All Object Lessons
Knowledge & Navigation

The Sextant: How Sailors Found Their Place by the Sun and Stars

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 mathematics, science, history, geography, ethics
Core question For over 250 years, how did sailors crossing thousands of kilometres of empty ocean find their place using only a small mirror, an arc of metal, and the sky?
A brass sextant. The instrument measures the angle between a star or the sun and the horizon, allowing a navigator to work out their position at sea. Photo: Fotokannan / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 3.0
Introduction

Imagine you are on a wooden sailing ship in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. You have been at sea for six weeks. Below you is four kilometres of water. In every direction, the horizon is a flat blue line with nothing on it. No mountains, no coast, no lighthouse. The ship's captain needs to know where you are. Not roughly — exactly. The next island is a small dot in a vast sea. If you sail past it by ten kilometres, you may miss it and run out of water and food. Without a phone, without GPS, without a radio, how can you possibly know your position? You can look up. The sun by day, the stars by night, and the moon at certain times are all in known places in the sky. Every star has a track that is carefully recorded in books on the ship. The sun rises and falls in predictable patterns. The trick is to measure exactly where these objects are in the sky at exactly the right time. If you can do that, you can work out where you are on the surface of the Earth. The instrument that lets you do this is called a sextant. It is a small device that fits in a wooden box. It has a curved arc with fine markings, a moving arm, two small mirrors, and a little telescope. You hold it up, look through the telescope, and bring the image of the sun or a star down to the horizon. The arc tells you the exact angle. With a clock and a book of star tables, you can use that angle to find your place on a chart. This lesson asks how this small instrument made ocean travel possible — and what it still teaches us today.

The object
Origin
Developed in the early 1700s in Europe — particularly Britain. John Hadley in England and Thomas Godfrey in America independently invented the octant, a smaller version, in 1731. The full sextant was developed by John Bird and others around 1757.
Period
Used widely from the late 1700s to today. Replaced earlier instruments like the cross-staff, backstaff, astrolabe, and quadrant. Still carried on most ocean-going ships as a backup to GPS.
Made of
Brass or aluminium frame, with mirrors made of polished metal or coated glass. The arc — the curved scale at the bottom — is usually silver or a silvered metal. The telescope is brass with glass lenses. Modern sextants may use lightweight alloys.
Size
A typical marine sextant is about 25 cm wide and weighs around 1 to 2 kg. Big enough to hold steady with two hands, small enough to keep in a wooden box on a ship.
Number of objects
Tens of thousands of sextants are in use or kept as backup instruments on ships worldwide today. Many more are in museums, in private collections, and in the homes of retired sailors.
Where it is now
Major museum collections include the Royal Museums Greenwich (London), the National Maritime Museum of Australia (Sydney), the Smithsonian National Museum of American History (Washington DC), and many others. Working sextants are still carried on naval ships and ocean-going merchant vessels.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The sextant was developed in Europe and used by European empires to colonise much of the world. How will you teach the instrument honestly while also naming what it was used for?
  2. Earlier navigation methods used by Pacific, Arab, and Polynesian peoples were highly developed too. How will you make sure these are mentioned?
  3. Some students will find the geometry hard. How will you make the idea clear without losing the wonder?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Think about the sky from the deck of a ship. The sun rises in the east, climbs up, and sets in the west. At its highest point of the day — solar noon — the sun is exactly due south of you (in the northern hemisphere) or exactly due north of you (in the southern hemisphere). The exact angle of the sun above the horizon at solar noon depends on two things: the time of year, and your latitude (how far north or south of the equator you are). The equator runs around the middle of the Earth. The North Pole is 90 degrees north of the equator. The South Pole is 90 degrees south. Every point on Earth can be given a latitude between 90 north and 90 south. If you measure the sun's angle at noon, look up the date in a book of solar tables, do a simple calculation, and you have your latitude. Why might one angle in the sky tell you where you are on Earth?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the Earth is round and the sun is far away. From any place on Earth, the sun looks like it is at a particular height in the sky. That height changes as you move north or south on the Earth's surface — because you are looking at the sun from a different angle. At the equator on the spring equinox, the sun at noon is straight overhead. At the North Pole on the same day, the sun at noon is at the horizon. Every latitude between has its own angle. The geometry is simple but powerful. The sun is the same sun from everywhere on Earth, but your view of it changes with your position. A sextant measures this angle precisely — to one minute of arc, which is 1/60th of a degree. This allows latitude to be known to within about one nautical mile (1.85 km). Students should see that the connection between the sky and the Earth is not magic. It is geometry. The sailor uses the same geometry that any student can learn in a maths class. The instrument just makes the measurement accurate enough to use at sea.

