13 January 2010 by Tristan Gooley
…with a little help from the sun.
An interesting article on the BBC website today about the seasonal habits of Puffins.
The most interesting thing other than learning more about the puffins’ whereabouts was the method they used for understanding where the birds were at any one time. Using ‘geolocator tags’ that logged the time of sunrise, sunset the research team were able to deduce their location.
‘The loggers work by measuring light levels, recording when dawn and dusk occurs each day.
With this data, researchers can calculate day length, when midday occurs, and the daily longitudinal and latitudinal co-ordinates for the individual bird.’
The tags also detected when the birds’ feet were wet, the hope being that this would give information about when the birds were airborne, but the puffins foxed the researchers here: they like to tuck their feet up into their plumage when asleep. Their feet…
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Tags: birds, latitude, longitude, migration, sea, sun |
01 June 2009 by Tristan Gooley

Tristan
I managed to rope in a friend at the end of an evening’s BBQ and together we plumb-bobbed Polaris, set out two posts and then strung a string between them. We checked with a compass and, despite the evening’s beers, we were actually almost spot on!
The next day we checked the shadow at 1.00 (12 noon GMT) and found this lined up on our string. Impressed or what!
Richard
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Hi Richard,
I can see I’m going to need to come up with some sort of merit/badge/star system just to complete the back to school experience!
A link that I will have mentioned on the day is here:
http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/AltAz.php
If you plug in your latitude and longitude, it will give you the altitude and azimuth of…
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Tags: compass, finding north, latitude, longitude, moon, polaris, shadow, sun |
26 August 2008 by Tristan Gooley

Time and navigation have a cosy relationship, as John Harrison, inventor of the chronometer that cracked the longitude problem in the 18th Century would attest. The sun, earth, moon and planets and stars have at times been seen as cogs in a huge clock.
So many natural phenomena take their orders from these bodies and tide is one of the best known of these. I took this photo of the tide running past a cardinal off Jersey this weekend. The cardinal is an easterly one, signalling that the safer water lay to the east of it. But could it tell us anything else? With two pieces of information, time and tide table, we can discern others such as the speed of the water and its direction. If we had no other references: no sight of land, no chart, no compass, no GPS… that small patch of water could reveal…
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Tags: cardinal, chronometer, harrison, longitude, moon, nature, sun, tide, time |