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Ancient Chinese Technology

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archeologyinc.org

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archeologyinc.org Search the Web: Inc Web Design Development Commercial Business Resources Pharmaceutical Companies Resources For Entrepreneurs Company Inc Web Design Development Commercial Business Resources Pharmaceutical Companies Resources For Entrepreneurs Company Entrepreneur Consulting Business Research Inc Web Design Development Web Development Company Design Services Web Development Services Professional Web Design Commercial Executive Executive Suites Office Space Television Commercials Business Resources Business Ideas Small Business Information Magazine Business ©2007 archeologyinc.org All rights reserved. Read More
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At Home Astronomy - Science Experiments for the Entire Family

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© 2001; UC Regents Read More
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Bluenose II Preservation Trust

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contact us | site map | site search sections: Sailing Schedule The Preservation Trust The Bluenose Legacy Online Shopping Welcome What's new on the site The Bluenose II Preservation Trust supports the maintenance and operation of the Bluenose II , the replica of of the famous schooner, and Canada's monument to the great age of sailing. Learn more about the Trust Learn more about the Bluenose Legacy Shop online There have been no additions in the last few weeks. Older Trust news items The Company Store Online Catalogue Proceeds from the Ship's Company Stores and the Online Catalogue go to supporting the operations of the great schooner. This is a not-for-profit operation. Browse the catalogue Best Seller: Sou'wester. Authentic Cape Ann design. Oilskin coating, cozy cotton plaid lining. Turn Read More
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CSMS

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Last modified on 01/03/01 Maintained by Jennifer Jones CHALLENGER REPORTS ONLINE H.M.S Challenger In 1870, Wyville Thomson , Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh University, persuaded the Royal Society of London to ask the British Government to furnish one of Her Majesty's ships for a prolonged voyage of exploration across the oceans of the globe. On 7 December 1872, the expedition put to sea from Sheerness aboard the corvette H.M.S. Challenger . The vessel was a three-masted square-rigged wooden ship of 2300 tons displacement and some 200 feet overall. She was essentially a sailing ship though possessing an engine of 1200 horsepower. It was planned that the ship would be under sail for most of the cruise, using the engine primarily for manoeuvring when conducting scientific observati Read More
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Early Hawaiian Ocean Navigators

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Search Home | My Account | Shopping Cart | Log In | Japanese Coffee Times May 1998 Current Articles Past Articles Flora & Fauna Hawaiian Cuisine Kona Coffee History & Culture Island Life Religion, Myth & Legend Home On-line Store Star Struck By Wayfinding by Betty Fullard-Leo Hundreds of years before European seafarers sailed into Kealakekua Bay on the Big Island, early Polynesians systematically navigated through 16 million square miles of the Pacific. These voyages of discovery are thought to have begun as early as 300 AD, dwindling off about 1000 AD and ceasing about 1200 AD. Until 1976 when the ancient water routes were retraced through modern "voyages of discovery," historians speculated about the origins of Hawai'i's first settlers. In 1947, Thor Heyerdahl built the balsa-w Read More
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Endeavour

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All information relevant to the HMB Endeavour replica is in the process of being transferred to the Australian National Maritime Museum's site. http://www.anmm.gov.au/ Read More
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Finding Latitude Using Astrolabes

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Finding Latitude Using an Astrolabe A Sailor's Day Sunrise As the sun's rays first appear on the horizon, our sailor identifies the stars (the constellation) visible in the sky around the sun. Noon: As the sun reaches its highest point in the sky during the day, our sailor takes out his astrolabe, holds it waist-high and looks down at the dial to see how many degrees the sun is above the horizon. Afternoon Then he takes out the Rules for the Astrolabe and using the constellation in which the stars were located that morning (across the top of the table), and the number of degrees that the sun was above the horizon at midday, he looks up the latitude. This astrolabe was made in 1605. Note the semi-circle on the bottom which is weighted so that the astrolabe remains steady even at sea. Calend Read More
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Fulton's Submarine (Reason): American Treasures of the Library of Congress

