USA TODAY US Edition

HIGHLIGHT: NEW MEXICO

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Santa Fe:

A newly forged steel instrument that can pinpoint the path of stars and planets across the night sky using the naked eye is a throwback to the years just before the advent of telescopes, returning stargazers in the hills of northern New Mexico to the essentials of astronomy in the past. Installed at St. John’s College by graduates, the device is a remake of long-lost originals devised by Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe in the late 16th century. It consists of four interlocki­ng rings combined with a sliding viewfinder that is moved by hand to measure angles between the any celestial object, the horizon and the equator.

 ?? AP ?? Bill Donahue adjusts an armillary sphere to track planetary rotations.
AP Bill Donahue adjusts an armillary sphere to track planetary rotations.

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