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Longitude: A journey through time, astronomy, and horology Kindle Edition
The dramatic human story of an epic scientific quest: the search for the solution of how to calculate longitude and the unlikely triumph of an English genius. With a Foreword by Neil Armstrong.
‘Sobel has done the impossible and made horology sexy – no mean feat’ New Scientist
Anyone alive in the 18th century would have known that ‘the longitude problem’ was the thorniest scientific dilemma of the day – and had been for centuries. Lacking the ability to measure their longitude, sailors throughout the great ages of exploration had been literally lost at sea as soon as they lost sight of land. Thousands of lives, and the increasing fortunes of nations, hung on a resolution.
The quest for a solution had occupied scientists and their patrons for the better part of two centuries when, in 1714, Parliament upped the ante by offering a king’s ransom (£20,000) to anyone whose method or device proved successful. Countless quacks weighed in with preposterous suggestions. The scientific establishment throughout Europe – from Galileo to Sir Isaac Newton – had mapped the heavens in both hemispheres in its certain pursuit of a celestial answer. In stark contrast, one man, John Harrison, dared to imagine a mechanical solution.
Full of heroism and chicanery, brilliance and the absurd, LONGITUDE is also a fascinating brief history of astronomy, navigation and clockmaking.
Note that it has not been possible to include the same picture content that appeared in the original print version.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherFourth Estate
- Publication dateApril 28, 2011
- File size1.3 MB
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"Only someone with Dava Sobel's unusual background in both astronomy and psychology could have written it. Longitude is a wonderful story, wonderfully told." -- Diane Ackerman, author of A Natural History of the Senses
"An exquisitely done narrative of the chronometer. It is a wonderful and engrossing achievement." -- William F. Buckley, Jr.
From the Back Cover
A fully illustrated edition of the international best-seller Longitude.
The Illustrated Longitude recounts in words and images the epic quest to solve the greatest scientific problem of the eighteenth and three prior centuries: determining how a captain could pinpoint his ship's location at sea. All too often throughout the ages of exploration, voyages ended in disaster when crew and cargo were either lost at sea or destroyed upon the rocks of an unexpected landfall. Thousands of lives and the fortunes of nations hung on a resolution to the longitude problem.
To encourage a solution, governments established prizes for anyone whose method or device proved successful. The largest reward of £20,000-- truly a king's ransom-- was offered by Britain's Parliament in 1714. The scientific establishment-- from Galileo to Sir Isaac Newton-- had been certain that a celestial answer would be found and invested untold effort in this pursuit. By contrast, John Harrison imagined and built the unimaginable: a clock that told perfect time at sea, known today as the chronometer. Harrison's trials and tribulations during his forty-year quest to win the prize are the culmination of this remarkable story.
The Illustrated Longitude brings a new and important dimension to Dava Sobel's celebrated story. It contains the entire original narrative of Longitude, redesigned to accompany 183 images chosen by William Andrewes-- from portraints of every important figure in the story to maps and diagrams, scientifc instruments, and John Harrison's remarkable sea clocks themselves. Andrewes's elegant captions and sidebars on scientific and historical events tell their own story of longitude, paralleling and illuminating Sobel's memorable tale.
Dava Sobel is the author of the best-sellers Longitude and Galileo's Daughter, and the editor and translator of Letters to Father. She lives in East Hampton, New York. William J. H. Andrewes is a museum consultant specializing in the history of scientific instruments and time measurement. He is the editor of The Quest for Longitude and lives in Concord, Massachusetts.
Praise for The Illustrated Longitude
"Two respected tellers of the longitude tale have teamed up! Sobel 's compelling prose is coupled with colorful and detailed illustrations provided by Andrewes. This edition responds to entreaties by readers who loved Sobel's Longitude but who wanted pictures to go with it."-- Mercator's World
"Enormous care has been devoted to the illustrations and captions. Readers will finish this book considerably more educated about geography and navigation."-- USA Today
"This new illustrated edition of Sobel's 1995 study of Harrison's remarkable instrument strikingly illuminates this largely unknown but crucial discovery."-- Dallas Morning News
Praise for Longitude
"As much a tale of intrigue as it is of science .... A book full of gems for anyone interested in history, geography, astronomy, navigation, clockmaking, and-- not the least-- plain old human ambition and greed."-- Philadelphia Inquirer
"Intricate and elegant .... No novelist could improve on the elements of Dava Sobel's Longitude."-- Newsweek
"Anyone with an interest in history or things maritime should consider Longitude. This fascinating volume brings alive the eighteenth century."-- USA Today
"Nearly perfect prose and a magnificent story, an extraordinary book."-- Washington Post Book World
About the Author
Jane Jacobs has appeared on screen in the film Capitivity and in the television shows Everybody Hates Chris, The Gilmore Girls, The New Dragnet, and The Munsters Today. Her theater credits include roles in Macbeth, Enter Singing, Kennedy's Children, and Once Upon a Mattress. She has also lent her voice to the video games Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis and Day of the Tentacle.
