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:
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:
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:
A 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.
Click 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? …
The 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 …
So 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.


HI Wills,
Last year I spent a few days in the UK, my sole sojourn to northern hemisphere, and the only thing I wanted to see was Harrison’s clocks and the Greenwitch observatory. I grew up on the coast of Western Australia which is littered with hundreds of shipwrecks dating back to the 1500s involving countless loss of life. Most of these ships hit the WA reefs simply because they couldn’t accurately measure thier longitude. Travelling from Europe to the East Indies (Indonesia) they would round the African continent and stay south, picking up the trade winds . If they waited too long to turn north and approached the WA coast and reefs in a storm or at night the results were often pretty bad.
Harrison’s chronometer (H4) solved the problem so elegantly. Simply keep one chronometer set to GMT (UTC) and one adjusted to local time via a mid day sextant reading of the sun and you knew exactly what your longitude was. The trick was the chronometer had to be incredibly accurate and impervious the motion of the ship. This invention changed the world. Ok I accept I’m a bit of a geek, but seriously I still feel incredibly blessed to have been able to visit the observatory and see the first three of Harrison’s clocks H1-H3 still running after nearly 300 years. Thanks for your article. Have a great day.
george e. smith says:
September 5, 2013 at 12:22 pm
I thought that you would also have to know your latitude, in order to know what time sunrise was.
============
you do, except perhaps at equinox.
http://williams.best.vwh.net/sunrise_sunset_algorithm.htm
7a. calculate the Sun’s local hour angle
cosH = (cos(zenith) – (sinDec * sin(latitude))) / (cosDec * cos(latitude))
if (cosH > 1)
the sun never rises on this location (on the specified date)
if (cosH < -1)
the sun never sets on this location (on the specified date)
Re GPS: of course there is now also the EU “Galileo” GPS system which will create its own new 0 degree (internal) reference line – but the errors are getting smaller!
Interestingly, I believe Galileo was actually commissioned because the EU realised that they couldn’t tax citizens using the infrastructure of another state. EU states are keen to tax road use, using distance travelled meters fed from compulsory GPS receivers fitted in vehicles – introduction of such a system was announced by the then UK government in 2005. But, early on it was recognised that if the US switched off their DoD GPS – or threatened to do so – the road charging system would fail, and the Russian Glonass system was anyway a non-starter. That is what Galileo is really all about – and why the EU are pressing on with it regardless of cost (presently estimated at 3 billion euro, and rising of course …)
Whilst in Bath visit the cheddar gorge for impressive views on Nature in acton. I suggest after Bath you visit Wales and Snowdonia national park. Hike the Miners track to the top of the second highest peak in UK (not difficult) Whilst there check out the Slate mines.Then for some change of scenery take a canal trip on the Lochs of Manchester/Wigan and sample Northern Beer.Check out the heart of industrial revolution. Then Lake District and Scotland for more hikes (assuming Indian Summer).
I was intrigued to see that 22 countries voted in favour of the Greenwich Meridian, but that the French abstained. There were nuances of self-interest at international conferences long before the current G20 talks.
Dear Willis,
long time lurker at last prodded to post –
If you find the Circus (it’s OK, no clowns) in Bath http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Circus,_Bath stand in the middle under the trees, stone provided for the purpose, and clap your your hands. Great echo.
Also I am as other posters in suggesting Scotland, Western Highlands especially. Takes a while to get there but the scenery is stunning. The nearest thing to mountains we’ve got in the union 🙂
And if you like a challenging drive then the Pass of the Cattle is a must with fabulous shellfish at the Applecross Inn http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bealach_na_B%C3%A0,
regards,
Colin
Richard Barraclough says:
September 6, 2013 at 9:55 am
I was intrigued to see that 22 countries voted in favour of the Greenwich Meridian, but that the French abstained. There were nuances of self-interest at international conferences long before the current G20 talks.
Historically you will find that France used the Paris Meridian its own standard meridian for some time. It – the Paris Meridian – and the Antwerp Meridian were both competing standard meridians with Greenwich for some time, but the British were the nation where chronometers adequately accurate to use for navigation were invented and shortly thereafter had a major lead in the quality and number of navigation charts. The French according to wikipedia hung onto the Paris Meridian for navigation until the beginning of WWI. When you consider that SI was essentially French in origin, it is still a little surprising that England triumphed in that one regard.
I ran down all the comments It was a CANUCK that came up with standard time. Because of the trains running a cross this great continent.
For a couple of scenic rail journeys, if I can suggest the Settle – Carlisle railway through the Yorkshire Dales (73 miles) and the Worth Valley Railway from Keighley to Howarth (“Bronte country”) where “The Railway Children” was filmed. Both railways have occasional steam trains.
The National Media Museum in Bradford is also worth a visit, although Bradford City itself is a bit
of an eyesore IMO.
johnmarshall says:
September 6, 2013 at 3:36 am
Thanks, John. See the second sentence of my post:
Not sure why you think you have to re-state that …
w.
lorne50 says:
September 6, 2013 at 11:59 am
Actually, the Canadian Stanford Fleming was the second man to come up with the idea, but the first to actually put it into practice. The idea was first proposed (and ignored) by an Italian named Quirico Filopanti. He published the idea in 1858, about twenty years before Fleming was able to get people to do it. There’s no evidence I can find that Fleming ever heard of Filopanti’s work …
Funny how this planet operates …
w.
In some locations the visual time signal was a black ball, hence the name of the company running the Coho ferry between Port Angeles WA and Victoria BC/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/271319.stm
“It’s a little known but interesting fact that the Greenwich Time Signal no longer gives Greenwich Mean Time,” said the NPL’s John Chambers. “Since 1972, all the time signals in the world have been based on atomic time.”
This is far more regular than Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) which drifts as the speed of the Earth’s rotation changes. Differences between the two mean that “leap seconds” occasionally need to be added to the time signal, by means of an extra pip. This keeps the two types of time roughly in step.
This oddity is one of the reasons why the last pip is slightly longer than all the rest.
“As a consequence of going over to atomic time, ever so occasionally we need a seven-pip time signal like there was at the end of December,” said John Chambers. “And if you have a seven-pip time signal, people are going to do a double take unless you lengthen the last pip.”
Louis,
Thanks for the funny place-names.
“Tongue of Gangsta” could easily be a successful mini-series from the name alone.
Thanks also to Willis, who as usual has provoked a fascinating and interesting series of comments on this thread. I love the fact that UK and US readers get together like this, comparing our unique and wonderful relationship. Many times [eg: Falklands], it’s us against the world!