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Thread: Navigation at sea, the story of longitude

  1. #1
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    Navigation at sea, the story of longitude

    [ame]https://youtu.be/8zyA4qQ7EvI[/ame]
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  2. #2
    austastar's Avatar
    austastar is offline YarnMaster Silver Subscriber
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    Hi,
    An excellent story of a battle of a clever individal against the biased buffoonery of the British Naval system.
    Well worth watching.

    Thanks for posting it.

  3. #3
    JDNSW's Avatar
    JDNSW is offline RoverLord Silver Subscriber
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    Not as clear cut as is often implied. Competing with the use of time pieces to find longitude was the use of lunar departures - effectively measuring time by the position of the moon.

    This became practical about the same time as Harrison's chronometer, thanks to improved predictions of the moon's position, and the only equipment it needed was the sextant that the navigator probably already had. (James Cook used this on his first voyage, the chronometers only becoming available for his second.)

    Chronometers did not become cheap enough to be used by most ships until well into the nineteenth century, and many navigators were still using lunar departures as their primary method or as a backup into the twentieth century.

    John
    John

    JDNSW
    1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
    1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol

  4. #4
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    An incorrectly logged longitudinal coordinate is what made Pitcairn Island attractive to the Bounty mutineers, and what kept them from being found for almost 20 years.

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