Jane narrated the AudioFile Earphones Award-winning audiobook Longitude, written by Dave Sobel and published by Macmillan Audio, as well as Olen Steinhauer's Liberation Movements and two novels by Eleanor Estes: The Curious Adventures of Jimmy McGee and The Witch Family. Of Longitude, AudioFile magazine said, "...Sobel’s wit, coupled with Jane Jacobs’s lovely, liquid tones and dramatic abilities, takes this fascinating topic and makes it an entertaining and erudite production. Even occasionally erratic levels of audio cannot diminish the joy of such fine listening."
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Longitude
The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His TimeBy Dava SobelAudio Renaissance
Copyright © 1996 Dava SobelAll right reserved.
ISBN: 9781559273978
CHAPTER ONE
Imaginary Lines
When I'm playful I use the meridians of longitude and parallels of latitude for a seine, and drag the Atlantic Ocean for whales.
--MARK TWAIN, Life on the Mississippi
: : Once on a Wednesday excursion when Iwas a little girl, my father bought me abeaded wire ball that I loved. At atouch, I could collapse the toy into a flatcoil between my palms, or pop it open to make a hollowsphere. Rounded out, it resembled a tiny Earth,because its hinged wires traced the same pattern ofintersecting circles that I had seen on the globe in myschoolroom--the thin black lines of latitude and longitude.The few colored beads slid along the wirepaths haphazardly, like ships on the high seas.
My father strode up Fifth Avenue to RockefellerCenter with me on his shoulders, and we stopped tostare at the statue of Atlas, carrying Heaven and Earthon his.
The bronze orb that Atlas held aloft, like the wiretoy in my hands, was a see-through world, defined byimaginary lines. The Equator. The Ecliptic. The Tropicof Cancer. The Tropic of Capricorn. The Arctic Circle.The prime meridian. Even then I could recognize,in the graph-paper grid imposed on the globe, a powerfulsymbol of all the real lands and waters on theplanet.
Today, the latitude and longitude lines governwith more authority than I could have imagined forty-oddyears ago, for they stay fixed as the world changesits configuration underneath them--with continentsadrift across a widening sea, and national boundariesrepeatedly redrawn by war or peace.
As a child, I learned the trick for remembering thedifference between latitude and longitude. The latitudelines, the parallels, really do stay parallel to eachother as they girdle the globe from the Equator to thepoles in a series of shrinking concentric rings. The meridiansof longitude go the other way: They loop fromthe North Pole to the South and back again in greatcircles of the same size, so they all converge at theends of the Earth.
Lines of latitude and longitude began crisscrossingour worldview in ancient times, at least three centuriesbefore the birth of Christ. By A.D. 150, the cartographerand astronomer Ptolemy had plotted them onthe twenty-seven maps of his first world atlas. Alsofor this landmark volume, Ptolemy listed all the placenames in an index, in alphabetical order, with the latitudeand longitude of each--as well as he could gaugethem from travelers' reports. Ptolemy himself hadonly an armchair appreciation of the wider world. Acommon misconception of his day held that anyoneliving below the Equator would melt into deformityfrom the horrible heat.
The Equator marked the zero-degree parallel oflatitude for Ptolemy. He did not choose it arbitrarilybut took it on higher authority from his predecessors,who had derived it from nature while observing themotions of the heavenly bodies. The sun, moon, andplanets pass almost directly overhead at the Equator.Likewise the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn,two other famous parallels' assume their positionsat the sun's command. They mark the northernand southern boundaries of the sun's apparent motionover the course of the year.
