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diary_206-207

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Dean Seeman
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2020-07-31
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  • LEFT PAGE 206 Latitude & [and] Longitude into ninety Equal parts, Each of which is a degree. Longitude is the distance East or West of Greenwich in English maps, of Washington in American usage, but other nations Employ a differant starting point for measuring longitude from. Longitude too, is measured in degrees, and a place which is half round the world from the starting point is, as Every school boy should Know, Exactly 180 degrees East or West of this point, as the case may be. Now it is Easy Enough for a sea captain, in fine weather, to determine his latitude. This can be done in several ways, but commonly the seaman trusts to observation of the sun at noon, when the sun is highest above the horizon. The actual height is determined by means of the instrument called the sextant, which is so devised thtat the observer can see two objects at once; one directly and the other after reflection of its light, and the amount by which he has to move a certain bar carrying the reflecting instrument, in order to bring the two objects into view in the same direction, shows him the real divergement of lines drawn from his eye to the two objects. To take the suns altitude then with this instrument, the observer takes the sun as one object, and the horizon directly below the sun, RIGHT PAGE Longitude & [and] Latitude 207 as the other; he brings them into view together, and then looking at the sextant, to see how much he has had to move the swinging arm which carries the reflecting glasses, he learns how high the sun is This being done at noon, with proper arrangements to insure that the greatest height then reached by the sun is observed at once indicates the latitude of the observer. Suppose for Example he finds the sun to be forty degrees above the horizon and the Nautical Almanac tells him that, at the time, the sun is ten degrees north of the celestial Equator, then he Knows that the celestial Equator is thirty degrees above the southern horizon. The pole of the heavens is therefore sixty degrees above the Northern horizon and the voyager is in 60 degrees North latitude. The longitude or distance East or West from some fixed station, is not so Easily determined. But we Know that the Earch, by turning round on her axis, causes the changes which we call day and night, and therefor these must happen at differant times, in places set differant distances round. For Example, it if [inserted] is clear that if [inserted] it is noon at one station, it must be midnight at a station half way round from the former. The Earth too, turns from West to East, that is, a place lying due west of another, is so carried as
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