Going Around In Great Circles

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I’m sure many people know this, but a “great circle” is a circle that goes clear around the entire globe, and whose center is at the center of the globe. A “meridian”, on the other hand, is a great circle that passes through the poles. Lines of longitude are meridians, for example, while the Equator is a great circle. And the “Prime Meridian” is the line of longitude that goes through both poles .. and right through the Greenwich Observatory.

On the other side of the planet from where I am now, the Prime Meridian is called the “International Date Line”. Inter alia, it runs through the island of Taveuni. And I’ve stood there in Taveuni astride the Date Line, with one foot in yesterday and one foot in today.

So it was with great satisfaction that I was able to do the same on this half of the planet. The ladies went to Harrods, and as a good seaman should, I went instead to the Greenwich Observatory, where the measuring of time zones started. Here’s the “evidinks”, as Popeye would say:

prime meridian greenwich my feet

The Observatory is a fascinating place for a seaman like myself, filled with the history of how man learned to navigate the globe. It’s on one of the highest spots around London, at no less than 153 feet above sea level. Here’s a panorama of about 120° of the view, Millennium Dome on the right, downtown on the left, from the top of the hill, Greenwich Park in the foreground. Click on it (or any of the other pictures) to get the larger version:

IMG_1163

One of the more amazing displays at the Observatory was of the four marine chronometers built by one of my personal heroes, John Harrison. He’s my hero for a couple of reasons. First, because like me he was self-educated, although to a greater degree. Second, because over thirty years of patient experimentation he invented the first successful marine chronometer accurate enough to determine where you are on the planet. Each of his four designs represented years and years of work, each contained a host of new ideas, until finally it all came right. There’re photos of his chronometers here.

Now, I sailed the ocean before GPS, and I’m a reasonable good celestial navigator. The theory of celestial navigation is simple. Let’s use sunrise as an example. If you know the exact time the sun rises where you happen to be, then you know which line of longitude you are on. Easy as that (with the usual caveats, refraction, etc.) … but only if you know exactly, to the second, what time it is. And that was why lots of seamen died before John Harrison invented his chronometer … they didn’t know what time it was, so they didn’t know where they were.

Now, of course, I didn’t have any expensive marine chronometer when I sailed, few people did. But that didn’t matter, because the BBC broadcasts time signals, in the form of six beeps, every hour on the hour. So all I had to do was compare my cheap watch to the radio just before I took my sextant sights. Then when I took the sights, I marked the time from my watch. When I went to work out the sights, I corrected my watch time based on the BBC’s accurate time.

Having spent many and many a morning and evening in the middle of some ocean or other, waiting for the boop-boop-boop-boop-boop-beeeep of the BBC’s time signal, it was a great satisfaction to me to see the actual clock which had been used to produce that very time signal. Indeed. the entire trip through the observatory was in the nature of my homage to the brilliant Englishmen who had done so much to make my life’s oceanic travels possible. For example, back in the days before radio they needed to be able to pass an accurate time signal to anyone in the Thames. To do that, they mounted a big red ball that can slide up and down a pole, viz:

IMG_1162A few minutes before 1:00 they raised the ball up to the top of the mast, and then at exactly 1:00 they dropped the ball … and all of the navigators on vessels up and down the Thames could set their chronometers to the exact second. Simple, and brilliant.

While I was in Greenwich, I also went to the Maritime Museum and the Cutty Sark. When I was a kid living on a cattle ranch, I dreamed of the ocean, and among other things, I put together a model of the Cutty Sark, with all of the spars and rigging and all. So it was almost a shock to see the real ship … it was a bit larger than I remembered it.

In the Maritime Museum, there is the most steampunk real actual vessel I ever saw, from memory called the “Miss England III”. It held the water speed record back a while ago. It’s made of riveted aluminum, and looks deliciously Victorian despite being built (again from memory) in the thirties.

IMG_1160Click on the picture, and enjoy the detail … it just needs a couple of very British maniacs with leather-rimmed goggles and it’s good to go.

So that was yesterday. Today was another lovely warm, even hot day. We went first to the Natural History Museum. It was good, but I wouldn’t rate it as great.