Ptolemy was free, however, to lay his prime meridian,the zero-degree longitude line, wherever heliked. He chose to run it through the Fortunate Islands(now called the Canary & Madeira Islands) off thenorthwest coast of Africa. Later mapmakers movedthe prime meridian to the Azores and to the CapeVerde Islands, as well as to Rome, Copenhagen, Jerusalem,St. Petersburg, Pisa, Paris, and Philadelphia,among other places, before it settled down at last inLondon. As the world turns, any line drawn from poleto pole may serve as well as any other for a startingline of reference. The placement of the prime meridianis a purely political decision.
Here lies the real, hard-core difference betweenlatitude and longitude--beyond the superficial differencein line direction that any child can see: The zero-degreeparallel of latitude is fixed by the laws of nature,while the zero-degree meridian of longitudeshifts like the sands of time. This difference makesfinding latitude child's play, and turns the determinationof longitude, especially at sea, into an adult dilemma-onethat stumped the wisest minds of theworld for the better part of human history.
Any sailor worth his salt can gauge his latitude wellenough by the length of the day, or by the height ofthe sun or known guide stars above the horizon. ChristopherColumbus followed a straight path across theAtlantic when he "sailed the parallel" on his 1492journey, and the technique would doubtless have carriedhim to the Indies had not the Americas intervened.
The measurement of longitude meridians, in comparison,is tempered by time. To learn one's longitudeat sea, one needs to know what time it is aboard shipand also the time at the home port or another placeof known longitude--at that very same moment. Thetwo clock times enable the navigator to convert thehour difference into a geographical separation. Sincethe Earth takes twenty-four hours to complete onefull revolution of three hundred sixty degrees, onehour marks one twenty-fourth of a spin, or fifteen degrees.And so each hour's time difference between theship and the starting point marks a progress of fifteendegrees of longitude to the east or west. Every day atsea, when the navigator resets his ship's clock to localnoon when the sun reaches its highest point in the sky,and then consults the home-port clock, every hour'sdiscrepancy between them translates into another fifteendegrees of longitude.
Those same fifteen degrees of longitude also correspondto a distance traveled. At the Equator, wherethe girth of the Earth is greatest, fifteen degreesstretch fully one thousand miles. North or south ofthat line, however, the mileage value of each degreedecreases. One degree of longitude equals four minutesof time the world over, but in terms of distance,one degree shrinks from sixty-eight miles at the Equatorto virtually nothing at the poles.
Precise knowledge of the hour in two differentplaces at once--a longitude prerequisite so easily accessibletoday from any pair of cheap wristwatches--wasutterly unattainable up to and including the eraof pendulum clocks. On the deck of a rolling ship,such clocks would slow down, or speed up, or stoprunning altogether. Normal changes in temperatureencountered en route from a cold country of origin toa tropical trade zone thinned or thickened a clock'slubricating oil and made its metal parts expand or contractwith equally disastrous results. A rise or fall inbarometric pressure, or the subtle variations in theEarth's gravity from one latitude to another, couldalso cause a clock to gain or lose time.
For lack of a practical method of determining longitude,every great captain in the Age of Explorationbecame lost at sea despite the best available chartsand compasses. From Vasco da Gama to Vasco Nunezde Balboa, from Ferdinand Magellan to Sir FrancisDrake--they all got where they were going willy-nilly,by forces attributed to good luck or the grace of God.
As more and more sailing vessels set out to conqueror explore new territories, to wage war, or toferry gold and commodities between foreign lands,the wealth of nations floated upon the oceans. Andstill no ship owned a reliable means for establishingher whereabouts. In consequence, untold numbers ofsailors died when their destinations suddenly loomedout of the sea and took them by surprise. In a singlesuch accident, on October 22, 1707, at the Scilly Islesnear the southwestern tip of England, four homeboundBritish warships ran aground and nearly twothousand men lost their lives.
The active quest for a solution to the problem oflongitude persisted over four centuries and across thewhole continent of Europe. Most crowned heads ofstate eventually played a part in the longitude story,notably King George III of England and King LouisXIV of France. Seafaring men such as Captain WilliamBligh of the Bounty and the great circumnavigatorCaptain James Cook, who made three long voyagesof exploration and experimentation before his violentdeath in Hawaii, took the more promising methods tosea to test their accuracy and practicability.