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Home - Overview - Treasure Talks - Learn More About It - Object Checklist (Current) - Credits Exhibition Sections: Top Treasures - Memory - Reason - Imagination Fulton's Submarine Robert Fulton (1765-1815) "On Submarine Navigation and Attack" Bound manuscript, August 1806 Manuscript Division Gift, 1924 (124.2) Plunging boat [submarine] , above and below water views Ink and watercolor on paper, 1806 LC-USZC4-6051 Robert Fulton (1765–1815) [ Submarine above and below water level ] Graphite, ink, and watercolor on paper, 1806 Prints & Photographs Division Purchase, 1983 (123.15) [ Digital ID# ppmsca cph 3g06051] Napoleon commissioned the first practical submarine, designed by the American inventor Robert Fulton. Testing of this craft, the Nautilus , was successfully carried out in Franc Read More
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Hallstrom Holdings - shipwrecks and sunken treasure

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The shipwreckexplorer.com web site is intended to become a vast resource of general information relating to: Maritime history Shipwrecks The commercial shipwreck salvage industry Maritime archeology As the site grows we will continuously add information. We will also profile a different shipwreck on a quarterly basis, most of which will be projects independent of those with which Hallstrom Holdings is involved. The Life of a Project Project Preparation and Logistics Once the research conducted on a shipwreck project has been positively evaluated, a number of points need to be examined, decisions made and preparation put into practice before setting out to search for and identify the target. The following are some of the considerations that need to be made: What is the priority of the new p Read More
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Hands-On Astrolabe

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Hands-On Astrolabe This web site has moved: http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/tops/astlabe.html Last modified: April 18, 2000 Read More
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Historic Naval Ships Visitors Guide

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Visitors' Guide "I touch my country's mind, I come to grips - With half her purpose, thinking of these ships... They mark our passage as a race of men. Earth will not see such ships as those again." John Masefield The vessels of the Historic Naval Ships Association speak of their nations' histories in a way that websites or videos cannot. Consisting of both museums and memorials, these ships honor the men and women who serve their nations as well as provide an exciting and fun place to learn about history and technology. Today, the 175 ships of the HNSA fleet ride peacefully at anchor, inviting you to cross their brows and journey back in time. Sit in the wardroom of a mighty battleship, touch a powerful torpedo on a submarine. Walk the legendary decks of seafaring history and stand where Read More
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History of Shipbuilding

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Floating trunk Raft Primitive boat Egyptian vessel Roman vessel Gally Caravel Huge vessel Sailingvessel Clipper Steam ship "Klermon" Transatlantic Motor boats Submarine Battleship Aircraft carrier Created by Jasmin Celic & Ezio Hafner - Guest Book Read More
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Latitude: The Art and Science of Fifteenth-Century Navigation

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Latitude Changed Knowledge of the World What Changed Without Latitude In 1440 European Sailors Only Knew But With Latitude In 1516 They Knew Ships Beacons Maps Latitude Compass Roses Earth's Magnetism Traditional Sailing Science of Sailing Coastal Navigation Ocean Currents Ocean Weather Longitude Polynesian Astronomy Math in Maps Calendars Site Map Net Resources Learning Page Portuguese Latitude Scale circa 1516 (blue/red rectangles, approx. double actual size) Send Comments sepia maps © Huntington Library Why world navigation was impossible in 1421 Last modified 9/8/2002 © 1998-2000 p seed Read More
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Literature.org - The Online Literature Library

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Search Literature.org By This Author : The Voyage o... The Origin o... The Origin o... The Descent ... Literature.org : Contact The Voyage of the Beagle Charles Darwin Preface Chapter 1 - St. Jago -- Cape de Verd Islands Chapter 2 - Rio de Janeiro Chapter 3 - Maldonado Chapter 4 - Rio Negro to Bahia Blanca Chapter 5 - Bahia Blanca Chapter 6 - Bahia Blanca to Buenos Ayres Chapter 7 - Buenos Ayres and St. Fe Chapter 8 - Banda Oriental and Patagonia Chapter 9 - Santa Cruz, Patagonia, and the Falkland Islands Chapter 10 - Tierra Del Fuego Chapter 11 - Strait of Magellan -- Climate of the Southern Coasts Chapter 12 - Central Chile Chapter 13 - Chiloe and Chonos Islands Chapter 14 - Chiloe and Concepcion: Great Earthquake Chapter 15 - Passage of the Cordillera Chapter 16 - Northern Chile and Per Read More
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Maps and Navigation

