892. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 15936 19490226 19490310 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. BETWEEN MARCH 4 AND 7 IT ALMOST BECOMES ATTACHED TO THE REAR OF GROUP 15939, WHICH IMMEDIATELY PRECEDES IT. 15937 19490227 19490302 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT EXCEPT ON FEBRUARY 28, WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 15938 19490227 19490309 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT, WITH A PAIR OF TINY COMPANIONS ON FEBRUARY 28. 15939 19490227 19490309 A STREAM CONSISTING OF TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS DEVELOPING FROM A SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 27. BETWEEN MARCH 4 AND 7 THE FOLLOWING PART ALMOST JOINS UP WITH GROUP 15936. FROM MARCH 7, THE GROUP DECLINES RAPIDLY AND CONSISTS OF A REGULAR SPOT AND COMPANION BY THE TIME THE LIMB IS REACHED. 15940 19490228 19490312 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS UNTIL MARCH 2. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL MARCH 5 WHEN A STREAM BEGINS TO DEVELOP, CONSISTING OF A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA AND FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS WHICH DIE OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 15941 19490301 19490305 A SMALL SPOT. 15942 19490301 19490308 RETURN OF GROUP 15902. A SMALL SPOT. 15943 19490302 19490314 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH VARIABLE COMPANIONS AFTER MARCH 7. 15944 19490303 19490315 A CLUSTER, WHICH COALESCES INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT ON MARCH 9. ON THE NEXT DAY IT HAS BROKEN UP AGAIN AND IS DIMINISHING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 15945 19490305 19490307 A TINY SPOT. 15946 19490305 19490311 A SMALL SPOT UNTIL MARCH 8, AFTER WHICH SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR AND A SHORT STREAM IS FORMED. 15947 19490306 19490307 A SMALL SPOT. 15948 19490307 19490319 A DOUBLE SPOT WHICH SOON BECOMES AN ELONGATED SPOT WITH TRIPLE UMBRA. ON MARCH 15 IT IS AGAIN DIVIDED INTO TWO. 15949 19490307 19490319 RETURN OF GROUP 15908. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 15950 19490308 19490311 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 15951 19490308 19490317 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT ON MARCH 8. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 15952 19490309 19490312 A PAIR OF SPOTS, APPEARING FAIRLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 15953 19490309 19490316 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS AFTER MARCH 13. 15954 19490309 19490321 RETURN OF GROUP 15914. A REGULAR SPOT, WHOSE UMBRA BECOMES DIVIDED BY BRIGHT "BRIDGES",FIRSTLY INTO TWO, AND THEN INTO THREE. THERE ARE OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 15955 19490310 19490322 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 15956 19490311 19490313 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 15957 19490311 19490312 A TINY SPOT. 15958 19490312 19490319 A SMALL SPOT. 15959 19490313 19490316 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MARCH 15. 15960 19490313 19490316 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 15961 19490313 19490324 A BI-POLAR GROUP. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT, WHOSE UMBRA HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO BY MARCH 22. THE FOLLOWER IS LESS STABLE AND IS BREAKING UP BY MARCH 20. 15962 19490313 19490325 RETURN OF GROUP 15917; THIRD APPEARANCE. A LARGE SPOT, ROUGHLY CIRCULAR. 15963 19490314 19490321 A FEW SMALL SPOTS UNTIL MARCH 18 AND THEN A COMPOSITE MASS. 15964 19490314 19490316 RETURN OF GROUP 15920. AN ELONGATED SPOT, WITH A BROKEN OUTLINE BETWEEN MARCH 17 AND 23. 15965 19490314 19490317 A REGULAR SPOT WITH VARIABLE COMPANIONS; ON MARCH 22 THE PRINCIPAL COMPONENT BEGINS TO BREAK UP. 15966 19490315 19490320 A STREAM OF INCREASING AREA. 15967 19490315 19490325 A FEW SPOTS IN THE FORM OF A STREAM; THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS BY MARCH 23. 15968 19490317 19490318 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15969 19490318 19490328 A TINY SPOT ON MARCH 18. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL MARCH 24, WHEN A GROWING CLUSTER APPEARS. 15970 19490319 19490327 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15971 19490320 19490321 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 15972 19490320 19490322 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON THE FIRST TWO DAYS; A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 22. 15973 19490320 19490324 A PAIR OF SPOTS UNTIL MARCH 22; A SINGLE SPOT AFTERWARDS. 15974 19490320 19490330 RETURN OF GROUP 15934. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 15975 19490321 19490323 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 15976 19490321 19490402 RETURN OF GROUP 15932. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS BETWEEN MARCH 29 AND 31. 15977 19490323 19490324 A TINY SPOT. 15978 19490324 19490405 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS UNTIL APRIL 2, AFTER WHICH A SHORT STREAM DEVELOPS. THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT AND IS THE SOLE SURVIVOR AFTER APRIL 3. 15979 19490324 19490405 AN EQUATORIAL REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL CLOSE COMPANIONS. 15980 19490325 19490327 A TINY SPOT. 15981 19490325 19490402 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN BETWEEN MARCH 28 AND MARCH 30. 15982 19490326 19490327 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 26; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 15983 19490326 19490407 RETURN OF GROUP 15952. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL APRIL 1. ON THE NEXT DAY ANOTHER COMPONENT APPEARS FORMING A FAIRLY WIDELY-SEPARATED PAIR. 15984 19490327 19490401 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 29 AND 30. 15985 19490327 19490330 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON MARCH 29 WHEN THERE IS A CLUSTER. 15986 19490328 19490408 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 15987 19490328 19490404 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, DYING OUT JUST PAST THE C.M. 15988 19490329 19490405 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL APRIL 1. NOTHING IS SEEN ON APRIL 2, AFTER WHICH A SMALL GROWING REGULAR SPOT APPEARS. 15989 19490329 19490408 A SMALL, NEARLY REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW COMPANIONS FROM MARCH 31 TO APRIL 2. 15990 19490330 19490410 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL APRIL 1. THEN THERE APPEARS A CLUSTER WHICH HAS BECOME COMPOSITE BY APRIL 6. 15991 19490330 19490410 RETURN OF GROUP 15943. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT UNTIL APRIL 5. ON THE NEXT DAY A STREAM APPEARS, OF WHICH THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT IS THE LEADER. 15992 19490401 19490412 SMALL SPOTS WHICH UNDERGO CONSIDERABLE CHANGES. 15993 19490401 19490411 RETURN OF GROUP 15951. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A PRECEDING COMPANION UNTIL APRIL 5. 15994 19490402 19490404 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 15995 19490402 19490408 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 15996 19490402 19490413 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 15997 19490403 19490405 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 15998 19490404 19490410 A STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE C.M. THE LEADER SOON BECOMES REGULAR AND IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT; THE FOLLOWING PART IS A RAPIDLY-DECLINING TRAIN OF SPOTS. 15999 19490404 19490405 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 4; A SINGLE SPOT ON APRIL 5. 16000 19490404 19490408 RETURN OF GROUP 15949; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 16001 19490406 19490418 RETURN OF GROUP 15955. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16002 19490408 19490417 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER SOON BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS AFTER APRIL 14. 16003 19490408 19490416 A SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOT. 16004 19490409 19490415 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16005 19490409 19490411 RETURN OF GROUP 15961. A SMALL SPOT. 16006 19490410 19490418 RETURN OF GROUP 15962; FOURTH APPEARANCE. A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH DISINTEGRATES. 16007 19490411 19490417 TWO TINY SPOTS, WHICH IN TWO DAYS BECOME A COMPOSITE STRUCTURE. ON THE NEXT DAY THIS HAS BROKEN UP INTO A STREAM WHICH IN TURN QUICKLY DIES OUT. THIS GROUP GOES THROUGH ITS WHOLE LIFE-HISTORY IN SEVEN DAYS. 16008 19490411 19490423 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A SLIGHTLY SMALLER COMPANION WHICH IS THE FIRST TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 16009 19490412 19490423 AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL VARIABLE COMPANIONS. THE WHOLE UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGES AND IS BREAKING UP AFTER APRIL 20. 16010 19490412 19490424 RETURN OF GROUP 15969. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH SMALL VARIABLE COMPANIONS UNTIL APRIL 21. 16011 19490415 19490416 TINY SPOTS. 16012 19490415 19490418 A SMALL SPOT. 16013 19490416 19490426 AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT WITH A SMALL COMPANION TO THE SOUTH. ON APRIL 18 THE COMPANION IS JOINED BY OTHER SMALL SPOTS AND THIS WHOLE PORTION ROTATES IN A CLOCKWISE DIRECTION TO FORM A SMALL VARIABLE STREAM. 16014 19490417 19490419 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16015 19490417 19490428 TWO OR THREE SMALL FLUCTUATING SPOTS UNTIL APRIL 20, AFTER WHICH THERE IS A VARIABLE CLUSTER WHICH DIES OUT RAPIDLY. 16016 19490417 19490429 RETURN OF GROUP 15976; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE ONLY SURVIVING COMPONENT AFTER APRIL 23. 16017 19490419 19490501 A REGULAR SPOT, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A LARGE DIMINISHING COMPANION. ON APRIL 27 OTHER SMALL SPOTS APPEAR AHEAD OF IT. 16018 19490419 19490501 A STREAM LED BY A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER IS A COLLECTION OF VARIABLE SPOTS AND BECOMES THE LARGEST COMPONENT THOUGH IT IS ALSO THE FIRST TO DIE OUT. 16019 19490420 19490421 A SMALL SPOT. 16020 19490421 19490423 A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 21; A WIDE PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16021 19490421 19490425 A SMALL SPOT. 16022 19490422 19490427 RETURN OF GROUP 15979. A SMALL SPOT. 16023 19490422 19490424 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON APRIL 22 AND 24; A PAIR ON APRIL 23. 16024 19490423 19490424 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16025 19490423 19490429 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT. 16026 19490424 19490426 A SMALL SPOT. 16027 19490424 19490503 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. THE LEADER HAS BECOME A REGULAR SPOT BY APRIL 28 AND IT THEN REMAINS STABLE. THE FOLLOWING PART IS VARIABLE AND DIES OUT AS THE LIMB IS APPROACHED. 16028 19490424 19490505 A SMALL, SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16029 19490425 19490430 A SHORT STRING OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT. 16030 19490425 19490507 RETURN OF GROUP 15998. A REGULAR SPOT. 16031 19490426 19490427 A TINY SPOT. 16032 19490428 19490429 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16033 19490429 19490511 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16034 19490430 19490502 A SMALL SPOT. 16035 19490501 19490507 A SHORT-LIVED GROUP OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 16036 19490501 19490507 A SCATTERED CLUSTER, DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS AND DISAPPEARING SUDDENLY BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16037 19490501 19490511 A STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT WHEN FIRST SEEN. THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS AT THE WEST LIMB. 16038 19490501 19490504 A TINY SPOT. 16039 19490502 19490512 A SMALL SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION; NOTHING IS SEEN ON MAY 11. 16040 19490504 19490507 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 16041 19490504 19490514 RETURN OF GROUP 16001; THIRD APPEARANCE. A PERSISTENT SMALL SPOT. 16042 19490505 19490517 A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH QUICKLY BREAKS UP; THE LARGEST PART SOON BECOMES REGULAR AND IT IS THE SOLE SURVIVOR AT THE WEST LIMB. 16043 19490506 19490508 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON MAY 7. 16044 19490507 19490512 A SHORT-LIVED VARIABLE STREAM. 16045 19490508 19490512 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 16046 19490508 19490509 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 16047 19490511 19490512 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16048 19490512 19490523 A REGULAR SPOT ACCOMPANIED BY A NUMBER OF VARIABLE COMPANIONS IN ITS REAR FROM MAY 15 TO MAY 22. 16049 19490513 19490519 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16050 19490514 19490516 A FEW VARYING SPOTS. 16051 19490515 19490524 A SMALL STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS WHICH UNDERGOES ITS WHOLE LIFE-HISTORY ON THE DISK. 16052 19490516 19490527 RETURN OF GROUP 16017. A SMALL STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A SINGLE SPOT AT THE EAST LIMB. ON MAY 23 ONLY THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER REMAIN AND ON THE NEXT DAY ONLY THE FOLLOWER. 16053 19490517 19490518 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 16054 19490517 19490523 A SMALL STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE APPEARING NEAR THE C.M. 16055 19490517 19490525 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 16056 19490517 19490528 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE LONGER-LIVED. 16057 19490520 19490521 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 16058 19490520 19490525 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MAY 23 AND 24. 16059 19490521 19490527 TWO SMALL SPOTS, APPEARING NEAR THE C.M. AND BOTH QUICKLY TAKING ON REGULAR OUTLINE. 16060 19490522 19490529 INTERMITTENT. A FEW FAINT SPOTS ON MAY 22; A TINY SPOT ON MAY 28 AND 29. 16061 19490523 19490529 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE C.M. ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY MAY 28. 16062 19490523 19490525 A TINY SPOT. 16063 19490523 19490602 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL MAY 29. 16064 19490524 19490528 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 24 AND 25. A SINGLE ONE ON MAY 28. 16065 19490524 19490526 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 16066 19490524 19490604 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS UNTIL MAY 29. 16067 19490525 19490526 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON MAY 25; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 16068 19490526 19490602 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16069 19490526 19490606 RETURN OF GROUP 16037. A STREAM, IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER SOON BECOME REGULAR SPOTS, THE FORMER BEING THE LARGER. 16070 19490527 19490606 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, SLOWLY PETERING OUT. 16071 19490529 19490606 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16072 19490529 19490609 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF TINY COMPANIONS UNTIL JUNE 4. 16073 19490601 19490611 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS WHICH INCREASES IN AREA AND BECOMES A SCATTERED CLUSTER. FROM JUNE 7, THE LEADING PORTION TAKES THE FORM OF TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS. 16074 19490601 19490613 RETURN OF GROUP 16042. A PERSISTENT SMALL SPOT. 16075 19490603 19490606 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16076 19490604 19490608 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16077 19490604 19490608 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 7. 16078 19490606 19490611 A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 6, 7 AND 10; A PAIR ON JUNE 8, 9 AND 11. ~ 16079 19490608 19490609 A SMALL SPOT. 16080 19490608 19490612 RETURN OF GROUP 16048. INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 16081 19490610 19490614 A GROUP FORMING PAST THE C.M. AND GROWING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16082 19490610 19490622 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A STRING OF SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL JUNE 17; TWO OF THESE RE-APPEAR ON JUNE 21. 16083 19490610 19490622 RETURN OF GROUP 16059. A SMALL NEARLY-REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY A FEW UNSTABLE SPOTS UNTIL JUNE 15. ON JUNE 16 THESE COMPANIONS HAVE DISAPPEARED AND A NEW FORMATION HAS APPEARED AT THE REAR. 16084 19490611 19490614 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16085 19490611 19490620 INTERMITTENT. AN UNSTABLE GROUP OF TINY SPOTS. 16086 19490612 19490616 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16087 19490612 19490613 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 12; A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 13. 16088 19490613 19490617 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 14. 16089 19490613 19490616 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JUNE 13 AND 14; A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 16. 16090 19490613 19490614 A SMALL SPOT. 16091 19490616 19490624 A SMALL SPOT. 16092 19490618 19490619 A SMALL SPOT. 16093 19490618 19490625 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 16094 19490618 19490629 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING SPOT. 16095 19490620 19490702 A REGULAR SPOT, CLOSELY FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION. 16096 19490620 19490621 A TINY SPOT. 16097 19490621 19490702 A VARIABLE STREAM, THE LEADING AND FOLLOWING PORTIONS OF WHICH COALESCE INTO COMPOSITE SPOTS FOR A FEW DAYS. ON JUNE 28 THE WHOLE GROUP HAS BROKEN UP INTO A LARGE NUMBER OF SMALL SPOTS. 16098 19490621 19490703 RETURN OF GROUP 16069; THIRD APPEARANCE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16099 19490622 19490704 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW CLOSE COMPANIONS. FROM JUNE 26 TO 29 THE SPOT IS EXTENDED IN LONGITUDE. 16100 19490623 19490626 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 25. 16101 19490623 19490703 RETURN OF GROUP 16076. A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 30 OR JULY 1. 16102 19490624 19490701 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16103 19490624 19490703 A SMALL SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 16104 19490626 19490707 RETURN OF GROUP 16073. A STREAM, CONSISTING OF A LARGE NUMBER OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT NEAR THE CENTRE AND THIS IS THE ONLY SURVIVOR AT THE WEST LIMB. 16105 19490627 19490630 A SHORT STREAM WHICH APPEARS NEAR THE WEST LIMB. IT IS FAIRLY STEEPLY INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR AND IS LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 16106 19490627 19490630 A GROWING REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL COMPANIONS. 