Welcome to the NavList Message Boards.

NavList:

A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding

Compose Your Message

Message:αβγ
Message:abc
Add Images & Files
    Name or NavList Code:
    Email:
       
    Reply
    Re: James Cook's Northeastern North American Coastal Charting
    From: Wolfgang Köberer
    Date: 2024 Feb 8, 23:14 -0800

    It is highly improbable that James Cook used lunar distances to obtain longitude --at least at sea at the time. Our late friend George Huxtable – whose many contributions and lively discussions on NavList some members may remember – has analyzed Cook’s Atlantic crossings in 1764 to 1767 (“Journey to Work: James Cook's Transatlantic Voyages in the Grenville 1764-1767”, in: Journal of Navigation, Vol. 63 (2010), 207 – 214) and found that Cook used dead reckoning to find his longitude. And Charles Green, the astronomer on Cook’s first voyage wrote to the secretary of the Royal Society on 28 November 1768: “I thought it a little odd when I found that no person in the ship could either make an observation of the Moon or calculate one when made.” “No person” apparently included Cook, who – as his biographer Beaglehole wrote, showed “a more lively interest”, without being able to say exactly when he learnt the technique (Beaglehole, The life of Captain James Cook, Stanford, Calif. 1974, 116). So it is also unlikely that Cook practised the lunar distance method when charting in North America.

    Best
    Wolfgang

       
    Reply
    Browse Files

    Drop Files

    NavList

    What is NavList?

    NavList is a community devoted to the preservation and practice of celestial navigation and other methods of traditional position-finding. We're a group of navigators, navigation enthusiasts and hobbyists, mathematicians and physicists, and historians interested in all aspects of navigation but primarily those techniques which are non-electronic.

    To post a message, if you are already signed up as a NavList member, start a new discussion or reply to any posted message and use your posting code (this is a simple low-security password assigned when you join). You may also join by posting. Your first on-topic messsage automatically makes you a member, and a posting code will be assigned and emailed to you for future posts.

    Uniquely, the NavList message boards also permit full interaction entirely by email. You can optionally receive individual posts or daily digests by email, and any member can post messages by email (bypassing the web site) by sending to our posting address which is "NavList@NavList.net". This functionality is similar to a traditional Internet mailing list: post by email, read by email, reply by email. Most members will prefer the web interface here for posting and replying to messages.

    NavList is more than an online community... more about that another day.

    © Copyright notice: please note that the rights to all messages and posts in this discussion group are held by their respective authors. No messages or text or images extracted from messages may be reproduced without the explicit consent of the message author. Email me, Frank Reed, if you have any questions.

    Join / Get NavList ID Code

    Name:
    (please, no nicknames or handles)
    Email:
    Do you want to receive all group messages by email?
    Yes No

    A NavList ID Code guarantees your identity in NavList posts and allows faster posting of messages.

    Retrieve a NavList ID Code

    Enter the email address associated with your NavList messages. Your NavList code will be emailed to you immediately.
    Email:

    Email Settings

    NavList ID Code:

    Custom Index

    Subject:
    Author:
    Start date: (yyyymm dd)
    End date: (yyyymm dd)

    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site