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The measurement of longitude was a problem that came into sharp focus as people began making transoceanic voyages. In one incident in 1707, Admiral Cloudsley Shovel and his fleet were afloat in fog and thought they were in the middle of the ocean; they ran aground and over 2000 men died. That incident in the general context of British maritime endeavors led to the establishment of a prize for finding a method of measuring longitude.
local time using the height of the sun, would allow mariners to calculate longitude. With support from the Longitude Board set up to administer the prize, he started in 1730 to build several spring-driven clocks, finally succeeding in 1761 with a determination of better than half a degree.
However, the Longitude Board refused to believe that longitude could be determined without astronomical measures, first awarding only half the prize and then dragging the process out with more demands for evidence and several copies of the clocks. Finally in 1773, George III got Parliament to award the prize to Harrison, bypassing the board.
Dava Sobel's 1996 bestseller Longitude (BooksEnthsiast.com) recounts Harrison's story. A film adaptation of Longitude was released by A&E in 1999, starring Michael Gambon as Harrison and Jeremy Irons.Today a sailor has a number of choices for determining longitude, including radar and the satellite navigation system GPS.