Background To Discovery

  Preface
  Contributors

 collapse sectionI  Seapower and Science:  The Motives for Pacific Exploration
 The First Age of Pacific Exploration (ca. 1510-1640s)
 Diversions and Deterrents (ca. 1640s-1760s)
 The Commencement of the Second Age of Exploration
  II  The Achievement of the English Voyages, 1650-1800
  III  The Men from Across La Manche: French Voyages, 1660-1790
 collapse sectionIV  Literary Responses to the Eighteenth-Century Voyages
 The Traveler As Hero
 The Traveler As Scientist
 The Scientific Approach to Geology
 The Scientific Approach to Human Nature
 Conclusion
 collapse sectionV  Navigation and Astronomy in the Voyages
 Navigation: The Early Years
 The Longitude
 The Longitude Act, 1714
 The Invention of the Reflecting Quadrant
 The Nautical Almanac
 The Marine Chronometer
 Explorers' Observations at Sea
 Observations Ashore
 Conclusion
  VI  The Sailor's Perspective: British Naval Topographic Artists

 collapse sectionNotes
 I Seapower and Science: The Motives for Pacific Exploration
 II The Achievement of the English Voyages, 1650-1800
 III The Men from Across La Manche: French Voyages, 1660-1790
 IV Literary Responses to the Eighteenth-Century Voyages
 V Navigation and Astronomy in the Voyages
 VI The Sailor's Perspective: British Naval Topographic Artists
 collapse sectionIndex
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