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He's examining a medieval manuscript that describes seven celestial bodies in the sphere of the sun, objects that behaved like stars but had tails. Five are named directly in the text, including one called Tafur, an Arabic designation. What makes this particularly significant is the manuscript's instruction to compare Taifur with a comet named Typhon. That reference opens up an entire thread of ancient observations that modern astronomy has largely overlooked. These weren't random sightings. The precision of the naming conventions and the systematic cataloging suggest these objects were tracked, recorded, and understood within a framework that predates our current models of the solar system.