NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
From: Jim Wyse
Date: 2022 Mar 6, 10:42 -0800
Frank,
Many thanks for the extensive and informative reply. I’m realizing that shadows work really hard: not only as anti-lunar indicators but also as Sun antipodal pointers, rainbow locators, and aircraft course finders. Your commentary on contrails will forever affect my seat selection choices. (Anti-Spoof Pro works in aircraft mode so I always have the Sun’s azimuth in my pocket.)
It also occurs to me that shadows played an important role a few millennia ago in determining the size of the earth. As the story comes down to us, Eratosthenes used a stick about a meter long (sorta broomstick length) and measured its shadow at noon on summer solstice. Given the precision of his ‘instruments’, he determined a surprisingly accurate value for the circumference of the earth. Of course, the vast majority of NavListers will already know this; however, I’d like to add the suspicion that you and Eratosthenes might be distant relatives – you both do incredibly clever and creative things with broomsticks and shadows.
Thanks again, Frank. Cheers to all.
Jim Wyse
48°N, 56°W