
NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Celestal navigation on a CD
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2007 Mar 26, 00:04 +0100
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2007 Mar 26, 00:04 +0100
On February 14, Robert Eno posted the following message- "To those of you who are members of the Navigation Foundation you will have read your newsletter by now and this announcement is yesterday's headline. To those of you who are not, the Institute of Navigation will shortly be releasing a single CD with a complete set of papers on celestial navigation going back to 1946. If you are as pleased and exited about this as I am, thank the folks at the Navigation Foundation who had a hand in this. There was a time when I feared that the Foundation would fade away due to the deaths of some key individuals and a general lack of interest and support, but they appear to have made a real comeback and are surging forward with many new and exiting initiatives. To the people at the Navigation Foundation: Terry, David, Roger, William, Douglas....I salute you gentlemen. You have proven that we are not down for the count just yet!" ====================== from George- I endorse all that Robert has said. David Burch, of Starpath, and editor of the Navigator's Newsletter, has done a superb job, in selecting all the articles that have appeared in the (US) journal "Navigation", of the Institute of Navigation, over the years, which have a traditional-navigation slant. Anything, that is, that would interest his own readers of N.N., and members of Navlist, whose interests overlap thoroughly. In the past, I've obtained copies of a few articles from Navigation, and each one is included in this collection. I can't think of anything he has missed out. All of these come on a single CD at a bargain price of $25 from the I o N. The articles are encoded in Adobe Acrobat form. They have been carefully scanned and the figures come out well. What's more, there's no restriction (as is frequently found elsewhere) on printing them out. You can order them online directly from the ION website. Here is the link: http://www.ion.org/shopping/begin.cfm it sells for $25 plus postage. Then scroll down to the bottom of that page for an order form. My congratulations go to David Burch for doing a fine job, and a useful one. One sour note to add. I discovered, within that website, that there would by "shipping charges" for the CD, which to UK would amount to $25, on top of the $25 for the disc. I still reckoned it worthwhile, so I paid up. It arrived, by airmail, without any special packing, and with a stamp which had cost $5.05. What a rip-off! I understand that shipping charges within US are also disproportionately high. Below, I have converted the contents list into a simple text file, to show the range of the 285 papers that have been included. It may or may not come over intelligibly when converted into email format. If it doesn't, don't blame it on the original CD, which in itself is crystal clear. You can see how the traditional-nav content of the journal has tapered off to nothing over recent years. Most of the relevant articles come from the glory-days before the 1990s. George. contact George Huxtable at george@huxtable.u-net.com or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222) or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK. 1 RESURRECTING THE ANALEMMA Samuel G. Shaw Vol. 49 No. 01, 2002 2 AUTHOR'S REPLY TO COMMENTS ON "THE CELESTIAL NAVIGATION OF CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS" Arne B. Molander Vol. 46 No. 03, 1999 3 COMMENTS ON "THE CELESTIAL NAVIGATION OF CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS" Keith A. Pickering Vol. 46 No. 03, 1999 4 THE CELESTIAL NAVIGATION OF CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS Arne B. Molander Vol. 44 No. 04, 1997 5 THE DIRECT FIX OF LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE FROM TWO OBSERVED ALTITUDES Stanley W. Gery Vol. 44 No. 01, 1997 6 THE LUNAR DISTANCE METHOD IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY: A SIMULATION OF JOSHUA SLOCUM'S OBSERVATION ON JUNE 16, 1896 Siebren Y. Van der Werf Vol. 44 No. 01, 1997 7 A NAVIGATION SOLUTION INVOLVING CHANGES TO COURSE AND SPEED George H. Kaplan Vol. 43 No. 04, 1996 8 DETERMINING THE POSITION AND MOTION OF A VESSEL FROM CELESTIAL OBSERVATIONS George H. Kaplan Vol. 42 No. 04, 1995 9 TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE OF SEXTANT INDEX ERROR R. Egler Vol. 42 No. 03, 1995 10 PRACTICAL SAILING FORMULAS FOR RHUMB-LINE TRACKS ON AN OBLATE EARTH George H. Kaplan Vol. 42 No. 02, 1995 11 MINIMIZING ERRORS IN CELESTIAL POSITIONING Paul F. Ross Vol. 41 No. 03, 1994 12 PILOTING WITH CELESTIAL ALGORITHMS Thomas R. Metcalf and Frederic T. Metcalf Vol. 41 No. 02, 1994 13 CAPT. P. V. H. WEEMS AND THE TRANSITION FROM MARINE TO AIR NAVIGATION G. D. Dunlap Vol. 40 No. 01, 1993 14 A SIMPLIFIED SIGHT REDUCTION METHOD FOR CELESTIAL NAVIGATION John D. Woodworth Vol. 39 No. 04, 1992 15 THE INSTITUTE'S PROFESSIONAL FORUM: AN EXTENSION TO THE OVERDETERMINED CELESTIAL FIX Thomas R. Metcalf Vol. 39 No. 04, 1992 16 AN ANALYSIS OF ADMIRAL PEARY'S SLEDGING SPEEDS William E. Molett Vol. 39 No. 03, 1992 17 HISTORY OF AERIAL POLAR NAVIGATION Joseph N. Portney Vol. 39 No. 02, 1992 18 ADVANCING CELESTIAL CIRCLES OF POSITION Thomas R. Metcalf Vol. 38 No. 03, 1991 19 ON THE OVERDETERMINED CELESTIAL FIX Thomas R. Metcalf and Frederic T. Metcalf Vol. 38 No. 01, 1991 20 THE INSTITUTE'S PROFESSIONAL FORUM: ANALYSIS OF WHETHER PEARY EMPLOYED AMUNDSEN'S METHOD OF OBTAINING COMPASS HEADING, (1); COMMENTS ON COL. MOLETT'S ANALYSIS, (2). (1) William E. Molett, (2) Thomas D. Davies Vol. 37 No. 01, 1990 21 OVERDETERMINED CELESTIAL FIX BY ITERATION Robert W. Severance Vol. 36 No. 04, 1989 22 ANALYSIS OF ADMIRAL PEARY'S TRIP TO THE NORTH POLE William E. Molett Vol. 36 No. 02, 1989 23 SMOOTHING A NOON SIGHT Robert W. Severance Vol. 35 No. 02, 1988 24 THE WORLD'S FIRST SEXTANTS Saul Moskowitz Vol. 34 No. 01, 1987 25 WHERE IN THE WORLD ARE WE? J. F. Roeber Vol. 33 No. 04, 1986 26 AUTONOMOUS SATELLITE NAVIGATION USING OBSERVATIONS OF STARLIGHT ATMOSPHERIC REFRACTION Robert L. White, Sam W. Thurman, Frank A. Barnes Vol. 32 No. 04, 1985 27 POSITION FROM OBSERVATION OF A SINGLE BODY James N. Wilson Vol. 32 No. 01, 1985 28 MATHEMATICAL 3-ARM PROTRACTOR W. B. Ruhnow Vol. 31 No. 01, 1984 29 ACCURACY: WHAT IS IT? WHY DO I NEED IT?HOW MUCH DO I NEED? J. F. Roeber Vol. 30 No. 02, 1983 30 THE WIND AND CURRENT CHART SERIES PRODUCED BY MATTHEW FONTAINE MAURY Marc I. Pinsel Vol. 28 No. 02, 1981 31 A HANDHELD COLLISION AVOIDANCE AID J. D. Luse Vol. 28 No. 01, 1981 32 AIDS TO NAVIGATION POSITIONING PROJECT James E. Smith, Jr. Vol. 28 No. 01, 1981 33 AN ANALYTICAL SOLUTION OF THE TWO STAR SIGHT PROBLEM OF CELESTIAL NAVIGATION James A. Van Allen Vol. 28 No. 01, 1981 34 K-12 METHOD BY CALCULATOR: A SINGLE PROGRAM FOR ALL CELESTIAL FIXES, DIRECTLY OR BY POSITION LINES S. Kotlaric Vol. 28 No. 01, 1981 35 MOST PROBABLE FIX POSITION REDUCTION G. D. Morrison Vol. 28 No. 01, 1981 36 THE INSTITUTE'S PROFESSIONAL FORUM T. D. Davies, Norman G. Cubberly Vol. 28 No. 01, 1981 37 UNAMBIGUOUS TWO BODY FIX METHODS DERIVED FROM CRYSTALLOGRAPHIC PRINCIPLES Torben Kjer Vol. 28 No. 01, 1981 38 VERTICAL SEXTANT ANGLES SHORT OF THE HORIZON W. C. Marlow Vol. 28 No. 01, 1981 39 JOHN CHURCHMAN AND THE LONGITUDE PROBLEM Charles H. Cotter Vol. 27 No. 03, 1980 40 GENERAL CONVENTIONS AND SOLUTIONS-THEIR USE IN CELESTIAL NAVIGATION G. G. Bennett Vol. 26 No. 04, 1979 41 SOME