16107 19490627 19490703 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 27. THEN NOTHING IS SEEN UNTIL A SMALL STREAM APPEARS ON JUNE 30. THIS STREAM IS INCLINED TO THE EQUATOR, AND ITS FOLLOWING PART CONSISTS OF A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 16108 19490628 19490705 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 16109 19490628 19490701 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16110 19490628 19490702 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION, QUICKLY DYING OUT. 16111 19490628 19490709 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON JULY 3. 16112 19490629 19490630 A SMALL SPOT. 16113 19490630 19490711 A SMALL SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TINY COMPANION UNTIL JULY 7; A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 10 AND 11. 16114 19490701 19490705 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JULY 2. 16115 19490703 19490704 A SMALL SPOT, APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16116 19490704 19490707 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 4 AND 6; A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 7. 16117 19490705 19490706 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 5; A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 6. 16118 19490705 19490707 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON JULY 5; A PAIR ON JULY 6 AND 7. 16119 19490705 19490713 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL JULY 10. 16120 19490706 19490710 A SHORT STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, APPEARING SUDDENLY IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE. 16121 19490706 19490708 A TINY SPOT. 16122 19490706 19490709 A SMALL SPOT, WITH TWO TINY COMPANIONS ON JULY 7. 16123 19490707 19490719 RETURN OF GROUP 16082. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16124 19490710 19490721 A BI-POLAR GROUP, OF WHICH THE LEADER SOON BECOMES A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER GROWS INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT AND THEN BREAKS UP RAPIDLY. 16125 19490711 19490712 A TINY SPOT. 16126 19490711 19490719 SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16127 19490712 19490716 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 12; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16128 19490712 19490720 A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON JULY 15, FORMING IMMEDIATELY S OF THE LEADER OF GROUP 16124. 16129 19490713 19490714 A PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16130 19490714 19490727 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16131 19490715 19490726 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS UNTIL JULY 18. 16132 19490715 19490727 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16133 19490716 19490727 A SMALL BI-POLAR GROUP, DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT AND THE LONGEST-LIVED. 16134 19490718 19490722 ONE OR TWO SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16135 19490718 19490725 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JULY 23. 16136 19490718 19490725 RETURN OF GROUP 16098; FOURTH APPEARANCE. A SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOT SEEN ONLY ON JULY 18, 19 AND 25. 16137 19490718 19490722 A SMALL SPOT. 16138 19490719 19490728 A BI-POLAR GROUP OF WHICH THE LEADER IS FIRST A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT AND FROM JULY 23 A REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER GROWS INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT, BUT BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIMINISH AFTER JULY 24. 16139 19490719 19490731 RETURN OF GROUP 16099. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A SLOW DRIFT TOWARDS THE EQUATOR. 16140 19490720 19490722 A SMALL STREAM, SUDDENLY APPEARING WEST OF THE C.M., WHICH IS LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. 16141 19490720 19490727 A FEW VARIABLE SMALL SPOTS. 16142 19490722 19490727 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16143 19490722 19490731 A STREAM LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT UNTIL JULY 27, AFTER WHICH THE WHOLE DECLINES. 16144 19490724 19490725 A TINY SPOT ON JULY 24; A SMALL CLUSTER ON JULY 25. 16145 19490724 19490730 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT. 16146 19490724 19490805 AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. ON JULY 27 THE WHOLE GROUP RAPIDLY INCREASES IN AREA; THE LEADER BECOMES ELONGATED AND, BY AUGUST 2, SPLITS INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS. THE FOLLOWER, A COMPOSITE SPOT, DIES OUT FAIRLY RAPIDLY AFTER AUGUST 1. 16147 19490725 19490726 A TINY SPOT. 16148 19490726 19490807 RETURN OF GROUP 16120. A LARGE STREAM, IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE COMPOSITE. THE FORMER UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGES, WHILE, BY AUGUST 4, ITS REAR PORTION BREAKS OFF TO FORM A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER SLOWLY DIMINISHES THROUGHOUT. 16149 19490727 19490806 A COMPOSITE SPOT, IMMEDIATELY F GROUP 16148, WHICH SOON BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT ON THE DISK. 16150 19490728 19490731 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16151 19490729 19490801 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 29; A SINGLE SPOT AFTERWARDS. 16152 19490729 19490808 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 7. 16153 19490729 19490731 A TINY SPOT. 16154 19490730 19490804 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON AUGUST 4. 16155 19490801 19490802 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16156 19490802 19490806 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 2 AND 3; A PAIR ON AUGUST 6. 16157 19490802 19490810 A SMALL CHANGING STREAM, WITH MAXIMUM AREA ON AUGUST 6. 16158 19490804 19490805 RETURN OF GROUP 16123; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 16159 19490805 19490807 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 6. 16160 19490805 19490817 RETURN OF GROUP 16124. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16161 19490808 19490809 A SMALL SPOT. 16162 19490810 19490820 A SMALL SPOT UNTIL AUGUST 12, AFTER WHICH A BI-POLAR GROUP DEVELOPS RAPIDLY. THE WHOLE IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16163 19490811 19490812 A SMALL SPOT. 16164 19490812 19490815 A PAIR OF SPOTS, APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16165 19490812 19490822 RETURN OF GROUP 16138. A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE ONLY STABLE MEMBER IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT NEAR THE CENTRE; THIS ALONE REMAINS AFTER AUGUST 18. 16166 19490813 19490816 A SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON AUGUST 15, WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 16167 19490813 19490819 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16168 19490813 19490817 TWO OR THREE VARIABLE SPOTS. 16169 19490813 19490825 A LARGE CLUSTER OF WHICH THE MAIN PART FORMS A GAMMA-TYPE SPOT BETWEEN AUGUST 18 AND 20, BUT ON AUGUST 21 BEGINS TO BREAK UP AGAIN, QUICKLY DYING OUT. THE MUCH SMALLER LEADING PART OF THE GROUP CONSISTS OF THREE MAIN NUCLEI WHICH REMAIN JUST SEPARATED AND BEGIN TO DIE OUT AFTER AUGUST 23. 16170 19490814 19490817 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO TINY COMPANIONS. IT APPEARS SUDDENLY AND LASTS FOR ONLY FOUR DAYS. 16171 19490815 19490826 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. THIS SPOT BECOMES THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS ON AUGUST 25. 16172 19490815 19490826 RETURN OF GROUP 16139; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT. 16173 19490817 19490822 A SMALL STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST AND LONGEST-LIVED COMPONENT. 16174 19490817 19490820 A FEW TINY SPOTS DYING OUT ON THE C.M. 16175 19490817 19490829 A REGULAR SPOT. THE UMBRA IS ELONGATED AND BECOMES DIVIDED INTO THREE PARTS ON AUGUST 25 AND 26. 16176 19490818 19490831 A REGULAR SPOT, LEADING A TRAIN OF SMALL VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 16177 19490820 19490824 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 16178 19490820 19490830 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS APPEARING IMMEDIATELY F GROUP 16175 AND QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A LARGE COMPLEX MASS WHICH BEGINS TO DECLINE AFTER AUGUST 26. 16179 19490820 19490901 RETURN OF GROUP 16146. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 16180 19490821 19490824 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 16181 19490821 19490902 A REGULAR SPOT UNTIL AUGUST 27; ON THE NEXT DAY SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR. THESE GROW AND MERGE WITH THE REGULAR SPOT TO FORM A COMPOSITE SPOT BY AUGUST 31. 16182 19490821 19490903 A REGULAR SPOT. 16183 19490822 19490827 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16184 19490822 19490902 RETURN OF GROUP 16148; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT, SUDDENLY DEVELOPING ON AUGUST 29 INTO A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH IS APPARENTLY DECLINING RAPIDLY AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16185 19490822 19490903 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION AT A LOWER LATITUDE ON AUGUST 26 AND 27. 16186 19490826 19490828 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 27. 16187 19490826 19490902 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS WITHIN AN EXTENDED AREA. 16188 19490826 19490905 A SMALL SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. BY SEPTEMBER 1 IT BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 16189 19490826 19490904 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO CLOSE COMPANIONS. THE WHOLE BEGINS TO DISINTEGRATE AFTER SEPTEMBER 2. 16190 19490828 19490831 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16191 19490829 19490905 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS WHICH ARE DYING OUT AS THE LIMB IS APPROACHED. 16192 19490830 19490909 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT UNTIL SEPTEMBER 3. ON THE NEXT DAY SOME SMALL COMPANIONS APPEAR, AND THE WHOLE GROUP DECLINES RAPIDLY AFTER REACHING ITS MAXIMUM AREA ON SEPTEMBER 7. 16193 19490830 19490911 A NEARLY-REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA, FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION UNTIL SEPTEMBER 7. 16194 19490831 19490908 A STREAM, GROWING RAPIDLY FROM A TINY SPOT ON AUGUST 31, IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS ON SEPTEMBER 6. THIS GROUP UNDERGOES ITS WHOLE LIFE-HISTORY ON THE DISK. 16195 19490831 19490911 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 16196 19490831 19490911 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS UNDERGOING CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY AND DECLINING TO A SINGLE TINY SPOT BY SEPTEMBER 10. 16197 19490901 19490904 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 3. 16198 19490901 19490913 RETURN OF GROUP 16160; THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY A FEW COMPANIONS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 6. 16199 19490902 19490905 A SMALL SPOT. 16200 19490903 19490910 A SMALL UNSTABLE SPOT. 16201 19490903 19490915 A STREAM, LED BY A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING PART BECOMES COMPOSITE BY SEPTEMBER 7 BUT AGAIN BREAKS UP BY SEPTEMBER 10 INTO A TRAIN OF VARIABLE SPOTS. THESE DIE OUT AS THE GROUP REACHES THE LIMB. 16202 19490904 19490906 ONE OR TWO SPOTS. 16203 19490905 19490907 A SMALL SPOT. 16204 19490905 19490916 RETURN OF GROUP 16162. A STRING OF SPOTS, EXCEPT ON SEPTEMBER 15, WHEN THE LEADER IS BY ITSELF. 16205 19490906 19490909 A SMALL SPOT. 16206 19490908 19490918 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPANION UNTIL SEPTEMBER 13. 16207 19490908 19490911 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16208 19490909 19490918 RETURN OF GROUP 16169. A REGULAR SPOT LEADING A SMALL STREAM; THE WHOLE DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16209 19490910 19490913 TWO OR THREE FAINT SPOTS. 16210 19490910 19490923 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH UNDERGOES VERY LITTLE CHANGE IN SHAPE EXCEPT FOR A LONGITUDINAL ELONGATION FOR A FEW DAYS. IT IS CLOSELY PRECEDED BY A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 21. 16211 19490911 19490914 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16212 19490911 19490922 A DIMINISHING COMPOSITE SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW TINY COMPANIONS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 15. 16213 19490913 19490924 RETURN OF GROUP 16175. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 16214 19490915 19490919 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 17 AND 18. 16215 19490915 19490926 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, LED BY A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS AFTER SEPTEMBER 23. 16216 19490915 19490922 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 16. 16217 19490916 19490920 A SMALL SPOT. 16218 19490916 19490923 A SMALL, DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO TINY COMPANIONS ON SEPTEMBER 22 AND 23. 16219 19490917 19490920 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16220 19490918 19490929 RETURN OF GROUP 16181. A CLUSTER OF TINY SPOTS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 20. NOTHING IS SEEN ON THE NEXT DAY, BUT ON SEPTEMBER 22 A GROWING CLUSTER REAPPEARS, THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT BEING A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT. 16221 19490919 19490920 A SMALL SPOT. 16222 19490919 19490928 A VARIABLE STREAM IN WHICH FIRST THE LEADER, AND THEN THE FOLLOWER, IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT. 16223 19490920 19490925 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, FORMING IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING GROUP 16215. 16224 19490920 19491002 A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH DIVIDES INTO TWO BY SEPTEMBER 23. AT THE SAME TIME OTHER SMALL SPOTS APPEAR, THE WHOLE FORMING A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADING AND CENTRAL PORTIONS ARE THE LARGEST COMPONENTS. 16225 19490922 19490926 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16226 19490923 19490924 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS. 16227 19490925 19490927 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16228 19490926 19490928 A SMALL SPOT. 16229 19490928 19491002 A SMALL SPOT. 16230 19490930 19491012 RETURN OF GROUP 16201. A STREAM, IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER SPLITS INTO A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS BY OCTOBER 10. FROM SEPTEMBER 30 THE LEADING PORTION OF THE GROUP GROWS RAPIDLY, FORMING ANOTHER COMPOSITE SPOT BY OCTOBER 5. THIS PART SLOWLY DECLINES AS IT CROSSES THE DISK. 16231 19491001 19491010 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A SMALL DISTANT COMPANION. 16232 19491001 19491013 A LARGE COMPLEX SPOT, OF WHICH THE MAIN NUCLEUS IS NEARLY REGULAR AFTER OCTOBER 5; THE WHOLE GROUP DECLINES SLOWLY FROM THAT DAY. 16233 19491002 19491008 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16234 19491002 19491006 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 2 AND 3; A SINGLE SPOT AFTERWARDS. 16235 19491002 19491012 A STREAM OF UNSTABLE SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY NORTH OF GROUP 16232, WHICH GOES THROUGH ITS COMPLETE LIFE-HISTORY ON THE DISK. 16236 19491002 19491012 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS FIRST SEEN ON OCTOBER 2. THE LEADER BECOMES COMPOSITE AND IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 16237 19491003 19491006 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS, OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON OCTOBER 6. 16238 19491003 19491005 A TINY SPOT. 16239 19491003 19491014 AT FIRST A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 5. ON OCTOBER 7 OTHER SPOTS APPEAR IN THE FORM OF A STREAM WHICH IS DECLINING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16240 19491004 19491010 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, APPEARING NEAR THE C.M. AND DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16241 19491005 19491006 A FEW SMALL SPOTS APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16242 19491005 19491007 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 16243 19491007 19491016 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY OCTOBER 13. 16244 19491007 19491017 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 11. 16245 19491007 19491018 A COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH SOON BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DECLINE. 16246 19491008 19491019 RETURN OF GROUP 16210. A STREAM IN WHICH THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT IS THE LEADER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT; THIS SPLITS INTO TWO ON OCTOBER 16. 16247 19491010 19491022 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT WITH A FWE TINW FOLLOWING COMPANIONS. 16248 19491011 19491014 A SMALL SPOT. 16249 19491011 19491019 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 16250 19491011 19491023 A STREAM LED BY A FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WHICH ALONE REMAINS AFTER OCTOBER 21. 16251 19491012 19491018 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16252 19491012 19491015 A SMALL SPOT. 16253 19491013 19491020 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 16-19. 16254 19491013 19491014 A SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 13; A PAIR ON OCTOBER 14. 16255 19491014 19491015 A TINY SPOT. 16256 19491014 19491024 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 17 AND WITH MAXIMUM AREA ON OCTOBER 23. 16257 19491020 19491025 A STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT JUST PAST THE C.M. THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT TO THE REAR. 16258 19491020 19491031 A STREAM IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER BECOMES A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS BY OCTOBER 27. 16259 19491021 19491031 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL OCTOBER 26, WHEN OTHERS APPEAR IN THE FORM OF A STREAM WHICH IS DECLINING AS IT REACHES THE LIMB. 16260 19491022 19491023 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16261 19491022 19491027 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16262 19491022 19491103 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS BY OCTOBER 29. THE FOLLOWING PART HAS DIED OUT BY NOVEMBER 2. 16263 19491023 19491024 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16264 19491024 19491027 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY OCTOBER 27. 16265 19491025 19491103 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WHICH BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON OCTOBER 28. 