Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
How did the early explorers, Capt Cook for example, chart coastlines?
I'd guess that the early attempts were fairly inaccurate.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by sandyRoe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Cook's were pretty accurate. I'm not sure about earlier explorers, though.
This is his map of New Zealand, which he was probably the first European to visit - very little wrong with it
http://www.captcook-n...ibits/10308/10308.jpg
This is his map of New Zealand, which he was probably the first European to visit - very little wrong with it
http://www.captcook-n...ibits/10308/10308.jpg
On his South Pacific venture the purpose was to charter any lands discovered so the most accurate instruments and knowledge for that time was on hand.
127 years before that, NZ was visited by Abel Tasman but, unbeknown to them they landed on agricultural land of the Maoris so some men were killed at both sides.
127 years before that, NZ was visited by Abel Tasman but, unbeknown to them they landed on agricultural land of the Maoris so some men were killed at both sides.
I don't come by here all that often any more but this is quite interesting.
You start with a baseline, a measured distance between two points, the more accurate the better. then you measure the angle to the next point with a sextant or other suitable device from both ends of the baseline. You can then use trigonometry (sine rule) to get the distances of the other two lines of the triangle.
You then move to the next point and repeat.
Cook had one huge advantage - on his second and third voyages he had a copy of H4 - John Harrison's chronometer which kept extrordinarily good time and allowed for the first time accurate determination of Longitude.
Before that he'd been forced to rely on the Lunar method (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_distance_
method)
This is a major reason that charts from this period suddenly look much more accurate and recognisable
Probably the gold standard in charting has to go to Bligh. Not what you'd call a good "people person" but when Cook was killed in Hawaii he got the ship and crew back home. He repeated the trick after the Bounty mutiny and eventually returned to the Torres straight creating maps of this dangerous area that were so good they were still in use up to World War II
You start with a baseline, a measured distance between two points, the more accurate the better. then you measure the angle to the next point with a sextant or other suitable device from both ends of the baseline. You can then use trigonometry (sine rule) to get the distances of the other two lines of the triangle.
You then move to the next point and repeat.
Cook had one huge advantage - on his second and third voyages he had a copy of H4 - John Harrison's chronometer which kept extrordinarily good time and allowed for the first time accurate determination of Longitude.
Before that he'd been forced to rely on the Lunar method (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_distance_
method)
This is a major reason that charts from this period suddenly look much more accurate and recognisable
Probably the gold standard in charting has to go to Bligh. Not what you'd call a good "people person" but when Cook was killed in Hawaii he got the ship and crew back home. He repeated the trick after the Bounty mutiny and eventually returned to the Torres straight creating maps of this dangerous area that were so good they were still in use up to World War II
Cook would have used the same methods and would have obtained the same accuracies as did the Ordnance Survey, which was set up only a few years after Cook's voyages in the southern oceans. For his first published chart of New Zealand, see...
http://www.antiquemap...7174EEF732C1B5E417ADA
http://www.antiquemap...7174EEF732C1B5E417ADA
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.