The North Circumpolar.
Yes. Pole Star is located by Ursa Major. On a clear moonless sky during summer at 9.00 p.m. at the northern part of sky you can see Ursa Major. Imagine a straight line that passess through these stars and extend this line towards the northern side to a star that is not too bright. This is a Pole Star. This star does not move at all. Ursa Major moves east to west of this Pole Star.
The Big Dipper is part of the Ursa Major constellation. It is one of the most well-known asterisms in the night sky and is easily recognizable due to its distinctive shape.
No, the Big Dipper is not part of Draco. The Big Dipper is part of the Ursa Major constellation, while Draco is a separate constellation in the northern sky. The two constellations appear near each other in the sky but are distinct.
The big dipper are the seven brightest of the formal constellation Ursa Major.
The constellation Ursa Major isn't in the sky at all; it is in our minds, in our imaginations. There are several stars which, from our particular point of view, appear to form a pattern. The pattern isn't real; we thought it up, and made up stories about it. But the pattern isn't in the stars.
Ursa Major
None! 'Ursa Major' is Latin for 'Big Bear'.
The riddle is referencing the constellation Ursa Major, also known as the Great Bear. The staff is the Big Dipper, part of Ursa Major. Arcturus is indeed the brightest star in the summer sky and is found in the constellation Booötes, located near Ursa Major.
Ursa Major is not associated with any specific god. It is a constellation in the northern sky that is commonly referred to as the "Great Bear." In various mythologies, it is often associated with different legends and stories, but it is not directly linked to a particular god.
Ursa Minor and Ursa Major are constellations in sky that are in shape of a bear, Caesar's bear. Google Ursa minor
Ursa Major or big dipper (Great Bear) and Ursa Minor or little dipper (Little Bear)
The "Great Bear" is called Ursa Major