16266 19491027 19491028 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 27; A PAIR ON THE NEXT DAY. 16267 19491027 19491028 A TINY SPOT. 16268 19491027 19491103 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS. 16269 19491028 19491029 A SMALL SPOT. 16270 19491029 19491102 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 16271 19491029 19491109 A LONG STREAM, IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE REGULAR SPOTS. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS DIE OUT BY NOVEMBER 6, AND THE FOLLOWER BY NOVEMBER 8. 16272 19491030 19491031 A TINY CLUSTER ON OCTOBER 30; A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 31. 16273 19491030 19491103 A WIDE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16274 19491031 19491107 A GROWING STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS NEAR TO THE C.M. 16275 19491101 19491102 A SMALL SPOT. 16276 19491101 19491104 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16277 19491101 19491102 A TINY SPOT. 16278 19491102 19491113 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS WHEN FIRST SEEN. THESE DEVELOP INTO A MODERATELY SIZED CLUSTER WITH MAXIMUM AREA ON NOVEMBER 11. 16279 19491102 19491114 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER, A COMPOSITE SPOT, IS AT FIRST THE LARGEST COMPONENT BUT WHICH IS REDUCED TO A TINY SPOT AT THE WEST LIMB. THE LEADER IS STABLE THROUGHOUT. 16280 19491103 19491112 A STREAM FORMING IMMEDIATELY BEHIND GROUP 16271. THE FOLLOWER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT. 16281 19491103 19491107 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON NOVEMBER 4 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 16282 19491104 19491111 RETURN OF GROUP 16246; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 16283 19491107 19491114 A VARIABLE STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY, OF WHICH ONLY ONE COMPONENT IS LEFT BY NOVEMBER 11. 16284 19491108 19491119 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 16285 19491108 19491116 A COMPOSITE SPOT, SHOWING VERY LITTLE CHANGE UNTIL NOVEMBER 12, WHEN IT BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 16286 19491108 19491110 WITH GROUP 16287, A RETURN OF GROUP 16256. ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16287 19491109 19491114 WITH GROUP 16286, A RETURN OF GROUP 16256. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL NOVEMBER 13; A SMALL STREAM ON THE NEXT DAY. 16288 19491110 19491114 A SMALL SPOT. 16289 19491112 19491115 A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY ON NOVEMBER 12 AND 15. 16290 19491112 19491124 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A CLOSE COMPANION UNTIL NOVEMBER 22. 16291 19491113 19491122 A BI-POLAR GROUP, IN WHICH THE LEADER, A COMPOSITE SPOT, IS THE LONGEST-LIVED COMPONENT. 16292 19491113 19491119 A SMALL SPOT. 16293 19491113 19491115 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON NOVEMBER 13; A PAIR ON NOVEMBER 14 AND 15. 16294 19491114 19491117 SMALL SPOTS. 16295 19491115 19491120 A COMPOSITE SPOT, APPEARING SUDDENLY ON NOVEMBER 15 AND GROWING RAPIDLY TO ITS MAXIMUM AREA. 16296 19491115 19491119 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16297 19491115 19491123 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 16. 16298 19491116 19491120 A GROUP WHOSE LEADER IS THE MOST PROMINENT COMPONENT. 16299 19491116 19491117 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16300 19491116 19491125 TWO OR THREE FAINT SMALL SPOTS UNTIL NOVEMBER 20, AFTER WHICH THERE IS A WIDE PAIR. 16301 19491117 19491122 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, APPEARING IMMEDIATELY NORTH OF THE FOLLOWER OF GROUP 16291. 16302 19491118 19491126 A SPARSE STREAM, LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS AFTER NOVEMBER 23. 16303 19491118 19491130 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL NOVEMBER 28. TWO NEW SMALL SPOTS APPEAR IN THE REAR ON NOVEMBER 30. 16304 19491119 19491201 RETURN OF GROUP 16262. A SMALL, FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16305 19491119 19491128 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 26. 16306 19491120 19491124 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16307 19491121 19491126 A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH GROW FAIRLY RAPIDLY. 16308 19491121 19491203 AN ELONGATED SPOT WHOSE UMBRA DIVIDES INTO TWO BY NOVEMBER 27. THERE ARE A FEW CLOSE COMPANIONS IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING. 16309 19491123 19491130 RETURN OF GROUP 16274. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 25 AND 26. 16310 19491123 19491204 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 16311 19491124 19491125 A TINY SPOT. 16312 19491124 19491201 A SMALL STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A SINGLE SPOT WHEN FIRST SEEN NEAR THE C.M. THE LEADER QUICKLY BECOMES REGULAR IN OUTLINE. 16313 19491125 19491126 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 25, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON THE NEXT DAY. 16314 19491125 19491203 TWO SMALL SPOTS, WHICH COALESCE AND DIE OUT. 16315 19491126 19491202 A SMALL SPOT. 16316 19491127 19491202 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 1. 16317 19491128 19491130 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16318 19491128 19491205 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16319 19491128 19491206 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 4 AND 5. 16320 19491128 19491207 RETURN OF GROUP 16280. TWO SPOTS, CLOSE TOGETHER, WHICH SLOWLY DIMINISH. 16321 19491128 19491211 RETURN OF GROUP 16278. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLOSE COMPANION WHICH IS EVENTUALLY ABSORBED. ON DECEMBER 7 A TINY AND MORE DISTANT COMPANION APPEARS. 16322 19491129 19491204 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 16323 19491129 19491211 RETURN OF GROUP 16279. A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 16324 19491130 19491202 TINY SPOTS. 16325 19491203 19491213 A STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM TWO TINY SPOTS, WHOSE FOLLOWER, AT FIRST DOUBLE, SOON BECOMES A COMPOSITE SPOT- THE LARGEST COMPONENT. THE WHOLE GROUP UNDERGOES ITS WHOLE LIFE-HISTORY ON THE DISK. 16326 19491204 19491210 A VARIABLE STREAM WHICH IS STILL GROWING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16327 19491204 19491215 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH UNSTABLE COMPANIONS BETWEEN DECEMBER 8 AND 13. 16328 19491205 19491211 ONE OR TWO VARIABLE SPOTS WITH A SUDDEN INCREASE TO MAXIMUM AREA ON DECEMBER 9. 16329 19491205 19491215 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 16330 19491205 19491206 A SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOT. 16331 19491207 19491208 A TINY SPOT ON DECEMBER 7; A PAIR ON THE NEXT DAY. 16332 19491207 19491216 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 16333 19491210 19491211 A TINY SPOT. 16334 19491210 19491221 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL DECEMBER 16. 16335 19491211 19491213 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16336 19491211 19491219 RETURN OF GROUP 16307. A SMALL SPOT UNTIL DECEMBER 14; LATER THERE ARE SEVERAL. 16337 19491211 19491216 A SMALL GROUP. 16338 19491212 19491213 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16339 19491212 19491215 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL DECEMBER 13; A SINGLE SPOT AFTERWARDS. 16340 19491212 19491213 A TINY SPOT. 16341 19491212 19491223 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT, SLOWLY DINIMISHING AFTER DECEMBER 14. 16349 19491220 19491231 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS UNTIL DECEMBER 23. ON THE NEXT DAY A MODERATE- SIZED COMPOSITE SPOT APPEARS WHIC INCREASES TO A MAXIMUM ON DECEMBER 27. 16350 19491221 19491223 A SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 21 AND 23; A PAIR OF DECEMBER 22. 16351 19491221 19491227 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16352 19491222 19491224 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS ON DECEMBER 24. 16353 19491222 19491229 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL DECEMBER 25. THREE DAYS LATER A NEW GROUP APPEARS WHICH IS GROWING AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 16354 19491222 19500102 A BI-POLAR GROUP, WHOSE LEADER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWER, COMPOSITE IN STRUCTURE, BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON DECEMBER 27 AND AT THE LIMB HAS DECLINED TO A TINY SPOT. 16355 19491224 19500105 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL DISTANT COMPANIONS. 16356 19491225 19491230 A SMALL SPOT. 16357 19491226 19491227 A TINY SPOT. 16358 19491226 19500106 RETURN OF GROUP 16326. A STREAM OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS UNTIL DECEMBER 30; THE NEXT DAY A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT BEGINS TO DEVELOP. THIS REACHES MAXIMUM AREA ON JANUARY 3, AFTER WHICH IT DISINTEGRATES. 16359 19491228 19500107 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES COMPOSITE AS IT DECLINES. 16360 19491229 19491230 A TINY SPOT. 16361 19491229 19500108 A SMALL BI-POLAR GROUP, IMMEDIATELY NORTH OF GROUP 16359. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 5. 16362 19491231 19500101 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16363 19500103 19500107 A SHORT-LIVED SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON JANUARY 5. 16364 19500104 19500107 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 16365 19500105 19500106 A SMALL SPOT. 16366 19500105 19500115 A PAIR OF SPOTS, GROWING FAIRLY RAPIDLY AND COALESCING INTO A SINGLE COMPOSITE STRUCTURE. 16367 19500105 19500116 A GROUP OF SPOTS UNDERGOING CONSIDERABLE CHANGE THROUGHOUT ITS TRANSIT. 16368 19500107 19500110 A SMALL SPOT. 16369 19500110 19500114 A PAIR OF SPOTS, SUDDENLY APPEARING WEST OF THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THESE ARE GROWING INTO A BI-POLAR GROUP AS THEY PASS ROUND THE LIMB. 16370 19500111 19500112 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16371 19500112 19500113 A SMALL SPOT. 16372 19500112 19500119 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 18. 16373 19500112 19500121 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS, NOT SEEN BETWEEN JANUARY 16 AND 21. 16374 19500114 19500126 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16375 19500115 19500123 A STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT WHEN FIRST SEEN. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 16376 19500115 19500119 A SMALL SPOT. 16377 19500116 19500121 A PAIR OF SPOTS WHICH ARE GROWING AS THEY PASS ROUND THE LIMB. 16378 19500116 19500125 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, DEVELOPING FROM A SMALL SPOT. BY JANUARY 24 ONLY THE LEADER, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, AND A SMALL FOLLOWER REMAIN. 16379 19500116 19500126 RETURN OF GROUP 16348: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL JANUARY 20. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL JANUARY 24, WHEN A PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARS. 16380 19500117 19500128 RETURN OF GROUP 16354. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT UNTIL JANUARY 22; ON THE NEXT DAY IT SPLITS INTO TWO AND THEN SLOWLY DIES OUT. 16381 19500119 19500123 SHORT-LIVED SINGLE SPOTS UNTIL JANUARY 23, WHEN THERE IS A STREAM. 16382 19500119 19500130 A VARIABLE STREAM, LED BY A COMPOSITE SPOT. 16383 19500119 19500126 A SPOT WHICH DIES OUT JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 16384 19500120 19500127 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER BECOMES THE MOST STABLE AND LONGEST-LIVED COMPONENT. 16385 19500120 19500128 A STRING OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS WHICH SPREAD OUT IN LONGITUDE AND DIE OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16386 19500121 19500202 A COMPOSITE SPOT, UNDERGOING SMALL CHANGES AS IT SLOWLY DIMINISHES. 16387 19500122 19500201 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 1. 16388 19500123 19500124 A SMALL SPOT. 16389 19500124 19500127 A STREAM, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16390 19500124 19500201 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16391 19500124 19500128 A SMALL CHANGING STREAM. 16392 19500124 19500125 A SMALL SPOT. 16393 19500124 19500125 A SMALL SPOT. 16394 19500125 19500127 A TINY SPOT. 16395 19500125 19500129 A SMALL SPOT. 16396 19500126 19500130 A STRING OF CHANGING SPOTS. 16397 19500129 19500205 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 3. 16398 19500130 19500210 RETURN OF GROUP 16369. A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 6. 16399 19500203 19500206 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON FEBRUARY 3 AND 6; A PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16400 19500204 19500206 A SMALL DIMINISHING SPOT. 16401 19500208 19500219 RETURN OF GROUP 16375. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16402 19500210 19500220 A STREAM, WHOSE LEADER SOON BECOMES A FAIRLY STABLE COMPOSITE SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS AT THE WEST LIMB. THE FOLLOWER, WHICH IS ALSO COMPOSITE AT FIRST, SOON BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT. 16403 19500210 19500222 RETURN OF GROUP 16374. A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16404 19500211 19500223 RETURN OF GROUP 16389. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16405 19500213 19500215 A PAIR OF SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON FEBRUARY 15. 16406 19500213 19500225 A COMPOSITE SPOT, IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING GROUP 16410. 16407 19500213 19500225 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS JUST NORTH OF IT FROM FEBRUARY 18 TO 20. 16408 19500214 19500217 A SMALL BI-POLAR GROUP, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16409 19500214 19500225 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 16. 16410 19500214 19500226 A NOTABLE GROUP, IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE COMPOSITE SPOTS. THE LEADER BECOMES REGULAR BY THE TIME IT REACHES THE WEST LIMB. THE FOLLOWER, AT FIRST THE LARGER COMPONENT, BREAKS UP AND SLOWLY DIMINISHES. 16411 19500218 19500228 THE LAST PHASE OF A REGULAR SPOT. 16412 19500219 19500223 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16413 19500219 19500303 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16414 19500220 19500301 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, UNDERGOING CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. 16415 19500220 19500303 A BI-POLAR GROUP, OF WHICH THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS BY MARCH 1. 16416 19500221 19500224 A SMALL STREAM, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16417 19500226 19500302 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16418 19500227 19500301 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 27; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER TWO DAYS. 16419 19500228 19500304 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 2 AND 3. 16420 19500228 19500307 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16421 19500228 19500312 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS UNTIL MARCH 8, AFTER WHICH IT BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT. 16422 19500228 19500312 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS UNTIL MARCH 3; ON THE NEXT DAY THE GROUP BEGINS TO DEVELOP RAPIDLY INTO A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. THIS IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS ON MARCH 11. 16423 19500301 19500302 A TINY SPOT. 16424 19500301 19500311 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 16425 19500303 19500309 A SMALL STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 16426 19500303 19500308 ONE OR TWO SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16427 19500304 19500307 A PAIR OF SMALL SHORT-LIVED SPOTS. 16428 19500304 19500306 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 4; ONLY ONE REMAINS ON MARCH 5 AND 6. 16429 19500304 19500307 A SMALL SPOT. 16430 19500304 19500307 RETURN OF GROUP 16408. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16431 19500305 19500308 A SMALL SPOT. 16432 19500305 19500306 A SMALL SPOT. 16433 19500306 19500307 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS. 16434 19500306 19500318 A STREAM, LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES THE LARGEST MEMBER AND ALONE REMAINS BY MARCH 14. FROM MARCH 10 THIS SPOT IS ELONGATED FOR A FEW DAYS. 16435 19500306 19500319 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16436 19500307 19500308 A FEW SPOTS, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16437 19500307 19500314 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE C.M. THE LEADER IS DEVELOPING INTO A REGULAR SPOT AS IT REACHES THE LIMB. 16438 19500307 19500317 A SMALL SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16439 19500307 19500319 RETURN OF GROUP 16402. A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 16440 19500309 19500311 A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 9; A PAIR ON MARCH 10 AND 11. 16441 19500310 19500321 RETURN OF GROUP 16403: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL MARCH 14; A PAIR ON MARCH 15 AND 16. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL MARCH 19, WHEN A FEW SMALL SPOTS APPEAR. 16442 19500311 19500320 RETURN OF GROUP 16416. A PAIR OF DECREASING REGULAR SPOTS, WITH A TINY COMPANION UNTIL MARCH 16. 16443 19500312 19500324 RETURN OF GROUP 16410. A REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES ELONGATED AND WHICH HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO BY MARCH 18. IT THEN SLOWLY DIES OUT. 16444 19500314 19500315 A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 14; A PAIR ON MARCH 15. 16445 19500314 19500325 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 16446 19500317 19500323 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS WITH AN EQUATORWARDS DRIFT. BY MARCH 22 THE REAR PART HAS DISAPPEARED AND ON THE NEXT DAY A SINGLE SMALL SPOT IS PRESENT. 16447 19500317 19500322 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL MARCH 19; THEN OTHERS APPEAR, FORMING A SMALL STREAM. 16448 19500317 19500318 A SMALL SPOT. 16449 19500319 19500330 RETURN OF GROUP 16415. A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16450 19500320 19500328 A SMALL CLUSTER, SLOWLY DYING OUT. 16451 19500324 19500326 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON THE LAST DAY. 16452 19500324 19500331 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MARCH 30. 16453 19500324 19500328 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; ONE REMAINS BY MARCH 26. 16454 19500325 19500329 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, APPEARING SUDDENLY IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE. 16455 19500325 19500330 INTERMITTENT. A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 25 AND 30; A PAIR ON MARCH 29. 16456 19500325 19500406 RETURN OF GROUP 16425. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A TINY COMPANION ON APRIL 4 AND 5. 