Timeline of astronomical maps, catalogs, and surveys
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Timeline of astronomical maps, catalogs and surveys
- 1800 BC - Babylonian star catalog
- 350 BC - Shin Shen's star catalog has almost 800 entries
- 300 BC - star catalog of Timocharis of Alexandria
- 134 BC - Hipparchus makes a detailed star map
- ca. 140 - Ptolemy completes his Almagest, which contains a catalog of stars, observations of planetary motions, and treatises on geometry and cosmology
- 840 - al-Farghani Compendium of the Science of the Stars
- 963 - al-Sufi's star catalog Book of the Fixed Stars
- 1252-1272 - Alphonsine tables recorded
- 1437 - Publication of Ulugh Beg's Zij-i-Sultani
- late 16th century - Tycho Brahe updates Ptolemy's Almagest
- 1603 - Johann Bayer's Uranometria
- 1678 - Edmund Halley publishes a catalog of 341 southern stars, the first systematic southern sky survey
- 1726 - Posthumous publication of John Flamsteed's Historia Coelestis Britannica
- 1771 - Charles Messier publishes his first list of nebulae
- 1862 - Friedrich Wilhelm Argelander publishes his final edition of the Bonner Durchmusterung catalog of stars north of declination -1°.
- 1864 - John Herschel publishes the General Catalogue of nebulae and star clusters
- 1887 - Paris conference institutes Carte du Ciel project to map entire sky to 14th magnitude photographically
- 1890 - John Dreyer publishes the New General Catalogue of nebulae and star clusters
- 1932 - Harlow Shapley and Adelaide Ames publish A Survey of the External Galaxies Brighter than the Thirteenth Magnitude, later known as the Shapley-Ames Catalog
- 1950-1957 - Completion of the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (POSS) with the Palomar 48-inch Schmidt optical reflecting telescope. Actual date quoted varies upon source.
- 1962 - A.S. Bennett of the Cambridge Radio Astronomy Group publishes the Revised 3C Catalog of 328 radio sources
- 1965 - Gerry Neugebauer and Robert Leighton begin a 2.2 micrometre sky survey with a 1.6-meter telescope on Mount Wilson
- 1982 - IRAS space observatory completes an all-sky mid-infrared survey
- 1990 - Publication of APM Galaxy Survey of 2+ million galaxies, to study Large-scale structure of the cosmos
- 1991 - ROSAT space observatory begins an all-sky X-ray survey
- 1993 - Start of the 20 cm VLA FIRST survey
- 1997 - Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS) commences
- 1998 - Sloan Digital Sky Survey commences
- 2003 - 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey published; 2MASS completes