REMARKS ON SIGHT REDUCTION WITH MATRICES Dewit, C Vol. 26 No. 03, 1979 42 SIMILARITIES BETWEEN CLASSICAL CELESTIAL NAVIGATION AND ELECTROSTATIC GYRO NAVIGATION J. N. Schmidt Vol. 26 No. 03, 1979 43 THE INSTITUTE'S PROFESSIONAL FORUM C. de Wit, R. G. Huenemann, D. W. Kerst, E. G. DeAvies Vol. 26 No. 03, 1979 44 A COMPLETELY PROGRAMMABLE METHOD OF CELESTIAL NAVIGATION C. T. Daub Vol. 26 No. 01, 1979 45 A NEW METHOD FOR PLOTTING THE POSITION LINE: THE GOLEM SOLUTION E. Gradsztajn Vol. 26 No. 01, 1979 46 HAND HELD CALCULATORS-AN EVALUATION OF THEIR USE FOR CELESTIAL NAVIGATION A. Bralove Vol. 25 No. 04, 1978 47 LONGITUDE BY LUNAR OBSERVATIONS AND THE POCKET CALCULATOR D. W. Kerst Vol. 25 No. 04, 1978 48 R1-D1: SOME IMPLICATIONS OF SHIP AUTOMATION ON ORGANIZATION, TRAINING, DESIGN AND LOGISTICS C. W. Koburger, Jr. Vol. 25 No. 04, 1978 49 SIGHT REDUCTION WITH MATRICES Watkins. R. and Janiczek. P. M Vol. 25 No. 04, 1978 50 THE INSTITUTE'S PROFESSIONAL FORUM R. Watkins, P. M. Janiczek and R. G. Huenemann Vol. 25 No. 04, 1978 51 A METHOD FOR DIRECT DETERMINATION OF TIME OF TRANSIT OF A CELESTIAL BODY WHEN THE OBSERVER IS MOVING R. W. Peach Vol. 25 No. 03, 1978 52 THE METHOD OF ASSUMED ALTITUDES: A NEW APPROACH TO AN OLD ART T. D. Davies Vol. 25 No. 03, 1978 53 THOMAS GODFREY'S QUADRANTS C. H. Cotter Vol. 25 No. 01, 1978 54 NEW DMAHC NAVIGATION PUBLICATIONS E. B. Brown Vol. 24 No. 03, 1977 55 A METHOD FOR COMPACTING NAVIGATION TABLES J. B. Jalickee and W. J. Klepczynski Vol. 24 No. 02, 1977 56 LONGITUDE WITHOUT TIME J. W. Luce Vol. 24 No. 02, 1977 57 ON THE COST OF MAKING MISTAKES IN NAVIGATION O. D. Anderson Vol. 24 No. 02, 1977 58 A NEW METHOD OF CELESTIAL NAVIGATION R. E. Ogilvie Vol. 24 No. 01, 1977 59 TWO BODY FIXES BY CALCULATOR M. F. A'Hearn and G. S. Rossano Vol. 24 No. 01, 1977 60 THE ALMANACS-YESTERDAY, TODAY AND TOMORROW P. K. Seidelmann, P. M. Janiczek and R. F. Haupt Vol. 23 No. 04, 1976 61 THE COAST GUARD TWO PULSE LORAN-C COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM D. A. Feldman, M. A. Letts and R. J. Wenzel Vol. 23 No. 04, 1976 62 THE THANKLESS NAVIGATOR T. D. Nicholson Vol. 23 No. 04, 1976 63 TWO CENTURIES OF NAUTICAL INSTRUMENTS IN JAPAN T. Mozai Vol. 23 No. 04, 1976 64 DIRECT METHODS OF LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE DETERMINATION BY MINI-COMPUTER C. Wight Vol. 23 No. 02, 1976 65 EVALUATION OF SEVERAL NAVIGATION ALGORITHMS FOR APPLICATION TO GENERAL AVIATION B. Conrad, C. T. Jackson, Jr. and A. J. Korsak Vol. 23 No. 01, 1976 66 FINDING LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE BY CALCULATORS C. Fox Vol. 22 No. 04, 1975 67 HAND HELD CALCULATOR TECHNOLOGY APPLIED TO AN ADVANCED OMEGA RECEIVER B. N. Gaon Vol. 22 No. 04, 1975 68 LONGITUDE WITHOUT TIME D. W. Kerst Vol. 22 No. 04, 1975 69 NAVIGATION APPLICATIONS OF THE HP-65 CALCULATOR K. E. Newcomer Vol. 22 No. 02, 1975 70 THE ACCURACY OF CELESTIAL FIXES AS COMPARED TO NAVSAT POSITIONS BY LEAST SQUARES ADJUSTMENT H. F. Van Der Grinten Vol. 22 No. 02, 1975 71 A DIP SHORT NOMOGRAM M. F. A'Hearn Vol. 21 No. 03, 1974 72 PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS IN CELESTIAL NAVIGATION R. M. Leve Vol. 21 No. 01, 1974 73 THE NAV-AID: A CALCULATOR FOR NAVIGATION R. G. Hirsch and R. L. Charlton Vol. 21 No. 01, 1974 74 THE USE OF THE HP-35 CALCULATOR FOR SIGHT REDUCTION S. Rigby Vol. 21 No. 01, 1974 75 H. O. 229 INTERPOLATION E. B. Brown and J. J. Speight Vol. 20 No. 03, 1973 76 A DAY/NIGHT REMOTE-CONTROLLED LLLTV CAMERA-SEXTANT SYSTEM FOR GENERAL AND CELESTIAL NAVIGATION S. Feldman, G. Barton, B. Katz and R. Wilkinson Vol. 20 No. 02, 1973 77 THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ARTIFICIAL HORIZON FOR CELESTIAL NAVIGATION S. Moskowitz Vol. 20 No. 01, 1973 78 CELESTIAL FIX-INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL? Alton