Renowned astronomers approached the longitudechallenge by appealing to the clockwork universe:Galileo Galilei, Jean Dominique Cassini, ChristiaanHuygens, Sir Isaac Newton, and Edmond Halley,of comet fame, all entreated the moon and stars forhelp. Palatial observatories were founded at Paris,London, and Berlin for the express purpose of determininglongitude by the heavens. Meanwhile, lesserminds devised schemes that depended on the yelpsof wounded dogs, or the cannon blasts of signalships strategically anchored--somehow--on the openocean.
In the course of their struggle to find longitude,scientists struck upon other discoveries that changedtheir view of the universe. These include the first accuratedeterminations of the weight of the Earth, thedistance to the stars, and the speed of light.
As time passed and no method proved successful,the search for a solution to the longitude problem assumedlegendary proportions, on a par with discoveringthe Fountain of Youth, the secret of perpetualmotion, or the formula for transforming lead intogold. The governments of the great maritime nations--includingSpain, the Netherlands, and certaincity-states of Italy--periodically roiled the fervor byoffering jackpot purses for a workable method. TheBritish Parliament, in its famed Longitude Act of1714, set the highest bounty of all, naming a prizeequal to a king's ransom (several million dollars in today'scurrency) for a "Practicable and Useful" meansof determining longitude.
English clockmaker John Harrison, a mechanicalgenius who pioneered the science of portable precisiontimekeeping, devoted his life to this quest. Heaccomplished what Newton had feared was impossible:He invented a clock that would carry the truetime from the home port, like an eternal flame, to anyremote corner of the world.
Harrison, a man of simple birth and high intelligence,crossed swords with the leading lights of hisday. He made a special enemy of the Reverend NevilMaskelyne, the fifth astronomer royal, who contestedhis claim to the coveted prize money, and whose tacticsat certain junctures can only be described as foulplay.
With no formal education or apprenticeship to anywatchmaker, Harrison nevertheless constructed a seriesof virtually friction-free clocks that required nolubrication and no cleaning, that were made from materialsimpervious to rust, and that kept their movingparts perfectly balanced in relation to one another, regardlessof how the world pitched or tossed aboutthem. He did away with the pendulum, and he combineddifferent metals inside his works in such a waythat when one component expanded or contractedwith changes in temperature, the other counteractedthe change and kept the clock's rate constant.
His every success, however, was parried by membersof the scientific elite, who distrusted Harrison'smagic box. The commissioners charged with awardingthe longitude prize--Nevil Maskelyne among them--changedthe contest rules whenever they saw fit, so asto favor the chances of astronomers over the likes ofHarrison and his fellow "mechanics." But the utilityand accuracy of Harrison's approach triumphed in theend. His followers shepherded Harrison's intricate,exquisite invention through the design modificationsthat enabled it to be mass produced and enjoy wideuse.
An aged, exhausted Harrison, taken under thewing of King George III, ultimately claimed his rightfulmonetary reward in 1773-after forty strugglingyears of political intrigue, international warfare, academicbackbiting, scientific revolution, and economicupheaval.
All these threads, and more, entwine in the linesof longitude. To unravel them now--to retrace theirstory in an age when a network of geostationary satellitescan nail down a ship's position within a few feetin just a moment or two--is to see the globe anew.
Continues...
Excerpted from Longitudeby Dava Sobel Copyright © 1996 by Dava Sobel. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
From AudioFile
Product details
- ASIN : B004XOZ8AG
- Publisher : Fourth Estate
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : April 28, 2011
- Edition : 10th Anniversary Ed
- Language : English
- File size : 1.3 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 191 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-0007382002
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #236,399 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #1 in Engineering Patents & Inventions
- #18 in Biographies of Scientists
- #21 in Scientist Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Dava Sobel (born June 15, 1947, The Bronx, New York) is an American writer of popular expositions of scientific topics. Her books include Longitude, about English clockmaker John Harrison, and Galileo's Daughter, about Galileo's daughterMaria Celeste.
Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Photo by Ragesoss (Own work) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons.