2
Latitude was the easier of the two coordinates. Sailors had been measuring it with simple instruments since at least the 1400s — first with a quadrant, then with a cross-staff, then with a backstaff. By the 1700s, the octant and then the sextant made latitude readings far more accurate. Longitude (east-west position) was much harder. To know your longitude, you need to know what time it is in two places at once: where you are, and a fixed reference point (like Greenwich in London). The Earth turns once every 24 hours, so every hour of time difference equals 15 degrees of longitude. If it is noon where you are and 11 in the morning at Greenwich, you are 15 degrees east of Greenwich. If it is noon where you are and 1 in the afternoon at Greenwich, you are 15 degrees west. The problem in the 1700s was clocks. A normal clock did not work on a rolling ship. The temperature and humidity at sea threw it off. A clock that lost or gained even one minute a day could put your longitude reading 60 kilometres off after two months at sea. This was a deadly problem. Many ships were wrecked because their longitude was wrong. In 1714, the British government offered a huge prize for anyone who could solve it. The carpenter John Harrison spent his whole life building 'marine chronometers' — clocks that worked at sea. By the 1760s, he had succeeded. With a sextant and a chronometer, sailors could finally know both their latitude and their longitude. Why might solving the longitude problem matter so much?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because of money, lives, and power. Ships were the trade engines of the 1700s. A ship that knew where it was could find islands, harbours, and safe routes. A ship that did not could be lost. The British navy lost many sailors in the famous 1707 Scilly naval disaster — four warships ran aground because they did not know their longitude, and about 1,400 sailors died. Once the longitude problem was solved, European ships could cross any ocean reliably. This is one reason European empires expanded so fast in the 1700s and 1800s. The sextant was part of this story. The combination of sextant, chronometer, accurate maps, and good star tables made the ocean a place that could be reliably crossed. This had huge consequences — some good (faster travel, faster trade), some terrible (the slave trade, colonisation, dispossession of Indigenous peoples). Students should see that 'a clever instrument' is not a neutral thing. The sextant gave one group of people huge power over the world's oceans. It was used to do many things — including bad things. Honest history holds both the achievement and the consequences together.

3
Not all ocean navigation came from Europe. Polynesian peoples crossed the Pacific Ocean for thousands of years using stars, ocean swells, bird flight patterns, and detailed memorised charts of stars and currents. They built large double-hulled canoes that could carry families and crops thousands of kilometres. By 1200 CE, Polynesian voyagers had found and settled every habitable island in the Pacific — a navigational achievement greater than anything Europe did until centuries later. Arab and Persian sailors used the kamal — a small wooden card on a string — to measure star heights in the Indian Ocean from at least the 1200s. Chinese sailors used the magnetic compass from the 1000s. Inuit sailors in the Arctic used star, wind, and ice-pattern knowledge to travel reliably in conditions that would have killed European ships. Each of these navigation systems was sophisticated. None used the European sextant. The sextant was one tool among many. It became dominant because European empires were dominant. It is still respected today as a piece of careful engineering, but it is not the only or the original way humans have crossed oceans. What does this teach us about navigation?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

That different peoples have solved the same problem in different ways. Crossing an ocean needs reliable knowledge of where you are. Many cultures developed this knowledge over many centuries. The Polynesian wayfinders read the ocean itself — the patterns of waves, the colour of the water, the flight of birds, the position of stars. They did not need a sextant because they had a different system. The Arab sailors used the kamal and detailed star books. The Chinese used the compass and tide tables. The Inuit used wind and ice and memory. The European sextant did one thing well — it measured exact star angles — but it did not invent ocean navigation. It joined a long story. Students should see that 'the sextant made ocean travel possible' is not quite true. The sextant made one kind of ocean travel possible — fast, precise, by people unfamiliar with the local seas. Other kinds of ocean travel had been working for centuries. The sextant added a new tool to an old human practice.