16457 19500327 19500408 RETURN OF GROUP 16422. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA UNTIL APRIL 7. 16458 19500329 19500408 A SMALL SPOT UNTIL MARCH 31, AFTER WHICH THERE IS A STREAM TO THE REAR, EXCEPT ON APRIL 3 AND 4. 16459 19500329 19500409 A SMALL STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16460 19500329 19500410 RETURN OF GROUP 16437. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE UMBRA IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" BETWEEN MARCH 30 AND APRIL 1. 16461 19500329 19500408 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, DYING OUT AS IT NEARS THE WEST LIMB. 16462 19500330 19500409 A SMALL STREAM, IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 8. 16463 19500402 19500409 A STREAM, DEVELOPING RAPIDLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 16464 19500403 19500411 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 10. 16465 19500403 19500405 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16466 19500403 19500415 RETURN OF GROUP 16435. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS BETWEEN APRIL 6 AND 12. 16467 19500407 19500419 A VERY LARGE GROUP, WHICH AT FIRST CONSISTS OF TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS. THE LEADER SOON BEGINS TO DIVIDE INTO TWO REGULAR SPOTS WHICH SEPARATE BY APRIL 13 AND SLOWLY DIMINISH AS THEY APPROACH THE WEST LIMB. THE FOLLOWER BECOMES ELONGATED AND UNDERGOES SLIGHT CHANGES DURING ITS TRANSIT. 16468 19500411 19500422 A TINY SPOT ON APRIL 11 WHICH SLOWLY DEVELOPS, AT FIRST INTO A STREAM, AND THEN INTO AN IRREGULAR COMPOSITE MASS. 16469 19500413 19500425 A STREAM , WHICH BY APRIL 18 HAS BECOME A SIMPLE BI-POLAR GROUP. THE FOLLOWER, A REGULAR SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA, DIVIDES INTO TWO AS THE GROUP DECREASES IN AREA. 16470 19500414 19500419 RETURN OF GROUP 16454. A SMALL SPOT. 16471 19500415 19500416 A SMALL SPOT. 16472 19500416 19500418 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16473 19500419 19500421 ONE OR TWO EPHEMERAL SPOTS. 16474 19500419 19500501 A STREAM, IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER UNDERGO SLIGHT CHANGES; THE WHOLE IS DIMINISHING AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 16475 19500421 19500503 A LARGE STREAM DEVELOPING FROM A SMALL SPOT AT THE EAST LIMB. THE LEADER, A FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOT, IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT. THE FOLLOWER UNDERGOES SLIGHT CHANGES UNTIL APRIL 30, AFTER WHICH IT QUICKLY BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT. 16476 19500423 19500426 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16477 19500423 19500424 A TINY SPOT. 16478 19500423 19500424 A TINY SPOT. 16479 19500423 19500504 RETURN OF GROUP 16457; THIRD APPEARACNE. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16480 19500424 19500425 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 16481 19500424 19500430 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS, SEEN ONLY ON APRIL 24 AND 30. 16482 19500424 19500506 RETURN OF GROUP 16463. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS UNTIL APRIL 29. 16483 19500425 19500502 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON APRIL 28 AND 29. NOTHING IS SEEN ON APRIL 30. 16484 19500425 19500504 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 16485 19500426 19500504 RETURN OF GROUP 16460; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WHICH DIES OUT RAPIDLY AFTER MAY 3. 16486 19500428 19500509 RETURN OF GROUP 16464. A COLLECTION OF SPOTS, WHICH BY MAY 2 HAS CHANGED TO AN ALMOST REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPOSITE SPOT. ON MAY 5 OTHERS SUDDENLY APPEAR IN BETWEEN TO FORM A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT. 16487 19500428 19500509 A REGULAR SPOT WITH CHANGES BETWEEN MAY 1 AND 3. THERE IS A DISTANT COMPANION IN THE REAR UNTIL MAY 2. 16488 19500430 19500506 SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16489 19500501 19500509 A GROUP OF VARIABLE SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON MAY 4-5. 16490 19500503 19500504 A SMALL SPOT. 16491 19500504 19500509 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL MAY 7; A CLUSTER ON THE NEXT TWO DAYS. 16492 19500505 19500509 A SMALL SPOT. 16493 19500506 19500518 RETURN OF GROUP 16468. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH SOME VARIABLE COMPANIONS UNTIL MAY 16. THE UMBRA IS CROSSED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" BETWEEN MAY 14 AND 17. 16494 19500507 19500508 A SMALL SPOT. 16495 19500507 19500509 A STREAM, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16496 19500507 19500510 A TINY FAINT SPOT. 16497 19500508 19500512 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON MAY 9. 16498 19500508 19500509 A TINY SPOT. 16499 19500509 19500511 A SMALL SPOT. 16500 19500510 19500511 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16501 19500510 19500511 A TINY SPOT. 16502 19500510 19500522 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS BETWEEN MAY 11 AND 15. 16503 19500511 19500512 ONE OR TWO HIGH-LATITUDE SPOTS, APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16504 19500511 19500512 A SMALL SPOT. 16505 19500514 19500515 SMALL FAINT SPOTS. 16506 19500516 19500518 A PAIR OF SPOTS. 16507 19500516 19500526 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 23. 16508 19500516 19500526 RETURN OF GROUP 16474. A COMPOSITE SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW TINY COMPANIONS. THE GROUP SLOWLY DISINTEGRATES AFTER MAY 18, LEAVING A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON MAY 25. 16509 19500518 19500521 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16510 19500518 19500530 RETURN OF GROUP 16475. A COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH BY MAY 22 HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO, TO FORM A REGULAR SPOT AND COMPANION. THE FORMER ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 28. 16511 19500519 19500520 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, GROWING AS THEY PASS ROUND THE WEST LIMB. 16512 19500519 19500524 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, APPEARING SUDDENLY ON MAY 19. ONE SMALL SPOT REMAINS BY MAY 25. 16513 19500520 19500601 AT FIRST A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, OF WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE REGULAR SPOTS AND THE INTERMEDIATE COMPONENT COMPOSITE. THIS MIDDLE COMPONENT APPEARS TO MOVE FORWARD AND TO HAVE AMALGAMATED WITH THE LEADER BY MAY 27. FROM THIS DATE THE FOLLOWING PORTION DIES OUT, LEAVING THE LEADER ALONE AT THE WEST LIMB. 16514 19500521 19500529 A BI-POLAR GROUP, GROWING RAPIDLY FROM A TINY SPOT NEAR THE C.M. THE FOLLOWER, A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 16515 19500522 19500528 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL SPOT. 16516 19500522 19500524 A SMALL SPOT. 16517 19500523 19500530 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A TINY COMPANION ON MAY 28 AND 29. 16518 19500524 19500602 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A SMALL PRECEDING COMPANION ON MAY 26 AND 27. 16519 19500525 19500528 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS WHICH ARE GROWING AS THEY PASS OUT OF SIGHT. 16520 19500528 19500607 A STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT ON MAY 28. THE LEADER BECOMES THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 16521 19500529 19500531 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 29 AND 30; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 16522 19500531 19500601 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 16523 19500601 19500603 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16524 19500601 19500604 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JUNE 3. 16525 19500601 19500611 TWO OR THREE SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, NOT SEEN FROM JUNE 6 TO 9. 16526 19500602 19500604 A SMALL SPOT. 16527 19500602 19500611 RETURN OF GROUP 16493: THIRD APPEARANCE. A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16528 19500606 19500608 A SMALL SPOT. 16529 19500608 19500611 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 16530 19500608 19500611 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY JUNE 11. 16531 19500608 19500620 A BIG SPOT WITH DOUBLE UMBRA WHICH BECOMES ELONGATED AND SPLITS INTO TWO BY JUNE 14. IT HAS, HOWEVER, RECOMBINED BY JUNE 17 TO FORM A COMPOSITE SPOT. 16532 19500609 19500621 A COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH SLOWLY DISINTEGRATES AND DIES OUT. 16533 19500611 19500612 A TINY SPOT. 16534 19500611 19500616 A GROUP OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16535 19500612 19500614 A SMALL SPOT, GROWING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16536 19500612 19500622 A GROUP OF CHANGING SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY A PAIR REMAINS BY JUNE 19; THESE DIE OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16537 19500613 19500623 RETURN OF GROUP 16514. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT SLOWLY DECLINING, PRECEDED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL JUNE 19. 16538 19500614 19500615 A TINY SPOT. 16539 19500616 19500619 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 16 AND 19; A PAIR ON THE OTHER TWO DAYS. 16540 19500616 19500628 RETURN OF GROUP 16513. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. THE UMBRA IS DIVIDED FROM JUNE 18 TO 22. 16541 19500620 19500625 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16542 19500620 19500701 A STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT. THE LEADER BECOMES REGULAR, AND THE FOLLOWER A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT RAPIDLY AFTER JUNE 28. 16543 19500621 19500629 A PAIR OF DIMINISHING SPOTS; ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY JUNE 27. 16544 19500622 19500625 A FEW FAINT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 24. 16545 19500622 19500702 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, EXCEPT BETWEEN JUNE 26 AND 28, WHEN THERE IS A NONDESCRIPT STREAM. 16546 19500622 19500624 A SMALL SPOT. 16547 19500622 19500627 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON JUNE 22, 23 AND 27; A PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16548 19500623 19500624 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16549 19500623 19500629 RETURN OF GROUP 16520. A SMALL SPOT UNTIL JUNE 25. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL JUNE 29, WHEN A FEW FAINT MARKINGS APPEAR. 16550 19500624 19500625 A TINY SPOT. 16551 19500626 19500627 A TINY SPOT. 16552 19500629 19500703 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16553 19500629 19500711 RETURN OF GROUP 16535. A REGULAR SPOT, SLOWLY DECREASING IN AREA AFTER JULY 4. 16554 19500630 19500703 A PAIR OF SPOTS; ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JULY 3. 16555 19500701 19500704 A STREAM DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB, SUBSEQUENT GROWTH BEING LOST TO VIEW. 16556 19500703 19500712 A STREAM, GROWING VIGOROUSLY FROM A TINY SPOT WHEN FIRST SEEN. THE LEADER IS THE LEAST STABLE COMPONENT AND DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. THE FOLLOWER, THE LARGEST COMPONENT, IS COMPOSITE. 16557 19500705 19500709 A STREAM, APPEARING PAST THE C.M., AND GROWING AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 16558 19500705 19500717 RETURN OF GROUP 16531. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA UNTIL JULY 13. 16559 19500706 19500708 A TINY SPOT. 16560 19500707 19500708 A PAIR OF SPOTS, APPEARING SUDDENLY AT THE WEST LIMB. 16561 19500709 19500714 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, APPEARING PAST THE C.M. 16562 19500710 19500721 A BROKEN GROUP, SLOWLY DECLINING AS IT CROSSES THE DISK. 16563 19500711 19500720 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 12. 16564 19500713 19500715 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS, APPEARING IMMEDIATELY SOUTH OF GROUP 16562. 16565 19500713 19500715 RETURN OF GROUP 16540: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT, SEEN ONLY ON JULY 13 AND 15. 16566 19500714 19500715 THREE TINY SPOTS ON JULY 14; A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 15. 16567 19500714 19500715 WITH GROUP 16565, A RETURN OF GROUP 16540: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 16568 19500715 19500726 A STREAM, QUICKLY DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT WHEN FIRST SEEN. THE LEADER, A LARGE REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 16569 19500715 19500727 RETURN OF GROUP 16542. A FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16570 19500719 19500731 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL JULY 25. 16571 19500719 19500729 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. ON JULY 26 IT BEGINS TO DISINTEGRATE AND SOON DIES OUT. 16572 19500720 19500731 A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT. 16573 19500721 19500727 A SMALL VARIABLE GROUP, APPEARING IMMEDIATELY NORTH OF GROUP 16569. 16574 19500722 19500724 A SMALL SPOT. 16575 19500724 19500803 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, UNDERGOING MINOR CHANGES BEFORE DYING OUT. 16576 19500725 19500729 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16577 19500726 19500729 A SMALL SPOT. 16578 19500728 19500729 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS. 16579 19500728 19500809 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH SOME SMALL CLOSE COMPANIONS FROM AUGUST 7. 16580 19500729 19500802 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, SEEN ONLY ON JULY 29 AND AUGUST 2. 16581 19500729 19500810 A GROUP WHICH IS AT FIRST BI-POLAR; ON AUGUST 3 OTHER SPOTS APPEAR IN FRONT OF THE LEADER AND BETWEEN THE MAIN COMPONENTS TO FORM A STREAM. AS THE WHOLE DIMINISHES, THE FOLLOWER BECOMES A SMALL WELL-DEFINED REGULAR SPOT. 16582 19500801 19500803 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 16583 19500801 19500804 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, CLOSELY FOLLOWING GROUP 16581. 16584 19500801 19500813 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS UNTIL AUGUST 8. 16585 19500806 19500814 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 16586 19500807 19500813 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16587 19500809 19500817 A SMALL STREAM, WHICH GOES THROUGH ITS LIFE-HISTORY ON THE DISK. ON AUGUST 12 AND 13 THE LEADER IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 16588 19500810 19500821 RETURN OF GROUP 16568. A CLUSTER OF SPOTS WHICH COALESCES TO FORM A COMPOSITE SPOT FOR A FEW DAYS. AFTER AUGUST 17 THE WHOLE RAPIDLY DISINTEGRATES, AND DISAPPEARS BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16589 19500812 19500814 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB AND GROWING AS IT PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 16590 19500812 19500824 RETURN OF GROUP 16569: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 16591 19500815 19500820 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16592 19500815 19500826 RETURN OF GROUP 16570. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16593 19500816 19500821 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING GROUP 16588. 16594 19500816 19500827 A STREAM, WHOSE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT UNTIL AUGUST 22, AFTER WHICH IT QUICKLY BREAKS UP. 16595 19500819 19500830 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA BETWEEN AUGUST 22 AND 27. 16596 19500819 19500825 A SMALL SPOT, WHICH SOON BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT. 16597 19500819 19500830 A SMALL, SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 16598 19500820 19500822 A SMALL SPOT. 16599 19500821 19500825 A SINGLE SPOT ON AUGUST 21 AND 25; A PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16600 19500822 19500827 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS WHICH DEVELOP INTO A STREAM. THE LEADER, A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, NEARLY TOUCHES GROUP 16592; THE FOLLOWER BECOMES COMPOSITE BY AUGUST 25. 16601 19500823 19500826 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY AUGUST 26. 16602 19500825 19500902 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION UNTIL AUGUST 29. 16603 19500827 19500905 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16604 19500828 19500909 A STREAM, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 5. 16605 19500829 19500903 A TINY SPOT SEEN ONLY ON AUGUST 29, 30 AND SEPTEMBER 3. 16606 19500829 19500904 A SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON SEPTEMBER 4 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 16607 19500830 19500904 A SMALL STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS FIRST SEEN ON AUGUST 30. 16608 19500902 19500904 A TINY SPOT. 16609 19500905 19500906 A TINY SPOT. 16610 19500906 19500918 A STRING OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 12; ON THE NEXT DAY CONSIDERABLE CHANGES HAVE TAKEN PLACE AND FROM THEN ONWARDS THE GROUP BEGINS TO DIE OUT. 16611 19500911 19500914 A BI-POLAR GROUP APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. THERE IS A SUDDEN INCREASE IN AREA ON SEPTEMBER 13. 16612 19500911 19500923 RETURN OF GROUP 16592: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16613 19500913 19500924 A WIDE PAIR OF NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS, EACH WITH A FEW SMALL VARIABLE COMPANIONS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 19. 16614 19500914 19500923 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16615 19500915 19500918 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 16616 19500915 19500927 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16617 19500918 19500921 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS, APPEARING VERY CLOSELY SP GROUP 16612. 16618 19500919 19500920 A GROUP APPEARING QUITE NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16619 19500919 19500920 A FAINT SPOT. 16620 19500921 19501001 A STRING OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 16621 19500925 19500928 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16622 19500926 19500927 A TINY SPOT. 16624 19500929 19501010 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES REGULAR AND IS THE LONGEST-LIVED. 16625 19500929 19501012 RETURN OF GROUP 16611. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16626 19501001 19501005 A SMALL SPOT. 16627 19501004 19501013 RETURN OF GROUP 16615. A VARIABLE STREAM. 16628 19501005 19501008 RETURN OF GROUP 16618. A TINY SPOT ON EACH DAY. 16629 19501008 19501015 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW COMPANIONS APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. BY OCTOBER 13 THE DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT ALONE REMAINS. 16630 19501008 19501014 A GROUP OF SMALL DYING SPOTS. 