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Customers find this book well-written and easy to read, with a fascinating account of the discovery of longitude. The book is well-researched and informative, providing great insight into the finding of longitude, with one customer noting it's not a dry textbook on the subject. They appreciate the beautiful illustrations, with captions describing them as a work of art, and find it fast-paced and full of courage. The book's length receives mixed reactions, with some finding it brief enough while others consider it too short.
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Customers find the book interesting and well-written, with one noting it reads like a textbook.
"This is a great read. The book is highly entertaining as well as being very informative...." Read more
"...placed on nearly every page and they absolutely enhance the comprehensibility of the material...." Read more
"...This story and Sobel's eloquent, fanciful, even loving descriptions of Harrison's timepieces themselves (complete with color plates showing them)..." Read more
"This book is very well written and just a little tedious, as is its subject, the construction of the first chronometers ever made, in England in the..." Read more
Customers find the book's story fascinating, describing it as an amazing historical account with an interesting and important topic.
"This is a great read. The book is highly entertaining as well as being very informative...." Read more
"...But, with a colorful use of the English language, a detailed inclusion of historical data and a topic that inspires the imagination, this text is..." Read more
"...Sobel's simple and compelling tale of how "time is longitude and longitude time" makes me want to straddle the prime meridian, with feet in both..." Read more
"This is a competent history of an important technological turning point in human history: the invention of accurate and reliable time keeping devices..." Read more
Customers find the book informative and well-researched, appreciating how it presents even the more scientific details.
"...The book is highly entertaining as well as being very informative. Dava Sobel makes a complex subject, the measurement of longitude, come alive...." Read more
"...Longitude is full to the brim with interesting facts and an amazing history on a topic that many might not even realize is interesting until reading..." Read more
"This title is Neil Armstrong's beautiful introductory analogy of what this entire book is about, the true story of longitude, "a..." Read more
"...content and the book has sufficient pictures, illustrations, and description that aid in a general understanding of the clocks, so my rating is for..." Read more
Customers praise the book's accuracy, particularly its detailed exploration of the longitude problem and the invention of an accurate chronometer.
"...It begins with the concept of longitude, why knowing ones longitude was critical and how it was treated prior to the seventeenth century...." Read more
"...by Dava Sorbel and William Andrews is a detailed book about the development of navigation through the discovery of calculating longitude...." Read more
"...introductory analogy of what this entire book is about, the true story of longitude, "a fascinating tale of a remarkable achievement in timekeeping..." Read more
"This is the story of the problem of longitude and the solving of that problem by comparison of the earth's rotation with time and how it is achieved..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's beautiful illustrations and captions that describe them, with one customer noting the educational value of the photographs and diagrams.
"...And that purpose is fulfilled in this 216-page text by colorful and captivating language, intriguing ideas, and a plethora of maps, charts, graphs,..." Read more
"...This story and Sobel's eloquent, fanciful, even loving descriptions of Harrison's timepieces themselves (complete with color plates showing them)..." Read more
"...describing its own content and the book has sufficient pictures, illustrations, and description that aid in a general understanding of the clocks,..." Read more
"...The print quality is high and the illustrations serve the story well...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's pace, describing it as fast-paced and shown on time, with one customer noting how it explains the relation between time keeping and navigation.
"...point in human history: the invention of accurate and reliable time keeping devices...." Read more
"...description of the techniques of celestial navigation, but rather is a brisk, engaging account of the origin of the Longitude problem, Mr Harrison's..." Read more
"...watchmaker who sought a simpler solution to the problem through accurate timekeeping...." Read more
"...between lines with wide columns of text, which makes the text slower to read...." Read more
Customers praise the author's perseverance and courage throughout the book.
"...This is testament to a man of patience, and a meticulous one at that..." Read more
"...The book's characters are brilliant, stubborn, underhanded and determined in their quest to find a real working solution to a serious navigational..." Read more
"...This is summer reading, a hero's tale, good defeating bad, The Little Engine that Could...." Read more
"...It's fascinating to learn about the tenacity of the best minds." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's length, with some finding it a great short read while others consider it too long and note that the print is tiny.
