Longitude by wire : finding North America / Richard Stachurski.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Columbia, S.C. : University of South Carolina Press, [2009]Copyright date: ©2009Description: ix, 239 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
  • cartographic image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781570038013
  • 1570038015
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Prologue : plundered corpses -- Only one hassler for the coast survey -- Station buttermilk -- Station head and horns -- The elusive longitude -- Real men in the way of science -- The lightning wire -- Astronomers without ears -- Following the lightning wire -- Finding North America -- Transatlantic hubris -- Heart's content -- Voodoo longitude -- Around the world in sixty years -- Epilogue : Hertzian waves.
Summary: At the turn of the nineteenth century, even the most experienced mariners were still risking catastrophe when navigating the North American coastline, because they lacked accurate navigational charts. The various means available to chart makers of the era to measure longitude, both celestial and terrestrial, could be off by thousands of feet -- often deadly for ships. In 1807 the U. S. Coast Survey was created to map the coast accurately and reduce the costly and deadly toll of shipwrecks, a challenge that would take the better part of a century to overcome. This is the tale of discoveries made by American scientists as they worked to solve this life-threatening quandary and develop a precise method of measuring longitude. It recounts how the successful coupling of precision chronometers with the new electrical technology represented by Samuel Morse's telegraph produced the solution to the longitude problem. The use of the telegraph by scientists of the U.S Coast Survey to communicate time signals reduced the probable error in longitudinal measurement to less than ten feet. The "American method," as it was deemed, quickly revolutionized observational astronomy and every other branch of science that depended on recording the precise time of an event.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Jost Bürgi Library Reading Room GA401 .S73 2009 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31560000036000
Books Books Jost Bürgi Library Reading Room GA401 .S73 2009 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31560000005658
Books Books Jost Bürgi Library Reading Room GA401 .S73 2009 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31560000083846

Includes bibliographical references (pages 227-234) and index.

Prologue : plundered corpses -- Only one hassler for the coast survey -- Station buttermilk -- Station head and horns -- The elusive longitude -- Real men in the way of science -- The lightning wire -- Astronomers without ears -- Following the lightning wire -- Finding North America -- Transatlantic hubris -- Heart's content -- Voodoo longitude -- Around the world in sixty years -- Epilogue : Hertzian waves.

At the turn of the nineteenth century, even the most experienced mariners were still risking catastrophe when navigating the North American coastline, because they lacked accurate navigational charts. The various means available to chart makers of the era to measure longitude, both celestial and terrestrial, could be off by thousands of feet -- often deadly for ships. In 1807 the U. S. Coast Survey was created to map the coast accurately and reduce the costly and deadly toll of shipwrecks, a challenge that would take the better part of a century to overcome. This is the tale of discoveries made by American scientists as they worked to solve this life-threatening quandary and develop a precise method of measuring longitude. It recounts how the successful coupling of precision chronometers with the new electrical technology represented by Samuel Morse's telegraph produced the solution to the longitude problem. The use of the telegraph by scientists of the U.S Coast Survey to communicate time signals reduced the probable error in longitudinal measurement to less than ten feet. The "American method," as it was deemed, quickly revolutionized observational astronomy and every other branch of science that depended on recording the precise time of an event.

31560000036000 17875

Monograph on finding the longitude of the North American Continent and the early history of transatlantic cables, illustrated

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