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‘Taking a Lunar Distance’, 1891.

Photo of ‘Taking a Lunar Distance’, 1891.

Engraving showing a naval officer measuring the position of the Moon with respect to the fixed stars from the deck of a ship at sea. Using a sextant, a navigational instrument, the sailor would be able to accurately determine the angle between certain stars and the lunar limb. With this measurement it was possible using the Nautical Almanac (navigational ephemeris) to calculate one's longitude at sea. Known as the 'Lunar Method' this technique required hours of mathematical calculations to be successful. From 'The Midnight Sky: Familiar Notes on the Stars and Planets' by Edwin Dunkin (1821-1898), a popular account of the stars and planets published in 1891. Dunkin was chief assistant at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich.

Picture Reference: 10421220
Subject: NATURAL WORLD > Navigation > Position Finders
Credit: Science Museum Library

Keywords: 1800s, 1870-1913, 19th Century, Age Of Electricity, Block, Buoys, Cannon, Century, Distance, Distance Measurement, Dunkin, Edwin, Europe, Finder, Lamp, Lantern, Longitude, Male, Man, Man-made, Man Made, Mast, Measurement, Measuring, Men, Men's, Moon, Natural World, Naval Profession, Nautical Vessel, Night, Optical Equipment, Optical Device, People, Planet, Position, Position Finders, Position Measurement, Pulley, Pulley Blocks, Rigging, Rope, Sailing, Sailor, Sextant, Ship, Ships, Sailing, 19th Century, Sky, Space, Space Exploration, Telescope, Transportation, Transport, Uk, Unattributed, United Kingdom, Watching, War, Water, Water Transport, Water Vessel, Water Vehicle

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