A Comet Textbook From 300 B.C.
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NASA has some nice historical comet stuff up on its Deep Impact Mission page (“Pope Calixtus III excommunicated Halley’s Comet as an instrument of the devil”), and I really like this: a 2300-year-old piece of Chinese silk upon which astronomers documented the difference between cometary forms (“long-tailed pheasant stars,” “broom stars,” etc) and linked them to specific types of disaster. It’s part of the Mawangdui Silk Texts, which were sealed in a tomb from 168 B.C. and not discovered until the ’70s: don’t you wish there was some way to do that with everything we’re fussing about now?