Carsten Niebuhr was the astronomer/cartographer for the Danish expedition to Arabia in 1761–7. He established the practicality of Tobias Mayer's lunar distance method for determining longitude, which became the predominant basis for the determination of longitude in the last decades of the eighteenth century. Niebuhr was also a pioneer in the application of astronomy to hydrography as demonstrated in his charts of the Nile Delta, Red Sea, Persian Gulf and Shatt el Arab. He is noted for the precision of his work which was exceptional for the times. However, Niebuhr's accomplishments in navigational astronomy, and their significance have largely gone unrecognized.
‘A Practical Skill that Was Without Equal’:Carsten Niebuhr and the navigational astronomy of the Arabian journey, 1761–7
The Mariner's Mirror ; 99 , 2 ; 138-152
2013-05-01
15 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
Carsten Niebuhr , astronomy , hydrography , longitude , navigation , Arabia , Red Sea I
GWLB - Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek | 1935
|European Dedication. GGT-Niebuhr opens Danish headquarters
British Library Online Contents | 1995
Carsten Krumm : Verkehrsordnungswidrigkeiten
Online Contents | 2012
|Memahami Konsep Reinhold Niebuhr tentang Keberagaman dan Kesatuan Sejarah
DOAJ | 2011
|