B Moody Vol. 19 No. 04, 1972 79 SIGHT REDUCTION USING THE PORTABLE SEXTANT COMPUTER SYSTEM S. Feldman, P. K. Seidelmann, E. D. Stephenson, and H. C. Ketts Vol. 19 No. 04, 1972 80 COMPUTER SIGHT REDUCTION BASED ON INTERSECTION OF EQUAL ALTITUDE CIRCLES R. W. Flynn Vol. 19 No. 01, 1972 81 NAVIGATIONAL PLANNING AND THE USE OF SPECIAL TECHNIQUES Byron E. Franklin and Ernest B. Brown Vol. 19 No. 01, 1972 82 A DIGITAL READ-OUT DAY AND NIGHT MARINE SEXTANT Sidney Feldman Vol. 18 No. 04, 1971 83 NEW SHORT METHOD TABLES (KI 1) FOR DIRECT FINDING OF A TWO STAR FIX WITHOUT USE OF ALTITUDE DIFFERENCE METHOD Stjepo Kotlaric Vol. 18 No. 04, 1971 84 EXAMPLES OF MOON SIGHTS TO OBTAIN TIME AND LONGITUDE Dr Frances W. Wright Vol. 18 No. 03, 1971 85 LOCAL HOUR ANGLE OF ARIES TABLES Frederick L. Devereux, Jr. Vol. 18 No. 02, 1971 86 NAVIGATION AT THE PRIME MERIDIAN G. Gebel and B. Matthews Vol. 18 No. 02, 1971 87 TIME AND NAVIGATION Dr. R. L. Duncombe and R. F. Haupt Vol. 17 No. 04, 1970 88 USE OF PLANETARIA IN NAVIGATION INSTRUCTION Major Kenneth W. Brotnow Vol. 17 No. 04, 1970 89 CERTAIN Hc/Z COMPUTATION POSSIBILITIES Alfred H. Kerrick Vol. 17 No. 03, 1970 90 NAVIGATION BY DEFINITION N. W. Emmott Vol. 17 No. 03, 1970 91 TRIANGULATION THEORY AND TECHNIQUES Cherokee C. Johnson Vol. 17 No. 03, 1970 92 STONE HENGE AND THE PIRI RE'IS MAP Alan R. Gillespie Vol. 17 No. 02, 1970 93 THE METHOD OF LUNAR DISTANCES AND TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCE Saul Moskowitz Vol. 17 No. 02, 1970 94 PRECOMP NAVIGATION Capt. P. V. H. Weems, USN (Ret.) Vol. 16 No. 04, 1969 95 PRACTICE DOES NOT ALWAYS MAKE PERFECT NAVIGATION RADM Ross F. Bullard, USCG Vol. 16 No. 03, 1969 96 FUTURE ASPECTS OF MARINE NAVIGATION FOR SMALL CRAFT Vernon I. Weihe Vol. 16 No. 02, 1969 97 MICRO COMPASS FOR SMALL BOAT NAVIGATION Marvin Taylor Vol. 16 No. 02, 1969 98 LONGITUDE WITHOUT TIME Bruno Outlepp Vol. 16 No. 01, 1969 99 NAVIGATING TO THE NORTH POLE-A SURFACE TRAVERSE Major Gerald R. Pitzl, USMCR Vol. 16 No. 01, 1969 100 NIGHT VISION NAVIGATION G. D. Dunlap and Oliver J. Edwards Vol. 16 No. 01, 1969 101 SMALL CRAFT OPERATION ON THE INTRACOASTAL WATERWAY OF THE GULF AREA P/C George K. Holland, N, USPS Vol. 16 No. 01, 1969 102 YACHT NAVIGATION Ben Warriner Vol. 16 No. 01, 1969 103 A PRACTICAL MECHANICAL CALCULATOR SPHERICAL TRIGONOMETRY Mitchell E. Timin and Alan M. Schneider Vol. 15 No. 04, 1968 104 IRRADIATION AND MANUAL NAVIGATION Richard F. Haines and William H. Allen Vol. 15 No. 04, 1968 105 NOTE ON DETERMINING RANGE FROM SEXTANT ALTITUDE Dr. William H. Guier Vol. 15 No. 04, 1968 106 ON THE ACCURACY OF CELESTIAL MPP'S IN AIR NAVIGATION Major Ronald A. Briggs, USAF Vol. 15 No. 04, 1968 107 SIGHT REDUCTION TABLES FOR ORBITAL PLANE DETERMINATION William P. Devereux Vol. 15 No. 04, 1968 108 GREAT CIRCLE ROUTE Lieut. Jack O. Horton, Jr., USNR Vol. 15 No. 03, 1968 109 TRUE AZIMUTH CALCULATION Michael C. Hutchins Vol. 15 No. 03, 1968 110 PROGRESS IN PRECISION TIMEKEEPING AND TIME DISTRIBUTION R. Glenn Hall Vol. 15 No. 02, 1968 111 GREAT CIRCLE SAILING (GRAPHIC SOLUTION) William M. Fraser Vol. 15 No. 01, 1968 112 ANALYSIS OF THE CELESTIAL PLOT IN MARINE NAVIGATION Ernest B. Brown Vol. 14 No. 04, 1967 113 MARINE NAVIGATION: WHERE WE STAND-WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE G. D. Dunlap Vol. 14 No. 04, 1967 114 NAVIGATION OF PLEASURE BOATS R. R. Blandford Vol. 14 No. 04, 1967 115 THE NAUTICAL ALMANAC IN ITS SEVENTH THIRD OF A CENTURY D. H. Sadler Vol. 14 No. 04, 1967 116 A SMALL BOAT NAVIGATION SYSTEM Allan C. Bernstein Vol. 14 No. 03, 1967 117 AN ENGINEERING APPROACH TO THE MATHEMATICS OF CELESTIAL NAVIGATION Joseph W. Little Vol. 14 No. 03, 1967 118 USE OF A SMALL COMPUTER AS A CELESTIAL NAVIGATION AID D. W. Range and R. N. Southworth