4
Today, almost every ship uses GPS — the Global Positioning System — for navigation. A small box receives signals from satellites in orbit and tells you your latitude and longitude to within a few metres, anywhere in the world, day or night. GPS is faster, more accurate, and easier to use than any sextant. But almost every ocean-going ship still carries a sextant. Why? Because GPS depends on satellites, and satellites depend on power, signals, and the trust that the system will be working. In a war, in a major solar storm, in a power failure, or in a deliberate jamming attack, GPS can fail. A sextant needs none of this. It needs the sky, a clock, a book of tables, and a trained sailor. As long as you can see the sun or a star, you can find your place. The US Naval Academy still teaches celestial navigation. The British Royal Navy still trains officers in sextant use. Most commercial ships have a sextant locked in a box on the bridge, just in case. It is a backup, but a backup that has worked for over 250 years. Why might an old instrument still matter in a world of satellites?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because some things are worth backing up. GPS is brilliant when it works. But it depends on infrastructure that can fail. The sextant depends only on the sky. It is the ultimate backup — simple, reliable, immune to most disasters. The same principle applies in many fields. Pilots still learn to fly by hand even though autopilots are normal. Surgeons still learn to do operations without electronic tools. Mathematicians still learn arithmetic even though calculators are everywhere. The reason is the same: when the modern system fails, the old skills work. A sextant is one of the clearest examples. Students should see that 'old' does not always mean 'useless'. Some old tools earn their keep by being reliable when everything else breaks down. End the discovery here. The sailor on a quiet bridge, with a sextant in her hands and stars above her head, is using a method that has worked for 250 years and will probably work for many more.

What this object teaches

The sextant is a navigation instrument that measures the angle between a star or the sun and the horizon. Developed in Europe in the early 1700s, it became the main tool of ocean navigation from about 1760 until the introduction of GPS in the late 1900s. The sextant uses two small mirrors and a moving arm to bring the image of a celestial object down to the horizon. By reading the angle on a curved scale, a trained navigator can work out their latitude and (with an accurate clock) their longitude. The sextant was one part of the European 'longitude solution' that made reliable ocean travel possible — for good (trade, exploration, science) and for harm (colonisation, the slave trade, dispossession). Other peoples — Polynesian wayfinders, Arab sailors, Chinese sailors, Inuit hunters — had their own sophisticated systems of ocean navigation, some far older than the sextant. Today, GPS has replaced the sextant for most uses, but almost every ocean-going ship still carries a sextant as a backup. It is an instrument that has worked for over 250 years.

DateEventWhat changed
From at least 1000 BCEPolynesian, Arab, Chinese, and other peoples develop ocean navigationLong-distance sea travel becomes possible using stars, swells, and birds
1400sEuropean sailors use the quadrant and cross-staff for latitudeFirst simple instruments to measure star heights at sea
1731John Hadley and Thomas Godfrey invent the octantA doubly-reflecting instrument far more accurate than the cross-staff
1757John Bird builds the first true sextant for John CampbellThe octant arc is extended to 120 degrees, allowing larger measurements
1760sJohn Harrison's marine chronometer solves the longitude problemSextant plus chronometer gives reliable position at sea
1800s-1900sSextant becomes the standard tool of ocean navigationEuropean empires use sextants to map and travel the world's oceans
TodayGPS is the main tool; the sextant is a backupEvery ocean-going ship still carries a sextant in a box, just in case
Key words
Sextant
A doubly-reflecting navigation instrument that measures the angle between a star or the sun and the horizon. The name comes from Latin 'sextans', meaning 'one sixth', because the curved arc is about one sixth of a circle (60 degrees).
Example: A sextant can measure angles up to 120 degrees with great accuracy — usually to within one minute of arc, which is 1/60th of a degree.
Latitude
A coordinate that tells you how far north or south of the equator you are. Measured in degrees from 0 (the equator) to 90 (the poles). Can be found from one measurement of the sun's angle at noon.
Example: London is at about 51 degrees north. Sydney is at about 34 degrees south. The equator is 0 degrees.
Longitude
A coordinate that tells you how far east or west you are. Measured in degrees from 0 (the Greenwich meridian) to 180. Needs an accurate clock to calculate.
Example: London is at 0 degrees longitude. New York is at about 74 degrees west. Tokyo is at about 139 degrees east.
Marine chronometer
A very accurate clock designed to keep correct time on a moving ship. Invented by John Harrison in the 1760s after a 40-year effort. Solved the longitude problem.
Example: Harrison's H4 chronometer of 1759 lost only about 5 seconds over a journey of more than 13,000 km. This was accurate enough to find longitude to within about 18 km.
Celestial navigation
The practice of finding your position using the sun, the moon, the stars, and the planets. Used at sea for centuries; still taught today as a backup to GPS.
Example: A trained navigator can find their position to within about 2 km using only a sextant, an accurate clock, and a book of star tables.
Polynesian wayfinding
The Pacific tradition of ocean navigation without instruments, using stars, ocean swells, bird flight, and memorised maps. Practised for thousands of years before European navigation arrived.
Example: By 1200 CE, Polynesian wayfinders had found and settled every habitable island in the Pacific. The Hokule'a, a modern voyaging canoe, has crossed the Pacific many times using only traditional methods.
Use this in other subjects
  • Mathematics: The sextant works by simple geometry: two angles equal twice their reflection (the double-reflection principle). Discuss why the arc of a sextant is only 60 degrees but can measure angles up to 120 degrees. Connect with basic trigonometry and angles in triangles.
  • Science: Look at how the sextant uses mirrors. Light reflects from one mirror, then from another, then into the telescope. Discuss the law of reflection (angle in equals angle out). The sextant is one of the cleanest classroom examples of optical engineering.
  • Geography: On a globe, mark the equator, the prime meridian (Greenwich), and several major cities with their coordinates. Discuss why latitude is easy to find (the stars give it directly) but longitude is hard (you need an accurate clock too). The world's mapped grid is the result.
  • History: Build a class timeline of ocean navigation: Polynesian wayfinding (from c. 1000 BCE), Arab kamal (c. 1200), Chinese compass (c. 1100), European cross-staff (c. 1400), Hadley's octant (1731), Bird's sextant (1757), Harrison's chronometer (1760s), modern GPS (1990s). Each is part of the human effort to know where we are.
  • Ethics: The sextant helped European ships cross oceans — for trade, science, and exploration, but also for the slave trade, colonisation, and dispossession of Indigenous peoples. Discuss how a single instrument can have very different effects depending on what it is used for. Strong answers will see that tools and their uses are different questions.
  • Citizenship: GPS is run by the US government and could be turned off or limited at any time. Several countries have built their own systems (the European Galileo, the Russian GLONASS, the Chinese BeiDou). Discuss why navigation infrastructure is a question of national security. The sextant remains valuable because it depends on no government.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The sextant was the first ocean navigation instrument.

