Nevil Maskelyne (1732–1811) was a hugely significant figure in the worlds of British science and maritime exploration. His high international standing and wide influence have in many ways been unfairly overlooked as his story has come to be dominated by his role in the campaign waged by John Harrison, the clockmaker, for a larger reward for his pioneering marine timekeepers. Maskelyne was, however, involved in all the key projects of eighteenth-century astronomy. These included ambitious expeditions to observe the transits of Venus, experiments designed to establish the shape and ‘weight’ of the Earth, the remaking of the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, and the survey of new lands on voyages of scientific exploration. The essays in this vo...
England’s first native scientific instrument maker, Humfrey Cole (c. 1530–1591), is we...
After the failure of the 1761 transit to provide a reliable value for the astronomical unit, the foc...
Reverend Jean Chappe d’Auteroche was a French astronomer and a member of the royal Academy of Scien...
The science of astronomy has had a long and distinguished history at the Cape of Good Hope (hereafte...
The British Astronomer Royal, Nevil Maskelyne, spent four months on a Scottish mountainside in 1774,...
This chapter explores how the cultural practices of exploration and explorers themselves might be co...
The invention of the telescope at the dawning of the 17th century has revolutionized humanity's unde...
The question of how to accurately find longitude at sea was hotly debated in the mid-1700s. This art...
Built in Greenwich in 1675–1676, the Royal Observatory was situated outside the capital but was deep...
International audienceThe “Nautical Almanac and Astronomical Ephemeris” was published from 1767 by N...
Abstract. We review the small number of known observations of planetary transits made in Ire-land in...
Making Stars Physical offers the first extensive look at the astronomical career of John Herschel, s...
little of her biography has yet been established, despite a number of clues. She was the author of N...
ROOS Anna Marie, Martin Lister and his Remarkable Daughters : The Art of Science in the Seventeenth ...
A tale of eighteenth-century invention and competition, commerce and conflict, this is a lively, ill...
England’s first native scientific instrument maker, Humfrey Cole (c. 1530–1591), is we...
After the failure of the 1761 transit to provide a reliable value for the astronomical unit, the foc...
Reverend Jean Chappe d’Auteroche was a French astronomer and a member of the royal Academy of Scien...
The science of astronomy has had a long and distinguished history at the Cape of Good Hope (hereafte...
The British Astronomer Royal, Nevil Maskelyne, spent four months on a Scottish mountainside in 1774,...
This chapter explores how the cultural practices of exploration and explorers themselves might be co...
The invention of the telescope at the dawning of the 17th century has revolutionized humanity's unde...
The question of how to accurately find longitude at sea was hotly debated in the mid-1700s. This art...
Built in Greenwich in 1675–1676, the Royal Observatory was situated outside the capital but was deep...
International audienceThe “Nautical Almanac and Astronomical Ephemeris” was published from 1767 by N...
Abstract. We review the small number of known observations of planetary transits made in Ire-land in...
Making Stars Physical offers the first extensive look at the astronomical career of John Herschel, s...
little of her biography has yet been established, despite a number of clues. She was the author of N...
ROOS Anna Marie, Martin Lister and his Remarkable Daughters : The Art of Science in the Seventeenth ...
A tale of eighteenth-century invention and competition, commerce and conflict, this is a lively, ill...
England’s first native scientific instrument maker, Humfrey Cole (c. 1530–1591), is we...
After the failure of the 1761 transit to provide a reliable value for the astronomical unit, the foc...
Reverend Jean Chappe d’Auteroche was a French astronomer and a member of the royal Academy of Scien...