16631 19501008 19501019 AT FIRST, A COMPOSITE SPOT WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. ON OCTOBER 15 IT BREAKS UP INTO NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16632 19501010 19501011 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 16633 19501011 19501014 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 11 AND 12, A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON THE OTHER DAY. 16634 19501012 19501013 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 12; A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 13. 16635 19501012 19501020 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, WHICH WITHIN A FEW DAYS DEVELOP INTO AN ELONGATED COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH ON OCTOBER 18 SPLITS INTO TWO. 16636 19501012 19501018 RETURN OF GROUP 16616. A SMALL SPOT, WITH A FAINT COMPANION ON OCTOBER 15. 16637 19501013 19501014 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON OCTOBER 13; A SINGLE SPOT ON OCTOBER 14. 16638 19501015 19501016 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON OCTOBER 15; A SINGLE SPOT ON OCTOBER 16. 16639 19501016 19501027 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS WHICH ALMOST DIE OUT BY OCTOBER 21. ON THE NEXT DAY THERE IS AN INCREASE IN ACTIVITY AND A BI-POLAR GROUP IS FORMED. 16640 19501025 19501031 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 28. 16641 19501026 19501106 A STREAM LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH IS THE SOLE SURVIVOR BY NOVEMBER 1. 16642 19501026 19501101 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 16643 19501028 19501030 RETURN OF GROUP 16625: THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 16644 19501028 19501108 A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS, WHICH JOIN TOGETHER FOR A FEW DAYS AND THEN SEPARATE AGAIN BEFORE SLOWLY DYING OUT. 16645 19501029 19501031 TWO OR THREE SPOTS, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16646 19501029 19501108 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, REACHING MAXIMUM AREA ON THE C.M. FROM NOVEMBER 4 ONWARDS THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, AND THE SMALL FOLLOWER ARE THE ONLY SURVIVORS. 16647 19501104 19501109 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, DYING OUT ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 16648 19501104 19501105 A SMALL SPOT. 16649 19501104 19501116 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH SOME CLOSE VARIABLE COMPANIONS UNTIL NOVEMBER 11. 16650 19501105 19501112 A BI-POLAR GROUP, WITH A RAPID INCREASE IN AREA, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE C.M. THE LEADER IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, AND THE FOLLOWER COMPOSITE. 16651 19501109 19501121 A LONG STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE. THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOTS. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS GROW INTO A COMPOSITE STRUCTURE BY NOVEMBER 15 AND AFTER NOVEMBER 17 BEGIN TO DIE OUT. 16652 19501111 19501117 RETURN OF GROUP 16639. A SMALL SPOT. 16653 19501112 19501113 A TINY SPOT. 16654 19501114 19501118 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 16. 16655 19501114 19501122 A SMALL GROUP OF FAINT VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 21. 16656 19501115 19501117 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 16. 16657 19501122 19501203 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 29. 16658 19501125 19501206 A LONG CHANGING STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT WHEN FIRST SEEN AT THE EAST LIMB. BY DECEMBER 3 ONLY THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER REMAIN. 16659 19501126 19501203 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS WHICH GO THROUGH THEIR WHOLE LIFE-HISTORY ON THE DISK. 16660 19501127 19501206 A PAIR OF WIDELY-SEPARATED SPOTS, WITH A FEW COMPANIONS ON NOVEMBER 29. THE GROUP DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16661 19501127 19501209 RETURN OF GROUP 16650. A REGULAR SPOT, WHOSE UMBRA DIVIDES INTO TWO AS THE WHOLE DECLINES. 16662 19501130 19501205 RETURN OF GROUP 16649. A STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY IN FRONT OF GROUP 16659 AND GROWING RAPIDLY. THE GROUP IS DIMINISHING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB, THE LEADER HAVING DIED OUT BY DECEMBER 5. ON DECEMBER 2 THERE IS A COMPOSITE SPOT TO THE SOUTH OF THE GROUP-CENTRE. 16663 19501201 19501210 A SMALL, SLOWLY-DECLINING SPOT. 16664 19501203 19501215 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FOLLOWING COMPANION UNTIL DECEMBER 10. 16665 19501204 19501211 A VARIABLE STREAM, WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON DECEMBER 7. 16666 19501207 19501210 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 16667 19501207 19501215 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 16668 19501207 19501217 RETURN OF GROUP 16651. AT FIRST A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A COMPONENT TO THE IMMEDIATE NORTH. FROM DECEMBER 9 THIS COMPANION DEVELOPS INTO A SPREADING CLUSTER AND BY DECEMBER 12 THE WHOLE GROUP BEGINS TO BREAK UP RAPIDLY, LEAVING A SMALL SPOT ALONE BY DECEMBER 16. 16669 19501207 19501219 A COMPOSITE SPOT, WHICH SOON BREAKS UP AND SPREADS OUT TO FORM A STREAM. THE ONLY DEFINITE COMPONENT IS A SMALL REGULAR SPOT AT THE REAR, WHICH ALONE REMAINS ON DECEMBER 16. 16670 19501210 19501213 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS, APPEARING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16671 19501211 19501212 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16672 19501212 19501215 A TINY SPOT, SEEN ONLY ON DECEMBER 12 AND 15. 16673 19501212 19501213 A SMALL SPOT. 16674 19501214 19501215 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 14; A SINGLE SPOT ON DECEMBER 15. 16675 19501215 19501217 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON DECEMBER 15; A SINGLE SPOT ON DECEMBER 16 AND 17. 16676 19501224 19510102 A STREAM, GROWING RAPIDLY TO A MAXIMUM ON DECEMBER 27 AND THEN DECLINING QUICKLY. THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST COMPONENT BUT IS THE FIRST TO DIE OUT. 16677 19501224 19501227 A PAIR OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16678 19510101 19510112 A STREAM, RAPIDLY DEVELOPING FROM A SMALL SPOT; THE LEADING PORTION BECOMES COMPOSITE BY JANUARY 6 BUT SOON BREAKS UP AGAIN INTO SINGLE SPOTS. THE WHOLE IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16679 19510105 19510107 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16680 19510107 19510112 A SINGLE SPOT, EXCEPT ON JANUARY 10 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 16681 19510107 19510108 A SMALL SPOT. 16682 19510110 19510111 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JANUARY 10; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 16683 19510111 19510115 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 11; ONLY ONE REMAINS ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16684 19510112 19510114 A SMALL SINGLE SPOT ON JANUARY 12 AND 13; A PAIR ON JANUARY 14. 16685 19510114 19510123 A CHANGING STREAM WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON JANUARY 18. 16686 19510117 19510123 A SMALL SPOT WHICH DIES OUT JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 16687 19510119 19510124 A STRING OF SMALL SPOTS. 16688 19510120 19510124 A TINY SPOT. 16689 19510122 19510203 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW CHANGING COMPANIONS UNTIL JANUARY 31. 16690 19510122 19510130 A SMALL SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL TINY COMPANIONS, IMMEDIATELY S GROUP 16689. 16691 19510123 19510124 A FEW TINY SPOTS ON JANUARY 23, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON THE NEXT DAY. 16692 19510123 19510203 A STREAM, DEVELOPING QUICKLY FROM A SMALL SPOT ON JANUARY 23. THE LEADER SOON BECOMES REGULAR AND IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT. 16693 19510123 19510204 A COMPOSITE SPOT LEADING A STRING OF SPOTS WHICH RAPIDLY INCREASE IN AREA AFTER JANUARY 26. THESE REMAIN FAIRLY STABLE UNTIL JANUARY 31, WHEN THEY BEGIN TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 16694 19510126 19510201 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16695 19510126 19510206 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16696 19510127 19510201 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16697 19510201 19510209 SMALL SPOTS FORMING A STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 8. 16698 19510204 19510206 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 4; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16699 19510204 19510210 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS UNTIL FEBRUARY 9. ON THE NEXT DAY THERE IS A BIG INCREASE IN AREA. 16700 19510205 19510216 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 13. 16701 19510206 19510210 A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 6. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL FEBRUARY 9 WHEN ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS REAPPEAR. 16702 19510207 19510209 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 7; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 8 AND 9. 16703 19510207 19510217 A SMALL, SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16704 19510209 19510219 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A TINY COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 11. 16705 19510210 19510215 A SMALL STREAM APPEARING IMMEDIATELY N GROUP 16703. 16706 19510211 19510213 A PAIR OF SPOTS, APPEARING SUDDENLY JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 16707 19510211 19510223 A PAIR OF SPOTS. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, ALONE REMAINS BY FEBRUARY 22. 16708 19510213 19510216 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16709 19510215 19510219 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 16710 19510218 19510226 RETURN OF GROUP 16692. AN INTERMITTENT TINY SPOT. 16711 19510219 19510303 RETURN OF GROUP 16693. A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH AT FIRST BECOMES ELONGATED AND THEN DISINTEGRATES TO FORM A STREAM IN WHICH THE PRINCIPAL NUCLEUS IS THE LEADER. 16712 19510226 19510308 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT UNTIL FEBRUARY 27; ON THE NEXT DAY A VARIABLE STREAM APPEARS BUT DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16713 19510228 19510305 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 16714 19510228 19510301 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS 16715 19510304 19510308 A PAIR OF SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MARCH 7. 16716 19510305 19510307 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON MARCH 5 AND 6; A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 7. 16717 19510306 19510307 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON MARCH 6; ONE SPOT ON MARCH 7. 16718 19510306 19510318 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A TINY COMPANION ON MARCH 10 AND 11. 16719 19510307 19510313 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION FOR THE FIRST TWO DAYS. 16720 19510311 19510319 A PAIR OF NEARLY REGULAR SPOTS, APPEARING SUDDENLY. AFTER THE SECOND DAY THEY SLOWLY DIMINISH, THE FOLLOWER ALONE REMAINING ON MARCH 19. 16721 19510312 19510314 A TINY SPOT. 16722 19510317 19510329 A LARGE STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE UMBRA IS DIVIDED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE" ON MARCH 25. 16723 19510318 19510330 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16724 19510319 19510322 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 19 AND 22; A PAIR ON MARCH 20 AND 21. 16725 19510320 19510322 A TINY SPOT ON MARCH 20; A PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16726 19510321 19510329 A FEW SMALL SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON MARCH 24, APPEARING BETWEEN GROUPS 16722 AND 16723. 16727 19510321 19510328 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 25. 16728 19510322 19510328 A SHORT STREAM, APPEARING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE FOLLOWER IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 16729 19510322 19510403 A STREAM, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA. BY MARCH 30 THIS SPOT IS THE SOLE SURVIVOR. 16730 19510323 19510325 A TINY SPOT. 16731 19510324 19510325 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 24; A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 25. 16732 19510325 19510326 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 25; A PAIR ON MARCH 26. 16733 19510326 19510403 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 16734 19510328 19510329 A TINY SPOT. 16735 19510330 19510408 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY APRIL 6. 16736 19510403 19510411 RETURN OF GROUP 16718. A SMALL, SLOWLY-DIMINISHING SPOT. 16737 19510404 19510412 A BI-POLAR GROUP GROWING FROM A TINY SPOT ON APRIL 4. THE LEADER, A COMPOSITE SPOT, IS AT FIRST THE LARGER COMPONENT BUT BEGINS TO DIE OUT FAIRLY RAPIDLY AFTER APRIL 9. THE FOLLOWER BECOMES REGULAR AND IS THE LONGEST-LIVED. 16738 19510405 19510406 A TINY SPOT. 16739 19510405 19510412 A SINGLE SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON APRIL 8 AND 9, WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 16740 19510406 19510415 A VARIABLE GROUP WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON APRIL 12. 16741 19510407 19510411 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A TINY COMPANION ON APRIL 8 AND 9. 16742 19510410 19510413 A SPOT, SUDDENLY APPEARING IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE AND THEN DYING OUT AGAIN. 16743 19510411 19510422 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADING COMPONENT SLOWLY ASSUMES A REGULAR OUTLINE AND ALONE REMAINS BY APRIL 20. 16744 19510411 19510423 A SMALL VARIABLE STREAM, SLOWLY DYING OUT. 16745 19510412 19510425 RETURN OF GROUP 16722. A GREAT COMPLEX GROUP. BETWEEN APRIL 16 AND 20 IT CONSISTS OF AN ELONGATED MASS WITH NUMEROUS NUCLEI AND UNDERGOES VERY LITTLE CHANGE. BY APRIL 21 THE REAR PART BEGINS TO DISINTEGRATE AND DECREASE IN AREA. DURING THIS PERIOD THE LEADER BECOMES MORE REGULAR IN OUTLINE. 16746 19510414 19510415 A FEW FAINT SPOTS. 16747 19510416 19510419 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON APRIL 17. 16748 19510418 19510421 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 18 AND 19, OF WHICH ONLY THE REAR ONE REMAINS ON APRIL 20 AND 21. 16749 19510420 19510426 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY N GROUP 16750. 16750 19510420 19510501 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT. THE FOLLOWING PART, A COLLECTION OF SMALL SPOTS, CONDENSES INTO A REGULAR SPOT BY APRIL 28. 16751 19510421 19510423 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON APRIL 21 AND 22; A SINGLE SPOT ON APRIL 23. 16752 19510421 19510502 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, IN WHICH ONLY THE LEADER AND FOLLOWER, BOTH REGULAR SPOTS, REMAIN AFTER APRIL 28. 16753 19510423 19510428 A PAIR OF SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY APRIL 26. 16754 19510423 19510505 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL MAY 2. 16755 19510424 19510425 A TINY SPOT. 16756 19510426 19510502 A SMALL SPOT. 16757 19510427 19510503 A BI-POLAR GROUP, APPEARING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MORE STABLE COMPONENT. 16758 19510501 19510507 AT FIRST A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. ON MAY 4 A SHORT STREAM APPEARS. 16759 19510503 19510504 A TINY SPOT ON MAY 3; A PAIR ON MAY 4. 16760 19510504 19510505 A TINY SPOT. 16761 19510507 19510513 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MAY 9 AND 10. 16762 19510507 19510519 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS ON MAY 14. 16763 19510509 19510522 RETURN OF GROUP 16745; THIRD APPEARANCE. A COMPLEX AND UNUSUALLY LARGE GROUP, LED BY A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE MAIN COMPONENT, A LARGE SPOT WITH NUMEROUS NUCLEI, UNDERGOES ONLY SLIGHT CHANGE THROUGHOUT ITS TRANSIT. THIS GIANT GROUP IS THE FOURTH LARGEST IN THE GREENWICH RECORDS. 16764 19510510 19510512 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 16765 19510510 19510519 A STRING OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16766 19510510 19510521 A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. BY MAY 19 IT BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 16767 19510511 19510522 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS. 16768 19510513 19510515 A SMALL SPOT. 16769 19510513 19510522 A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH BEGINS TO DIMINISH SLOWLY AFTER MAY 16. 16770 19510514 19510519 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MAY 18. 16771 19510515 19510520 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS, SEEN ONLY ON MAY 15, 16 AND 20. 16772 19510515 19510517 A TINY SPOT. 16773 19510515 19510516 A TINY SPOT ON MAY 15; A PAIR ON MAY 16. 16774 19510515 19510527 RETURN OF GROUP 16750. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16775 19510516 19510528 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS AT THE EAST LIMB, QUICKLY DEVELOPING INTO A BI-POLAR GROUP. ON MAY 21 THE FOLLOWER BEGINS TO SPLIT INTO TWO AND SLOWLY DECLINES. 16776 19510516 19510526 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS UNTIL MAY 20, WHEN THERE IS A SPURT OF ACTIVITY FOR A FEW DAYS. AFTER THIS, THE GROUP SLOWLY DIES OUT. 16777 19510517 19510518 A TINY SPOT. 16778 19510518 19510520 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16779 19510518 19510522 A SMALL SPOT. 16780 19510519 19510530 RETURN OF GROUP 16757. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WHICH DECLINES AFTER MAY 26. 16781 19510520 19510529 A SMALL SPOT GROWING INTO A MODERATE-SIZED COMPOSITE STRUCTURE BY MAY 23. ON THE NEXT DAY IT BEGINS TO DIVIDE, FORMING A STREAM, THE LEADER OF WHICH NEARLY MERGES WITH THE FOLLOWER OF GROUP 16775. 16782 19510521 19510603 RETURN OF GROUP 16758. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16783 19510525 19510606 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16784 19510527 19510530 A SMALL SPOT. 16785 19510530 19510602 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 16786 19510531 19510603 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16787 19510602 19510603 A TINY SPOT. 16788 19510604 19510609 A SMALL STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 16789 19510605 19510613 A PAIR OF SPOTS APPEARING SUDDENLY IMMEDIATELY P GROUP 16788. THESE QUICKLY FORM A BI-POLAR GROUP, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP AFTER JUNE 10. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE SOLE SURIVOR AT THE LIMB. 16790 19510605 19510617 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER, A DOUBLE SPOT, IS THE FIRST TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. THE FOLLOWER, MORE STABLE, HAS A LARGE DISTURBED AREA ON ITS NORTHERN AND PRECEDING BOUNDARIES UNTIL JUNE 12. 16791 19510605 19510614 A PAIR OF SPOTS, SLOWLY DYING OUT. 16792 19510605 19510618 RETURN OF GROUP 16763; FOURTH APPEARANCE. A STREAM, THE LEADER OF WHICH IS A STABLE REGULAR SPOT PRECEDED BY A VERY CLOSE COMPANION. THE COMPOSITE FOLLOWER SLOWLY DIMINISHES. 