Right

Many peoples navigated oceans long before the sextant — Polynesian wayfinders for thousands of years, Arab sailors with the kamal, Chinese sailors with the compass. The sextant joined a long human story of finding the way.

Why

Calling the sextant 'the first' erases the achievements of non-European peoples who had been crossing oceans for centuries.

Wrong

A sextant alone can tell you exactly where you are.

Right

A sextant gives you latitude easily, but for longitude you also need an accurate clock (a marine chronometer) and a book of star tables. The full position-finding system is more than just one instrument.

Why

Treating the sextant as a magic location box misses the wider system of clock, tables, and calculation that makes navigation work.

Wrong

GPS has made the sextant useless.

Right

GPS is the main tool today, but almost every ocean-going ship still carries a sextant as a backup. GPS depends on satellites that can fail; a sextant depends only on the sky. The British Royal Navy and the US Naval Academy still teach celestial navigation.

Why

'Old' is not the same as 'useless'. Some old tools are still important because they are reliable when modern tools fail.

Wrong

Polynesian navigation was guessing or luck.

Right

Polynesian wayfinding was a sophisticated science, passed down through generations, that used stars, ocean swells, cloud patterns, and bird flight. It was so good that Polynesians found and settled every habitable Pacific island by 1200 CE — a feat European navigation did not match until centuries later.

Why

Dismissing Indigenous navigation as 'guessing' is a colonial habit. The science was real.

Teaching this with care

Treat the sextant as both a piece of careful engineering and a tool of European imperial power. Be honest about both. The sextant helped open the world's oceans to European empires from the late 1700s. It was used in many famous expeditions — including some that mapped Indigenous lands later taken by force. Mention this clearly but without heavy moralising. Avoid the trap of presenting European navigation as the only or the first form of ocean navigation. Polynesian wayfinders crossed the Pacific for thousands of years before European ships arrived. Arab, Chinese, and other peoples had sophisticated navigation systems too. Mention these alongside the sextant, not as footnotes. The Hokule'a voyaging canoe and the modern revival of Polynesian wayfinding (taught by the Polynesian Voyaging Society in Hawaii, including teachers like the late Mau Piailug from Satawal) is a beautiful living tradition. The mathematics of the sextant can be challenging. Use simple language. The double-reflection principle can be explained as 'two mirrors that let you bring the sun down to the horizon'. The geometry behind why this works is real but can wait for older students. If the class has students who have been at sea, give them space to share but do not put them on the spot. Many fishing and merchant communities still know the sky. End the lesson on the present. The sextant is not in a museum — it is still on every ocean-going ship, in a wooden box on the bridge. Working sailors still learn to use it. The story is not over.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the sextant.

