Prior to beginning the Voyage of Discovery, Captain Lewis was trained to use a sextant (with necessary acoutrements) for navigation and map creation. One essential for identifying location was to maintain uniformly accurate time, using chronometer. How did Lewis maintain the accuracy of mechanical chronometer for the duration of the exploration? Chronometers, circa 1803, were delicate and large, when properly boxed for protection. And the voyage's logs report boats/canoes overturning into rivers more than once.
Nowadays quartz and [some] mechanical watches/clocks essentially guarantee chronometer-level time accuracy. And maintaining nearly perfect accuracy is guaranteed with a few mouse clicks on the Internet. Identifying a specific time for use in navigation occurred in Great Britain with Greenwich Mean Time being basis location. Greenwich is several thousand miles from Washington, D.C., from which I anticipate Captain Lewis' chronometer (did he include a back-up?) was adjusted.
How did Lewis maintain the accuracy of mechanical chronometer for the duration of the exploration?
Nowadays quartz and [some] mechanical watches/clocks essentially guarantee chronometer-level time accuracy. And maintaining nearly perfect accuracy is guaranteed with a few mouse clicks on the Internet. Identifying a specific time for use in navigation occurred in Great Britain with Greenwich Mean Time being basis location. Greenwich is several thousand miles from Washington, D.C., from which I anticipate Captain Lewis' chronometer (did he include a back-up?) was adjusted.
How did Lewis maintain the accuracy of mechanical chronometer for the duration of the exploration?