16793 19510607 19510619 A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER DIVIDES INTO TWO BETWEEN JUNE 13 AND 15 AND THEN RE-COMBINES. ON JUNE 14 SMALL SPOTS APPEAR BETWEEN THE PRINCIPAL COMPONENTS TO FORM A STREAM; THESE AND THE FOLLOWER HOWEVER, SOON DIE OUT AND THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS AT THE WEST LIMB. 16794 19510612 19510613 A TINY SPOT. 16795 19510612 19510624 A GREAT COMPOSITE SPOT. ON JUNE 16 IT BEGINS TO BECOME ELONGATED, THE PRINCIPAL NUCLEUS BEING AT THE REAR. BY THE TIME THE GROUP REACHES THE LIMB THIS NUCLEUS HAS DETACHED ITSELF AND BECOME A REGULAR SPOT. 16796 19510613 19510614 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JUNE 13; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 16797 19510613 19510623 RETURN OF GROUP 16781. SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16798 19510614 19510620 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 15 AND 17. 16799 19510615 19510625 A STREAM, FORMING IMMEDIATELY BEHIND GROUP 16795. AT FIRST THE REAR SPOT IS THE PRINCIPAL COMPONENT BUT BY JUNE 20 THE LEADING PART COALESCES INTO A COMPOSITE STRUCTURE AND BECOMES THE LARGER MEMBER. 16800 19510616 19510628 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL JUNE 22. 16801 19510617 19510619 A TINY SPOT. 16802 19510618 19510630 RETURN OF GROUP 16782; THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT WHICH, ON JUNE 23, BEGINS TO DIVIDE INTO TWO PARTS AND SLOWLY DIE OUT. 16803 19510621 19510703 RETURN OF GROUP 16783. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON JUNE 27 AND 29. 16804 19510626 19510630 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A TINY COMPANION ON JUNE 26 AND 27. 16805 19510627 19510704 ONE OR TWO TINY VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 1. 16806 19510702 19510709 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, SEEN ONLY ON JULY 2 AND 7 TO 9. 16807 19510703 19510707 SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 6. 16808 19510703 19510714 RETURN OF GROUP 16792; FIFTH APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH TWO COMPANIONS BETWEEN JULY 4 AND 8. 16809 19510704 19510714 RETURN OF GROUP 16793. A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16810 19510706 19510707 A TINY SPOT ON JULY 6; A PAIR ON JULY 7. 16811 19510706 19510709 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 16812 19510706 19510709 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS. 16813 19510707 19510715 A SMALL STREAM LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH BECOMES DOUBLE FOR A DAY OR TWO. THE GROUP DIES OUT JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 16814 19510708 19510712 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 11. 16815 19510708 19510709 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16816 19510708 19510710 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16817 19510708 19510720 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 16818 19510708 19510720 RETURN OF GROUP 16795. A STREAM, IN WHICH THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT IS IN THE LEADING PART. THIS EVENTUALLY BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS AT THE LIMB. 16819 19510714 19510716 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS. 16820 19510715 19510721 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JULY 19 AND 20. 16821 19510716 19510717 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JULY 16; THREE SPOTS ON THE NEXT DAY. 16822 19510718 19510729 A SMALL, SLOWLY-DIMINISHING, REGULAR SPOT. 16823 19510719 19510725 RETURN OF GROUP 16803; THIRD APPEARANCE. A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JULY 23 AND 24. 16824 19510721 19510725 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16825 19510722 19510725 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16826 19510722 19510801 A VERY SHORT STREAM, DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16827 19510723 19510730 A STREAM, NEAR THE SOLAR EQUATOR, LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY JULY 28. 16828 19510725 19510731 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JULY 29 AND 30. 16829 19510725 19510726 A TINY SPOT ON JULY 25; A PAIR ON JULY 26. 16830 19510727 19510731 A SHORT STREAM, DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16831 19510728 19510804 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH, AFTER JULY 30, SUDDENLY INCREASE IN AREA AND BECOME COMPOSITE. 16832 19510729 19510802 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 30 AND 31. 16833 19510730 19510805 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, OF WHICH ONE REMAINS ON AUGUST 5. 16834 19510730 19510802 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JULY 30 AND 31; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16835 19510801 19510803 A TINY SPOT. 16836 19510802 19510807 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16837 19510802 19510813 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS WHICH GRADUALLY INCREASE IN AREA AND COALESCE INTO A COMPOSITE STRUCTURE ON AUGUST 9, AFTER WHICH THE GROUP BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DECLINE. 16838 19510804 19510815 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A FEW COMPANIONS BETWEEN AUGUST 7 AND 9. 16839 19510804 19510815 RETURN OF GROUP 16817. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16840 19510804 19510816 AT FIRST A PAIR OF SPOTS; BY AUGUST 8 OTHER SPOTS APPEAR, FORMING A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, THE FOLLOWER OF WHICH SOON BREAKS UP AND DIES OUT. 16841 19510806 19510807 A TINY SPOT. 16842 19510807 19510813 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, SEEN ONLY ON AUGUST 7, 12 AND 13. 16843 19510807 19510814 A FEW CHANGING SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY S GROUP 16839. 16844 19510807 19510819 A STREAM, WHOSE PRINCIPAL COMPONENT IS A REGULAR SPOT WHICH DIVIDES INTO TWO BY AUGUST 12. THE WHOLE GROUP IS DYING OUT AS IT APPROACHES THE LIMB. 16845 19510813 19510825 A STREAM, IN WHICH THE LEADER IS A SMALL, SLOWLY-DIMINISHING SPOT. THE FOLLOWER, A SMALL COMPOSITE SPOT, EVENTUALLY BECOMES THE LARGEST COMPONENT. 16846 19510815 19510816 A TINY SPOT. 16847 19510816 19510825 RETURN OF GROUP 16830. A GROUP OF SMALL VARIABLE SCATTERED SPOTS. 16848 19510819 19510824 A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY F GROUP 16845. 16849 19510820 19510824 A SMALL VARIABLE SPOT. 16850 19510822 19510824 A TINY SPOT. 16851 19510824 19510826 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 25. 16852 19510829 19510902 A SMALL SPOT ON AUGUST 29 AND SEPTEMBER 2; A PAIR ON SEPTEMBER 1. 16853 19510830 19510901 A TINY SPOT ON AUGUST 30 AND 31; THREE ON SEPTEMBER 1. 16854 19510830 19510911 RETURN OF GROUP 16838. A PAIR OF SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS REGULAR IN OUTLINE. ON SEPTEMBER 4 OTHER SPOTS APPEAR TO FORM A LONG STREAM AND AFTER SEPTEMBER 6 THE WHOLE BEGINS TO DECLINE AND DIE OUT. 16855 19510830 19510911 RETURN OF GROUP 16839; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A COUPLE OF COMPANIONS AFTER SEPTEMBER 8. 16856 19510901 19510904 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16857 19510904 19510915 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 7. 16858 19510905 19510914 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 7. 16859 19510906 19510913 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 9 AND 10. 16860 19510906 19510911 A SMALL SPOT, DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 16861 19510908 19510921 A STREAM, LED BY A DIMINISHING DOUBLE SPOT. THE FOLLOWER, A COMPOSITE SPOT, INCREASES IN AREA AND, AFTER A FEW DAYS, DIVIDES INTO THREE SEPARATE SPOTS, IN A LINE INCLINED TO THE AXIS OF THE GROUP. BY SEPTEMBER 16 THESE ARE ALSO BREAKING UP AND DIMINISHING. 16862 19510909 19510917 A PAIR OF SPOTS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 11, AFTER WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS. 16863 19510911 19510917 A FEW SPOTS, WITH A MAXIMUM ON SEPTEMBER 12. 16864 19510911 19510914 A SMALL SPOT. 16865 19510912 19510920 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 17. 16866 19510912 19510914 A SMALL SPOT. 16867 19510912 19510920 A SMALL SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A TINY COMPANION UNTIL SEPTEMBER 17. 16868 19510914 19510926 A TINY SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 14 WHICH BY SEPTEMBER 16 HAS BECOME A STREAM LED BY A NEARLY REGULAR SPOT. WITHIN A FEW DAYS THE REAR POSITION HAS GROWN INTO A FAIR-SIZED COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH BY SEPTEMBER 24 HAS COMPLETELY ABSORBED THE LEADER. THE WHOLE GROUP APPEARS TO BE DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16869 19510918 19510928 A RAPIDLY-DEVELOPING BI-POLAR GROUP. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT; THE FOLLOWER DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16870 19510918 19510929 A VARIABLE STREAM OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS AT FIRST THE PRINCIPAL COMPONENT. BETWEEN SEPTEMBER 22 AND 25 THE WHOLE GROUP IS A CONGLOMERATION OF SMALL SPOTS BUT ON SEPTEMBER 26 IT TAKES MORE THE FORM OF A STREAM. 16871 19510920 19510926 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 21. 16872 19510921 19510924 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 16873 19510921 19510928 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 16874 19510923 19510925 A TINY SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 23; A PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16875 19510925 19511004 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 26. 16876 19510926 19510927 A SMALL SPOT. 16877 19510930 19511006 A COMPACT GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS, WITH RAPID RISE AND DECLINE. 16878 19510930 19511001 A SMALL SPOT. 16879 19510930 19511012 RETURN OF GROUP 16857. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16880 19511005 19511012 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16881 19511008 19511015 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS, DYING OUT JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 16882 19511008 19511020 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 16883 19511009 19511020 A VARIABLE STREAM, IMMEDIATELY S GROUP 16882, THE LEADING PART OF WHICH IS GROWING AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16884 19511010 19511013 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 11. 16885 19511010 19511022 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS BETWEEN OCTOBER 16 AND 18. 16886 19511011 19511012 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS. 16887 19511018 19511021 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 20. 16888 19511019 19511023 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 16889 19511023 19511027 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 16890 19511025 19511027 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 16891 19511026 19511031 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 16892 19511026 19511106 A SINGLE SPOT ON OCTOBER 26. ON THE NEXT DAY THERE IS A DOUBLE SPOT, THE TWO COMPONENTS OF WHICH SEPARATE AND JOIN WITH OTHER SPOTS TO FORM A NORMAL STREAM. 16893 19511026 19511107 A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL COMPANIONS. 16894 19511027 19511107 A STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY F GROUP 16892. 16895 19511028 19511029 A TINY SPOT. 16896 19511028 19511103 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 30 AND 31. 16897 19511028 19511102 RETURN OF GROUP 16879; THIRD APPEARANCE. A FAINT SPOT. 16898 19511104 19511105 A SMALL SPOT. 16899 19511104 19511116 RETURN OF GROUP 16883. A REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW COMPANIONS ON NOVEMBER 10 AND 11. 16900 19511104 19511116 RETURN OF GROUP 16882. A SPOT, ELONGATED IN A LATITUDINAL DIRECTION, WHICH AT FIRST HAS A DOUBLE UMBRA. ON NOVEMBER 7 THE UMBRA BECOMES DIVIDED INTO THREE. THERE ARE A FEW TINY COMPANIONS UNTIL NOVEMBER 12. 16901 19511107 19511115 A GROUP OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, WITH MAXIMUM AREA ON NOVEMBER 10. 16902 19511109 19511111 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16903 19511111 19511113 A SMALL SPOT. 16904 19511113 19511117 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 16905 19511115 19511122 A PAIR OF SPOTS UNTIL NOVEMBER 19. A SINGLE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 20 AND 22, NOTHING BEING SEEN ON NOVEMBER 21. 16906 19511116 19511117 A FAINT SPOT. 16907 19511116 19511126 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL NOVEMBER 23. 16908 19511117 19511129 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 16909 19511118 19511127 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 18. THE LEADER SOON BECOMES REGULAR AND ALONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 24. 16910 19511119 19511120 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON NOVEMBER 20. 16911 19511123 19511126 A SMALL SPOT, EXCEPT ON NOVEMBER 24, WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 16912 19511123 19511205 A NEARLY REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS UNTIL DECEMBER 1. THERE IS A SUDDEN INCREASE IN AREA ON DECEMBER 4. 16913 19511125 19511126 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 25; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 26. 16914 19511125 19511202 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, DYING OUT JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 16915 19511127 19511130 A RAPIDLY-GROWING CLUSTER, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 16916 19511129 19511201 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 29 AND 30; A SINGLE SPOT ON DECEMBER 1. 16917 19511201 19511204 RETURN OF GROUP 16899; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 16918 19511202 19511203 RETURN OF GROUP 16900; THIRD APPEARANCE. A TINY SPOT. 16919 19511205 19511216 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN FROM DECEMBER 10 TO 14. 16920 19511206 19511210 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION. 16921 19511206 19511207 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 16922 19511207 19511208 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 16923 19511208 19511215 A PAIR OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16924 19511210 19511214 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY THE LEADER REMAINS BY DECEMBER 12. 16925 19511212 19511214 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON DECEMBER 12; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER DAYS. 16926 19511213 19511217 TINY SPOTS, SEEN ONLY ON DECEMBER 13 AND 17. 16927 19511214 19511227 RETURN OF GROUP 16915. A STREAM, WHICH AT FIRST CONSISTS OF THREE SPOTS. BY DECEMBER 17 THE LEADING PAIR BEGINS TO COALESCE AND BECOME COMPOSITE. ON DECEMBER 18 OTHER SMALL SPOTS APPEAR BETWEEN THE MAIN COMPONENTS AND GROW RAPIDLY, JOINING WITH THE LEADING NUCLEUS TO FORM A COMPOSITE SPOT. THE FOLLOWER, ALSO COMPOSITE, BEGINS TO BREAK UP AFTER DECEMBER 24, AND IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16928 19511216 19511225 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, FORMING IMMEDIATELY P GROUP 16927. THE WHOLE MOVES FORWARD IN LONGITUDE. 16929 19511217 19511223 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 22. 16930 19511220 19511224 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 24. 16931 19511225 19511228 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 27. 16932 19511227 19520105 A STREAM, SUDDENLY APPEARING IN THE EASTERN HEMISPHERE. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS BY JANUARY 4. THE FOLLOWER, A COMPOSITE SPOT, DECLINE AFTER DECEMBER 29. THE WHOLE GROUP SHOWS AND EQUATORWARD DRIFT. 16933 19511229 19520103 A GROUP OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16934 19511231 19520103 A SMALL SPOT ON DECEMBER 31; A PAIR OF SPOTS AFTERWARDS. 16935 19520101 19520102 A SMALL SPOT. 16936 19520101 19520105 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16937 19520101 19520103 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16938 19520102 19520113 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 5 AND 6. 16939 19520106 19520109 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 16940 19520108 19520118 A REGULAR SPOT, THE UMBRA OF WHICH BECOMES DOUBLE BY JANUARY 11. BY JANUARY 15 IT HAS DIVIDED INTO TWO SMALL SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 16941 19520109 19520120 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY SOME VARIABLE COMPANIONS UNTIL JANUARY 17. 16942 19520110 19520111 ONE OR TWO SMALL EQUATORIAL SPOTS. 16943 19520111 19520113 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS ON JANUARY 11 AND 12; A SINGLE TINY SPOT ON JANUARY 13. 16944 19520112 19520117 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 17. 16945 19520113 19520124 A VERY VARIABLE GROUP. FOR THE FIRST FEW DAYS THE PRINCIPAL COMPONENT IS A REGULAR SPOT AT THE REAR, WHICH SOON BREAKS UP. THE WHOLE, AFTER CONSIDERABLE CHANGES, IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 16946 19520123 19520203 A STREAM OF SPOTS, WHICH BY JANUARY 27 DEVELOPS INTO A BI-POLAR GROUP. THIS SOON BEGINS TO DIE OUT, THE LEADING PART ALONE REMAINING BY JANUARY 30. 16947 19520124 19520125 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16948 19520126 19520127 A TINY SPOT. 16949 19520130 19520204 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 2 AND 3. 16950 19520204 19520211 SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16951 19520205 19520210 A SMALL EQUATORIAL STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS. 16952 19520206 19520207 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS. 16953 19520209 19520210 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 16954 19520212 19520224 A STREAM, IN WHICH THE LEADING PART IS AT FIRST COMPOSITE AND THEN SLOWLY BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT. THE REAR PART CONSISTS OF A PAIR OF SPOTS UNTIL FEBRUARY 16, AFTER WHICH IT BECOMES A SMALL VARIABLE CLUSTER AND DIES OUT BY FEBRUARY 23. 16955 19520213 19520225 A SPOT WHICH SPLITS INTO TWO BY FEBRUARY 16. THE LEADER BECOMES A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WHILE THE FOLLOWER DIES OUT BY FEBRUARY 18. THE WHOLE GROUP HAS A NORTHWARD DRIFT. 16956 19520216 19520219 A TINY SPOT. 16957 19520305 19520313 A CLOSE PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MARCH 12. 16958 19520309 19520311 A TINY SPOT ON MARCH 9 AND 11; A PAIR ON MARCH 10. 16959 19520310 19520321 INTERMITTENT. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT ON MARCH 10 AND 11; FROM MARCH 12 ONWARDS THE GROUP CONSISTS OF A SHORT STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 16960 19520310 19520319 RETURN OF GROUP 16954. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS BETWEEN MARCH 12 AND 15. 16961 19520324 19520401 A STREAM OF VERY VARIABLE SPOTS, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWING PORTION BECOMES THE MOST PROMINENT PART BETWEEN MARCH 27 AND 29. 