  1. What is a sextant, and what does it measure?

    A sextant is a navigation instrument that measures the angle between a star or the sun and the horizon. It uses two small mirrors and a moving arm to bring the image of a celestial object down to the horizon, where the angle can be read precisely on a curved scale.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that names the instrument and the angle. Bonus for mentioning the mirrors.
  2. What is the difference between latitude and longitude?

    Latitude is your position north or south of the equator, measured from 0 to 90 degrees. Longitude is your position east or west of Greenwich, measured from 0 to 180 degrees. Latitude can be found from the sun alone; longitude needs an accurate clock too.
    Marking note: Strong answers will name both coordinates correctly and mention the difficulty of longitude.
  3. Why was the longitude problem so difficult?

    To know your longitude, you need to know what time it is in two places at once — where you are and a fixed reference point like Greenwich. Normal clocks did not work on rolling, damp, hot or cold ships. John Harrison's marine chronometer of the 1760s finally solved this.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the need for an accurate clock and Harrison's solution.
  4. What other peoples developed sophisticated ocean navigation before the sextant?

    The Polynesians used stars, ocean swells, bird flight, and memorised charts to cross the Pacific for thousands of years. The Arabs used the kamal in the Indian Ocean. The Chinese used the magnetic compass. The Inuit used wind and ice patterns in the Arctic.
    Marking note: Strong answers will name at least two non-European traditions.
  5. Why is the sextant still useful today, even though GPS exists?

    GPS depends on satellites, which can fail in a war, a solar storm, a power cut, or a jamming attack. A sextant needs only the sky, a clock, and a trained sailor. Almost every ocean-going ship still carries a sextant as a backup.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises the sextant as a reliable backup when modern systems fail.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. A clever instrument can be used for many different things. The sextant helped science and trade but also helped the slave trade and colonisation. Should we admire it or be careful of it?

    Push students to hold both at once. The sextant is a beautiful piece of engineering. It is also part of the story of European empires that did real harm in many parts of the world. Strong answers will say we can admire the instrument and be honest about its uses. The instrument did not choose its missions; the people using it did. The same is true of many other inventions — the printing press, the steam engine, the computer. Each is morally neutral. The decisions about how to use them are not. End by asking: what tools today raise the same kind of question?
  2. GPS is more accurate and easier than the sextant. So why do navies still teach celestial navigation?

    This is a question about reliability and dependence. Modern systems are wonderful when they work, but they depend on infrastructure that can fail. The same principle applies in many fields. Pilots still learn to fly by hand. Surgeons learn to operate without electronic aids. Mathematicians do arithmetic without calculators. The reason is the same: when the modern system fails, the old skills work. Strong answers will see that 'old' and 'useful' can go together. End by asking: what other backup skills do students think are worth keeping?
  3. Polynesian wayfinders crossed the Pacific without any instruments. They used stars, waves, birds, and memorised charts. What does this tell us about the human mind?

