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9 Results found
The following results matched your search criteria:
1.
Portable telescope.
A portable brass reflecting telescope, with two eyepieces, one a later replacement, and folding tripod. The telescope can be dismantled and fitted...
2.
Quadrant, c. 1768.
A brass quadrant, made in London by John Bird c. 1768.
3.
Reflecting circle - Borda type, c. 1790.
A reflecting circle was used to measure the distance between the moon and certain stars in the 'lunar distance' method of finding longtitude. Trade...
4.
Halley's 5-foot transit instrument.
The earliest telescope at the Royal Observatory Greenwich that can definitely be associated with its history is Edmond Halley's (1656-1742) 5-foot...
5.
Bradley's 8-foot brass mural quadrant.
Bradley's quadrant follows the same design as Halley's, the main difference being the metal used. After twenty years of use, the frame of Halley's...
6.
A compass, 1766.
The first major improvement to the mariner's compass came in the mid-18th century with the work of Dr Gowin Knight. In 1745 he invented a method of...
7.
A double sextant, 1797.
The sextant takes its name from its shape, a sixth of a circle. Astronomical sextants had been in use since the 16th century but the marine version...
8.
A sextant.
The sextant was first made in the late 1850s by the London instrument maker John Bird, then one of the finest makers in the city. He was commissioned...
9.
A back-staff, 1755.
A back-staff is a navigational instrument that was developed in the 1500s to measure the height of the sun above the horizon, and so determine the...
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