Nanuq Posted April 3, 2018 Report Share Posted April 3, 2018 Okay folks, no using a search engine for the answer .... what is the significance of the picture on Google's search screen today, and why do we care? Ready? Go! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sogeha Posted April 3, 2018 Report Share Posted April 3, 2018 A fellow Yorkshireman. Don’t need to google him Oh and why we Care doesn’t take lateral thinking? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nanuq Posted April 4, 2018 Author Report Share Posted April 4, 2018 @Sogeha wins the pop quiz for today! English clockmaker John Harrison revolutionized long distance seafaring in the 18th century, solving the problem of calculating longitude at sea and devising tools that helped sailors navigate with precision. Today, on what would have been Harrison’s 325th birthday, Google is celebrating the legendary horologist with a special Doodle. In Harrison’s time, seafaring was dangerous. So much so that, after four ships and 1,300 sailors were lost in the Scilly Naval Disaster of 1707, the British Parliament offered a £20,000 reward to anyone who could devise a way to calculate longitude at sea. Harrison, a self-taught carpenter, took up the challenge. (my kind of man! -ed.) After 7 years of tinkering, in 1735 Harrison created the marine chronometer, a timekeeping device that was powered not by gravity, but by the motion of a ship. It was so accurate that it could be used by sailors as a portable time standard, who compared their local time to Greenwich Mean Time to calculate longitude, or east-west location on the Earth. Time has looked kindly on Harrison’s inventions: In 2015, the Guinness World Records’ association declared one of his clocks projects the most accurate swinging pendulum clock in the world. The project drew ridicule when Harrison boasted it would still be accurate within a second after 100 days of ticking; 250 years later, he was proven right. And there you have it... the basis for determining the Longitude whilst at sea. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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