Jacob's staff#In surveying
{{Short description|Measurement tool}}
{{For|the plant sometimes called the Jacob's staff|Ocotillo}}
File:Bastone di Giacobbe inv 3167 IF 46850.jpg
The term Jacob's staff is used to refer to several things, also known as cross-staff, a ballastella, a fore-staff, a ballestilla, or a balestilha. In its most basic form, a Jacob's staff is a stick or pole with length markings; most staffs are much more complicated than that, and usually contain a number of measurement and stabilization features. The two most frequent uses are:
- in astronomy and navigation for a simple device to measure angles, later replaced by the more precise sextants;
- in surveying (and scientific fields that use surveying techniques, such as geology and ecology) for a vertical rod that penetrates or sits on the ground and supports a compass or other instrument.
The simplest use of a Jacob's staff is to make qualitative judgements of the height and angle of an object relative to the user of the staff.
=Etymology=
The origin of the name of the instrument is not certain. Some refer to the Biblical patriarch Jacob, specifically in the Book of Genesis ({{bibleverse||Gen|32:11|HE}}).Turner, Gerard L'E. Antique Scientific Instruments, Blandford Press Ltd. 1980 {{ISBN|0-7137-1068-3}} It may also take its name after its resemblance to Orion, referred to by the name of Jacob on some medieval star charts.Harriet Wynter and Anthony Turner, Scientific Instruments, Studio Vista, 1975, {{ISBN|0-289-70403-0}}[http://www.maa.mhn.de/Maps/Stars_en/Fig/orion.html Orion] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070612163005/http://www.maa.mhn.de/Maps/Stars_en/Fig/orion.html |date=2007-06-12 }} This article indicates the three belt stars are sometimes called Jacob's Ladder or Jacob's Stick Another possible source is the Pilgrim's staff, the symbol of St James (Jacobus in Latin). The name cross staff simply comes from its cruciform shape.
=History=
The original Jacob's staff was developed as a single pole device, in the 14th century, that was used in making astronomical measurements. It was first described by the French-Jewish mathematician Levi ben Gerson[http://www.cs.biu.ac.il/~tsaban/Pdf/MathofLevi.pdf "The Mathematics of Levi ben Gershon, the Ralbag"][http://www.surveyhistory.org/jacob's_staff1.htm David G. Krehbiel "Jacob's Staff", Backsights, Surveyor's Historical Society] of Provence, in his "Book of the Wars of the Lord" (translated in Latin as well as Hebrew).{{cite web|last1=Stern|first1=Dr. David|title=The Cross Staff|url=https://www-istp.gsfc.nasa.gov/stargaze/Scrostaf.htm|access-date=11 April 2018}} He used a Hebrew name for the staff that translates to "Revealer of Profundities", while the term "Jacob's staff" was used by his Christian contemporaries.{{cite journal |last1=Goldstein |first1=Bernard |title=Levin ben Gerson and the Cross Staff Revisted |journal=Aleph |date=2011 |volume=11 |issue=2 |pages=365–385 |jstor=10.2979/aleph.11.2.365.pdf?refreqid=excelsior:a08ab1beb338a72c69a372d21cc1f553 |doi=10.2979/aleph.11.2.365|s2cid=142638690 }} Its invention was likely due to fellow French-Jewish astronomer Jacob ben Makir, who also lived in Provence in the same period. Attribution to 15th century Austrian astronomer Georg Purbach{{Cite web |url=http://obs.nineplanets.org/psc/hist1.html |title="Important Astronomers, their Instruments and Discoveries" |access-date=2006-10-31 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090123130950/http://obs.nineplanets.org/psc/hist1.html |archive-date=2009-01-23 |url-status=dead }} is less likely, because Purbach was not born until 1423. (Such attributions may refer to a different instrument with the same name.) Its origins mayMay, William Edward, A History of Marine Navigation, G. T. Foulis & Co. Ltd., Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, 1973, {{ISBN|0-85429-143-1}} be traced to the Chaldeans around 400 BCE.
Although it has become quite accepted that ben Gerson first described Jacob's staff, the British Sinologist Joseph Needham theorizes that the Song dynasty Chinese scientist Shen Kuo (1031–1095), in his Dream Pool Essays of 1088, described a Jacob's staff.Needham, Joseph. (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 3, Mathematics and the Sciences of the Heavens and the Earth. Taipei: Caves Books Ltd. Pages 573–575. Shen was an antiquarian interested in ancient objects; after he unearthed an ancient crossbow-like device from a home's garden in Jiangsu, he realized it had a sight with a graduated scale that could be used to measure the heights of distant mountains, likening it to how mathematicians measure heights by using right-angle triangles. He wrote that when one viewed the whole breadth of a mountain with it, the distance on the instrument was long; when viewing a small part of the mountainside, the distance was short; this, he wrote, was due to the cross piece that had to be pushed further away from the eye, while the graduation started from the further end. Needham does not mention any practical application of this observation.
