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TIE IN THE FIRST SOCCER TEST.—lncidents in the game between Canada and New Zealand, played at Dunedin last Saturday. Top: New Zealand's goal besieged. Bottom: Monaghan scores for Canada.

From left: The gigantic telescopic camera, 45ft long, which was used to record the eclipse. . . A remarkably large prominence photographed during the eclipse of 1919. . . Beautiful coronal streamers stretching for millions of miles into space at the eclipse of 1878. . . Three ways in which the moon's shadow falls on the earth, causing (a) total eclipse, (b) annular eclipse (total in centre of track), and (c) partial eclipse of the sun.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19270630.2.128.5

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LVIII, Issue 152, 30 June 1927, Page 10

Word Count
99

TIE IN THE FIRST SOCCER TEST.—lncidents in the game between Canada and New Zealand, played at Dunedin last Saturday. Top: New Zealand's goal besieged. Bottom: Monaghan scores for Canada. From left: The gigantic telescopic camera, 45ft long, which was used to record the eclipse. . . A remarkably large prominence photographed during the eclipse of 1919. . . Beautiful coronal streamers stretching for millions of miles into space at the eclipse of 1878. . . Three ways in which the moon's shadow falls on the earth, causing (a) total eclipse, (b) annular eclipse (total in centre of track), and (c) partial eclipse of the sun. Auckland Star, Volume LVIII, Issue 152, 30 June 1927, Page 10

TIE IN THE FIRST SOCCER TEST.—lncidents in the game between Canada and New Zealand, played at Dunedin last Saturday. Top: New Zealand's goal besieged. Bottom: Monaghan scores for Canada. From left: The gigantic telescopic camera, 45ft long, which was used to record the eclipse. . . A remarkably large prominence photographed during the eclipse of 1919. . . Beautiful coronal streamers stretching for millions of miles into space at the eclipse of 1878. . . Three ways in which the moon's shadow falls on the earth, causing (a) total eclipse, (b) annular eclipse (total in centre of track), and (c) partial eclipse of the sun. Auckland Star, Volume LVIII, Issue 152, 30 June 1927, Page 10