"...I think I read it in less than six hours. Recommended." Read more
"...and fascinating read on the history of timekeeping, watchmaking, and longitude. If you are curious about history, it will not disappoint." Read more
"...Last, the paperback at this size is cumbersome and not for lap reading. At this size it needs to be a hardback...." Read more
"...That being said, I really enjoyed reading this book. It is broken into small chapters that give a small glimpse into many of the stories that..." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2013Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThis is a great read. The book is highly entertaining as well as being very informative. Dava Sobel makes a complex subject, the measurement of longitude, come alive. The story is not only that of a scientific and technical quest, but also of human conflict, told with great skill. It begins with the concept of longitude, why knowing ones longitude was critical and how it was treated prior to the seventeenth century. The key to longitude was time, or rather knowing the time of an event, at your location and at a reference location. The two primary methods to do this are via the use of a very accurate timepiece or through the use of a knowledge of the position of the moon relative to the sun and stars, both of which I discuss this in a bit more detail at the end of this review.
The problem of an accurate longitude measurement was so critical that the British Government created a £20,000 prize for the solution to this problem. Most of this discussion is about John Harrison, a carpenter and self taught clockmaker, who developed a timepiece that was accurate enough to be used to measure longitude, and the British Royal Astronomers, primarily Nevil Maskelyne, who favored the method based on the position of the moon. The book discusses Harrison's creation of marine timepieces (chronometers) that were accurate enough to solve this problem and win him the prize, and the astronomers, primarily Maskelyne, who favored the moon position method and thus sought to discredit the clock approach and deny Harrison the prize.
My only reservation about the book is that there is very little technical information about exactly how Harrison's chronometers operated. There is one figure showing an escapement mechanism and a very brief discussion of how he solved lubrication and temperature problems, but I did not feel that this was sufficient to really understand how his clocks worked. Thus, I feel that a serious student of clocks would likely to be disappointed in the technical aspects of the book. However, a more general reader like myself could overlook this deficiency and focus of the human aspects of the book. I was able to find enough technical information about the operation of watches from the Internet to satisfy my needs, so the lack of this level of detail did not cause me to downrate the book from 5-stars.
THE MEASUREMENT OF LONGITUDE -
The simplest event to use to determine longitude is high noon, the time when you sun reached its highest point in the sky. If you had a watch set to 12noon at a reference location you could know your longitude based on the time, on this watch, that you locally observed high noon. For instance, if this watch was set so that it registered noon at Greenwich England (the location of the Royal Observatory), and you saw the sun reach it highest point at 1 o'clock, then you knew that you were one hour west of Greenwich. Since a day (one complete earth rotation) is divided into 24 hours and a circle is divided into 360 degrees, each hour of difference corresponds to 360/24 or 15 degrees of longitude, or about 1000 miles at the equator. Unfortunately, in the early 18th century there was no clock that could operate on a ship that was accurate enough to yield time measurements that could be used to accurately perform this task. If the clock ran to fast or too slow, say by only one minute per day, then in 10 days it would be off by 10 minutes or 1/6 of an hour or 2.5 degrees of longitude. At the equator this corresponds to about 1000/6 or 166.7 miles, which was clearly unacceptable. Even a much more accurate clock, say one that was off by only 10 seconds per day, would be unacceptable for a long voyage. Such a clock would be off by 300 seconds in 30 days or 5 minutes, yielding an error of 1.25 degrees, or about 83 miles at the equator. In practice, two chronometers are used, one set to the reference time and one continually adjusted to 12 O'clock at local high noon. Since the local clock was continually being adjusted it did not have to be as accurate as the reference clock that was not adjusted. Using a locally adjusted clock allowed one to determine the longitude at any time of day, instead of just at high noon.
Another approach was to chart the position of the moon relative to specific stars, or the sun. One could then determine the longitude by using an almanac showing the time at Greenwich when the moon was in a particular position and when it occurred locally. The local time was determined by observing high noon. This method also had limitations as it required many laborious calculations, which were subject to error, and it could not be used when the moon could not be observed. A still earlier method used the eclipse of the moons of Jupiter as the reference, but this required a very accurate telescopic measurement that was very difficult to do on a swaying ship.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis is an easy read even for non-scientific reader. The illustrated version is worth getting. It is a preparation for 20th century relativity.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2010Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThis title is Neil Armstrong's beautiful introductory analogy of what this entire book is about, the true story of longitude, "a fascinating tale of a remarkable achievement in timekeeping and navigation."