Vol. 14 No. 03, 1967 119 THE FRANKLIN PILOTING TECHNIQUE Ernest B. Brown and Bryon E. Franklin Vol. 14 No. 02, 1967 120 MARINE USER'S MODIFICATIONS TO THE AIR ALMANAC Ernest B. Brown Vol. 14 No. 01, 1967 121 THREE DIMENSION CELESTIAL NAVIGATION Loren E. DeGroot and John Larsen Vol. 13 No. 04, 1966 122 AN ASTRONOMICAL GUIDANCE SYSTEM FOR AIR NAVIGATION Col. R. Genty Vol. 13 No. 03, 1966 123 CELESTIAL NAVIGATION PROCEDURES Cdr. Robert E. Williams, USESSA Vol. 13 No. 02, 1966 124 DEVELOPMENT OF ELECTRONIC AIDS TO NAVIGATION FOR THE SMALL CRAFT NAVIGATOR Lt. L. J. DeGraw, USCG Vol. 13 No. 02, 1966 125 SIGHT REDUCTION TABLES FOR MARINE NAVIGATION J. H. Blythe, Dr. R. L. Duncombe, and D. H. Sadler Vol. 13 No. 02, 1966 126 PROPOSED NAUTICAL UNITS OF LENGTH AND TIME Dr. John C. Bellamy Vol. 13 No. 01, 1966 127 CELESTIALLY REFERENCED ELECTRONIC SPACE TRACKING Robert Irving Vol. 12 No. 04, 1965 128 NAVIGATIONAL REQUIREMENTS AND METHODS OF RECREATIONAL BOATMEN Cdr. John E. Everson, N, USPS Vol. 12 No. 04, 1965 129 SEXTANT SIGHTING PERFORMANCE FOR SPACE NAVIGATION USING SIMULATED AND REAL CELESTIAL TARGETS Bedford A. Lampkin Vol. 12 No. 04, 1965 130 FROM SIMPLE QUADRANT TO SPACE SEXTANT Saul Moskowitz Vol. 12 No. 03, 1965 131 LUNAR DISTANCES AND OCCULTATIONS USING H. O. 214 D. D. Williams Vol. 12 No. 02, 1965 132 NEWEST ONE-ENTRY NAVIGATION TABLES Captain G. P. Hadjilias, N. C., M. I. N. Vol. 12 No. 02, 1965 133 PRINTING OF ASTRONOMICAL AND SIGHT REDUCTION TABLES R. L. Duncombe and R. F. Haupt Vol. 12 No. 02, 1965 134 LIMITATIONS IMPOSED ON CELESTIAL NAVIGATION DUE TO INACCURACIES OF STAR POSITIONS Francis P. Scott Vol. 11 No. 01, 1964 135 STICK CHARTS OF MICRONESIA Lt. Col. Charles J. Davis Vol. 11 No. 01, 1964 136 THE "LOG" OF CELESTIAL NAVIGATION T. R. Stenberg Vol. 11 No. 01, 1964 137 ERRORS AND ACCURACY OF POSITION, LOPs, AND FIXES T. R. Stenberg Vol. 10 No. 04, 1963 138 SMALL CRAFT NAVIGATION Cdr. Charles M. Bradley, USPS Vol. 10 No. 04, 1963 139 A SELF-CONTAINED NAVIGATION SYSTEM (NOTES AND COMMENT) Capt. R. E. Jasperson, USN (ret.) Vol. 10 No. 02, 1963 140 POLYNESIAN NAVIGATION (NOTES AND COMMENT) Capt. Brett Hilder Vol. 10 No. 02, 1963 141 CELESTIAL HEADING REFERENCES Eric H. Tecklenburg Vol. 09 No. 01, 1962 142 POLYNESIAN NAVIGATION J. P. Frankel Vol. 09 No. 01, 1962 143 PLOTTING THE FUTURE COURSE OF MARINE CELESTIAL NAVIGATION Gene R. Marner Vol. 07 No. 04, 1960 144 CELESTIAL SIGHTING THROUGH THE SUBMARINE PERISCOPE Lt. Cmdr. Robert Irving, USN Vol. 07 No. 02 & 3, 1960 145 PRINCE HENRY THE NAVIGATOR Norman J. W. Thrower Vol. 07 No. 02 & 3, 1960 146 SURVIVAL POSITION LOCATION USING STAR SIGHTING E. H. Sharkey Vol. 06 No. 08, 1959-1960 147 A PROPOSAL FOR A NEW METHOD OF CELESTIAL SIGHT REDUCTION AND LINE-OF-POSITION PLOTTING Dan N. Hurwitz Vol. 06 No. 07, 1959 148 THE RHUMB LINE ON THE ELLIPSOIDAL EARTH Ralph Hoyt Bacon Vol. 06 No. 07, 1959 149 THE INSTITUTE AND THE SEARCH FOR KNOWLEDGE Capt. Alton B. Moody, USNR Vol. 06 No. 06, 1959 150 CELESTIAL NAVIGATION WITHOUT A VERTICAL REFERENCE Phillip R. Burton Vol. 06 No. 05, 1959 151 THE LIMACON OF PASCAL AS A BASIS FOR COMPUTED AND GRAPHIC METHODS OF DETERMINING ASTRONOMIC POSITIONS Alfred H. Kerrick Vol. 06 No. 05, 1959 152 THE NEW BOWDITCH: A REVIEW Grenville D. Zerfass Vol. 06 No. 05, 1959 153 POLYNESIAN NAVIGATIONAL STONES Capt. Brett Hilder Vol. 06 No. 04, 1958-1959 154 AN AUTOMATIC ASTRO COMPASS David B. Nichinson Vol. 06 No. 03, 1958 155 A PROPOSAL FOR A SURVIVAL SEXTANT Leonard E. Gray Vol. 06 No. 02, 1958 156 HAROLD GATTY AS WE KNEW HIM Capt. P. V. H. Weems, USN (Ret.) Vol. 06 No. 02, 1958 157 THE SEARCH FOR SELF-CONTAINED NAVIGATION AIDS Richard Y. Miner Vol. 06 No. 02, 1958 158 THE ZENITH INDICATOR POSITION INSTRUMENT Lt. J. D. Bottoms, USN Vol. 06 No. 02, 1958 159 AN UNIDENTIFIED