Marine Link
Sunday, April 19, 2026

Navigation

Navigation, derived from the Latin words "navis" (meaning  "ship") and "agere" (meaning "to drive") is the process of accurately determining the position and controlling the movement of a craft or vehicle along a desired course. This is accomplished by finding the navigator's position compared to known locations or patterns.

Early instruments used for determining latitude were the quadrant, (which measured the altitude of the polestar or the noonday sun,) the astrolabe and the sextant. Longitude was originally fixed using chronometers and tables showing yearly positions of celestial bodies. The first mariners to explore the world’s oceans developed standard ways of observing and recording their location, the routes they traveled, wind and water currents, and other useful facts. These records, logs, and journals made it possible find their way home and pass along their observations. Each successful voyage became a part of an expanding collection of reliable maritime information.

Modern navigation systems are part of a tightly coordinated and widely integrated transportation system in which each vessel must be responsible for staying on course, avoiding collisions, minimizing fuel consumption, and keeping on schedule. Modern navigation systems make use of many traditional tools, such as compasses, charts, instruments; but over the past century radio beacons, satellite networks and global positioning systems have been relied upon with increasing frequency to determine a ship’s position.

Ship compasses are usually stabilized by gyroscopes and installed in housing which properly compensates for the vessel’s motion. Charts are another essential navigational tool- position is fixed using charts of known locations in concert with instruments that calculate a vessel’s relative bearing. Dead reckoning is a method which relies on recording the accurate velocity calculated by gyroscopes and computer analysis of the vessel’s acceleration.

Tags: Navigation

© Adobe Stock/kashd

Ships Sailing Through Hormuz Need Prior Coordination with the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary GuardCorps

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© Grispb / Adobe Stock

Europe Can Help Clear Mines in Strait of Hormuz, France Says

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L to R: Dr. Sascha Gill, CEO of UNITED WATERWAYS, and Joshua Divin, ABS Senior Vice President, Marine Business Development. © ABS

ABS, UNITED WATERWAYS Collaborate on Coastal, Inland Maritime Training

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© Peter Hermes Furian / Adobe Stock

North Korea Test Fires Missiles from Destroyer

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Anschütz SYNAPSIS Nav Tech for New Multipurpose Vessel

Anschütz has been awarded the contract to supply Integrated Navigation and Bridge…

© Port Tampa Bay

Port Tampa Bay Receives $10m Federal Investment to Strengthen Supply Chain, Regional Economy

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Shippers Look For Clarity on Reopening Hormuz After US-Iran Ceasefire

Shippers said on Wednesday they needed more clarity on the terms of the U.S.-Iran…

© Mike Dot / Adobe Stock

UN Resolution on Protecting Hormuz Shipping Vetoed

China and Russia on Tuesday vetoed a U.N. resolution encouraging states to coordinate…

Robosys Automation’s VOYAGER AI platform has continued to evolve, with enhancements in fully autonomous navigation, COLREGs-compliant collision avoidance, dynamic path planning and remote operation functionality. Image courtesy Robosys

Tech Talk: Time to Rethink Watchkeeping

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Source: ClassNK

ClassNK Awards Autonomous Notation to Domestic Container Ship

ClassNK has granted its “AUTO-Nav2(All)" notation to Japanese domestic liner container ship Genbu…

Credit: Robert Allan

Robert Allan Ltd. Develops RApide 1800 Design for Brazilian Bunkering Operations

Robert Allan Ltd. in conjunction with Indústria Naval Catarinense Ltda. (INC), has…

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