Gunters Quadrant, 1623-1700.
UNITED KINGDOM - APRIL 11: Made of brass, this horary quadrant has engraved scales to a design conceived by the English mathematician Edmund Gunter (1581-1626) in 1623. The horary quadrant was used for finding local time by sighting either the Sun or a bright star at night. Held vertically, a measurement could be taken from the position on the scale of a moveable bead on the thread of the instrument�s plumb bob. The instrument was derived from the astrolabe and first appeared during Medieval times. Like its predecessor, it includes a two-dimensional depiction of the heavens that is reduced to a quarter. Gunter invented several other measuring instruments which bear his name, and also introduced the words �cosine� and �cotangent� into the language of trigonometry. (Photo by SSPL/Getty Images)

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Editorial #:
90731611
Collection:
SSPL
Date created:
April 11, 1995
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Source:
SSPL
Object name:
10196557
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3504 x 2823 px (11.68 x 9.41 in) - 300 dpi - 3 MB