16962 19520324 19520405 AT FIRST A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS. AFTER MARCH 30 THERE IS AN INCREASE IN AREA BEFORE THE GROUP BEGINS TO DIE OUT. 16963 19520327 19520330 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON MARCH 28 AND 29. 16964 19520328 19520401 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY MARCH 31. 16965 19520328 19520330 A SMALL SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION ON MARCH 28 AND 29. 16966 19520403 19520415 A REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY A NUMBER OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. ON APRIL 12 THE LATTER HAVE COALESCED INTO TWO COMPOSITE SPOTS WHICH ARE GROWING AS THE GROUP APPROACHES THE LIMB. 16967 19520408 19520411 SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16968 19520417 19520424 A STREAM, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT, STEADILY GROWING UNTIL APRIL 22. 16969 19520419 19520424 A FEW SMALL SPOTS WITH MAXIMUM AREA ON APRIL 20; ONLY ONE REMAINS BY APRIL 22. 16970 19520420 19520501 A SINGLE TINY SPOT UNTIL APRIL 22. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL APRIL 25 WHEN THERE ARE A FEW SMALL SPOTS. THERE IS A DISTINCT DRIFT TOWARDS THE SUN'S EQUATOR. 16971 19520421 19520422 A TINY SPOT. 16972 19520421 19520502 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS BETWEEN APRIL 23 AND 28. 16973 19520422 19520423 A SMALL SPOT. 16974 19520424 19520425 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 16975 19520429 19520430 A SMALL SPOT. 16976 19520430 19520504 RETURN OF GROUP 16966. A SMALL SPOT. 16977 19520504 19520508 A STREAM, FORMING IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE. 16978 19520505 19520509 A PAIR OF SPOTS, DEVELOPING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. THE FOLLOWER DIVIDES INTO TWO AS THE GROUP PASSES OUT OF SIGHT. 16979 19520511 19520515 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON MAY 12. 16980 19520515 19520526 A SMALL SPOT UNTIL MAY 17; A PAIR AFTER THIS DATE. 16981 19520516 19520525 A TINY SPOT FOR THE FIRST TWO DAYS, AFTER WHICH THERE IS A SMALL CLUSTER WHICH DECLINES AS IT APPROACHES THE LIMB. 16982 19520519 19520521 A TINY SPOT ON MAY 19 AND 21; A PAIR ON MAY 20. 16983 19520522 19520603 RETURN OF GROUP 16977. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WHOSE UMBRA IS DIVIDED BY A BRIGHT "BRIDGE". THERE ARE ONE OR TWO SMALL COMPANIONS AFTER MAY 28. 16984 19520523 19520524 A TINY SPOT ON MAY 23; A PAIR ON THE NEXT DAY. 16985 19520527 19520530 A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS ON MAY 27; A PAIR AFTERWARDS. 16986 19520527 19520530 TINY SPOTS, SEEN ONLY ON MAY 27 AND 30. 16987 19520527 19520530 A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 16988 19520601 19520608 A SMALL SPOT FROM JUNE 1 TO 4. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL JUNE 7 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 16989 19520605 19520606 A TINY SPOT. 16990 19520606 19520608 A TINY SPOT ON JUNE 6 AND 8; A PAIR ON JUNE 7. 16991 19520607 19520608 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JUNE 7; A TINY SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 8. 16992 19520608 19520609 A TINY SPOT. 16993 19520608 19520619 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS; THE LEADER BECOMES REGULAR AFTER JUNE 12 AND ALONE REMAINS BY JUNE 16. 16994 19520612 19520613 A TINY SPOT. 16995 19520614 19520616 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 16996 19520614 19520623 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT BEFORE REACHING THE WEST LIMB. 16997 19520615 19520627 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 16998 19520617 19520624 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON JUNE 17 AND 18. BY THE NEXT DAY THE REAR SPOT HAS DIED OUT AND A NEW SPOT HAS APPEARED IN FRONT, THE GROUP NOW BECOMING BI-POLAR IN FORM. 16999 19520618 19520625 A SMALL SPOT UNTIL JUNE 21. ON JUNE 22 OTHER TINY SPOTS APPEAR BUT ONLY ONE SPOT REMAINS ON THE LAST DAY. 17000 19520620 19520701 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH BEGINS TO BREAK UP ON JUNE 22. BY JUNE 27 ONLY A SINGLE SMALL SPOT REMAINS AND THIS IS JOINED, ON THE NEXT DAY ONLY, BY A DISTANT PRECEDING COMPANION. 17001 19520622 19520705 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH SOME SMALL COMPANIONS BETWEEN JUNE 26 AND JULY 2. 17002 19520625 19520702 A STREAM OF SMALL VERY VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 29. 17003 19520627 19520707 A STREAM, IN WHICH THE LEADER SOON BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT. 17004 19520628 19520703 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY NP GROUP 17001. 17005 19520705 19520715 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL JULY 8, AFTER WHICH THERE IS A STREAM LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WHICH ALONE REMAINS BY JULY 12. 17006 19520708 19520720 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW COMPANIONS BETWEEN JULY 11 AND 18. 17007 19520709 19520720 A COMPOSITE SPOT WHICH GRADUALLY OPENS OUT TO FORM A STREAM. THE PRINCIPAL NUCLEUS, THE LEADER OF THE STREAM, BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA AND IS THE SOLE SURVIVOR AT THE LIMB. 17008 19520711 19520712 FOUR TINY SPOTS ON JULY 11; A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 12. 17009 19520712 19520717 A FEW FAINT SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING GROUP 17006, NOT SEEN ON JULY 15. 17010 19520714 19520719 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 17011 19520714 19520717 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, EXCEPT ON THE LAST DAY WHEN THERE IS A CLUSTER. 17012 19520714 19520716 A TINY SPOT ON JULY 14; A PAIR ON THE OTHER DAYS. 17013 19520720 19520801 RETURN OF GROUP 17001. A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS ON JULY 26. 17014 19520727 19520807 AN ELONGATED SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA WHEN FIRST SEEN. BY JULY 31 THE GROUP BREAKS UP INTO NUMEROUS SMALL SPOTS WHICH UNDERGO CONSIDERABLE CHANGES AS THEY DIE OUT. 17015 19520731 19520802 A SMALL SPOT. 17016 19520803 19520811 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY AUGUST 10. 17017 19520804 19520805 A SMALL SPOT. 17018 19520805 19520813 RETURN OF GROUP 17006. A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT. 17019 19520805 19520810 RETURN OF GROUP 17007. A SMALL SPOT, DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 17020 19520805 19520815 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A TINY COMPANION ON AUGUST 7 AND 8. 17021 19520807 19520819 A BI-POLAR GROUP; THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS ON AUGUST 16. 17022 19520812 19520813 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON AUGUST 13. 17023 19520813 19520818 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, CHANGING INTO A BI-POLAR GROUP BY AUGUST 17. 17024 19520816 19520820 A FEW SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 17025 19520816 19520826 RETURN OF GROUP 17013; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 17026 19520820 19520901 A REGULAR SPOT WITH SOME VARIABLE COMPANIONS. ON AUGUST 27 THE UMBRA DIVIDES INTO TWO AND ON AUGUST 30 THE WHOLE SPOT SPLITS, DYING OUT AS IT PASSES AROUND THE LIMB. 17027 19520820 19520830 ONE OR TWO SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY TO THE NORTH AND REAR OF GROUP 17026. THERE IS A SLIGHT DRIFT IN LONGITUDE. 17028 19520823 19520828 A SHORT-LIVED STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 17029 19520823 19520903 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH APPEARS SUDDENLY; IT IS FOLLOWED BY A SMALL COMPOSITE COMPANION WHICH DWINDLES TO A TINY SPOT BY THE TIME THE GROUP REACHES THE LIMB. 17030 19520825 19520826 A TINY SPOT. 17031 19520826 19520907 A BI-POLAR GROUP IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER SOON BREAKS UP, DYING OUT BY SEPTEMBER 4. THE LEADER IS A REGULAR SPOT WITH A TRIPLE UMBRA BETWEEN AUGUST 30 AND SEPTEMBER 3. 17032 19520826 19520907 A STREAM, IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND ALONE REMAINS BY SEPTEMBER 5. 17033 19520830 19520906 A FEW TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 3 TO 5. 17034 19520902 19520903 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 2; A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 3. 17035 19520905 19520906 A TINY SPOT. 17036 19520905 19520907 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 17037 19520905 19520910 RETURN OF GROUP 17021. A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 5 AND 6. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL SEPTEMBER 9 WHEN THERE IS A PAIR. 17038 19520916 19520923 RETURN OF GROUP 17026. A FEW SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 22. 17039 19520918 19520929 RETURN OF GROUP 17029. A SMALL PERSISTENT SPOT, WITH A TINY COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 20. 17040 19520921 19520930 A SLOWLY-DIMINISHING COMPOSITE SPOT WITH A FOLLOWING COMPANION UNTIL SEPTEMBER 24. 17041 19520922 19521004 RETURN OF GROUP 17031. A REGULAR SPOT. 17042 19521002 19521004 A TINY SPOT. 17043 19521004 19521007 A SMALL SPOT. 17044 19521004 19521008 A TINY SPOT. 17045 19521004 19521016 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DOUBLE UMBRA, FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION UNTIL OCTOBER 12. ON OCTOBER 13 THE SPOT HAS SPLIT INTO TWO AND ON THE NEXT DAY INTO THREE. 17046 19521006 19521007 A TINY SPOT. 17047 19521019 19521031 A COMPACT STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A DOUBLE SPOT. THE FOLLOWING PART UNDERGOES CONSIDERABLE CHANGE AND IS THE FIRST TO DIE OUT. 17048 19521026 19521105 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF CHANGING SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 2. 17049 19521105 19521116 A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS UNTIL NOVEMBER 9. 17050 19521107 19521112 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, APPEARING JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 17051 19521113 19521115 A SMALL GROUP, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 17052 19521116 19521127 RETURN OF GROUP 17047. A STREAM, LED BY A FAIRLY STABLE REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING PORTION UNDERGOES SLIGHT CHANGES AND TAKES ON A COMPOSITE STRUCTURE BY NOVEMBER 20. BY NOVEMBER 23 IT BEGINS TO DIMINISH IN AREA. 17053 19521124 19521128 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 24; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 25 AND 28. 17054 19521130 19521209 RETURN OF GROUP 17051. A SMALL SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO TINY NORTHERN COMPANIONS BETWEEN DECEMBER 3 AND 7. 17055 19521204 19521215 A LONG STREAM OF VARIABLE SPOTS, IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A SMALL REGULAR SPOT BY DECEMBER 11 AND ALONE SURVIVES BY DECEMBER 14. 17056 19521211 19521222 A PAIR OF WIDELY-SEPARATED SPOTS UNTIL DECEMBER 16. THE LEADER HAS BROKEN UP INTO A CLUSTER BY DECEMBER 17; THE FOLLOWER HAS GONE BY THE NEXT DAY. 17057 19521212 19521224 RETURN OF GROUP 17052; THIRD APPEARANCE. A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL TINY COMPANION. THE UMBRA IS BISECTED BY A BRIGHT 'BRIDGE' BETWEEN DECEMBER 20 AND 22. 17058 19521213 19521224 A SMALL SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION UNTIL DECEMBER 17; NOTHING IS SEEN ON DECEMBER 22. 17059 19521214 19521226 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL DECEMBER 19. 17060 19521217 19521219 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 19. 17061 19521226 19521227 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON DECEMBER 26; A SINGLE SPOT ON DECEMBER 27. 17062 19521229 19530107 A STRING OF SMALL SPOTS. 17063 19521230 19521231 A TINY SPOT. 17064 19530104 19530115 RETURN OF GROUP 17060. A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, UNDERGOING SLIGHT CHANGES. 17065 19530106 19530118 A REGULAR SPOT WITH AN OCCASIONAL COMPANION. 17066 19530108 19530109 RETURN OF GROUP 17057; FOURTH APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 17067 19530109 19530120 A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, IN THE REAR OF WHICH A TRAIN QUICKLY DEVELOPS. BY JANUARY 18 THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS. 17068 19530110 19530122 RETURN OF GROUP 17059. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 17069 19530115 19530119 A TINY VARIABLE SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 16 AND 17. 17070 19530115 19530119 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, IMMEDIATELY F GROUP 17068. 17071 19530122 19530124 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON JANUARY 24. 17072 19530202 19530211 RETURN OF GROUP 17065. A SMALL SPOT. 17073 19530209 19530211 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON FEBRUARY 10. 17074 19530315 19530316 A TINY CLUSTER ON MARCH 15; A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 16. 17075 19530318 19530325 A SMALL SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO TINY COMPANIONS ON MARCH 18 AND 19. 17076 19530327 19530401 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON MARCH 29. 17077 19530327 19530405 A SMALL SPOT WITH A DISTANT COMPANION ON MARCH 30, APRIL 1 AND 2. 17078 19530328 19530401 A SMALL SPOT. 17079 19530330 19530331 A TINY SPOT. 17080 19530330 19530410 A REGULAR SPOT, PRECEDED BY A CLUSTER OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH DRIFT FORWARD IN LONGITUDE BEFORE DYING OUT BY APRIL 9. 17081 19530402 19530408 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL APRIL 4. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL APRIL 7 WHEN A FEW TINY SPOTS APPEAR. 17082 19530403 19530411 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, DEVELOPING INTO A BI-POLAR GROUP BY THE TIME THE LIMB IS REACHED. 17083 19530422 19530504 A COMPACT STREAM OF WHICH THE LEADING PART COALESCES INTO A MODERATE-SIZED ELONGATED SPOT, WHILE THE FOLLOWING PORTION REMAINS COMPOSITE. 17084 19530423 19530428 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY APRIL 28. 17085 19530425 19530427 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON APRIL 25; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER DAYS. 17086 19530426 19530507 RETURN OF GROUP 17082. A REGULAR SPOT. 17087 19530428 19530504 A TINY INTERMITTENT SPOT. 17088 19530519 19530530 RETURN OF GROUP 17083. A DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT WITH A CLOSE COMPANION. 17089 19530528 19530529 THREE TINY SPOTS ON MAY 28; A PAIR ON MAY 29. 17090 19530530 19530531 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 17091 19530531 19530605 A FEW TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 1 AND 3. 17092 19530601 19530611 A TINY SPOT WHEN FIRST SEEN; ON THE NEXT DAY A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS WITH A FEW TINY COMPANIONS APPEAR. 17093 19530603 19530612 A TINY SPOT ON JUNE 3, WHICH BY THE NEXT DAY HAS DEVELOPED INTO A STREAM LED BY A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 17094 19530614 19530617 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 17095 19530614 19530621 A DYING STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, UNDERGOING LITTLE CHANGES. 17096 19530619 19530627 A SMALL SPOT, FOLLOWED BY AN INTERMITTENT DISTANT COMPANION. 17097 19530624 19530625 A TINY SPOT. 17098 19530626 19530630 RETURN OF GROUP 17092. A TINY SPOT. 17099 19530709 19530721 A SPOT WITH TRIPLE UMBRA, FOLLOWED BY A SMALL DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL JULY 17. ON JULY 16 THE MAIN SPOT BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 17100 19530711 19530714 A TINY SPOT ON JULY 11; A PAIR ON JULY 13 AND 14. 17101 19530802 19530814 A FEW VARIABLE SPOTS WHICH DIE OUT AFTER AUGUST 6. ON AUGUST 8 TWO SCATTERED CLUSTERS APPEAR AND QUICKLY COALESCE INTO A STRING OF FOUR SMALL COMPOSITE SPOTS; THESE ARE DYING OUT AS THE GROUP PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 17102 19530807 19530808 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 17103 19530809 19530819 A SMALL DIMINISHING REGULAR SPOT, WITH A SMALL COMPANION ON AUGUST 10, 11 AND 13. 17104 19530810 19530812 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON AUGUST 10; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER TWO DAYS. 17105 19530811 19530823 A STREAM, IN WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE FIRST TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. THE LEADER BECOMES REGULAR AND ALONE REMAINS BY AUGUST 20. 17106 19530811 19530821 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL AUGUST 16. 17107 19530905 19530909 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 6 AND 7. 17108 19530906 19530907 A TINY SPOT. 17109 19530906 19530919 RETURN OF GROUP 17105. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A STABLE POSITION. 17110 19530907 19530912 A FEW TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 10. 17111 19530907 19530912 A TINY SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 7. NOTHING IS THEN SEEN UNTIL SEPTEMBER 10, WHEN A PAIR APPEARS. THIS GROUP IS IMMEDIATELY N GROUP 17109. 17112 19530913 19530920 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 17113 19530914 19530921 ONE OR TWO FAINT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 19 AND 20. 17114 19530915 19530926 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A TINY COMPANION ON SEPTEMBER 16. 17115 19530924 19530927 A SMALL VARIABLE SPOT. 17116 19531006 19531011 A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 17117 19531012 19531014 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 17118 19531013 19531017 A STREAM OF RAPID RISE AND DECAY. 17119 19531026 19531028 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 17120 19531031 19531104 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 1 AND 2. 17121 19531120 19531121 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 20; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 21. 17122 19531126 19531127 A TINY SPOT. 17123 19531207 19531208 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON DECEMBER 7; A TINY SINGLE SPOT ON DECEMBER 8. 17124 19531225 19531231 A SMALL VARIABLE SPOT. 17125 19540209 19540211 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 9; A TINY SPOT ON FEBRUARY 10 AND 11. 17126 19540301 19540304 A SMALL SPOT ON MARCH 1; A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A COMPANION ON THE OTHER DAYS. 17127 19540312 19540323 A STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE, DEVELOPING FROM A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 12. THE INTERMEDIATE SPOTS HAVE DIED OUT BY MARCH 21. 17128 19540317 19540319 A TINY SPOT. 17129 19540406 19540409 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 17130 19540415 19540416 A SMALL SPOT. 17131 19540601 19540604 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON JUNE 1 AND 2; A SINGLE SPOT ON JUNE 3 AND 4. 17132 19540708 19540709 A TINY SPOT. 17133 19540712 19540716 A SMALL SPOT WITH A TINY COMPANION ON JULY 13. 17134 19540716 19540717 A CLOSE PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 17135 19540725 19540730 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 17136 19540801 19540809 RETURN OF GROUP 17133. