Marching line
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marching lines are a pair of lines drawn on the glass of a compass, and arranged at 45 degrees to each other. These are an essential component in hiking through the wilderness. Most modern compasses have adjustable luminous marching lines.
[edit] See also
- Azimuth
- Beam compass
- coordinates
- fluxgate compass
- gyrocompass
- Gyrosin compass
- gyrostatic compass
- inertial navigation system
- pelorus
- radio compass
- radio direction finder
- surveyor's compass, or circumferentor
[edit] External links, resources, and references
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
- USGS Geomagnetism Program
- Amir Aczel, The Riddle of the Compass: The Invention that Changed the World, ISBN 0-15-600753-3
- Joseph Needham, Colin A. Ronan: The Shorter Science & Civilisation in China Vol 3 Chapter 1 Magnetism and Electricity.
- Science Friday, "The Riddle of the Compass" (interview with Amir Aczel, first broadcast on NPR on May 31, 2002).
- Paul J. Gans, The Medieval Technology Pages: Compass
- Frederic Lane, "The Economic Meaning of the Invention of the Compass", American Historical Review, vol. 68, pp. 605-617 (1963)
- The Tides By Sir William Thomson (Lord Kelvin)
- Evening Lecture To The British Association At The Southampton Meeting on Friday, August 25, 1882 [1]. Refers to compass correction by Fourier series.
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Liquid_filled_compass.jpg
- Admiralty manual of navigation, Chapter XXV The Magnetic Compass (continued) the analysis and correction of the deviation, His Majesty's Stationary Office, London, 1914.
- Arrick Robots. Robotics.com Example implementation for digital solid-state compass. ARobot Digital Compass App Note
- Williams, J.E.D. From Sails to Satellites. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992.
- Frances and Joseph Gies, Cathedral, Forge, and Waterwheel subtitled "Technology and Invention in the Middle Ages".
- Petra G. Schmidl Two Early Arabic Sources on the Magnetic Compass