Latitude, that is, the determination of north-south position, had been simple and reliable for centuries, but a simple and reliable method for finding east-west (longitude) had been difficult, well into the 1700s. The longitude problem persisted, and as empire's growth and security demanded increasingly efficient maritime navigation, the British Crown in 1714 offered a £20,000 prize to the man who could find a method for reliably and reproducibly determining it. An elaborate and complicated system involving lunar observation came about, but was laborious and calculation-intensive. Then came John Harrison, the dedicated genius who devised the first seagoing chronometers (this is origin of the word). He solved the problem, but personal rivalries, scientific steadfastness (more correctly pigheadedness), and the vagaries and idiocy of bureaucracy kept him from his rightful prize and recognition for far too long.
This is the story that Sobel tells. It reads very easily, so for any who might be intimidated or fear this book is a nonstop chronicle of lofty scientific jargon and notation, don't be. The story flows well, and Sobel explains those subjects that require it, so no reader will be left behind. As written, this book struck me as being very much like the outstanding old British Connections TV show, shedding light on a specific and apparently finite historical issue, but then showing the myriad fascinating, radiating spokes of the famous and infamous. Isaac Newton touches on this story, as does Darwin, Captain Cook, King George III, Mason and Dixon (of the very famous Line), and even the notorious Captain Bligh.
But what exactly is the relevance of telling this story of a fundamental navigational problem that was solved over 200 years ago? In the era of GPS telling us how to drive the SUV three miles to the grocery store, how does this story continue to carry meaning? I wondered this going in, as I picked up this book on the hearty recommendations of colleagues. The answer comes immediately (and I won't spoil it), before Sobel even begins, with Neil Armstrong's surprisingly good introduction.
It's hard to picture a man who would take years to build a single clock. The cable channels give us how-it's-made shows showing automated factories cranking out identical products to the tune of 100,000 per day, and it took Harrison five years to craft his first sea clock, just one device. The others, even with his growing experience and expertise, took even longer. This is testament to a man of patience, and a meticulous one at that (one of Sobel's asides is Harrison's writing style, with and an introductory sentence that runs on for 25 pages). Harrison's story also is testament to a world with no electricity, no instant communications, no television or Internet, where literacy remained the domain of the upper classes, and where there was precious little to do with non-work day unless you had a consuming passion. Sobel tells of selfless celestial observers dedicating decades of their lives to chronicling the positions of the sun, moon, and stars; their tedious devotion empowered the Western Hemisphere for rapid colonization, setting the stage for the Industrial Revolution, mass communication, and ironically the global marketplace.
I found myself about halfway through the book taking note of what is NOT present in Sobel's book. This book is missing the overdone details and asides, the too common and too-long side- and backstories that many books of this type tend toward, where the main narrative loses its way or is buried in its related stories, as interesting as they may be. This is a good thing. This tale is not just the story of John Harrison, nor is it his biography. It is the story of the longitude problem, and it encompasses many disparate people and issues, but Sobel keeps it on-task, simple, straightforward and easy to follow. If you are looking for over-detailed obsession on every aspect of the story and copious academic notation, this is not the book for you. Sobel does, however, provide an extensive source listing and an index, making this book the perfect starting point for further detailed reading or research on the subject.
Bottom line: I've been to London, but there are a number of sights there I have yet to see. This story and Sobel's eloquent, fanciful, even loving descriptions of Harrison's timepieces themselves (complete with color plates showing them) has added the Greenwich Observatory to my bucket list. Sobel's simple and compelling tale of how "time is longitude and longitude time" makes me want to straddle the prime meridian, with feet in both hemispheres, and see the timepieces that changed modern seafaring, literally making possible the world we know today.
