Marine Chronometers: The Clocks That Changed the Course of Globalization

 

Marine Chronometers: The Clocks That Changed the Course of Globalization

A marine chronometer by John Harrison, crafted between 1761 and 1800. (Photo: Bjoertvedt via Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0])

Traveling across time zones can be disorienting—watches, clocks, and even your sleep schedule need adjusting to a new longitude. This problem faced by modern travelers had more serious implications in the 18th century—a time of fierce imperial competition on the high seas. As ships traveled east and west through different longitudes, their clocks were not able to maintain accurate time. As calculating time differences was a reliable way to determine the longitudinal coordinates of a ship, faulty time-keeping resulted in vessels getting lost and wrecked. The invention of accurate marine chronometers changed the course of seafaring and navigation forever.

In the early 18th century, sailors could measure latitude using the sun and stars. However, there were no accurate means to determine the longitudinal coordinate of a ship’s location. It was known that the coordinates could be calculated mathematically by comparing two accurate times—one at a known longitude and the other at an unknown point. Unfortunately, the pendulum clocks of the day could not be counted on to keep reliable measures when subjected to the rolling of a ship on ocean waves. After several naval disasters resulted from poor navigation, the British government offered a reward for technical solutions to the problem of longitude. The Longitude Act of 1714 offered £20,000 ($26,302) to anyone who could devise an accurate method of calculating the location of a ship within one half degree.

 

Frodsham Chronometer Clock

 

Marine chronometer by Charles Frodsham, London, circa 1844 – 1860. (Photo: User:Ktr101 via Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 4.0])

Clockmakers set out to win the prize money by inventing a marine chronometer which could keep accurate time aboard a vessel. The English carpenter and clockmaker John Harrison eventually won the prize, and he is credited with the invention of the first accurate marine chronometer. In 1728, Harrison began to build his first prototype clock, known as H1. By 1736, the administrators of the prize—the Board of Longitude—were intrigued enough to order a sea trial of his first model. Pleased with the initial results, Harrison was awarded grants to continue refining his mechanism for improved accuracy. The clockmaker built models H2 and H3 over the next two decades. These models used springs and balances rather than the classic pendulum; however, the accuracy of each chronometer was still slightly lacking.

Harrison’s big break came with his fourth model, H4. In the mid-1750s the inventor decided to craft his next sea clock as a watch, rather than the earlier bulky models. In 1761, the Board tested H4 on a trans-Atlantic voyage. The results were shocking—the sea watch kept almost perfect time. Arriving in Jamaica, the watch showed a local time only five seconds behind the true time. The calculations of longitude made from the time kept on H4 were accurate to within one nautical mile. Unfortunately, the Board and the English Parliament were not immediately convinced of the watch’s accuracy. It took a fifth model, H5, and personal intervention by King George III before Harrison received the prize money for his life’s work.

The impact of the sea watch—or marine chronometer as it came to be known—was enormous. Navigation capabilities were greatly improved for explorers of the 18th and 19th centuries. The infamous explorer Captain James Cook used a replica of the H4 watch on his travels, finding it exceptionally accurate. While electronic GPS systems have mostly replaced the marine chronometer today, some sailors are still required to learn the method during naval service or certification processes. Chronometers today are encountered particularly in the tradition of Swiss watches, where the term denotes precision and accuracy.

If you would like to learn more about this clock which changed the world, scroll down to watch a video from the BBC.

The invention of the marine chronometer—or sea watch—changed the possibilities of navigation on the high seas during the late 18th century.

Inside h4 Clock

 

Inside Harrison’s H4 sea watch. (Photo: Mike Peel via Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 4.0])

Invented by Englishman John Harrison, the marine chronometer allowed sailors to keep accurate time despite the rolling of the sea and while moving through time zones.

John Harrison

 

Portrait of John Harrison (1693-1776), English clockmaker, by Philippe Joseph Tassaert. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons [Public domain])

Harrison was inspired to invent the sea watch by prize money—the British Longitudinal Act of 1714 offered £20,000 to whoever could solve the problem of accurately determining longitude at sea.

John Harrison Designs For h4 Sea Watch Chronometer

 

An 1802 rendering of John Harrison’s H4 Sea Watch. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons [Public domain])

To determine longitudinal coordinates, sailors needed to know the accurate time at their location for a mathematical formula.

H3 John Harrison Sea Clock

 

John Harrison’s H3 Sea Clock timekeeper. (Photo: Bin im Garten via Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0])

Harrison’s fourth attempt—the sea watch known as H4—was accurate to within five seconds of the real time during a test voyage to Jamaica. This allowed very accurate calculations of the ship’s coordinates.

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Although it took much persuasion and a fifth version of his sea watch for Harrison to receive his prize money, the marine chronometer quickly became an indispensable part of sea navigation.

Marine Chronometer

 

Harrison’s H5 marine chronometer. (Photo: Racklever via Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0])

Watch as the BBC unravels the fascinating history of the marine chronometer:

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From mymodernmet.com

Library Places 1,600+ Occult Books Online With Help From ‘The Da Vinci Code’ Author

occult library dan brown

We’ve written about a lot of library digitization projects, but one of the more interesting collections to bring their books to the public is Amsterdam’s Ritman Library. Its collection of esoteric, religious, and philosophical manuscripts is based on the private collection of 20th-century businessman Joost Ritman, whose family made their fortune selling plastic tableware to airlines. And now, a good portion of the library’s core collection is online thanks to The Da Vinci Code author, Dan Brown.

In reality, the Ritman Library has been aiming to digitize its collection since beginning its Hermetically Open project in 2012. A play on the library’s status as a hub of printed materials in the field of Hermeticism, it was the start of an effort to bring these precious materials to a wider audience. Luckily for the library, they had a fan in Brown, who had visited the Ritman on several occasions while writing The Lost Symbol and Inferno. In June 2016, Brown announced that he would be donating €300,000 ($368,000) to the library in an effort to help them digitize their core collection of 4,600 pre-1900 texts on alchemy, religion, and magic.

And now, the first results of the donation are online, with the Ritman Library announcing that 1,617 occult manuscripts are ready to be explored. While the library admits that the interface is still new and will be improved for searchability and manuscript downloads, it’s still an exciting step for those interested in Hermeticism. And while there’s no language filter just yet—many of the books are in Latin, Dutch, German, or French—typing in an English speaking place of publication will yield some results in English.

More books will surely be added shortly and the first release follows closely after the opening of the Embassy of the Free Mind, Dan Brown’s new center that “aims to promote ‘free thinking’ through culture, art, science, and spirituality.” The Ritman Library’s collection is now housed at the center, making it an international hub for those interested in mysticism and philosophy.

The Ritman Library has been sharing their progress as they scan and digitize their vast collection of occult manuscripts.

Ritman Library digitization

Ritman Library Occult Library Scanning Process

Dan Brown donation Ritman Library

Ritman Library Occult Library Scanning Process

A generous donation by Da Vinci Code author Dan Brown, a fan of the library, helped them jumpstart their digitization project.

Ritman Library: Website | Facebook

h/t: [Open Culture]

Related Articles:

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1,000-Year-Old Illustrated Manuscript of Herbal Remedies Available Online

World’s Oldest Multicolor Book, a Chinese Calligraphy & Painting Manual, Now Available Online

The post Library Places 1,600+ Occult Books Online With Help From ‘The Da Vinci Code’ Author appeared first on My Modern Met.

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