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Maps and Navigation If you want to be a good sailor, you will need to know about maps and navigation. You will have to be able to read maps with latitude and longitude and navigate through currents and winds . Not only that, but you will have to use navigational tools to direct your ship through the currents and winds. You will have to be precise with your navigating or you may end up hundreds of miles off course! Sextant Chronometer Bearing Circle Sunboard Semi-Wheel Lead Line Weather Vane Sunstone Anchor Download a Freelance Graphics presentation on navigation tools . Sextant Make your own sextant Sextants have been used by numerous nations throughout the world. The sextant was a tool that was used consistently for navigation. Today, it is still being used to navigate the most difficult Read More
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Micronesian Navigation: Contents

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Traditional Navigation in the Western Pacific A Search for Pattern Introduction Micronesia The Sidereal Compass Sailing Direction Exercises Keeping Track Living Seamarks Schematic Mapping Predicting the Weather . Putting the System to Work The Navigator as Ritual Specialist Keeping the Knowledge Alive The Search for Pattern Bodies of Knowledge and Cultural Anthropology Bibliography About this Presentation see more online exhibits at World Cultures: Ancient and Modern University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology © copyright 1997 Read More
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Mystic Seaport: The Museum of America and the Sea™

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Special Events Visit Mystic Seaport Educational Programs Shop the Museum Store Art Gallery Research the Collections Become a Member Support the Museum About Mystic Seaport Contact Us Account Login Username: Password: Forgot Password? If you are new to our site, please create an account now! Forgot Password? E-mail Address: Cancel Missing Page? We're sorry, but we cannot locate the Web page you are looking for. You may have followed an outdated link or perhaps you typed in an invalid URL (web address). One of the following steps may help you find what you're looking for. Click the link below or the back button on your browser to return to the previous page. Correct the URL you have requested, either on your browser or in the form below: Try each directory level in clickable form: http://www Read More
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NOVA Online | Into the Abyss | Deep-Sea Machines

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--> Deep-Sea Machines by Jennifer Uscher Bathysphere The bathysphere -- bathys is Greek for "deep" -- was developed in the early 1930s by William Beebe and Otis Barton, two explorers from the New York Zoological Society. It was a 4,500-pound hollow steel ball about five feet in diameter,which was raised and lowered from a ship by a cable. Electrical connections powered its oxygen system and searchlight. Air came from oxygen tanks fitted to the interior, with trays of powdered chemicals to absorb moisture and carbon dioxide. The oxygen was kept circulating by hand-held woven palm-frond fans. In 1934, Beebe and Barton dropped 3,028 feet down into the ocean off the coast of Bermuda, relaying news of their finds by telephone cable to a ship on the surface. They recorded every animal that passe Read More
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NOVA Online | Lost at Sea: The Search for Longitude

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--> Welcome to the companion Web site to "Lost at Sea: The Search for Longitude," originally broadcast on October 6, 1998. Based on the bestselling book Longitude by Dava Sobel, the program tells the story of how an unknown genius, John Harrison, discovered the key to navigating on the open seas and thus solved one of the thorniest problems of the 1700s. Text Longitude Home | Great Challenge | GPS Find Your Longitude | Ancient Navigators | Resources Teacher's Guide | Transcript | Site Map NOVA Online | Editor's Picks | Previous Sites | Join Us/E-mail | TV/Web Schedule About NOVA | Teachers | Site Map | Shop | Jobs | Search | To print NOVA Online is produced for PBS by the WGBH Science Unit Major funding for NOVA® is provided by the Park Foundation, The Northwestern Mutual Foundation, and S Read More
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Oceanographic expeditions