MARINER'S ASTROLABE N/A Vol. 05 No. 08, 1957-1958 160 THE DISCOVERY OF THE LONGITUDE Norman J. W. Thrower Vol. 05 No. 08, 1957-1958 161 THE TRUE DISTANCE AND AZIMUTH COMPUTER FOR POLAR NAVIGATION Sheridan L. Hall Vol. 05 No. 08, 1957-1958 162 ANTARCTIC NAVIGATION Capt. Charles W. Thomas, USCG Vol. 05 No. 07, 1957 163 PRECISION CELESTIAL NAVIGATION IN HIGH-SPEED, HIGH-ALTITUDE AIRCRAFT Major Harold F. Korger, USAF Vol. 05 No. 06, 1957 164 A FORMAT FOR A RAPID MULTIPLE-STAR-FIX SOLUTION Lieutenant (j.g.) Jo Swerling, Jr., USNR Vol. 05 No. 04, 1956 165 VECTOR DIAGRAMS FOR SAILBOAT DEAD RECKONING Leonard E. Gray Vol. 05 No. 04, 1956 166 AN IMPROVED PROTRACTOR Lieutenant Commander C. H. Blair, USN Vol. 05 No. 02, 1956 167 CELESTIAL NAVIGATION IN HIGH LATITUDES Major William E. Molett, USAF Vol. 05 No. 02, 1956 168 COMPUTERS FOR MOTION OF THE BODY AND OBSERVER Captain Martin Berkovitz, USAF Vol. 05 No. 02, 1956 169 PROBLEMS ENCOUNTERED IN SURVIVAL NAVIGATION Glenn M. Hawkins Vol. 05 No. 02, 1956 170 POLAR (ICECAP) NAVIGATION Major Palle Mogensen, U. S. Army Vol. 05 No. 01, 1956 171 THE PLANE AND GREAT CIRCLE SAILINGS, PART 11 Peter H. Selby Vol. 05 No. 01, 1956 172 UNIFICATION OF THE ABRIDGED NAUTICAL ALMANAC AND THE AMERICAN NAUTICAL ALMANAC G. M. Clemence and D. H. Sadler Vol. 05 No. 01, 1956 173 THE PLANE AND GREAT CIRCLE SAILINGS Peter H. Selby Vol. 04 No. 08, 1955 174 HIGH PRECISION COMPUTER FOR AUTOMATIC SOLUTION OF THE CELESTIAL TRIANGLE Gene R. Marner Vol. 04 No. 07, 1955 175 KEPLER William R. Cagle Vol. 04 No. 07, 1955 176 ON THE GEOMETRICAL SOLUTION OF THE NAVIGATIONAL TRIANGLE John A. Russell Vol. 04 No. 06, 1955 177 PUTTING THE MOON IN THE POCKET ALMANAC Robert W. Byerly Vol. 04 No. 06, 1955 178 HALF CENTURY OF NAVIGATION 1900-1950 Captains P. V. H. Weems, USN (Ret.) Vol. 04 No. 05, 1955 179 THE GREEN FLASH W. H. Forthman Vol. 04 No. 05, 1955 180 ALFONSO THE WISE William Potter Vol. 04 No. 04, 1954 181 NAVIGATOR'S POCKET ALMANAC N/A Vol. 04 No. 04, 1954 182 NEW TECHNIQUES FOR THE RUNNING FIX Lt. Robert W. Beard, USNR Vol. 04 No. 04, 1954 183 WHITHER BOUND, NAVIGATOR? Commander Alton B. Moody, USNR Vol. 04 No. 04, 1954 184 POLAR COMPASSES Samuel M. Burka Vol. 04 No. 03, 1954 185 RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN POLAR NAVIGATION Major William E. Molett, USAF Vol. 04 No. 03, 1954 186 AN EARLY BUREAU OF LONGITUDE: PEIRESC IN PROVENCE Seymour L. Chapin Vol. 04 No. 02, 1954 187 IRRADIATION AND REFRACTION AT LOW ALTITUDES AND THE WORKING NAVIGATOR Captain H. H. Shufeldt, USNR Vol. 04 No. 02, 1954 188 THE NAVIGATOR'S POCKET ALMANAC Paul E. Wylie Vol. 04 No. 02, 1954 189 DO YOU SAY WHAT YOU MEAN? Commnder Alton B. Moody, USNR Vol. 04 No. 01, 1954 190 METHODS USED IN CELESTIAL NAVIGATION Fred Franklin Vol. 04 No. 01, 1954 191 PRECOMPUTED CELESTIAL DATA FOR HIGH SPEED AIRCRAFT Major Robert Sullivan, USAF Vol. 04 No. 01, 1954 192 THE DIP OF THE HORIZON Hans Christian Freiesleben Vol. 04 No. 01, 1954 193 FIXES, AND HOW TO GET OUT OF THEM Commander H. W. Dusinberre, USN Vol. 03 No. 09, 1953 194 NAUTICAL AND STATUTE MILE CONTROVERSY Merrill Armour Vol. 03 No. 09, 1953 195 NAVIGATION WITHOUT MATHEMATICS? Rear Admiral Alfred C. Richmond, USCG Vol. 03 No. 09, 1953 196 SIMPLIFIED STAR PLOTTING Commander H. W. Dusinberre, USN Vol. 03 No. 09, 1953 197 A SURVEY OF THE EFFORTS TO DETERMINE LONGITUDE AT SEA, 1660-1760. PART III: A PERFECT TIMEKEEPER Seymour L. Chapin Vol. 03 No. 08, 1953 198 PROBLEMS OF A SMALL BOAT SKIPPER Richard S. Nye Vol. 03 No. 08, 1953 199 THE NAUTICAL AND STATUTE MILE CONTROVERSY Commander E. R. McCarthy, USC&GS Vol. 03 No. 08, 1953 200 TRUE AZIMUTH OF POLARIS BY NOMOGRAM J. G. van de Flier Vol. 03 No. 08, 1953 201 A SURVEY OF THE EFFORTS TO DETERMINE LONGITUDE AT SEA, 1660-1760. PART 11: THE USE OF