Modelling Deviation with a Globe (Magnetic Stone)
Thursday, March 24th, 2011[ZB Magnet 2] William Gilbert, De Magnete (London: Petrus Short, 1600), Zentralbibliothek Zürich, Alte Drucke und Rara, XVI.28, p. 158.
[ZB Magnet 2] William Gilbert, De Magnete (London: Petrus Short, 1600), Zentralbibliothek Zürich, Alte Drucke und Rara, XVI.28, p. 158.
Deviation* is due to Earth’s Elevation. Gilbert explains this thesis with his “terrella” (a spheric magnet). He adds mass to the terrella and observes that a needle is “attracted out of the true direction”. [ZB Magnet 2] William Gilbert, De Magnete (London: Petrus Short, 1600), Zentralbibliothek Zürich, Alte Drucke und Rara, XVI.28, p. 157.
The rising and setting of the sun or the moon or stars is observed with a rule, which has two sights (figure above). This rule is connected with a compass rose and needle (figure below). William Gilbert, De Magnete (London: Petrus Short, 1600), Zentralbibliothek Zürich, Alte Drucke und Rara, XVI.28, p. 173.
Variation compass, instrument for measuring magnetic deviation*; the instrument relates observations of the sun to observations of the magnetic needle. The instrument shows the variation by the shadow of the sun. The shadow is observed before and after noon and correlated with the direction of the needle. The observations are marked with chalk or ink on the plate (circles). Afterwards they are compared to each other to study the deviation. William Gilbert, De Magnete (London: Petrus Short, 1600), Zentralbibliothek Zürich, Alte Drucke und Rara, XVI.28, p. 171.
* Deviation: The direction of a compass needle is deviating from the north-south-direction at different places of the globe. Sebastain Cabot first discovered and reported this fact, except for Columbus who didn’t report it officially. Deviation is also named “variation”.
Instrument for finding the ortive amplitude on the horizion, i.e.: for measuring the rising and setting of a star in relation to the horizon. William Gilbert, De Magnete (London: Petrus Short, 1600), Zentralbibliothek Zürich, Alte Drucke und Rara, XVI.28, p. 176.
Image 1, GH are the poles, EF is a piece of magnetic stone in the earth and is not separated from the whole; BA is a mine and partly separated from the earth; CD is a mass of iron in the air. Image 2, the separated part EF behaves quite differently from the iron bar CD. Image 3, when the separated part EF is suspended by thread, E will turn to pole B and F to pole A. [ZB Magnet 2] William Gilbert, De Magnete (London: Petrus Short, 1600), Zentralbibliothek Zürich, Alte Drucke und Rara, XVI.28, p. 120f.; descriptions follow the translation of P. Fleury Mottelay [1893] (New York: Dover, 1958), p. 186f.
First image: All points of the needles have been magnetized by pole A. Second image: Half of the globe (spherical loadstone) by itself, the pointers except the middle one tend not in a right line but obliquely. [ZB Magnet 2] William Gilbert, De Magnete (London: Petrus Short, 1600), Zentralbibliothek Zürich, Alte Drucke und Rara, XVI.28, p. 136; descriptions follow the translation of P. Fleury Mottelay [1893] (New York: Dover, 1958), p. 206f.
Landing is necessary
Leaping is necessary
Needles that give evidence are necessary
Baskets and hands are necessary
Mesh web interweave
Globe cloud gouache
1.8 micro seconds
Semantic arguments
Hairsplitting
Thanksgiving
Mimosa migration
Locum lapidem
Surface shadow
Monkfish hood
One foot in terra
The other in trema
All necessary
Etchings like the markings on a face
Chiselled by wind, necessary
So bring me down again, and fly my love
My lips on yours, necessary