However, we went on from there to the Victoria and Albert Museum, and that museum was absolutely stupendous. Here’s the chandelier in the entry, how could you not like a museum with such an outrageous juxtaposition of the old and new? …

IMG_1167The building itself is astonishing, with immense high ceilings carried on steel arches down into stonework walls with delicate fretwork. And the contents, my goodness, the contents. The basic news is that they have everything from everywhere, and then some, and then a few dozen more. And then a couple more cases full, with (I’m sure) more in the basement. And there were surprises around every corner. For example, I’ve often wondered why it took so long for people to put wheels on suitcases … when I was a kid, hardly any suitcases had wheels. But to my surprise, I found out that it wasn’t a new idea at all …

IMG_1170So as a place to go on my (sadly) last day in London, the V&A Museum was simply superb. On the way out, I asked the guard if Vickie and Al ever came around to visit their most awesome museum, because I was hoping to thank them for their work. He coldly informed me that they were late. “How late?” I asked. He said Al had been late since about 1860, and she’d been late since 1901 … I figured if they were that late it wasn’t likely they’d show up today, so we left and went back to the flat. Can’t have everything in this life, I guess, and at least now the internet is back on in the flat.

Tomorrow we’re off to see Stonehenge et al., on Saturday we’ll be in Bath, and from there … who knows?

My thanks to all for their suggestions and good wishes. As mentioned, my phone is 074 4838 1774. I can’t say I’ll answer all the texts, but they are read and appreciated whether answered or not. We have no reservations north of Bath, so advice on (inexpensive) places to stay is always welcome. The dang money here seems to be made out of ice cream or something, a pound melts away awful fast …

Regards,

w.

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Mike McMillan
September 5, 2013 2:44 pm

Been there. I like the clocks.
It was also a center for the investigation of stellar aberration.

jorgekafkazar
September 5, 2013 2:50 pm

Dang, Willis, I didn’t intend to read the whole thing. As usual…

mogamboguru
September 5, 2013 2:52 pm

Only the British could build the fastest twin-engined bomber in the world from wood – DH 98 Mosquito – while building a speedy ship from Aluminum – Miss Britain III – and succeed, while everybody else in the world at that time was absolutely certain it had to be done vice versa.
But, well: It was them who thought that the hull of a ship built of steel would be tougher than an iceberg, too – the HMS Titanic…

mogamboguru
September 5, 2013 2:53 pm

Mike McMillan says:
September 5, 2013 at 2:44 pm
/////////////////////////////////////
Sometimes, my English is full of stellar aberrations, too…

James at 48
September 5, 2013 2:58 pm

RE: Premier Inn – it is true that the price is right. However … they make you pre pay, and … you even have to pay to talk to someone in customer service!

DirkH
September 5, 2013 3:00 pm

Will we get a report of the Death Ray skyscraper?

September 5, 2013 3:00 pm

The amazing thing about Harrison’s chronometers is the progression in design evident in H1, H2, H3. But H4 looked like it was dropped by some time traveler. It is as revolutionary as the transister radio was to the tube set. H4 said, “I’m ready to set sail.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_chronometer

Annie
September 5, 2013 3:08 pm

Louis 2:21 pm:
You’ve missed out Nether Wallop, Middle Wallop and Over Wallop!
These amuse my Aussie friends, until I point out that they run to names like Wagga Wagga and Yallingup….Oh, and Woy Woy.

September 5, 2013 3:25 pm

mogamboguru at 2:52 pm
Re: Titanic. I don’t know that’s fair.
There was a deliberate decision by the maritime industry that the best way of keeping passengers safe was to make a ship with multiple watertight doors. To make the ship its own liftboat. We don’t give parachutes to airline passengers, do we?
What seemed to doom Titanic may have been an optical illusion, on a moonless night. We don’t really know how big the iceberg was. Pack ice had halted many ships. What may have sunk Titanic was a large, flat berg. It is mass, not height, that is important.
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/Did-the-Titanic-Sink-Because-of-an-Optical-Illusion.html
What sank Titanic was the disrespect for the surprises that nature can throw in your way. The captain asked too much from his lookouts in clear weather conditions seldom seen.
Wiki: List of maritime Disasters Titanic is tied for 6th.
May the memory of Titanic and her passengers live on to remind us all of the surprises nature may have in store for us. How many people has the memory of Titanic already saved?

September 5, 2013 3:40 pm

Willis,
I just enjoyed the story.
thanks..

Duster
September 5, 2013 3:41 pm

Cutty Sark models, oh man. Many, many moons ago now, my dad spent two or three years – I was in grammar school and don’t really remember – building a large Revell model of the Cutty Sark in exquisite detail, with different gauges of thread and yarn for the various stays and sheets and what all the rest of the various lines are called. Once completed, he placed it reverently on the fireplace mantel. It was truly beautiful. Sadly, within at most a couple months, I was pursued through the house by my mother who was wielding a long-handled broom. After cornering me by the fireplace, she took a swing at me with the broom, which I ducked in self-preservation. When Dad came home, his first glance at the model revealed a ship that looked like it had – barely – survived a full gale, partially dismasted, rigging in tatters, yards hanging at all kinds of angles, the bowsprit broken. He ws shocked, but recovered fairly quickly, coming home with a similar scale model of the USS Constitution – Old Ironsides – explaining to my mom that at least a frigate would be able to defend itself. True story.

