Saturn during the 2005/2006 apparition

A report of the Saturn, Uranus & Neptune Section (Director: M. Foulkes). This report describes observations of Saturn made by members of the since-renamed Saturn Section during the 2005/2006 apparition. In particular, this report describes the observations of a bright storm that appeared in southern mid-temperate latitudes, which was also observed by the Cassini spacecraft. Details of other storms observed are also described, including a light spot at high southern latitudes. Only a small segment of the northern hemisphere was visible but within this, a narrow bright blue zone was recorded. Observations of an occultation of the star BY Cancri are also presented.

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Roland L. T. Clarkson: a Suffolk astronomer

R. L. T. Clarkson (1889–1954) lived nearly all his life in Suffolk and the surrounding counties, under the dark skies of rural England. A complete set of beautifully illustrated observational notebooks allows us to trace the life of this typical and uncontroversial amateur astronomer, along with his interactions with the BAA. Throughout most of his life Clarkson suffered from a shortage of money and was even forced to sell his best telescopes during the Great Depression. Some previously unpublished details are presented here about the work of the lunar observer H. G. Tomkins of Dedham, with whom he collaborated in the 1920s & ’30s. Like Tomkins and many others of his epoch, Clarkson favoured a volcanic origin for the lunar craters: the subject of his only contribution to our Journal. Late in life, he was a founder member of the Ipswich and District Astronomical Society, the forerunner of the modern Orwell Astronomical Society Ipswich.

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