Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
posted to alt.sailing.asa
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
While I question some of some of the things Conrad says, I think it is a
mistake to call Columbus a "bumbling, but lucky fool." From everything I have read, Columbus was a skilled navigator using the tools of his day. While he may have used the compass (I don't remember reading that), he was able to plot a course across the Atlantic with some accuracy. One example of this, is one leg of one of his trip where he left the coast of South America headed to Cuba. His point of arrival was exact off set by the current which he did not realize existed. While text books state he sailed off into the unknown, he set sail with 1000 years of knowledge of the seas to the west of Europe. It is known that this knowledge extended to the coast of America where European fishermen had been fishing off of the coast of Newfoundland prior to Columbus. He may have actually had knowledge of the American coast, as his point of arrival in American was south of the tip of Florida. With our current instruments we forget what our ancestors could do with the things that nature provided them; wind, current, stars, moon, sun, and an internal sense of time. By Columbus's time they had tools for determining latitude, and other tools, while primitive by our standard, for navigation. You can check these statement by reading the many books in the library where this information was derived. jlrogers±³© wrote: Read his journals. He was a bumbling, but lucky fool. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Secret of How Columbus Discovered the New World | ASA | |||
Secret of How Columbus Discovered the New World | ASA | |||
Secret of How Columbus Discovered the New World | ASA | |||
Secrets lost in Secret Cove | General | |||
OT--Not again! More Chinese money buying our politicians. | General |