Hi ya! Wassup? Keeping your nose to the grindstone; your shoulder to the wheel and your ear to the ground? Wonderful...now while in that position, try to reach the coffee pot so you can pour yourself a delightfully perky mug of coffee and reach out with the other hand and juggle a couple of virtual treats! Say...if you are a lover of historical stories as I am, here's an interesting one for you...
An oblong crystal found in the wreck
of a 16th century English warship is a sunstone, a near-mythical
navigational aid said to have been used by Viking mariners, researchers
say.
The stone is made of Iceland spar, a transparent,
naturally-occurring calcite crystal that polarises light and can get a
bearing on the sun. It was found in the
remains of a ship that had been dispatched to France in 1592 by Queen
Elizabeth I as a precaution against a second Spanish Armada, but which
had foundered off the island of Alderney in the English Channel.
British
and French scientists have long argued that the find is a sunstone - a
device that fractures the light, enabling seafarers to locate the sun
even when it is behind clouds or has dipped below the horizon.
Sunstones,
according to a theory first aired 45 years ago, helped the great Norse
mariners to navigate their way to Iceland and even perhaps as far as
North America during the Viking heyday of 900-1200 AD, way before the
magnetic compass was introduced in Europe in the 13th century. But there is only a sketchy reference in ancient Norse literature to a
“solarsteinn”, which means the idea has remained frustratingly without
solid proof.
In a study published in the British journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society A, investigators carried out a chemical
analysis on a tiny sample, using a device called a spectrometer, which
confirmed that the stone was a calcite. The stone is about the
size of a small bar of soap whose edges have been trimmed at an angle.
In technical terms, its shape is rhombohedral which is different from the shape you may have found yourself in if you attempted the position mentioned above.
It is milky white
in appearance, and not transparent, but the new experiments show that
this is surface discolouration, caused by centuries of immersion in sea
water and abrasion by sand, the study said.
Using a transparent
crystal similar to the original, the scientists were able to follow the
track of the setting sun in poor light, with an accuracy of one degree.
In a second experiment, they were able to locate the sun for 40 minutes after sunset.
Other
factors provide evidence that this is a sunstone, according to the
investigation, led by Guy Ropars of the University of Rennes, in
France's western region of Brittany.
The crystal was found in the
wreckage alongside a pair of navigation dividers. And tests that placed a
magnetic compass next to one of the iron cannons excavated from the
ship found that the needle swung wildly, by as much as 100 degrees.
Put together, these suggest the sunstone may have been kept as a backup to a magnetic compass.
The
authors also note previous research that some species of migrating
birds appear to have used polarised light from the sky as a navigational
aid or to recalibrate their magnetic compass around sunrise and sunset.
How
does the sunstone work? If you put a dot on top of the crystal and look
at it from below, two dots appear, because the light is “depolarised”
and fractured along different axes. You then rotate the crystal until the two points have exactly the same intensity or darkness.
“At
that angle, the upward-facing surface of the crystal indicates the
direction of the sun,” Ropars told AFP in an interview in 2011.
D'you suppose you could create an ice block - like as giant ice cube, eh...and that if you put a dot atop it and looked through it from the bottom, it would work the same as a sunstone. Of course, the question is, what would you use it for, eh? Personally, I have no idea though I am sure it was handy in its time.
See ya, eh!
Bob
Thursday, March 21, 2013
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