Top reviews from other countries
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Las PatatasReviewed in Japan on September 18, 2022
4.0 out of 5 stars 東西の移動を可能にした職人の話
緯度と経度。気にかけないと、どっちがどっちか分からなくなりそうな2つの概念だが、その歴史は大きく異なる。
緯度が分かれば南北の移動を確定することができ、北半球では北極星を起点にすることで測定が可能であり、ギリシャ時代からその方法が知られている。一方の経度は、東西の移動を確定するのに必要だが、長いことその正確な方法が確立できなかった。
長いこととは、実に18世紀の中頃である。東西のどこにいるか、場所が分かるというのは航海には文字通り死活問題であり、イギリス政府は1714年には今日の金額で数億円にも及ぶ報奨金を提示した上で、その解決を図っている。その果実は航海技術を駆使して巨大な植民地を有するに至った大英帝国につながるわけで、その影響は計り知れない。
主人公である寡黙なヨークシャーの職人であるJohn Harrisonは、経度の測定に精密な時計を作ることで解決を目指した。これは技術的な解決である。正確な時計があれば、現地で太陽の最高高度の時間を測り、これでイギリス時間との差異を出す。差異は、角度として経度で表され、これをもとに東西の距離も計算することが出来る。
しかし、イギリスのアカデミアにとって、職人の技術はエレガントではない。科学者にとっては月の動きを観測して、経度を算出するといった理論的な方法が正しい方法であり、Harrisonにすんなりとオッケーは出さない。しかし、彼らの承認なしには、報奨金も国家の認定という栄誉もないのだ。
有名な1760年〜70年のクック船長の航海までも幾度のトライアルが行われ、精密な時計という技術的な解決は最終的には認められることになるが、当初の試作品H-1からはすでに何十年もの年月が過ぎていくのである。
本書の副題には、時代の難問を解決した孤高の天才の実話とあり、この範囲では非常に面白い。ただし、正確な時間の測定と場所の測定という話は、原理は同様のまま今日まで続き、今やGPSにより携帯電話から場所が簡単に把握出来ている。時計は原子時計になり、時間の差異の比較のため、衛星間で異なる時間が流れるのをアインシュタインの相対性理論で調整する。これも一つの魅力的なサイエンスストーリーであり、本題が「経度」とあるとやはりここまで書いてないと物足りない。本書の出版からGPSの大衆化までラグがあるため、後出しジャンケンのようではあるが、今日までの繋がりまでも読みたかったという点で、星4個としたい。
- Helen CartyReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 8, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars A really interesting read ..
A good read for anyone interested in Geography!
- ravi kumar kReviewed in India on September 28, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars What a Historical thriller
This book is really heart touching historic thriller, a great deal of scientific events happened during ancient times were explained beautifully by the author. I am very thankful to the author for this valuable gift, and this book is must read one.
- Fernando Velez.Reviewed in Mexico on May 1, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book. Makes you understand both the importance and difficulty of Longitud.
I enjoy learning more than facts about the main story. It teaches how human passions determine many outcomes of life. In addition, it is a pleasure to learn her rich English vocabulary.
- JeanDReviewed in Canada on July 28, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars I really enjoyed reading this book
I really enjoyed reading this book. I bought the "illustrated" version of the book. The extra cost is definitely worth it as the numerous color illustrations and sketches are wonderful, allow a better understanding of the many principles and mechanisms explained in the text and really bring the subject to life. I wish I had read this book before I visited the Greenwich observatory earlier this year as I would have spent a lot more time examining in more detail the John Harrison's clocks forming the special exhibit there.
We live in an age where we take for granted the accuracy of the inexpensive quartz watch and have almost constant access to the exact time through the internet or a GPS signal, and I did not realize how critical having access to an accurate chronometer (to keep track of time from the home port) was to determining one's longitude while navigating the big oceans far from land. The book also describes in much detail the competition between the clockmakers and the astronomers (i.e. between developing an accurate time piece vs developing an accurate model of the motion of the moon, planets and the stars) for finding a solution to the problem of measuring the passing of time, a competition which to a good extend brought self-thought working class inventors against the English educated upper class represented by the Royal Society.
Until I read this book I did not realize that the major driving force for developing astronomy during the 17th and 18th centuries was to find a solution to the "longitude problem" since it had such a major impact on navigation and the creation of empires. This by itself led to the creation of the Observatoire Astronomique of Paris in 1667 and not long after the Royal Observatory at Greenwich in 1675 when King Charles II charged John Flamsteed, the first royal astronomer, to "apply the most exact Care and Diligence of rectifying the Tables of the Motions of the Heavens, and the Places of the fixed stars, so as to find out the so-much desired Longitude at Sea, for perfecting the art of Navigation". The quote is from pp. 39-40 of the book.
So besides bringing to light the most interesting developments in clock making, the book brings a lot more in terms of the global historical perspective and the development of sciences from the time of Galileo to the early 19th century.