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A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Quadrants, was: Preston's paper on Lewis & Clark's Navigation
From: Trevor Kenchington
Date: 2003 Jun 8, 09:11 -0300
From: Trevor Kenchington
Date: 2003 Jun 8, 09:11 -0300
George Huxtable wrote, as part of a much longer contribution: > an octant in normal use can measure an angle > up to 90? only (compare with 120? for a sextant). Is that invariably true? I have seen at least one quadrant/octant with dual peep holes. (The particular example that I recall is in the Peabody-Essex museum in Salem, Massachusetts.) Using the second eye position would still confine the instrument to a 90-degree arc but it would not be the arc from 0 to 90, more like 30 to 120. I have never read anything about such an instrument, nor how one might be used, but it may be unsafe to simply assume that any quadrant was incapable of measuring altitudes greater than 90 degrees. Trevor Kenchington -- Trevor J. Kenchington PhD Gadus@iStar.ca Gadus Associates, Office(902) 889-9250 R.R.#1, Musquodoboit Harbour, Fax (902) 889-9251 Nova Scotia B0J 2L0, CANADA Home (902) 889-3555 Science Serving the Fisheries http://home.istar.ca/~gadus