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Secondary sources used to find information:

"Earth Was Created in a Wonderful Location." The


Institute for Creation Research. Web. 15 Jan. 2011.
<http://www.icr.org/earths-location/>.
From this website, I gained the information that Earth was
located at the perfect location where it received enough
sunlight to support life, but it wasn’t too hot to burn
everything.

Kudlinski, Kathleen V., and John Rocco. Boy, Were We


Wrong about the Solar System! New York: Dutton
Children's, 2008. Print.

I read this book just to get a basic understanding of the


many historic theories about the universe.

"Nicholas Copernicus | Calendars." Webexhibits. Web. 22


Dec. 2010.
<http://www.webexhibits.org/calendars/year-text- C
opernicus.html>.

This site told me about the way Copernicus used the sun
and moon to try and tell time.

Primack, Joel R., and Nancy Ellen. Abrams. The View from
the Center of the Universe: Discovering Our
Extraordinary Place in the Cosmos. New York:
Riverhead /Penguin, 2006. Print.
I only read Chapter 3 which kind of described the debate,
but was more centered around the theories themselves.

Primary source used to find information:

"Nicolaus Copernicus (Stanford Encyclopedia of


Philosophy)." Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Web. 29 Jan. 2011.
<http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/copernicus/>.

This was the only credible site I found that had primary
sources. It had little pieces of things that Copernicus
himself wrote about his discoveries and experiences.

Sources used to find pictures:

"APOD: 2001 August 6 - The Orbiting Hubble Space


Telescope." Astronomy Picture of the Day. Web. 9
Jan. 2011.
<http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap010806.html>.
"The Church and Copernicus." Filer. Web. 9 Jan.
2011.

I got a picture of the Hubble Space Telescope used on the


page about the consequences of this debate from this page.

"Earth Was Created in a Wonderful Location." The


Institute for Creation Research. Web. 15 Jan. 2011.
<http://www.icr.org/earths-location/>.
I got the picture used on the page about he Copernican
Theory from this site.

"NASA - Image of the the Day - Gallery." NASA - Home.


Web. 29 Jan. 2011.
<http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/imagegallery/iotd.h
tml>.

On my Home page, there is a slide show, all the pictures for


that were from this page as well as the picture of the nebula
shown near the website name on all the pages.

Source for the video:

"NASA - Multimedia - Video Gallery." NASA - Home.


Web. 30 Jan. 2011.
<http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/videogallery/index.
html>.

On the Home page, after my thesis, I put up a video there.


The video came from this website. It was originally named
“Dust Models Paint Alien's View of Solar System.” I
changed did not give the video a name; I also cut away
most of the video, the section I have is only second 8
through 39. I also deleted all the sound.

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