NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Precision of lunars
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2007 Apr 28, 20:40 +0100
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2007 Apr 28, 20:40 +0100
Frank wrote, in Navlist 2661, "Although he was a great authority on late 19th century navigation, Lord Kelvin was absolutely NOT an authority on lunars." so I asked, in 2655- | "Well, how is Frank able to state that, with such certainty? Has he | found some error, in Kelvin's text about lunars, that the rest of us | have missed? " And this is Frank's reply- | Well, let's see... He says that lunars were the only option available | before 1765 --so right off the bat he's got the history wrong. What Kelvin wrote, that I assume Frank is paraphrasing, is this, on page 98- "...till Harrison's invention of the first useful artificial marine chronometer ... in 1765 ...the only chronometer generally available for finding longitude at sea was that great natural chronometer presented by the moon in her orbital motion round the earth." And I don't see anything to question in that statement, or in Frank's paraphrase of it either. So in what way, exactly, does Frank claim that Kelvin "got the history wrong"? It seems absolutely correct. And Frank goes on to deride Kelvin on the grounds that in 1895 he predicted that heavier-than-air machines were an impossibility. What on earth is the connection between that and his knowledge of lunars? Or his other predictions, that Frank mocks, for that matter? Frank wrote- | But I don't "belittle" | his authority on lunars. (he did, though....) | I'm saying that he, an authority on | navigation, was MOCKING lunars because in his era they were long over | and done with, and he exaggerated their inaccuracy because he didn't | know any better. Sometimes I think that Frank and I have read two different papers. True, Kelvin pointed to the weaknesses of lunar-distance navigation, in a balanced way. Did he "mock" lunars? No. Did he "exaggerate their inaccuracy"? Not that I can see. "because he didn't know any better"? What on Earth is that meant to imply? No end of poison in that posting, then, about Kelvin, and for what? ====================== About the demise of lunars, Frank's actual words, to which I objected in Navlist 2665 as being an unduly sweeping statement, were as follows- | The lecture | you're quoting from was delivered in 1875. This is forty or fifty | years after lunars ceased being used even as a backup measure aboard | British ships and twenty to thirty years after they ceased that role | aboard American vessels. and in reply Frank quoted the following words, from Kelvin's lecture, as though they backed up his original statement- | Let's start with Kelvin himself. In the lecture we've been discussing, | Lord Kelvin wrote: | "Just two kinds of observations are used in astronomical navigation | which are shortly designated as 'altitudes' and 'lunars.' I shall say | nothing of lunars at present, EXCEPT THAT THEY ARE BUT RARELY USED IN | MODERN NAVIGATION, as their object is to determine Greenwich time, and | this object, except in rare cases, is nowadays more correctly attained | by the use of chronometers than it can be by the astronomical | method." [emphasis added] | | So do you hear Kelvin's words? Lunars are BUT RARELY USED in 1875 | according to him. Well, if Frank had written that "in 1875, lunars were but rarely used", I would not have disagreed with that, and I doubt whether anyone else would.. But he went much further, with his sweeping statement. In no way do Kelvin's words support that statement. What other evidence can Frank offer, then? His strongest suit is his study of vessels' logbooks held at Mystic. But we need to know a bit more. Because these are American vessels, we learn nothing from them about British practice, which concerned half of his sweeping statement. And we should discount from his reckoning any Navy vessels, which presumably were equipped, from early on, with multiple chronometers, and had no further need of lunars. Similarly, we should exclude the well-found clipper-ships, which would have been similarly supplied with nothing-but-the best, just as East India Company vessels were in England. And how many of the others, from Mystic, would have been whalers, I wonder? Many pelagic whalers wandered the oceans, for years at a time, without needing to bother much about navigation, as long as they knew which ocean they were in. In general, whalers were unsophisticated navigators, rough-and-ready seamen without mathematical skills, few of whom could have handled a lunar distance even at the height of the "lunar era". No, the remnants of the "lunar brigade" would have been the small trading vessels, making port-to-port passages under sail across the oceans. Brigs and schooners of 100 tons or so, parish-rigged, which still existed in profusion in the second half of the 19th century, scraping a living in the slowly-dying days of sail. Vessels which kept going by avoiding any unnecessary expense; when one chronometer might have been afforded, but backups would be out of the question. Those are the vessels where a lunarian might still be found on board. And those are the vessels that tended to be neglected by museums and by history. I wonder how many, from that category, are represented by logs in the Mystic collection. Perhaps there are indeed many, in which case Frank's evidence from those logs carries some weight. As for the British aspect of Frank's sweeping statement, he justifies it as follows- How about something | from the British side: in a letter from Lt. E.D. Ashe of the Royal | Navy writing to the Royal Astronomical Society in 1849, he says that | in "twenty years' sea time, I have not seen the chronometers checked | by lunar observations except once." That's very strong evidence. An | officer in the Royal Navy who has seen lunars used only a single time | in the whole period from 1829 to 1849. Before that, especially during | the Napoleonic wars, lunars were actively used in the Royal Navy. It isn't evidence at all. By the first quarter of the century, Royal Navy vessels all had a chronometer, even in home waters, and shortly after, multiple chronometers were made available. So of course Naval navigation had no further need for lunars, neither for longitude directly, nor for chronometer checking. But that happy state of affairs didn't apply to all trading vessels. George. contact George Huxtable at george@huxtable.u-net.com or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222) or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK. --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ To post to this group, send email to NavList@fer3.com To , send email to NavList-@fer3.com -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---