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Marine Compass
China was the earliest country to discover and use
magnetic materials. Large-scale sifting and smelting of iron ores led to the
discovery of magnets, while the booming navigation on the high seas called for
direction-pointing instruments; these social demands motivated the progress of
such instruments.
Si Nan
Over 2,000 years ago, in the Warring
States Period (475-221BC), Chinese ancestors invented the earliest compass
-- Si Nan, also known as the South Pointer.
Different from the compass
of today, Si Nan was composed of two parts: a spoon and a tray. The spoon was
cut from an intact piece of natural loadstone, with its handle as the South Pole
and its round, smooth bottom as the center of gravity. The tray, on the other
hand, was made of bronze
, and at the center, there was a round, smooth groove. When the spoon was put
into the groove, it would rotate. When
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| Pointing-to-the-south fish made by Cheng
Yuanliang of the Yuan
Dynasty | the spoon stopped, its handle would point
to the south, and its head to the north. This instrument was the predecessor of
the magnetic compass. However, since it was easy for natural loadstone (magnetic
iron oxide) to lose its magnetism, Si Nan could not be widely used.
Pointing-to-the-South Fish
During the Northern
Song Dynasty (960-1127), artificial magnetization was discovered, giving
rise to the Pointing-to-the-South Fish, which was made from a piece of thin iron
sheet cut into the shape of a fish, magnetized in a geomagnetic field, and put
into water, floating and lying north-to-south. However, due to its weak magnetic
field, Pointing-to-the-South Fish was not of much practical value.
Marine Compass
Through
magnetizing a steel needle by rubbing it on a natural magnet, people invented
the earliest artificially magnetic compass, which pointed south when floated on
water or suspended. Later it was attached to a bowl with directional points.
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