During the medieval European Renaissance, the Dutch mathematician and surveyor Adriaan Metius developed his own Jacob's staff; Dutch mathematician Gemma Frisius made improvements to this instrument. In the 15th century, the German mathematician Johannes Müller (called Regiomontanus) made the instrument popular in geodesic and astronomical measurements.Ralf Kern: Wissenschaftliche Instrumente in ihrer Zeit. Band 1: Vom Astrolab zum mathematischen Besteck. Cologne, 2010. p. 214.
=Construction=
File:Jacobstaff.svgs' Practical Navigation (1672)]]
In the original form of the cross-staff, the pole or main staff was marked with graduations for length. The cross-piece (BC in the drawing to the right), also called the transom or transversal, slides up and down on the main staff. On older instruments, the ends of the transom were cut straight across. Newer instruments had brass fittings on the ends, with holes in the brass for observation. (In marine archaeology, these fittings are often the only components of a cross-staff that survive.)Swanick, Lois Ann. An Analysis Of Navigational Instruments In The Age Of Exploration: 15th Century To Mid-17th Century, MA Thesis, Texas A&M University, December, 2005
It was common to provide several transoms, each with a different range of angles it would measure; three transoms were common. In later instruments, separate transoms were switched in favour of just one with pegs to indicate the ends. These pegs were mounted in one of several pairs of holes symmetrically located on either side of the transom. This provided the same capability with fewer parts. The transom on Frisius' version had a sliding vane on the transom as an end point.
=Usage=
The user places one end of the main staff against their cheek, just below the eye. By sighting the horizon at the end of the lower part of the transom (or through the hole in the brass fitting) [B], then adjusting the cross arm on the main arm until the sun is at the other end of the transom [C], the altitude can be determined by reading the position of the cross arm on the scale on the main staff. This value was converted to an angular measurement by looking up the value in a table.
In surveying
In surveying, the term jacob staff refers to a monopod, a single straight rod or staff made of nonferrous material, pointed and metal-clad at the bottom for penetrating the ground.Rutstrum, The Wilderness Route Finder, University of Minnesota Press (2000), {{ISBN|0-8166-3661-3}}, pp. 47-55, 64-72 It also has a screw base and occasionally a ball joint on the mount, and is used for supporting a compass, transit, or other instrument.Rutstrum, pp. 47-55, 64-72
The term cross-staff may also have a different meaning in the history of surveying. While the astronomical cross-staff was used in surveying for measuring angles, two other devices referred to as a cross-staff were also employed.Turner, Gerard L'E., Nineteenth Century Scientific Instruments, Sotheby Publications, 1983, {{ISBN|0-85667-170-3}}
- Cross-head, cross-sight, surveyor's cross or cross - a drum or box shaped device mounted on a pole. It had two sets of mutually perpendicular sights. This device was used by surveyors to measure offsets. Sophisticated versions had a compass and spirit levels on the top. The French versions were frequently eight-sided rather than round.
- Optical square - an improved version of the cross-head, the optical square used two silvered mirrors at 45° to each other. This permitted the surveyor to see along both axes of the instrument at once.Rankine, William J. M., A Manual of Civil Engineering, Charles Griffin & Company (1926), p.21
In the past, many surveyor's instruments were used on a Jacob's staff. These include:
- Cross-head, cross-sight, surveyor's cross or cross
- Graphometer
- Circumferentor
- Holland circle
- Miner's dial
- Optical square
- Surveyor's sextant
- Surveyor's target
- Abney level
Some devices, such as the modern optical targets for laser-based surveying, are still in common use on a Jacob's staff.
=In geology=
In geology, the Jacob's staff is mainly used to measure stratigraphic thicknesses in the field, especially when bedding is not visible or unclear (e.g., covered outcrop) and when due to the configuration of an outcrop, the apparent and real thicknesses of beds diverge therefore making the use of a tape measure difficult. There is a certain level of error to be expected when using this tool, due to the lack of an exact reference mean for measuring stratigraphic thickness. High-precision designs include a laser able to slide vertically along the staff and to rotate on a plane parallel to bedding.Patacci, M. (2016), A high-precision Jacob's staff with improved spatial accuracy and laser sighting capability [http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/94611/ Open Repository] [https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sedgeo.2016.02.001 DOI Link]
See also
- Backstaff
- Cross of St James
- Pilgrim's staff
- Tacheometry
- As a symbol in Scouting: 5th World Scout Jamboree
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
{{Commons category|Jacob's staff}}
- [http://www2.pitt.edu/~brg/pdfs/brg_v_5.pdf Levi ben Gerson and the Cross Staff Revisited, Bernard R Goldstein] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200110042129/http://www.pitt.edu/~brg/pdfs/brg_v_5.pdf |date=2020-01-10 }}
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Category:14th-century introductions
Category:Angle measuring instruments
Category:Historical scientific instruments
Category:Navigational equipment