CELESTIAL BODIES Seymour L. Chapin Vol. 03 No. 07, 1953 202 ACCURACY: AN EDITORIAL COMMENT NA Vol. 03 No. 07, 1953 203 BUBBLE ACCELERATION Major Robert Sullivan, USAF Vol. 03 No. 07, 1953 204 H.O. 249 AND THE NEW AIR ALMANAC John Dohm Vol. 03 No. 07, 1953 205 SELECTED STARS 1953 ALMANACS Commander Edwin A. Beito, USNR Vol. 03 No. 07, 1953 206 WHAT'S OUR SPEED? THE EVOLUTION OF SHIP-LOGS Grenville D. Zerfass Vol. 03 No. 07, 1953 207 A SURVEY OF THE EFFORTS TO DETERMINE LONGITUDE AT SEA, 1660-1760 Seymour L. Chapin Vol. 03 No. 06, 1952 208 PARADOX OF PROXIMITY Commander E. S. Quilter, USN Vol. 03 No. 06, 1952 209 WHAT GEOMAGNETISM MEANS TO NAVIGATORS Captain Elliott B. Roberts, USN Vol. 03 No. 06, 1952 210 A SHORT HISTORY OF THE INSTITUTE OF NAVIGATION John W. Calvert Vol. 03 No. 05, 1952 211 NATHANIEL BOWDITCH AND HIS WORK Paul E. Wylie Vol. 03 No. 05, 1952 212 NOTE ON THE SELECTION OF STARS FOR NAVIGATION Charles H. Smiley Vol. 03 No. 05, 1952 213 SUGGESTION FOR MEASUREMENT OF REFRACTION Robert W. Byerly Vol. 03 No. 05, 1952 214 CONCERNING THE APPARENT DIFFERENCE IN THE SIZE OF THE SUN AT NOON AND AT SUNSET Captain Raleigh C. Willems, USAF Vol. 03 No. 04, 1952 215 CONSIDERATION OF VARIOUS TERRESTIAL COORDINATE SYSTEMS Walter B. Nash Vol. 03 No. 04, 1952 216 EXPEDITIONS OF THE FRENCH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, 1735 Seymour L. Chapin Vol. 03 No. 04, 1952 217 NATHANIEL BOWDITCH Grenville D. Zerfass Vol. 03 No. 04, 1952 218 POLAR NAVIGATION Captain J. O. Sanders, USAF Vol. 03 No. 04, 1952 219 PRECISE ASTRONOMICAL FIXES Giles G. Healey Vol. 03 No. 04, 1952 220 TIMEKEEPING Captain P. V. H. Weems, USN (Ret.) Vol. 03 No. 04, 1952 221 TWO MIRRORS: THE STORY OF THE INVENTION OF THE SEXTANT Grenville D. Zerfass Vol. 03 No. 04, 1952 222 TYCHO BRAHE Samuel Herrick Vol. 03 No. 04, 1952 223 A TWILIGHT COMPUTER AND PLANISPHERE FOR HIGH LATITUDE NAVIGATION J. W. Cox and S/L K. R. Greenaway, RCAF Vol. 03 No. 03, 1952 224 ATMOSPHERIC REFRACTION AT LOW ANGULAR ALTITUDES IN THE POLAR REGIONS Charles H. Smiley Vol. 03 No. 03, 1952 225 H. O. 249 REVISED John Dohm Vol. 03 No. 03, 1952 226 PERSONAL EQUATION AND THE MODERN MARINE SEXTANT Charles H. Smiley and Mark Quirk Vol. 03 No. 010, 1953 227 THE POCKET NAUTICAL ALMANAC Paul E. Wylie Vol. 03 No. 010, 1953 228 LUNAR PARALLAX METHOD OF ASTRO NAVIGATION J. S. Thompson Vol. 03 No. 01 & 2, 1952 229 ASTRONOMICAL FORMULAE FOR USE IN NAVIGATION Charles Fox Vol. 03 No. 01 & 2, 1951 230 ATMOSPHERIC REFRACTION AT LOW ANGULAR ALTITUDES IN THE TEMPERATE ZONES Charles H. Smiley Vol. 03 No. 01 & 2, 1951 231 EARLY NAVIGATION MANUALS Grenville D. Zerfass Vol. 03 No. 01 & 2, 1951 232 LOW ALTITUDE REFRACTION CORRECTION Captain Raleigh C. Willems, USAF Vol. 03 No. 01 & 2, 1951 233 REFRACTION NEAR THE HORIZON G. M. Clemence Vol. 03 No. 01 & 2, 1951 234 THE ORIGINAL STAR FINDER Captain Gilbert T. Rude, USN (Ret.) Vol. 03 No. 01 & 2, 1951 235 TRANSPOLAR CELESTIAL FOR HIGH SPEED NAVIGATION Thoburn C. Lyon Vol. 03 No. 01 & 2, 1951 236 UNIFICATION OF THE AIR ALMANAC AND THE AMERICAN AIR ALMANAC G. M. Clemence and D. H. Sadler Vol. 03 No. 01 & 2, 1951 237 ACCURACY OF MARINE NAVIGATION Captain P. V. H. WEEMS, USN (Ret.) Vol. 02 No. 10, 1951 238 MIDDLE LATITUDE SAILING NEAR THE EQUATOR A. N. Black Vol. 02 No. 10, 1951 239 THE ACCURACY OF OBSERVATIONS MADE WITH MARINE SEXTANTS Charles H. Smiley Vol. 02 No. 10, 1951 240 THE YACHTSMAN'S INTEREST IN NAVIGATION Randolph E. Tyrrel Vol. 02 No. 10, 1951 241 A SHORT METHOD FOR PRECOMPUTATION Samuel Herrick Vol. 02 No. 09, 1951 242 FACTS OF ASTRONOMY OF VALUE TO THE NAVIGATOR Commander Edwin A. Beito, USNR Vol. 02 No. 09, 1951 243 PULKOVO-OLD CAPITAL OF POSITIONAL ASTRONOMY Otto Struve Vol. 02 No. 09, 1951 244 A FIX FROM ONE SIGHT Frederick Franklin Vol. 02 No. 07, 1950 245 