The Big and the Little Dippers are sometimes considered to be the easiest constellations to find in the night sky. It is easiest to spot the two of them swinging around the North Star.
you can see the big dipper at 30 degrees and above all year around
You can see the Big Dipper every month of the year, IF you live in the Northern Hemisphere
you look at the brightest star in the sky then you follow a chain of stars to the big dipper
there's only one big dipper but there's also a little dipper
because when he looked at the sky he saw the stars he connected the stars and he connected one and he called it big dipper because he was the first one to discover the big dipper.
The Big Dipper is NOT a constellation. It's an asterism (part of a constellation). You can see it all year long if you live in the Northern Hemisphere.
You can see it all the time of you live in the Northern Hemisphere, unless you live really, REALLY south and the Dipper is low on the horizon... Find out where north is, wait for the sun to set, and you will EASILY see the Big Dipper in the north.
in the sky dummy
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One of the other names of the big dipper is Ursa Major.
No. Peru is in the southern Hemisphere and though parts of the Big Dipper can be seen, no part of the Little Dipper can be seen.
you can only see the big dipper at night with a microscop