NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Name for sixty nautical miles
From: Don Seltzer
Date: 2016 Mar 18, 17:18 -0400
Don Seltzer
From: Don Seltzer
Date: 2016 Mar 18, 17:18 -0400
I was at the Peabody Essex Museum today, and in one of the exhibits I viewed a 17th century Dutch map of the Atlantic. Down the middle of the chart was a longitude scale marked in degrees on the right side. On the left side the markings ran 15 to the degree. I am guessing that at that time, the Dutch had defined the sea league as 4 nautical miles.
Another proposal for Frank: 2 Leagues (American and National) = 1 Major League. This lends itself nicely to decimalization. 1 Degree of a Great Circle = exactly 10 Major Leagues.On Thu, Mar 17, 2016 at 8:41 PM, Don Seltzer <timoneer@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thu, Mar 17, 2016 at 4:48 PM, Philip Lange <NoReply_PhilipLange@fer3.com> wrote:If memory serves, a Cable is 100 Fathoms and a League is 10 Cables or 1000 Fathoms.= 1 nautical mileDifferent countries have had different definitions of a league, and a land league is often shorter than a sea league, but it always has been considered to be several miles.In the UK and the US, a sea league has generally been equated with three nautical miles.Don Seltzer