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Ursa Major is the constellation. The 2 stars in the bowl of the dipper point to Polaris. Polaris IS the North Star.
The constellation of Pegasus is in the northern sky and the Arawak and Warrau people used the stars to represent a grill on stilts. The square of the constellation was also used to locate navigational stars.
Cassiopeia
the Little Bear
Ursa Major/The Great Bear/The Plough/The Big Dipper/The Drinking Gourd.
You can locate Leo the constellation by: 1: eating 2: drinking bear 3: looking in the sky!
It can be used to locate other stars
Ursa Major
They help us to find directions and to locate other stars.
Modern uses are to merely name different stars and to locate them in the sky.
The constellation Camelopardalis is visible year-round in the northern hemisphere. It is easy to locate due to its close proximity to Polaris in Ursa Minor, marking the North Celestial Pole. In the summer sky, Camelopardalis can be located fairly low on the northern horizon, below Polaris and to the west of the crown of Cassiopeia. Our name for it comes from the Italian, by way of Arabic, but which animal did the Romans call "camelopardalis"? - Giraffe
The crankcase drain plug on a 2007 Polaris scrambler 500 is hard to locate. However, it is behind the bolt in the skid plate.