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[ home / oceanography ] Notable oceanographic expeditions This is a list and brief synopsis of notable expeditions that have in some way benefited the field of oceanography. It covers the years 1657 to 1933, and is (for now) directly pinched from Seas, Maps, and Men: An Atlas-History of Man's Exploration of the Oceans (1962), a book edited by G. E. R. Deacon (and which is reviewed elsewhere in these pages). Eventually I hope to have these more fully explained as well as referenced and illustrated, but for now it's just a brief and a bit dry history of significant oceanographic expeditions. I also want to extend this beyond 1933. Enjoy. Edmund Halley (1657-1742) A British astronomer, Halley (of comet fame) made probably the first primarily scientific voyage--to study the variation of the ma Read More
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OML: Neptune's Realm

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Charting Neptune's Realm: From Classical Mythology to Satellite Imagery An exhibition at the Osher Map Library and Smith Center for Cartographic Education, University of Southern Maine, Portland, 4 April 2000 to 11 January 2001 Donald S. Johnson, guest curator Everyone is familiar with maps and the information they contain, but few are aware of the nautical chart with its special characteristics and iconography. In the absence of land, one piece of water looks like any other, leading one to ask, "what is there that can be delineated on the vast, trackless ocean?" And, "how did this notation arise and develop?" The charts in this exhibit answer these questions. Lesson plans are now available for this exhibit A grant from the Davis Family Foundation has enabled the preparation of an interpre Read More
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Pirates!: Pirate Ships

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PAGE TRANSFERED TO: http://www.piratesinfo.com/detail/detail.php?article_id=46 Pirates! Fact- Pirate Ships Fact Legend Pirate Facts Main General History Types of Piracy Famous Pirates Pirate Facts Pirate Ships Ship Parts Pirate vessels Pirate Vocabulary Welcome to Pirates! Fact- Pirate Ships . This section provides you with definitions of certain ship parts , as well as a list of some historically important pirate vessels . Learn about: Pirate Ships Ship Parts Pirate vessels Main Menu: Communications Knowledge Check Pirates! Help Pirates! Main Extra Resources Map of Pirates! Tour of Pirates! Bibliography About Pirates! Please help the Pirates! web site grow and contribute your pirate content for inclusion on one of our sections. Credit is always given to the author of the submitted content Read More
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Singapore Science Centre

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Singapore Science Centre Read More
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Smith College Museum of Ancient Inventions: Compass

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Compass, China, 220 BCE by Susan Silverman AC Earliest records show a spoon shaped compass made of lodestone or magnetite ore, referred to as a "South-pointer" dating back to sometime during the Han Dynasty (2nd century BCE to 2nd century CE). The spoon-shaped instrument was placed on a cast bronze plate called a "heaven-plate" or diviner's board that had the eight trigrams (Pa Gua) of the I Ching, as well as the 24 directions (based on the constellations), and the 28 lunar mansions (based on the constellations dividing the Equator) . Often, the Big Dipper (Great Bear) was drawn within the center disc. The square symbolized earth and the circular disc symbolized heaven. Upon these were inscribed the azimuthal points relating to the constellations. Its primary use was that of geomancy (prog Read More
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Sperry Marine: Home

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.linkFont11 { font-size: 11px; } More Information... At Sperry Marine, we are the heirs of a long and honorable tradition. Our legacy brands - Sperry, Decca and C. Plath - are three of the best-known names in the marine electronics industry, with a history dating back over 100 years. We are proud of our past, and we are pledged to preserve and enhance the value inherent in these highly respected brands. Popular product groups: Marine Radar product line Gyrocompass product line Voyage Data Recorder product line Youth Mentoring and Scholarship Program Peter Dohle Signs Fleetwide Service Contract Integrated Bridge Systems for Royal Caribbean's Genesis Shipbuilding Project American Bureau of Shipping Certification for Radio Surveys RCI Vessel Liberty of the Seas Fitted with IBS Past News & Pre Read More
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St. Petersburg College Gibbs Campus