Gavin Hetherington
September 5, 2013 3:53 pm

RACookPE1978 says:
September 5, 2013 at 2:05 pm
Your description of the method of taking a noon sight is accurate but I think the most accurate way of determining longitude is as described in my previous post. The reason for the ‘longitude’ sight being taken mid morning is that it’s the best compromise between getting a good cross – the earlier you take it the nearer your position line is to north/south – and minimising the inaccuracies in the ded. reckoning run between the morning sight and noon sight – the later you take it the smaller the inaccuracy due to the difference between assumed and actual course/speed.
I used to do this for a living and took hundreds. It’s remarkable how quickly the altitude ‘goes’ once the sun passes it’s Zenith and with practice you can pin the time of local apparent noon to within a couple of seconds. Re. the Air Navigation problem, most of us ‘cheated’ and bought Air Navigation tables for stellar sights. These are designed for speed and give you a suitable set of stars and a lot of pre-calculation based on your assumed (d.r.) position.

Perry
September 5, 2013 3:55 pm

Willis,
Set in the floor of the Painted Hall at Greenwich is a plaque that states that on 15th June 1941, there came three citizens of the USA, the first of their countrymen to become sea officers in the Royal Navy.
http://www.mcdoa.org.uk/images/Engraved%20stone%20to%20US%20Volunteers%20at%20Greenwich%20med.jpg
One of those three was Lt Cdr A. H. Cherry who wrote a book titled Yankee R.N.: Being The Story Of A Wall Street Banker Who Volunteered For Active Duty In The Royal Navy Before America Came Into The War.
It’s a fine book. I’ve re-read it many times.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Books/s?ie=UTF8&field-author=Commander%20A.H%20Cherry&page=1&rh=n%3A266239%2Cp_27%3ACommander%20A.H%20Cherry
Best wishes,
Perry

Richard Lewis
September 5, 2013 4:07 pm

Fascinating travelogue. Thank you! One, as noted in posts above, is stimulated to recall personal travel experiences of a quirky type: On an all-expense paid trip to the Orient (thanks, Uncle Sam), flew out of Honolulu mid-evening in a military DC-6, bound for Wake Island. Crossed the International Date Line at exactly midnight (well, have to admit, it may have been approximately, but the anecdote would fail). Left Honolulu on May 7, arrived Wake on May 9. Never saw a second of May 8, 1963 A tour in Korea foreshortened? Nah.

Michael
September 5, 2013 4:08 pm

george e. smith says:
September 5, 2013 at 12:22 pm
The International Date line, is however NOT a half of a great circle.
For some completely inexplicable reason, it is not any kind of plane curve; with all kinds of zigs and zags in it. Purely political; & idiotic too.
Political but totally sensible to avoid splitting countries. Japan is sensible like that – its all on in one time zone – its central zone. If Australia and other countries could be that sensible.

philincalifornia
September 5, 2013 4:14 pm

Daedalus says:
September 5, 2013 at 2:32 pm
PS Should you come anywhere near Huddersfield, an old market town and weavers and purveyors of the finest woven woolen cloths in the world; post here and I will tell you the best places to stay and visit.
———————————————————————–
….. one of which would, of course, be the Black Horse at Clifton (where I stay when I’m over frequently). The best pub food I know.
The Norman Church at Hartshead (where the Bronte sister’s father was pastor before moving to Haworth), the former Kirklees Hall, complete with Robin Hood’s grave on the grounds, the dumb steeple, where the new Luddites gathered for their first attack on a mill, and I could go on …. all within an approximately 1.5 mile radius from the pub. Amazing place, amazing beer and beautiful countryside too, despite being in the middle of a triangle of two large cities and a very large town.
I’m still recommending Avebury, Wiltshire highest on my list though, as I know Willis will be passing close to there.

Editor
September 5, 2013 4:43 pm

Willis: I thought I was doing pretty good by still having my slide rule, but you had a sextant. Wish I had a sextant.

