NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: No Lunars Era
From: Fred Hebard
Date: 2004 Dec 7, 00:02 -0500
From: Fred Hebard
Date: 2004 Dec 7, 00:02 -0500
On Dec 6, 2004, at 8:02 PM, Regarding the Lewis & Clark expedition, Frank Reed wrote: > There were PLENTY of people who could have been sent on that > expedition who had extensive practical experience with lunars. Hell, > they could have sent Nathaniel Bowditch! The failure of the navigation > observations on the Lewis & Clark expedition was a travesty, plain and > simple. I don't agree. So what if they got the longitudes screwed up? They managed to do the most important thing, help the U.S. lay claim all the way to the Pacific north of California. The rivers they navigated were unambiguous; there was no need for the lunars to specify which rivers they were on. They also managed to excite a great number of people about the Louisiana Purchase and foster colonization of all that land, leading the way to Fort Astoria and the Oregon Trail. Finally, they managed to go out and make it back. They had to hold their team together over an arduous passage over inhospitable country. It was an Army job all the way. This was not a comfortable passage to Tahiti. To second guess the choice of personnel and direct involvement of Jefferson from our 21st-Century perspective is not appropriate, in my opinion. Fred