The Pleiades is not a constellation - it's an open cluster of stars and it's approx. 400 light years away from Earth.
Hey, per Wikipedea itself, go figure... "Some Greek astronomers considered them to be a distinct constellation, .... As daughters of Atlas, the Hyades were sisters of the Pleiades. ..."
ref: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleiades_(star_cluster)
52.00098 from the earth
Camelopardalis is a Large but faint constellation . the nearest star of this constellation is about 17.58 light years away
Like all constellations, they are made up of stars - each one it's own unique distance from Earth. Therefor a constellation isn't a specific distance from Earth.
Delphinus is a constellation located about 240 light-years away from Earth.
The scorpion constellation is made up of star that are different distances from Earth, so you can't find a single distance of a whole constellation.
52.00098 from the earth
hercules is 27.4 light years away from Earth
The constellation Norma is approximately 200 million light years away from Earth. It is a small and inconspicuous constellation that can be seen in the southern hemisphere.
Eridanus is a constellation - not a single star
Camelopardalis is a Large but faint constellation . the nearest star of this constellation is about 17.58 light years away
Like all constellations, they are made up of stars - each one it's own unique distance from Earth. Therefor a constellation isn't a specific distance from Earth.
Delphinus is a constellation located about 240 light-years away from Earth.
The scorpion constellation is made up of star that are different distances from Earth, so you can't find a single distance of a whole constellation.
Aquila is a constellation containing a lot of stars, at different distances. Aquila is not at a particular distance.
Thuban is a star located approximately 303 light years away from Earth in the constellation of Draco.
Roughly speaking, a constellation is a direction in the sky. This is like asking "how far is left", or "how far is up". It starts right here, and goes all the way to infinity. Or however far the Universe reaches.
Every star in EVERY constellation has a different distance from Earth. So a particular constellation cannot be measured that way, since it only looks like that shape from our perspective in our particular location in space.