HUMAN NAVIGATOR OR BLACK BOX? Lieutenant Commander Alton B. Moody, USNR Vol. 02 No. 07, 1950 246 NAVIGATION METHODS COMPARED Captain P. V. H. WEEMS, USN (Ret.) Vol. 02 No. 07, 1950 247 THE PFUND SKY COMPASS Lieutenant Commander Alton B. Moody, USNR Vol. 02 No. 07, 1950 248 THE WORK OF THE NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS IN NAVIGATION E. U. Condon Vol. 02 No. 06, 1950 249 TIME AND ALMANACS G. M. Clemence Vol. 02 No. 06, 1950 250 A LINE OF POSITION BY OBSERVED AZIMUTH Horace R. Byers Vol. 02 No. 05, 1950 251 ATMOSPHERIC REFRACTION AT LOW ANGULAR ALTITUDES IN THE TROPICS Charles H. Smiley Vol. 02 No. 05, 1950 252 A POSITION FINDER Paul Miller, U.S.N. (Ret.) Vol. 02 No. 04, 1949 253 A SIMULTANEOUS TWO-STAR FIX Charles T. Dozier Vol. 02 No. 04, 1949 254 NEW TYPE 1950 NAUTICAL ALMANAC Commander Edwin A. Beito, U.S.N.R Vol. 02 No. 04, 1949 255 MIDDLE LATITUDE SAILING WHEN THE COURSE CROSSES THE EQUATOR Paul E. Wylie Vol. 02 No. 03, 1949 256 NAVIGATION BY THE RULE OF SIXTY Commander E. S. Quilter, U.S.N Vol. 02 No. 03, 1949 257 PRESENT STATUS OF POLAR NAVIGATION Flight Lieutenant K. R. Greenaway, R.C.A.F Vol. 02 No. 03, 1949 258 PROBLEMS OF MARINE NAVIGATION Lieutenant Charles W. Handley, U.S.M.S Vol. 02 No. 03, 1949 259 RECENT DEVELOPMENT IN POLAR NAVIGATION Lieutenant Command Alton B. Moody, U.S.N.R Vol. 02 No. 03, 1949 260 SOME HISTORY OF H.O. 214 IN THE NETHERLANDS Ph. A. Gallas Vol. 02 No. 01, 1949 261 THE TRIANGULATOR Frederick Franklin Vol. 02 No. 01, 1949 262 TIMES OF SUNRISE AND OF SUNSET BY A GRAPHICAL METHOD Paul E. Wylie Vol. 01 No. 12, 1948 263 A "NEW LOOK" FOR THE NAUTICAL ALMANAC Ramon O. Williams Vol. 01 No. 11, 1948 264 SUMMARY OF A PAPER ON THE PLACE OF NAVIGATION IN THE COLLEGE CURRICULUM Bart J. Bok Vol. 01 No. 09, 1948 265 H.O. 249 Henrietta H. Swope Vol. 01 No. 07 & 8, 1947 266 NAVIGATION IN THE ANTARCTIC Alton B. Moody Vol. 01 No. 07 & 8, 1947 267 THE AMERICAN NAUTICAL ALMANAC AND ITS IMPROVEMENT Paul E. Wylie Vol. 01 No. 07 & 8, 1947 268 NAVIGATION COMPUTER SERIES Captain P. V. H. Weems, USN (Ret.) Vol. 01 No. 06, 1947 269 THE GERMAN GYRO-SEXTANT Mary R. Hunt Vol. 01 No. 06, 1947 270 CRITICAL TABLES FOR CORRECTING OBSERVED ALTITUDES FOR ATMOSPHERIC REFRACTION IN POLAR LATITUDES Charles H. Smiley Vol. 01 No. 05, 1947 271 NIGHT SEXTANT OBSERVATIONS AGAINST A NIGHT VISION HORIZON Commander Wm. J. Catlett, Jr Vol. 01 No. 05, 1947 272 NOTE ON DREISENSTOK'S METHOD IN CELESTIAL NAVIGATION N. Wyman Storer Vol. 01 No. 05, 1947 273 THE INFLUENCE OF THE EARTH'S ROTATION ON BUBBLE SEXTANT READINGS J. J. Green Vol. 01 No. 05, 1947 274 A NEW SEXTANT William H. Holman III Vol. 01 No. 04, 1946 275 BOWDITCH Alton B. Moody Vol. 01 No. 04, 1946 276 JAPANESE ALMANACS Ralph F. Haupt Vol. 01 No. 04, 1946 277 SIMPLE COMPUTATION OF DISTANCES OVER THE EARTH B. W. Sitterly and J. A. Pierce Vol. 01 No. 04, 1946 278 AMERICAN ALMANACS George W. Mixter Vol. 01 No. 03, 1946 279 AMERICAN NAUTICAL ALMANAC L. J. Comrie Vol. 01 No. 03, 1946 280 REVISING THE NAUTICAL ALMANAC Samuel Herrick Vol. 01 No. 03, 1946 281 THE AAF APPROACH TO POLAR NAVIGATION George W. Mixter Vol. 01 No. 03, 1946 282 ACCURACY OF POSITION FINDING USING THREE OR FOUR LINES OF POSITION S. A. Goudsmit Vol. 01 No. 02, 1946 283 CAPTAIN THOMAS HUBBARD SUMNER, 1807-1876 Robert S. Richardson Vol. 01 No. 02, 1946 284 INTERPRETATION OF THE CELESTIAL LINE OF POSITION Austin Phelps Vol. 01 No. 02, 1946 285 INSTRUMENTAL SOLUTIONS IN CELESTIAL NAVIGATION Samuel Herrick Vol. 01 No. 01, 1946 286 NOON INTERVAL TABLES T. F. Hickerson Vol. 01 No. 01, 1946 --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ To post to this group, send email to NavList@fer3.com To unsubscribe, send email to NavList-unsubscribe@fer3.com -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---