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The Quadrant
The quadrant
received its name
because it is one-fourth
of a full circle. In
fact, quad
means "four." It had
much use even before it
went to sea to help
navigators.Originally Astrologers would use
the quadrant
to help determine an
eclipse of the sun or to
forecast someone's fate
with help from the
stars. It was simply a
device for measuring the
angular height of a star
or the sun. Surveyors
could use it to measure
the height of a building
or a mountain. It was
even used to help aim a
cannon to hit an enemy
fortress.
For the sailor, it
was first used to
measure the height of
Polaris, the Pole
star. While the earliest
documented (written) use
of the quadrant
at sea is in the mid
1400s, it was in use
well before that by
astrologers and
land-surveyors. It
became important to
Europeans when the Age
of Exploration began in
the early 1400s.It
was common knowledge at the time that the
pole star moved very
little at night due it's
position above the North
Pole. They knew it
wasn't exactly at the
North Pole, but pretty
close. In fact it's
about one degree away
from being exactly at
the North Pole today,
and was about 3 1/2
degrees off in the time
of Christopher Columbus.
People knew these
things, but didn't have
any practical use for
the information ashore.
Sailors had learned
from the Arabs that the
Pole Star could also
help with navigation;
the height of
Polaris above the
horizon changed
depending on a person's
Latitude, the distance
above or below the
equator. Knowing how
high
Polaris was at a
particular port city you
wanted to reach would
help you navigate your
way there.
The Arabs traded
along the east coast of
Africa, north and south,
and had to go offshore,
out of sight of land,
because of dangerous
shoals (shallow water)
and currents. They
couldn't see their port
cities. So they sailed
until Polaris was the
right height, and then
turned toward the shore
to reach their
destination.
Until the
"Age of Exploration,"
Europeans traded close
to well known coasts
going north or south, or
they traded along the
east-west routes of the
Mediterranean. They
didn't need to know
latitude. Once they
began to travel into
unknown waters off West
Africa, the need for the
Pole Star and
determining latitude
became important.
The quadrant
is simple to use. Sight
the star, or sun, along
one edge, the right edge
in the diagram. The
piece of rope hangs down
because of the weight
attached (called a plumb
bob), and the scale
crossed by the rope
gives the angular height
of the body. With that
information, you can
obtain your latitude.
Of course, sighting a star is pretty
easy on your eyes. But using the sun can
be a problem because it's so bright it
may blind you. In fact, blindness and
poor sight was a job hazard of early
navigators.
Of course, one of the
problems with
Polaris is that it
disappears if you travel
below the equator. The
solution was to then
navigate using the sun
to determine latitude. |
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