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The Coalsack Nebula was juxtaposed in 1899 by Richard Hinckley Allen through naming the Northern Coalsack Nebula. [4] The Coalsack Nebula covers nearly 7° by 5° and extends into the neighboring constellations Centaurus and Musca. [5] The first observation was reported by Vicente Yáñez Pinzón in 1499. [6]
Richard Hinckley Allen (1838, Buffalo, New York – 1908, Northampton, Massachusetts) was a gifted polymath and amateur naturalist; his wide range of interests caused his friends to nickname him "the walking encyclopedia."
L. Stewart Hinckley (1902–1969), American politician; Lyman G. Hinckley (1832–1887), American politician; May Green Hinckley (1881–1943), Latter-day Saint leader; Mike Hinckley (born 1982), baseball pitcher; Richard Hinckley Allen (1838–1908), American astronomer; Robert Cutler Hinckley (1853–1941), American artist
Hinckley shot four people on March 30, 1981, including Reagan, then White House press secretary James Brady, as well as a Secret Service agent and a police officer. Brady suffered medical ...
Richard Hinckley Allen gives no historical names for the star in his book Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning. [18] In 2016, the IAU organized a Working Group on Star Names (WGSN) [19] to catalog and standardize proper names for stars. The WGSN decided to attribute proper names to individual stars rather than entire multiple systems. [20]
Described by Richard Hinckley Allen as bluish, [7] Gamma Tucanae is a yellow-white sequence star of spectral type F4V and an apparent magnitude of 4.00 located around 75 light-years from Earth. [19] It also marks the toucan's beak. [20] Beta, Delta and Kappa are multiple star systems containing six, two and four stars respectively.