Accession No

3796


Brief Description

dip circle, by Benjamin Pike and Sons, U.S.A., 1850-1900 (c)


Origin

U.S.A.; New York


Maker

Benjamin Pike and Sons


Class

magnetism; earth sciences


Earliest Date

1850


Latest Date

1900


Inscription Date


Material

glass; metal (brass, silver, steel)


Dimensions

length 105mm; breadth 104mm; height 31mm


Special Collection


Provenance


Inscription

‘B. PIKE & SONS NEW-YORK’


Description Notes

Glazed circular brass case with suspension ring. Silvered vertical, lower half divided 0-90-0 to 1 degree horizontally-pivoted steel magnetic needle.

Instrument for geological field work.


References


Events

Description
A dip circle is used the measure the angle between the horizon and the earth’s magnetic field (the dip angle). They were used in surveying, mining and prospecting as well as for the demonstration and study of magnetism.

Georg Hartmann first discovered dip angle in 1544, when he noticed the needle on a compass dipped towards the north hemisphere. Rather than explore this phenomenon, Hartmann sought ways to eliminate it. However, Robert Norman investigated dip angle further and in 1581 described in print a device to measure this phenomena.

Early dip circles were not accurate and gave poor results. Over the next 300 years many improvements were made, including reducing the friction between the needle and its pivot and encasing the circle in glass. Initially, dip circles could only be used on land, but in 1834 Robert Were Fox designed the first that could be used on board a moving ship. This advance proved to be of major assistance to polar navigation, in particular in the discovery of the exact position of the South magnetic pole. Another important improvement to the instrument was developed in the 1830s by the Dublin Physicist Humphrey Lloyd, who devised a way of attaching a magnetic needle at right-angles to the dip needle in order to measure the intensity of force (by seeing the extent to which the right-angle needle deflected the dip-needle).

The design of dip circles approached its peak at the beginning of the Twentieth century and by World War I the most advanced dip circles were being made. However, with the development of electronic systems dip circles became obsolete.
07/02/2008
Created by: B. Jardine (with amendments by A. McConnell) on 07/02/2008


FM:44600

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