One way to find Polaris, the North Star, is to look for the "Big Dipper" and then look at the two stars forming the edge of the "bowl" on the dipper opposite the handle (these are Merak and Dubhe). Look straight along the line formed by the two stars "up" from the dipper about twice the distance that separates the two stars and you should see it. It will generally be in a northern part of the sky. The North Star is also the only one that doesn't move through the night. All other stars will appear to rotate around it.
Another way is to locate the Little Dipper (Ursa Minor) and Polaris will be the star at the end of the handle.
Ursa Major, the great bear. Part of this constellation has a very prominent asterism which people refer to as the "Plough" or the "Big Dipper", part of this asterism is what is used to point to the pole star. ============================================= So it's actually the pole star, in the asterism of the "Little Dipper", in the constellation of Ursa Minor, that can help traveler find north pole without compass.
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A few of them can but the most famous ones are Ursa Minor (the little bear) and Ursa Major (the great bear). Inside each bear is a "dipper" - the Little Dipper is in the little bear and the Big Dipper is in the great bear. The star at the end of the Little Dipper is Polaris - the North Star. Polaris is called the North Star because it's directly above Earth's north pole. By finding this star, travelers always were able to find north. A great way to find Polaris is by using the stars in the 'easy to spot' Big Dipper. If you draw an imaginary line from the two stars in the front of the pole, you will come to Polaris.
By telling people where is north south east and west
To locate the North Star in the night sky, find the Big Dipper constellation and follow the two outer stars in its bowl to the North Star, which is the brightest star in the Little Dipper constellation. The North Star is always in the same position in the northern sky and can help you determine true north.
There is an asterism, a smaller part of the Great Bear, called the "big dipper". (In the UK, I understand that it is called "the Plough", and during Shakespeare's time it was called "Charles' Wain".) Follow the two stars at the lip of the dipper; they are Merak and Dubhe. Follow the line between them for seven times their separation in the sky. There is a small dim-mish star there, which is still brighter than the other stars around it. This is Polaris, the north star.
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http://souledout.org/nightsky/ursamajorandminor.html Pictures and stuff, should help
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The book is called East by Edith Pattou.