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The Scholarships and Student Financial Assistance Web Site has Moved! You will be redirected to the NEW Site automatically. Or you may Click on the following Link: St. Petersburg College Gibbs Campus Don't forget to update your Bookmarks! Web and Instructional Technology Services St. Petersburg College ©2000-2005 Read More
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The Astrolabe

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The Astrolabe An instrument with a past and a future This page provides a very general overview of astrolabe principles. Links are provided to other pages with more details. The astrolabe in the picture was made by the French scientist and craftsman Jean Fusoris in about 1400 ( photo courtesy Adler Planetarium and Astronomy Museum ). Click on the image to display a biographical sketch of the maker and large pictures of the front (121K) and back (51K) of the instrument. You can also download The Electric Astrolabe and a template for making a Mariner's Astrolabe . If, after looking through this site, you find you want to learn more about astrolabes and related pre-telescopic instruments, you might be interested in the author's just published book, The Astrolabe , which explains all types of Read More
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the document has moved

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The document has moved here . Per ?., mars 2001 Read More
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The Legendary Ocean - The Unexplored Frontier

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1998 Year of the Ocean THE LEGENDARY OCEAN ? THE UNEXPLORED FRONTIER Contents 1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY L-2 2. SEAS OF LEGENDS, LIFE, AND DISCOVERY L-3 3. A LONG HISTORY OF OCEANIC EXPLORATION L-3 4. TECHNOLOGY FOR DISCOVERY L-5 5. THE WEALTH AND WONDER OF THE OCEANS L-7 6. NAVIGATING THE FUTURE L-9 7. THE FUTURE L-12 8. REFERENCES L-12 This Year of the Ocean document was prepared as a background discussion paper and does not necessarily reflect the policies of the U.S. Government or the U.S. Government agencies that participated in its preparation. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The ocean remains as one of Earth’s last unexplored frontiers. It has stirred our imaginations over the millennia and has lead to the discovery of new lands, immense deposits and reservoirs of resources, and startling scientif Read More
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The Parts of an Astrolabe

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The Parts of an Astrolabe Classical astrolabes were usually made of brass and were commonly about six or eight inches (15 to 20 cm) in diameter, although much larger and smaller ones were made. No doubt many astrolabes were made of cardboard and paper, but few have survived. Most astrolabe problems were solved using the front of the instrument. The front of an astrolabe has two types of parts: fixed and rotating. The fixed parts represent time scales and the stereographic projection of the sky as seen from a specific latitude. The rotating parts simulate the daily rotation of the sky. Mater and Plates The main body of a typical astrolabe would consist of a brass disk about ¼ inch (6 mm) thick and about six inches (15 cm) in diameter that is hollowed out in the center to hold sets of thin b Read More
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Titlepage.html

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Wayfinding: In the Middle of the Pacific This site is best viewed in 256 colorsor better Ancient Hawaiian Navigation Game Life on The Hawaiian Voyaging Canoes References Navigating with the Stars Author's Page Mahalo ThinkQuest Jr. Guest Book Illustration used with permission byHerb Kawainui Kane, February 1998 Send use-mail! [email protected] Read More
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TOPIC 2 - HISTORY OF OCEANOGRAPHY

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ELEMENTS OF OCEANOGRAPHY TOPIC 2 - HISTORY OF OCEANOGRAPHY [Lecture ppt | pdf ] Overheads: Ancient Uses of the Oceans Egyptian and Mesopotamian Cultures and early trade (~3200 BC) Minoans as the first true maritime power (~2000 BC-1200 BC) Phoenician and Greek colonization of the Mediterranean (~1200 BC - 400 BC) Polynesian colonization of South Pacific Islands (~4000 BC - 1000 AD) Early Developments in our Understanding of the Oceans - I Early Greek ideas about oceans and marine life. ­ Origin of science as we define it today - Thales of Miletus (~600 BC) ­ Aristole catalogued marine organisms (~350 BC) ­ Erastosthenes calculated circumference of spherical Earth (~250 BC) Early Developments in our Understanding of the Oceans - II Technological Aids ­ Polynesian/Phoenician/Greek maps ­ Pto Read More
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Traditional Navigation in the Western Pacific @ University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology

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UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM of Archaeology and Anthropology presents Is there a primitive mentality essentially different from a civilized one? Or do people learn and mentally organize their experience in similar ways in spite of differences in their cultures and in the content of what they have to learn? We know that all people, if raised in the appropriate environment, prove capable of learning to speak any language and to think and operate effectively in the context of any culture. But what about different people's traditional bodies of specialized lore? Are they organized in similar ways, or not? Cognitive psychologists are interested in understanding how specialists mentally process and store their knowledge so that they can retrieve it as needed. Traditional navigators of the C Read More
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Underwater Exploration Timeline-University of Wisconsin Sea Grant

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cool science | diving | experiments | quizzes | timeline | tools and gear accessibility | site info | email us | credits mj kids and teachers copyright 2001 University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute design Tina Yao Last Updated 23 August 2001 by Yao If you have trouble accessing this page or wish to request a reasonable accommodation because of a disability contact us . Ever wonder why we humans are constantly poking our noses into strange, unknown and sometimes dangerous places? What on earth would inspire us to leave the safety and comfort of what we know to plunge into what we don't know? Join us as we explore the undersea world and learn about the famous and not-so-famous explorers who took lots of risks to unlock some of the deep sea's mysteries. Read More
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Untitled Document

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THE VOYAGE OF THE CHALLENGER H.M.S. Challenger The H.M.S. Challenger embarked from Portsmouth, England on December 21, 1872 and changed the course of scientific history. Physicists, chemists, and biologists collaborated with expert navigators to map the sea. This interdisciplinary spirit has continued to the present day. During the 4 year journey, the voyages circumnavigated the globe, sounded the ocean bottom to a depth of 26,850 feet, found many new species, and provided collections for scores of biologists. The Challenger at St. Paul's Rocks The Challenger was a corvette class ship, a military vessel that traveled under sail but had auxiliary steam power, which helped to stabilize the vessel during sampling. Sixteen of the ships 18 guns were removed, and in their place were installed mi Read More
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Wayfinders

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Centuries before European explorers ventured beyond their shorelines, the ancestors of today's Polynesians had sailed to every habitable island in the far corners of the Pacific. This ancient Polynesian sea voyaging tradition comes to life again in "Wayfinders: A Pacific Odyssey." This Web site companion begins where the program ends. Begin your online journey by investigating the film's major themes and subjects in greater depth. Learn more about Pacific Island geography, culture, history, archaeology, linguistics and celestial navigation, and ask questions of the experts who provided background information for the film. • Home • About the Film • Polynesian History and Origin • Wayfinding • Sharing Stories • Ask the Experts • Resources • Site Credit Read More
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www.uss-salem.org - /museum/

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www.uss-salem.org - /museum/ [To Parent Directory] 10/29/2004 2:56 PM <dir> archives 8/26/2002 12:59 PM <dir> contact 10/29/2004 2:59 PM <dir> education 3/27/2007 10:55 PM <dir> events 6/10/2005 1:05 AM <dir> functions 9/17/2006 9:42 PM <dir> history 1/8/2007 12:03 AM 24056 main.jpg 9/9/2003 10:49 PM <dir> memorial 1/27/2002 6:40 PM <dir> model 8/23/2007 8:34 PM <dir> New Folder 8/23/2007 8:31 PM <dir> New_Folder 6/6/2006 7:52 PM 10290 salem_work_party.jpg 2/1/2006 3:41 PM <dir> salemassoc 12/3/2002 8:01 PM <dir> shipstore 5/23/2001 2:03 PM 30251 storeorder.htm 10/3/2006 11:09 AM <dir> visit 10/25/2007 10:43 PM 22763 visitor_information.htm 9/30/2002 6:56 PM 13429 voidmodel.htm 8/24/2007 11:07 PM 12854 volunteer. Read More
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