The mariners magazine, or, Sturmy's mathematical and practical arts containing the description and use of the scale of scales, it being a mathematical ruler, that resolves most mathematical conclusions, and likewise the making and use of the crostaff, quadrant, and the quadrat, nocturnals, and other most useful instruments for all artists and navigators : the art of navigation, resolved geometrically, instrumentally, and by calculation, and by that late excellent invention of logarithms, in the three principal kinds of sailing : with new tables of the longitude and latitude of the most eminent places ... : together with a discourse of the practick part of navigation ..., a new way of surveying land ..., the art of gauging all sorts of vessels ..., the art of dialling by a gnomical scale ... : whereunto is annexed, an abridgment of the penalties and forfeitures, by acts of parliaments appointed, relating to the customs and navigation : also a compendium of fortification, both geometrically and instrumentally / by Capt. Samuel Sturmy.

About this Item

Title
The mariners magazine, or, Sturmy's mathematical and practical arts containing the description and use of the scale of scales, it being a mathematical ruler, that resolves most mathematical conclusions, and likewise the making and use of the crostaff, quadrant, and the quadrat, nocturnals, and other most useful instruments for all artists and navigators : the art of navigation, resolved geometrically, instrumentally, and by calculation, and by that late excellent invention of logarithms, in the three principal kinds of sailing : with new tables of the longitude and latitude of the most eminent places ... : together with a discourse of the practick part of navigation ..., a new way of surveying land ..., the art of gauging all sorts of vessels ..., the art of dialling by a gnomical scale ... : whereunto is annexed, an abridgment of the penalties and forfeitures, by acts of parliaments appointed, relating to the customs and navigation : also a compendium of fortification, both geometrically and instrumentally / by Capt. Samuel Sturmy.
Author
Sturmy, Samuel, 1633-1669.
Publication
London :: Printed by E. Cotes for G. Hurlock, W. Fisher, E. Thomas, and D. Page ...,
1669.
Rights/Permissions

To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication ( http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.

This text has been selected for inclusion in the EEBO-TCP: Navigations collection, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61915.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The mariners magazine, or, Sturmy's mathematical and practical arts containing the description and use of the scale of scales, it being a mathematical ruler, that resolves most mathematical conclusions, and likewise the making and use of the crostaff, quadrant, and the quadrat, nocturnals, and other most useful instruments for all artists and navigators : the art of navigation, resolved geometrically, instrumentally, and by calculation, and by that late excellent invention of logarithms, in the three principal kinds of sailing : with new tables of the longitude and latitude of the most eminent places ... : together with a discourse of the practick part of navigation ..., a new way of surveying land ..., the art of gauging all sorts of vessels ..., the art of dialling by a gnomical scale ... : whereunto is annexed, an abridgment of the penalties and forfeitures, by acts of parliaments appointed, relating to the customs and navigation : also a compendium of fortification, both geometrically and instrumentally / by Capt. Samuel Sturmy." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61915.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 8, 2024.

Pages

How to Mount your Piece by your Scalc and Quadrant thereon.

* 1.1To the side of the Scale or Quadrant is a piece of Brass fitted of the same breadth, with two Screws, and holes fitted to screw the Brass Plate two Inches of the former length, without the Edge or Side of the Line of Numbers, for to take any Angle that is under the Line of Level; for if you put the Brass into the Mouth of the Piece, the Line of Numbers being next unto it, and put in the Tompkin into the Mouth likewise to stop it fast in the middle of the Metal at the bottom, and then the standers by raise the Britch with Crows to what degree you please; and so likewise if the Mark or degr. assigned be above the Line of Level, if the Scale will not stand fast by the degree of the Diameter that fits the Bore, putting of it just into the Mouth of the Piece, then screw the Brass Plate to a hole made on purpose for the other side, and turn the degrees of the Diameter to the Bore, and fasten it with the Tompkin in the middle of the Mouth, as before; and so this Instrument will be most useful for all things as belong to a Gunner, with less trouble and Charge, than any other that ever was made by any other Men, and far more useful.

Then the Instrument being in the Mouth of the Piece, as before directed, mark di∣ligently until the Plumb-Line, which proceeds from the Centre of the Quadrant, cut these assigned degrees and Parts of degrees that you are to Mount the Gun by, in the Arch which is Divided into 90 degrees in the outward Circle thereof; your Gun so Loaded and fitted, as beforesaid, make your Shot, for without question, you will make a good Shot, and strike or came near the Mark.

Notes

Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem? Please contact us.