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON AUGUST 2. AFTER AUGUST 4 IT BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT. 17137 19540809 19540814 A SMALL STREAM, APPEARING SUDDENLY NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN AND DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 17138 19540821 19540826 A SHORT VARIABLE STREAM WHICH IS DYING OUT AS IT PASSES ROUND THE LIMB. 17139 19540904 19540914 INTERMITTENT. A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 4; A SINGLE SPOT ON THE OTHER DAYS. 17140 19540915 19540917 A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 15 AND 17; A PAIR ON SEPTEMBER 16. 17141 19541002 19541012 INTERMITTENT. A FEW SMALL SPOTS ON OCTOBER 2 AND 3; A SINGLE SPOT ON OCTOBER 12. 17142 19541004 19541005 TINY SPOTS. 17143 19541012 19541017 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS. 17144 19541012 19541014 A PAIR OF SPOTS ON OCTOBER 12; A SINGLE SPOT ON OCTOBER 14. 17145 19541014 19541017 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS ON OCTOBER 17. 17146 19541016 19541017 A TINY SPOT. 17147 19541018 19541026 A PERSISTENT SMALL SPOT. 17148 19541105 19541109 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON NOVEMBER 7; A PAIR ON NOVEMBER 9. 17149 19541109 19541110 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 9; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 10. 17150 19541109 19541115 A PAIR OF SPOTS, APPEARING JUST PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, OF WHICH THE FOLLOWER IS THE MOST STABLE. 17151 19541110 19541115 INTERMITTENT. A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 17152 19541110 19541114 A SMALL SPOT, QUICKLY DYING OUT. 17153 19541113 19541114 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 17154 19541117 19541119 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON NOVEMBER 17; A SINGLE SPOT ON NOVEMBER 18 AND 19. 17155 19541215 19541221 A REGULAR SPOT FOLLOWED BY A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 17156 19541218 19541226 ONE OR TWO SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 21. 17157 19541229 19550105 A STREAM, SUDDENLY APPEARING NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN, WITH A REGULAR SPOT AS LEADER. THE FOLLOWER IS A DOUBLE SPOT, THE TWO COMPONENTS SEPARATING AFTER JANUARY 1. 17158 19550104 19550114 A STREAM, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT. THE FOLLOWING PART DIES OUT RAPIDLY AFTER JANUARY 7. 17159 19550105 19550107 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 17160 19550106 19550109 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 17161 19550107 19550119 RETURN OF GROUP 17155. A NEARLY REGULAR SPOT WITH A COMPANION TOUCHING THE LEADING EDGE FOR MOST OF THE DISK-PASSAGE. 17162 19550120 19550126 RETURN OF GROUP 17157. A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JANUARY 25. 17163 19550123 19550129 A SMALL STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A TINY SPOT ON JANUARY 23. THE LEADER, A REGULAR SPOT, IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT. 17164 19550126 19550207 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT WITH ONE OR TWO COMPANIONS ON JANUARY 27, 28 AND 31. 17165 19550129 19550131 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 17166 19550130 19550206 RETURN OF GROUP 17158. A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON FEBRUARY 5. 17167 19550202 19550205 A STREAM, FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB AND GROWING RAPIDLY AS IT PASSES OUT OF VIEW. 17168 19550204 19550212 A SMALL GROUP WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON FEBRUARY 8 AND STEADY ADVANCE IN LONGITUDE. 17169 19550206 19550216 RETURN OF GROUP 17161; THIRD APPEARANCE. A GROUP OF CHANGING SPOTS. 17170 19550212 19550213 A SMALL SPOT. 17171 19550216 19550217 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON FEBRUARY 16; A SINGLE SPOT ON FEBRUARY 17. 17172 19550221 19550303 RETURN OF GROUP 17167. A PAIR OF SPOTS, WHICH SOON DEVELOP INTO AN UNSTABLE STREAM AND DIE OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 17173 19550223 19550307 RETURN OF GROUP 17164. A REGULAR SPOT. 17174 19550308 19550310 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 8 AND 9; A SINGLE SPOT ON MARCH 10. 17175 19550329 19550401 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON MARCH 29 AND 30; NOTHING IS SEEN ON MARCH 31 BUT THERE IS A SINGLE SPOT ON THE NEXT DAY. 17176 19550329 19550402 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 17177 19550403 19550405 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON APRIL 3 AND 4; A SINGLE SPOT ON APRIL 5. 17178 19550404 19550409 A BI-POLAR GROUP DEVELOPING FROM A FEW TINY SPOTS ON APRIL 4. 17179 19550405 19550411 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON APRIL 7. 17180 19550408 19550409 TINY SPOTS ON APRIL 8; A SINGLE SPOT ON APRIL 9. 17181 19550415 19550417 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 17182 19550415 19550421 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON APRIL 18-20. 17183 19550417 19550424 INTERMITTENT. A FEW TINY SPOTS. 17184 19550427 19550507 A BI-POLAR GROUP, OF WHICH THE LEADER ALONE REMAINS BY MAY 3. 17185 19550428 19550505 A SMALL SPOT, WHICH DIVIDES INTO TWO BEFORE DYING OUT. 17186 19550503 19550512 A STRING OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 17187 19550504 19550505 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 17188 19550516 19550527 A PAIR OF SPOTS UNTIL MAY 19. ON THE NEXT DAY INTERMEDIATE SPOTS APPEAR TO FORM A STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADING PORTION SOON COALESCES INTO A REGULAR SPOT, WHILE THE FOLLOWING PART BECOMES COMPOSITE AND SOON DIES OUT. 17189 19550517 19550521 A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 17190 19550518 19550530 A VARIABLE STREAM, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT. 17191 19550521 19550522 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON MAY 21; A SINGLE SPOT ON MAY 22. 17192 19550524 19550604 A STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A SMALL SPOT FIRST SEEN ON MAY 24. THE LARGEST AND MOST STABLE COMPONENT IS THE CENTRAL SPOT. THE WHOLE GROUP DIES OUT AS IT APPROACHES THE LIMB. 17193 19550525 19550526 A TINY SPOT. 17194 19550528 19550602 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 17195 19550531 19550602 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 17196 19550604 19550614 A LONG STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JUNE 12. ON JUNE 13 AND 14 A FEW TINY SPOTS REAPPEAR. 17197 19550610 19550615 TINY SCATTERED SPOTS IN HIGH NORTHERN LATITUDE NOT SEEN ON JUNE 14. 17198 19550610 19550622 A REGULAR SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO CLOSE COMPANIONS, JUST PRECEDING GROUP 17200. BY JUNE 17 THE UMBRA BEGINS TO DIVIDE AND THE WHOLE SPOT SPLITS INTO TWO BY JUNE 21, DECREASING IN AREA AS IT APPROACHES THE LIMB. 17199 19550611 19550612 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 17200 19550611 19550623 A STREAM, UNDERGOING CONSIDERABLE CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY, IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING GROUP 17198. 17201 19550611 19550616 RETURN OF GROUP 17188. A FEW SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 17202 19550616 19550622 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 17203 19550628 19550710 A REGULAR SPOT WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. ON JULY 5 IT BEGINS TO BECOME ELONGATED BEFORE SPLITTING UP AND DYING OUT. 17204 19550630 19550711 A REGULAR SPOT, QUICKLY DISINTEGRATING AND DYING OUT. 17205 19550701 19550706 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON JULY 2. 17206 19550704 19550714 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 17207 19550706 19550715 INTERMITTENT. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 17208 19550709 19550711 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 9; A SINGLE TINY SPOT ON JULY 10 AND 11. 17209 19550709 19550712 A FAINT SPOT, SEEN ONLY ON JULY 9 AND 12. 17210 19550710 19550714 SMALL CHANGING SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 11 AND 12. 17211 19550712 19550715 A SMALL SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON JULY 12 AND 14. 17212 19550714 19550722 A FEW SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON JULY 18 AND 19. 17213 19550719 19550720 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS ON JULY 19; A SINGLE SPOT ON JULY 20. 17214 19550719 19550720 A GROUP FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 17215 19550719 19550722 A TINY SPOT, NOT SEEN ON JULY 21. 17216 19550726 19550804 A GROUP OF SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS, WITH MAXIMUM AREA ON JULY 30. 17217 19550727 19550728 A TINY SPOT. 17218 19550731 19550803 SMALL UNSTABLE SPOTS. 17219 19550804 19550814 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS UNTIL AUGUST 8. LATER THERE IS A BRIEF INCREASE IN AREA. 17220 19550805 19550816 A STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A SINGLE SPOT, IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND REMAINS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT. 17221 19550805 19550817 RETURN OF GROUP 17214. A STREAM, WHICH BY AUGUST 10 HAS COALESCED INTO TWO PRINCIPAL COMPONENTS. THESE TAKE ON REGULAR OUTLINE AS THEY NEAR THE LIMB. 17222 19550809 19550818 SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON AUGUST 16 AND 17. 17223 19550813 19550815 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 17224 19550816 19550823 A SMALL STREAM, SLOWLY DEVELOPING AS IT APPROACHES THE LIMB. 17225 19550821 19550824 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 17226 19550824 19550902 A STREAM QUICKLY BREAKING UP AFTER AUGUST 30 AND DYING OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 17227 19550826 19550902 VARIABLE SPOTS WITH A BRIEF MAXIMUM ON AUGUST 27. 17228 19550827 19550830 A TINY SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON AUGUST 28 AND 30. 17229 19550827 19550905 A SMALL SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO UNSTABLE COMPANIONS. 17230 19550829 19550904 A CLOSE PAIR OF SPOTS, COALESCING AND DYING OUT NEAR THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 17231 19550831 19550905 A PAIR OF SPOTS, BREAKING UP AND DYING OUT. 17232 19550831 19550910 RETURN OF GROUP 17220. A PERSISTENT SMALL SPOT. 17233 19550831 19550914 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT. 17234 19550901 19550909 RETURN OF GROUP 17221; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A COMPANION FROM SEPTEMBER 2 TO SEPTEMBER 7. 17235 19550902 19550908 A STREAM OF CHANGING SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 7. 17236 19550903 19550911 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A DISTANT COMPANION EXCEPT ON SEPTEMBER 8, 9 AND 11. 17237 19550904 19550908 A BI-POLAR GROUP, FORMING QUICKLY WITHIN A FEW DAYS OF THE WEST LIMB. 17238 19550904 19550906 A TINY SPOT. 17239 19550905 19550907 A TINY FAINT SPOT. 17240 19550905 19550914 A FEW SMALL SPOTS WITH A BACKWARD DRIFT IN LONGITUDE. 17241 19550907 19550911 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS, EXCEPT ON SEPTEMBER 10 WHEN ONLY ONE IS SEEN. 17242 19550911 19550920 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, OF WHICH THE LEADER IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT. 17243 19550912 19550917 INTERMITTENT. A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 12; A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 15 AND 17. 17244 19550915 19550920 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS. 17245 19550918 19550919 A SMALL SPOT. 17246 19550920 19550921 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 20; A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 21. 17247 19550923 19550929 RETURN OF GROUP 17237. ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS DYING OUT ON THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 17248 19550924 19550925 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 17249 19550925 19550930 A FEW FAINT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON SEPTEMBER 26 AND 27. 17250 19550927 19550929 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON SEPTEMBER 27 AND 28; A SINGLE SPOT ON SEPTEMBER 29. 17251 19550930 19551010 RETURN OF GROUP 17233. A STREAM OF SMALL CHANGING SPOTS. 17252 19550930 19551003 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 17253 19550930 19551013 A STABLE REGULAR SPOT, WITH OCCASIONAL SMALL COMPANIONS. 17254 19551001 19551014 A GROUP OF VARIABLE SPOTS. 17255 19551002 19551006 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 17256 19551002 19551009 A SMALL SPOT, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 7 AND 8. 17257 19551003 19551006 A SMALL SPOT ON OCTOBER 3 AND 6; A PAIR ON OCTOBER 4 AND 5. 17258 19551006 19551014 A SMALL SPOT, WITH ONE OR TWO CLOSE VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 17259 19551007 19551009 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS. 17260 19551007 19551015 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 13. 17261 19551008 19551014 A SMALL SPOT WITH A COMPANION ON OCTOBER 12. 17262 19551009 19551011 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 17263 19551012 19551013 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS ON OCTOBER 12; A SINGLE SPOT ON OCTOBER 13. 17264 19551019 19551030 A STREAM IN WHICH THE LEADER IS THE FIRST TO DIE OUT. THE FOLLOWER BREAKS UP INTO A CLUSTER FOR A FEW DAYS AND DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 17265 19551020 19551029 A SMALL SLOWLY-DIMINISHING SPOT. 17266 19551022 19551104 A REGULAR SPOT. 17267 19551023 19551104 A LARGE COMPOSITE SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A TRAIN OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 17268 19551024 19551025 A FEW TINY SPOTS. 17269 19551024 19551105 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS, WHICH BY NOVEMBER 1 HAS DEVELOPED INTO A NORMAL BI-POLAR GROUP. 17270 19551024 19551105 A REGULAR SPOT WITH A FEW VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 17271 19551026 19551101 ONE OR TWO SMALL SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON OCTOBER 27. 17272 19551028 19551109 RETURN OF GROUP 17253. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A DISTANT SMALL COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 5. 17273 19551031 19551102 TWO OR THREE TINY SPOTS. 17274 19551101 19551113 A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON NOVEMBER 3-5. 17275 19551105 19551107 A STREAM OF SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 17276 19551105 19551117 A STREAM, LED BY A SMALL REGULAR SPOT WHICH IS THE ONLY STABLE COMPONENT AND ALONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 14. 17277 19551107 19551119 A LONG STREAM OF NORMAL TYPE WHICH IS SLOWLY DYING OUT AS IT APPROACHES THE LIMB. 17278 19551108 19551121 AT FIRST A BI-POLAR GROUP CONSISTING OF TWO FAIR-SIZED COMPOSITE SPOTS. ON NOVEMBER 11 INTERMEDIATE SPOTS APPEAR TO FORM A STREAM. THE LEADER REMAINS COMPOSITE BUT THE FOLLOWER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT BY NOVEMBER 13. 17279 19551109 19551113 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 17280 19551110 19551112 A GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS FORMING NEAR THE WEST LIMB. 17281 19551110 19551111 A PAIR OF TINY SPOTS. 17282 19551112 19551113 A SMALL SPOT. 17283 19551112 19551123 A STREAM IN WHICH BOTH LEADER AND FOLLOWER ARE SMALL REGULAR SPOTS UNTIL NOVEMBER 16. THEN THEY BEGIN TO BREAK UP AND THE WHOLE GROUP DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 17284 19551114 19551118 A STREAM FORMING PAST THE CENTRAL MERIDIAN. 17285 19551114 19551117 TINY SPOTS SEEN ONLY ON NOVEMBER 14 AND 17. 17286 19551118 19551120 A PAIR OF SMALL SPOTS. 17287 19551119 19551201 RETURN OF GROUP 17267. A REGULAR SPOT WITH A NUMBER OF SMALL VARIABLE COMPANIONS. 17288 19551120 19551202 RETURN OF GROUP 17266. A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS, FOLLOWED BY A FEW SMALL COMPANIONS. 17289 19551121 19551202 RETURN OF GROUP 17270. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT. 17290 19551123 19551130 SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 17291 19551123 19551203 A STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS IN HIGH LATITUDE, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY NOVEMBER 30. 17292 19551127 19551206 A SMALL SPOT UNTIL DECEMBER 3. ON DECEMBER 4 AND 5 THERE IS A PAIR OF SPOTS. 17293 19551128 19551210 RETURN OF GROUP 17280. A GROUP OF NUMEROUS SPOTS FORMING AN ALMOST CONTINOUS STRUCTURE UNTIL DECEMBER 5. AFTER WHICH THE WHOLE BECOMES A NORMAL STREAM. 17294 19551128 19551210 RETURN OF GROUP 17274. A REGULAR SPOT, FOLLOWED BY A DISTANT COMPANION UNTIL DECEMBER 7. 17295 19551204 19551212 A PAIR OF SPOTS, OF WHICH ONLY ONE REMAINS BY DECEMBER 11. 17296 19551204 19551216 RETURN OF GROUP 17276. A LONG STREAM OF SMALL SPOTS UNTIL DECEMBER 10. ON THE NEXT DAY THERE IS A BIG INCREASE IN AREA IN THE REAR PART, WHICH ALONE SURVIVES TO THE LIMB. 17297 19551204 19551205 A SMALL SPOT. 17298 19551206 19551207 A SMALL SPOT. 17299 19551208 19551210 A TINY SPOT ON DECEMBER 8 AND 9; A PAIR ON DECEMBER 10. 17300 19551208 19551209 A TINY SPOT ON DECEMBER 8; A PAIR ON DECEMBER 9. 17301 19551209 19551214 A SMALL SPOT WITH A FOLLOWING COMPANION WHICH DIES OUT BY DECEMBER 14. 17302 19551211 19551222 A REGULAR SPOT WHICH BEGINS TO BREAK UP AND DIE OUT AFTER DECEMBER 17. 17303 19551212 19551213 A TINY SPOT. 17304 19551212 19551222 A FEW FAINT SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 21. 17305 19551213 19551225 A SINGLE ELONGATED SPOT, SLOWLY DYING OUT AS IT APPROACHES THE LIMB. 17306 19551214 19551222 A STREAM, DEVELOPING FROM A FEW TINY SPOTS. THE LEADER BECOMES A REGULAR SPOT AND IS THE MOST STABLE COMPONENT. 17307 19551217 19551225 RETURN OF GROUP 17287; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL REGULAR SPOT, WITH A COMPANION ON DECEMBER 20 AND 21. 17308 19551218 19551221 TWO OR THREE SMALL SPOTS. 17309 19551218 19551230 A BI-POLAR GROUP, IN WHICH THE LEADER BECOMES A DOUBLE SPOT AND IS THE FIRST TO DIE OUT. THE FOLLOWER SOON BECOMES REGULAR IN OUTLINE AND SURVIVES TO THE LIMB. 17310 19551219 19551220 RETURN OF GROUP 17288; THIRD APPEARANCE. A TINY SPOT. 17311 19551220 19551226 A WIDE PAIR OF SPOTS, NOT SEEN ON DECEMBER 22. 17312 19551221 19551223 ONE OR TWO TINY SPOTS. 17313 19551221 19551226 ONE OR TWO SMALL VARIABLE SPOTS. 17314 19551224 19560102 TINY SPOTS, WHICH BY DECEMBER 30 HAVE BECOME A PAIR OF REGULAR SPOTS AND WHICH DIE OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB. 17315 19551225 19560106 RETURN OF GROUP 17293; THIRD APPEARANCE. A COMPACT GROUP OF SMALL SPOTS WHICH DEVELOPS INTO A STREAM BY JANUARY 1 AND IS DYING OUT AS IT APPROACHES THE LIMB. 17316 19551226 19560102 RETURN OF GROUP 17294; THIRD APPEARANCE. A SMALL SPOT. 17317 19551227 19551230 A FEW SMALL SPOTS. 17318 19551228 19560108 A SMALL STREAM, LED BY A REGULAR SPOT, WHICH DIES OUT BEFORE REACHING THE LIMB.