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by Kary Pardy

                                When Antique Technology Still Works:

                                        Finding our Way with a Sextant


        Do You Know Where You’re Going To?                                 The octant was refined to a sextant, named because it enlarged the
           In 1714, the British Parliament established the Longitude Act, and   octant (1/8 of a circle) to 1/6th of a circle, and now measurements
        with it, the Longitude Rewards. Equivalent to just over a million dollars   of up to 120 degrees were possible. While the octant could reliably
        today, these prizes offered rewards to any who could come up with a   calculate your position on a nautical chart by calculating the sun or the
        reliable way to measure longitude at sea. Latitude was simple enough   North Star’s angle to the horizon at a given time, the sextant’s larger
        and could be measured relative to the altitude of the sun at noon, but   angle could accurately measure lunar distance between the moon
        longitude proved much trickier. The old method, dead reckoning,     and another celestial object to determine Greenwich Mean Time, an
        was based on the speed the vessel was traveling and the vessel’s     invaluable component when determining longitude.
        direction, and was dangerously inaccurate when sailors got too far from
        land. Add in the problem of magnetic north vs true north (which can   Enter: The Sextant
        vary by a critical 10 degrees in the Indian and Atlantic Oceans), and   The sextant was a game-changer – not only could it plot a location
        you get several deadly shipwrecks, including the destruction of a British   with accurate latitude and longitude, but it also addressed the
        naval squadron off the coast of Sicily in 1707. It was time to find, and   challenges of past technologies. A sextant measures celestial objects
        fund, a better way.                                                relative to the horizon, which makes it more precise than a purely
           Enter English mathematician John Hadley and Philadelphia glazier   instrumental measurement. Even when bouncing around on a rolling
        Thomas Godfrey, who both developed similar solutions around 1731.   sea, a sextant will read accurately because both the horizon and the
        They developed an instrument, the octant, that uses two mirrors to   celestial object will move in the field of view and the angle (the most
        measure celestial bodies above the horizon via angles up to 90 degrees.   important part of the measurement) will stay the same. It also has the
                                                                           advantage of working at night, as you can measure off the stars.




























                                                                                   How to use a sextant? Wikihow.com offers a step by step guide
                                                                                    with visuals, Davis instruments has a downloadable manual
                                                                                    on their website, and there are several other online resources
                                                                                                    Photo: WikiHow.com
                                                                              The sextant caught on quick for its reliability and precise readings,
                                                                           and saved lives in the process. A famous tale of sextant use comes
                                                                           from Ernest Shakelton’s Trans-Antarctic Expedition (1914-1916).
                                                                           When Shackleton’s ship  Endurance got caught in pack ice and
                                                                           crushed, the crew took lifeboats to Elephant Island where they were
             Sextants can be sensitive: Severe changes in temperature warp the arc and
             damage the accuracy of the angle, so many are fitted with weatherproof    stranded upon arrival. Captain Frank Worsley used a Heath & Co.
               cases. The handle is also separated from the frame so that body heat    sextant to navigate himself, Shackleton, and four crewmen 800 nautical
                 cannot impact the frame over time. Sailors in tropical climates    miles through dangerously rough seas to find help on South Georgia
                combat this weakness by painting their sextant's white to reflect    Island, ultimately saving the crew. The same “Hezzanith” sextant is
                        sunlight and keep cool. Sextant circa 1865.        now in the collection of the Scott Polar Research Institute at the
             photo: Cooper Hewitt Collection, on loan from the Smithsonian National Museum of American History  University of Cambridge.


        32               Journal of Antiques and Collectibles
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