Indus is a constellation in the southern sky first professionally surveyed by Europeans in the 1590s and mapped on a globe by Petrus Plancius by early 1598. It was included on a plate illustrating southern constellations in Bayer's sky atlas Uranometria in 1603. It lies well south of the Tropic of Capricorn but its triangular shape can be seen for most of the year from the Equator. It is elongated from north to south and has a complex boundary. The English translation of its name is generally given as the Indian, though it is unclear which indigenous people the constellation was originally supposed to represent.
The constellation Indus as it can be seen by the naked eye.
The spiral galaxy NGC 7038 (Hubble Space Telescope image)
Indus (top middle) in an extract from Johann Bayer's Uranometria, its first appearance in a celestial atlas.
Petrus Plancius was a Dutch-Flemish astronomer, cartographer and clergyman. He was born as Pieter Platevoet in Dranouter, now in Heuvelland, West Flanders. He studied theology in Germany and England. At the age of 24 he became a minister in the Dutch Reformed Church.
Petrus Plancius Instructing Students in the Science of Navigation, by David Vinckboons
Orbis Terrarum 1594
Nova Francia .. Terra Nova 1592
Insulae Moluccae 1592