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A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Nevil Maskelyne, by Howse, was:Re: Books about Bowditch
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2010 Mar 15, 21:38 -0000
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2010 Mar 15, 21:38 -0000
Patrick Goold wrote- "I just ordered several other books by Howse that I found while searching for the other. Interesting author. The book on Cook's timepieces is of particular interest to me. I would like to know the practical details of navigation for Cook. Not just the theory and how to get similar results with modern instruments but how Cook actually did it." The work by Howse on Cook's timepieces is a collection of journal articles that have been bound into a booklet. There's much interesting stuff in it, particularly Howse's analysis of the way the chronometrs drifted over the years of the voyages. Without having lunars or other astronomical methods to correct the timepiece, the chronometers would have been much less useful. That information counters romantic views, which are often to be found, about the infallibility of Cook's timekeeper. Nevertheless, having such an instrument transformed the operation of surveying, as Cook acknowledged. If Patrick is taking a serious interest in this matter, I can recommend "The Marine Chronometer", by Rupert Gould,(1923). Gould was the man who put the Harrison chronometers back into working order again. I see that there's a hardback copy from 1976 via Amazon UK for only �13, which looks like a bargain for someone. The seller states that one of the plates has come adrift, the same defect I've found on my own copy of about the same date. It's a defect I would put up with. There's a recent edition available in what looks like a print-on-demand version, which I would steer clear of unless you know it's good. For a good view of the longitude problem in general, there's a superb volume, "The Quest for Longitude", edited by William J H Andrewes, (1996), the proceedings of a 1993 symposium at Harvard. Symposium proceedings are usually dreary things, but this one is quite the opposite. A used copy might be found in the US for $50 or so. If it's specifically Cook's three circumnavigations that interest Patrick, these are superbly covered in "The Journals of Captain James Cook", the life's work of J C Beaglehole, in four hefty volumes (the third voyages is covered in two volumes). There's a one-volume abridgment which is no more than a pale shadow of the main work. This is a journal, not a log, so there are snips about the navigation, but that wasn't Cook's main purpose in writing, nor Beaglehole's. The real lowdown on the navigational details in Cook's first voyage, with those of several other circumnavigators, are collected at- Wales, William, 1788 Astronomical observations : made in the voyages which were undertaken by order of His present Majesty, for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere, and successively performed by Commodore Byron, Captain Wallis, Captain Cartaret, and Captain Cook ... / by William Wales Printed by C. Buckton; and sold by P. Elmsly, London : Wales didn't travel on the first voyage, on which the astronomer was Green. Green died on the return journey, leaving his obsrvations in a mess, which was only sorted out years later by Wales. Wales and Bayley were astronomers on voyages 2 and 3, and wrote them up in1777, in - The Original astronomical observations made in the course of a voyage towards the South Pole and round the world, in his Majesty's ships the "Resolution" and "Adventure", in the years 1772, 1773, 1774 and 1775, by William Wales,... and Mr. William Bayly,... I havent found either of these works in Googled form, so they will have to be consulted in a good academic library. If Patrick really wants to get to grips with the astronomical detail, it is all there. Bayley, by the way, is commemorated in "Bayley's beads", to be observed at every full solar eclipse. George. contact George Huxtable, at george@hux.me.uk or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222) or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.