NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
From: David Pike
Date: 2018 Jan 8, 11:18 -0800
Mark Knudsen You wrote:
Question? There is a U Tube program were a man used a board with a wire to cast a shadow , he marked the points of the shadow with a pencil every couple of minutes than recorded the time. At the peak , shortest shadow he recorded thi time Ned used it to calculate from GMT for his longitude is this simalar to what you are doing with graph paper. If I remember he was only point something of a kalometer off. Comments please.
All these methods rely on the principle that if you stand in the same spot and observe the Sun, it will describe an arc in the sky and reach its highest point at local
Shadow methods simply replace the need for a sextant by measuring the length of a shadow and using trigonometry. They commonly came up in books with titles like ‘A hundred and one things for boys and girls to do in their holidays’ and ‘A charismatic teacher’s guide to teaching trigonometry’. I’ve toyed with the idea, but you need a good imagination and have to be prepared to be disappointed. You need a clear sky and a strong Sun to get a sharp shadow edge; flat, level ground or surface; and those who must be obeyed mustn’t mind it all happening over lunchtime. You still have to be able to mark the point directly below the shadow item in order to define the vertical and have somewhere to take the base measurement from. With care, luck, and a big enough model, you might get reasonable latitude, but IMHO it would be hopeless for determining longitude. If you just wanted time, a simple Sun dial might be a better bet. DaveP