[aprssig] Re: [[furlongs per fortnight]]
Mark Fellhauer
sparkfel at qwest.net
Fri Sep 7 17:23:43 EDT 2007
At 11:57 AM 9/7/2007, Steve Dimse wrote:
>On Sep 7, 2007, at 1:05 PM, Mark Fellhauer wrote:
>
>>You follow a celestial reference point. Um, that would be a star.
>
>In an imprecise sense you are right, in that the sun is a star. The
>first known measurement of the earth's diameter was calculated using
>the angle of the sun during the summer solstice.
The first modern sextants recorded in history can be dated back to 900 AD
in Iran. But various astrolabes were in existence much earlier than
that. And Stars other than the sun were often used for
reference. People do navigate at night.
While some Romans had mis-calculated the earth's diameter, there were
certainly people with more accurate measurements. Columbus used "facts"
under-reporting the earth's diameter probably on purpose to mollify crew
members and his financiers.
By 1612 longitude could be determined by time tables derived from the orbit
patterns of Jupiter's moons.
Mark
KC7BXS
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