Navigation
By the stars and otherwise
Updated Series
On my last website, I had a series of blog posts about mapping (Mapping Adventures) and celestial navigation (Star Math). There was a lot of overlap and muddling in the information, so I have retooled it and included it all on one page. Please use the links to navigate your way through each of the articles, or have a scroll through.
​
If I omitted your favorite joke or info tidbit in my streamlining, please let me know.
Where Am I?
Wherever you are, looking in all directions around you will help you determine where you are, in relation to your surroundings. But you’re probably here to learn about where you are on our big globe, so let’s talk about more universal directions.
Compasses
To orient ourselves in a common direction, most compasses point North, and North is marked on maps, so we can turn ourselves and our maps in that direction, and plot our route accordingly.
North
There are three Norths, believe it or not.
True North
North is considered by many to be the top of the world, because it is at the top of nautical maps, and sailing used to be the only international method of transport. Historically, however, most of the directions have taken a turn at being the popular top of a map, for various cultural reasons. For example, Mecca to the East was considered most important, so that area should go up top. Or North is on bottom because that’s where darkness is and who would want to go there? Then came European imperialism.
European sailors relied on Polaris, which they called “The North Star” to largely guide their night navigation, since it is the only relatively fixed point in the sky. It’s super important to navigation, and important goes at the top… Of course I have some Southern Hemisphere friends who have never even seen Polaris, so who’s to say that it’s really the most important factor?
From Earth’s perspective, Polaris is Astronomical True North. Geodetic True North is the land right under where Polaris sits (It’s not perfectly right under the star, but to such a small degree that we don’t have to worry about it). If you want the top of the world, this is it!
Map North
There’s a fun experiment where you pretend Earth is an orange, and you peel off its crust. Then you try to make that formerly round peel into a flat 2D representation of the round Earth. No matter how hard you try, either the peel will dome up, or the presentation of the globe will be distorted.
Every map has some level warping or distortion, so North isn’t always where it’s drawn to be, and sometimes not even perfectly at the top of the page, depending on the map’s printing.
Map North (or grid north) is where the arrow or grid lines on your map are telling you that North is. You’ll usually just rotate the map to line up with where North is in reality or on your compass.
Speaking of compasses, we’ll move on to the most bizarre North: The one that you fall prey to every time you pop open your compass.
Compass North
Earth is a planet, spinning around in a void full of harmful rays, emitted from a star that we’re just far enough away from that it doesn’t burn us alive, but close enough to that we don’t freeze to death.
So it shouldn’t come as a surprise that Earth has a shield of sorts. A geomagnetic field, generated by the movement of the earth’s liquid core. It protects us against charged particles that can damage the ozone layer that protects us from harmful space radiation.
How does this affect navigation? Magnetic or Compass North, points to the strongest point of this magnetic field (this location is also slightly shifting over time, but it’s minor, don’t worry about it).
Magnetic North is not in the exact same spot as True North, so your position on Earth determines how far off your compass will read. All you have to do is look up the Local Declination (how many degrees off your position is) online or in a book, before you head out, and adjust your compass so you don’t have to think of it again. If you’re using a compass app, you can just set it to the True North option.
Types of Wayfinding
I have always understood that compasses point generally Northward, or that East is in the direction of sunrise, but… I never really knew how to use that information. I just felt like “hey, we’re going North. What a thrill!” Eventually I discovered three different ways to make my way around:
Method #1: The Course Plotter
Works when you have directions to a specific location:
1. Say you’re a pirate looking for a great tea shop that was recommended to you.
2. You’ve been told (or maybe you have a map) that the shop is 30 paces West.
3. It’s late afternoon, so you turn toward sunset and start walking!
Method #2: The Levelheaded Wanderer
Works when you have a starting point you need to get back to:
1. Note the surroundings of where you start
2. Pick a major long running “hand rail.” A hand rail is a long, visible landmark like the road you’re on (if you’re in a city, get the street name too!), a river or a long, straight fence line.
3. Start heading out perpendicular from your starting from, noting the direction you’re heading in. For this example, let’s say you’re starting off Westward
4. Squirrel around the city/forest as much as you want.
5. Once you’re done, you just turn in the opposite direction that you started in and head back to your hand rail. In this case, turn East and walk until you get back to the road you started on
6. Walk along your handrail until you see something that’s familiar to your starting point
Method #3: The Fastidious Record Keeper; or, Dead Reckoning
Most of us will be more like the Levelheaded Wanderer, but if you want to really keep control over where you are, you can:
1. Track which direction you head in, the duration, and make a note of every time you change directions. If you also happen to note your surroundings as you go, this is a great way to make a map!
2. When you are ready to head back, you can either retrace your steps, or head out to the handrail, but this time you’ll know which direction to head in to find your starting point, and for roughly how long!
I feel like most people hear about dead reckoning in connection to Christopher Columbus who was… not a good navigator. This doesn’t mean dead reckoning is a poor navigation method! Far from it. Columbus just used it poorly, in addition to trying to experiment with celestial navigation which he was much worse at, not knowing much about it. A cautionary tale: Try things at home before using them in the middle of the ocean.
How it works for sailors: Instead of using the stars to navigate, you note the direction in which you’re travelling, and record for how long and at what speed, then calculate the distance of travel, noting it on your map, if you have one. It will definitely get you in the right general location.
The calculation is: Distance = Speed x Time
Now we know how to get around, let’s talk about how we note where we are, more precisely.
Coordinates
Ever looked up a location and seen something like this: 41.2565° N, 95.9345° W or this: 41° 15' 23.4", - 95° 56' 4.2"? These numbers are telling us how far the location is to the north or south (Latitude), and east or west (Longitude).
Latitude
Latitude measures how far north or south a point is on Earth. On a map or globe, it’s drawn like Earth is wearing a horizontal-striped shirt. Imagine the core of Earth. Lil’ buddy:

And now imagine Earth’s bellybutton: The exact center of the world (basically, I am aware that the Earth is super lumpy and the core is liquid, but apparently math has figured out some “good enough” measurements that make this allll okay).

Drawing a straight, horizontal line from the bellybutton to Earth’s surface, you get The Equator or 0° latitude.