at mid and northern celestial latitudes
Faint stars were not included in ancient constellations and regions of the southern sky were not visible to the ancient astronomers of northern latitudes. (source: Michael A. Seed's Foundations of Astronomy)
Nearby constellations to Hercules are Lyra, Draco, Bootes, Corona Borealis, and Serpens.
These constellations share a border with Taurus: Auriga Perseus Aries Cetus Eridanus Orion Gemini
Well Hercules is between the constellations Lyra and Bootes.
DracoCamelopardalisLynxLeo MinorLeoComa BerenicesCanes VenaticiBoötes
the constellations are located every were in the northern hemisphere.
Faint stars were not included in ancient constellations and regions of the southern sky were not visible to the ancient astronomers of northern latitudes. (source: Michael A. Seed's Foundations of Astronomy)
Between the two zodiac constellations Aries and Aquarius
No, constellations cover the entire area of the sky.
The Little Dipper is one constellation, it is not made up of smaller constellations.
Nearby constellations to Hercules are Lyra, Draco, Bootes, Corona Borealis, and Serpens.
These constellations share a border with Taurus: Auriga Perseus Aries Cetus Eridanus Orion Gemini
Well Hercules is between the constellations Lyra and Bootes.
yes constellations are relative in comparison with where you are located in the universe. depending on where you travel some constellations may stay the same while other will drastically look different.
It is the Andromeda Galaxy
DracoCamelopardalisLynxLeo MinorLeoComa BerenicesCanes VenaticiBoötes
There is an imaginary band in the sky called the Plane of the Ecliptic. The planets we can see from earth, never wander above or below that band of sky - so the planets are always in one of the other of the constellations that lie in that band. We call those particular 12 (or 13) constellations the "constellations of the Zodiac".