IN the course of a systematic search for tables or graphs using the principles appealed to in the Experimental Astronomical Navigation Tables (see p. 333), I examined a copy of the above tables, whose full title follows:
‘Margetts's Horary Tables for shewing by Inspection the Apparent Diurnal Motion of the Sun, Moon and Stars, the Latitude of a Ship and the Azimuth, Time or Altitude corresponding with any Celestial Object.
‘London. Printed for and sold by the Author. “Published as the Act directs 1st July 1790.”’
These tables (or diagrams) do not appear to be well known and they seem to possess sufficient interest to warrant notice. The author's own description is so precise that I can do no better than to repeat it verbatim with a few added notes of explanation. The accompanying photograph, reproduced from the copy in the collection of navigational books and tables in the Admiralty Library by kind permission of the Admiralty Archivist, shows a typical opening of the tables.
I have been unable, in the course of an admittedly hurried and incomplete search, to find any biographical information about Margetts. Perhaps some reader of the Journal can supply the deficiency.