
NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Distances
From: Doug Royer
Date: 2005 Feb 9, 11:47 -0800
From: Doug Royer
Date: 2005 Feb 9, 11:47 -0800
Yes, this is an amazeing accomplishment/feat. She is one hard core sailor.My compliments to her. Thanks for including the link. Ellen Macarther's recent singlehanded nonstop sail around the world in 71 days 14 hours 18 minutes 33 seconds, covering 27,354 nautical miles at an average speed of 15.9 knots is simply amazing! (Check out http://www.teamellen.com/ for more details...) While studying her path I looked for the latitude and longitude of the Ushant starting line using Google. I did not find the location, but I did find this: http://www.desmith.net/MJdS/dp.pdf "Distance and Path" - a 13 MB Acrobat PDF file of Michael J de Smith's PhD thesis concerning measuring distances. It has some interesting things about sextants and nautical navigation history in it. Dan