D.J. Hawkins
September 5, 2013 5:48 pm

richardscourtney says:
September 5, 2013 at 1:09 pm
Willis:
Several people have rightly advised you to sample local ciders.
You being an American, the advice probably needs some explanation. People from the Americas and Oz think cider is a kind of lemonade. English cider is not like that at all. And the real West Country varieties (known as Scrumpy) are a nectar stronger than beer.
You can get weaker forms of cider (e.g. Strongbow) in pubs all over the country, and they are better than what Americans think to be cider, but they are poor excuses for the real thing which you can only get in the West Country.
Richard

Americans recognize your cider as “applejack”. I live in New Jersey, home to one of the first, and until recently (per Wiki) only producer of applejack in the U.S., Lairds Farms. My brother worked there briefly, once upon a time. The traditional method of production was to place a jug of cider in the ground up to the shoulder of the vessel in late fall. During the late fall warmth the cider would ferment. Afterwards in winter a great deal of the water would freeze off, concentrating the applejack by freeze distillation. Laird’s doesn’t do it that way of course, but it’s fascinating to see how people learned to put Mother Nature to work on their behalf before we were (thankfully, in many cases) spoiled by technological advancements.

peter_dtm
September 5, 2013 5:57 pm

Willis
If you end up near York; don’t forget to visit WASHINGTON – don’t blink; you’ll miss it
not the pale imitation I’m told they’ve built in the New World – but the real one !
Just on the M1; not far South of the Angle of the North just South of Newcatle upon Tyne.
Great article; but a pity you mised the 2nd best museum in London – the Science Museum. Ah well you saw the best – Grenwich !
(Note to someone up thread – RMS Titanic – as in Royal Mail Ship; HMS – His/Her Majesty’s Ship; reserved for UK warships)

Editor
September 5, 2013 6:11 pm

One pre-chronometer time source that really impressed me were tables of the positions of Jupiter’s moons. They’re quite predictable (though you have to account for changes in the time for light to bounce from Jupiter to the observer) and good to adjust a lesser timepiece.

michaelozanne
September 5, 2013 6:23 pm

Given that we’ve buried you in suggestions and your future course is indeterminate :
Cheap and cheerful hotel chains – Travelodge, Premier Inn , Holiday inn Express can be web booked without too much fuss. They lack full hotel refinements, pay in advance, no room service, no charging meals etc to room, but clean good comfort and they don’t steal your towels. Usually close to our attached to a pub restaurant that won’t kill you either on price or with salmonella.
http://Www.laterooms,com will give you fair price access to proper hotels. A country or small town hotel close to a target destination is often cheaper and better than a city hotel at the the destination. Don’t book a Brittania Hotel , sucks like a jet intake….
many tourist information offices operate a book ahead service for family hotels and bed and breakfast establishments. You have to try the country bumpkin full Monty breakfast at least once.
If you go north from Bath, try and get the womenfolk to agree to the RAF museum at Cosford http://www.rafmuseum.org.uk/cosford/ it’s free. Try and get far enough north so that the turn east will get you to the National Rail Museum and the Jorvik centre at York and/or the Royal Armouries at Leeds .
If you turn south, for Somerset and Devon, there’s the Fleet Air Arm museum at Yeovilton, Wookey hole, Forde Abbey where Downton Abbey is filmed, Sherborne Castle Where Walt Raleigh used to live, Morwhellam Quay mining museum, Beer Quarry which has been worked since Roman times (wear a thick jumper or coat, brass monkeys in there…) Exeter Cathedral, Maritime Museum, and underground passages. The cob at Lyme Regis where Meryl Streep stood in The French Lieutenants Woman. The Bovingdon Tank museum in Dorset is a mile away from the Monkey World Primate rescue centre if you want to look at heavy metal while the women go Gaga for lemurs and baby chimps.
if you go west into Wales bear in mind that east-west movement is much easier than North-South. What looks like a trunk road on the map is often a goat track in reality…

RACookPE1978
Editor
September 5, 2013 6:30 pm

And SS is Steam Ship (for merchants).
MV Motor Vessel (diesel powered).
But USS is United States Ship. (US Navy, steam (whether nuke or boiler) or gas turbine powered or diesel.)

RACookPE1978
Editor
September 5, 2013 6:44 pm

Richard Lewis says:
September 5, 2013 at 4:07 pm

… One, as noted in posts above, is stimulated to recall personal travel experiences of a quirky type: On an all-expense paid trip to the Orient (thanks, Uncle Sam),… Left Honolulu on May 7, arrived Wake on May 9. Never saw a second of May 8, 1963 A tour in Korea foreshortened? Nah.

On an all-expense paid trip to Brazil and Argentina in 1975 (thanks, Uncle Sam),… Left VACAPES (Virginia) Op area heading east to then go south towards Rio and southern Brazil. (Nice trip!) So as we headed east, we kept losing hours every day as we crossed each time zone. Being a kind and reasonable man, the XO took each lost hour out of the night shifts, and so everybody had an hour’s less sleep every day. (I figure if you went all the way around eastbound, you lost a day off of your required commissioning days?)
SO, obviously, on the way, home we gained that hour back. And, the XO still being a kind and reasoning individual with everybody’s best interests at heart, gave us an extra hour every day just before lunch …. for cleanup and training.