    This is a creative question. Students may say: that the human mind can hold huge amounts of information; that learning by experience can be as powerful as learning by tools; that many ways of knowing are real. The deeper point is that Western science is one tradition of knowledge among many. The Polynesian system was a real science — testable, teachable, reliable. Its tools were the mind and the body, not metal instruments. End by saying that the human mind is the original navigation instrument. Every tool, from the kamal to the sextant to the GPS, is an extension of it.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'You are on a ship in the middle of the ocean. No phone, no GPS. How do you know where you are?' Take guesses. Then say: 'For over 250 years, sailors used a small instrument with two mirrors and a curved scale. It is called a sextant. We are going to find out how it works.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the sextant: a brass instrument about 25 cm wide, with a curved scale, two mirrors, a moving arm, and a small telescope. It measures the angle between a star or the sun and the horizon. Pause and ask: 'Why might knowing an angle in the sky help you find where you are on Earth?' Listen to answers. They will lead naturally into the connection between geometry and geography.
  3. LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE (15 min)
    On the board, draw a simple globe with the equator and the prime meridian. Explain latitude (north-south, easy to measure from the sun alone) and longitude (east-west, needs an accurate clock too). Tell the story of John Harrison and the marine chronometer. End with the moment in the 1760s when sailors could finally know both coordinates reliably.
  4. OTHER NAVIGATIONS (10 min)
    On the board, list the peoples and tools: Polynesian wayfinding (stars, swells, birds), Arab kamal, Chinese compass, Inuit ice and wind knowledge. Discuss: each is a real ocean navigation system. The sextant joined this human story; it did not invent it. Strong students will see that the sextant became dominant because of European power, not because it was the only way.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'GPS is more accurate than the sextant. So why do navies still teach the sextant?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'Because some things are worth backing up. When the modern system fails, the old skills work. A sextant needs only the sky, a clock, and a trained sailor. The same instrument has worked for over 250 years. On every ocean-going ship today, there is a sextant in a wooden box. Just in case.'
Classroom materials
Find Latitude with Your Hand
Instructions: On a clear night, students go outside (or to a window) and find Polaris — the North Star. Polaris is almost directly above the North Pole. Its angle above the horizon equals your latitude. Students measure this angle roughly with their hands — one fist held at arm's length is about 10 degrees. Count fists from horizon to Polaris.
Example: In Mrs Lopez's class, students measured Polaris at about 5 fists above the horizon — about 50 degrees. The teacher said: 'Your school is at about 51 degrees north. Your hands just measured your latitude to within a few degrees. A real sextant would do this to within a few kilometres, but the principle is the same. You have just done celestial navigation. Ancient sailors used this same method with simpler tools.'
Mirror Magic
Instructions: In small groups, students use two small mirrors to bring two objects in the room into the same view. One student holds a mirror at a fixed angle; another holds a second mirror; a third looks. By adjusting one mirror, the team can make a far-away object 'come down' to meet a near object. Discuss: this is the basic trick of a sextant. Two mirrors let you bring the sun down to the horizon.
Example: In Mr Wong's class, students worked out that the angle on one mirror was always double the change in the reflected image. The teacher said: 'You have just rediscovered the principle of double reflection. The sextant arc is 60 degrees, but it measures up to 120 degrees, because every degree on the arc is two degrees of reflected angle. You have done the geometry that runs the instrument.'
Wayfinders Across Cultures
Instructions: In small groups, students research one of these ocean navigation traditions and present briefly: Polynesian wayfinding, Arab kamal, Chinese compass, Inuit ice navigation, Viking sunstone, European sextant. Discuss: each is a real system. What did each people use, and what did each people know?
Example: In one class, students chose the Polynesian system. They explained the long-distance memory of the stars, the reading of ocean swells, and the modern revival through the Hokule'a voyaging canoe. The teacher said: 'You have just shown that 'ocean navigation' is not one tradition. It is many. The European sextant is one. The Polynesian wayfinding is another. Each works. The world needed many minds to find its way across the seas.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Hokule'a for the modern Polynesian revival of traditional wayfinding.
  • Try a lesson on the stick chart for another Pacific navigation tradition based on memorised wave and current patterns.
  • Try a lesson on the astrolabe for the Islamic and earlier European ancestor of the sextant.
  • Connect this lesson to mathematics class with a longer project on angles, mirrors, and trigonometry. The sextant is a perfect classroom example.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on the age of European exploration — its science, its trade, and its violence.
  • Connect this lesson to geography class with a longer project on latitude, longitude, and how the world is mapped.
Key takeaways
  • The sextant is a navigation instrument that measures the angle between a star or the sun and the horizon. Developed in the early 1700s, it became the main tool of ocean navigation for over 250 years.
  • With a sextant, a sailor can find their latitude (how far north or south of the equator) directly from the sun or stars. With a sextant and an accurate clock (a marine chronometer), they can also find their longitude.
  • John Harrison's marine chronometer of the 1760s solved the longitude problem. The combination of sextant and chronometer made reliable ocean travel possible.
  • Many other peoples developed ocean navigation long before the sextant — Polynesian wayfinders, Arab sailors with the kamal, Chinese sailors with the compass, Inuit hunters with wind and ice knowledge. The sextant joined a long human story.
  • The sextant was used for many things — science, trade, exploration — but also for the slave trade, colonisation, and the mapping of lands later taken by force. Tools and their uses are different questions.
  • Today, GPS has replaced the sextant for most navigation. But every ocean-going ship still carries a sextant in a box, just in case. It is a reliable backup that has worked for over 250 years.
Sources
  • Longitude — Dava Sobel (1995) [book]
  • The Sextant Handbook — Bruce Bauer (1995) [book]
  • We, the Navigators: The Ancient Art of Landfinding in the Pacific — David Lewis (1994) [academic]
  • Sextant — Royal Museums Greenwich (2024) [institution]
  • Celestial Navigation in the GPS Age — US Naval Academy (2023) [institution]