photo: Creative Commons
Table of geography, hydrography, and navigation, from the 1728 Cyclopaedia.
photo: Creative Commons / Thomas doerfer
2007 Lincoln Navigator L
photo: US Coastguard
Coast Guardsmen clear ice from a buoy. The Coast Guard maintains the "signposts" and "traffic signals"--more than 50,000 federal aids to navigation, including buoys, lighthouses, day beacons, and radio-navigation signals--on the nations waterways. These navigation aids provide a critical component of the overall navigational picture needed by all mariners. (125059) ( De icing the Buoy by Sidney Hermel (ID# 200212) )
photo: Creative Commons / Hanhil
The River Avon or Avon (pronounced /ˈeɪvən/) is a river in or adjoining the counties of Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Warwickshire, Worcestershire and Gloucestershire in the Midlands of England. It is also known as the Upper Avon, Warwickshire Avon or Shakespeare's Avon. The river has a total length of 96 miles (154 km). Avon is an anglicisation of the Welsh word for 'river' (spelled afon in Welsh)
photo: Creative Commons / Clipper
Radar ranges and bearings can be very useful navigation. When a vessel is within radar range of land or special radar aids to navigation, the navigator can take distances and angular bearings to charted objects and use these to establish arcs of position and lines of position on a chart
photo: Creative Commons / PH2 Wudjick, USN
Nose of a Nimrod MR2 at RIAT 2009.The crew consisted of two pilots and one flight engineer, two navigators (one tactical navigator and a routine navigator),
photo: Creative Commons / BaldBoris
The New bury Wharf River Kennet is navigable from Newbury downstream to the confluence with the River Thames at Kennet Mouth, in Reading
photo: Creative Commons / Heinz Albers,
The Danube in Budapest the Danube is navigable by ocean ships from the Black Sea to Brăila in Romania and by river ships to Kelheim, Bavaria, Germany; smaller craft can navigate further upstream to Ulm, Württemberg, Germany.
photo: Creative Commons / Arpingstone
The Kennet and Avon Canal near the Dundas Aqueduct, Wiltshire
photo: Creative Commons / Cobatfor
Camera arrangement of a camouflaged RA-3B of Heavy Photographic Squadron 61. The early A-3 variants had a crew of three: pilot, bombardier/navigator (BN) and crewman/navigator (aka: third crewman).
photo: Creative Commons / Dcoetzee
Mountain bike orienteering
photo: US Coastguard / Petty Officer 3rd Class Charly Hengen.
KODIAK, Alaska - Coast Guard Petty Officer 2nd Class Ryan Johnson, avionics electrical technician and HC-130 Hercules aircraft navigator with Air Station Kodiak, updates a navigational log June 13, 2010, during a Hercules flight. A navigational log is a record of positions, winds and fuel updated throughout a flight. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Charly Hengen. (912252) ( C130 aircrew position navigator )
photo: Creative Commons / Mykaskin
The restored swing bridge at Brigham. The Driffield Navigation is an 11-mile (18 km) waterway, through the heart of the Holderness Plain to the market town of Driffield, East Riding of Yorkshire, England.
photo: Public Domain / IFCAR
Lincoln Navigator Second generation.
photo: Xinhua photo
China Puts Third Navigation Satellite into Orbit Kxinhua2u
photo: Creative Commons / David Shankbone
The Navigators sign in Colorado Springs
photo: Creative Commons
John Harrison's Chronometer H5
photo: Creative Commons / Chris j wood
The Riverside level of The Oracle shopping center in Reading, England. The River Ken net is navigable from Newbury downstream to the confluence with the River Thames at Ken net Mouth, in Reading
photo: Creative Commons / IFCAR
Lincoln Navigator
photo: US Coastguard / PA1 Tasha Tully
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Aug. 1, 2006)--Crewmembers from the Aids to Navigation Team in St. Petersburg, Fla., maintain a buoy in Tampa Bay with help from a 55-foot Aids to Navigation Boat (ANB). The 55 was designed to respond quickly to aids to navigation needs in moderately rough weather in all coastal and inland waters. The boat is made of aluminum and is equipped with a workshop for servicing buoy components. USCG photo by PA1 Tasha Tully (107104) ( AIDS TO NAVIGATION (FOR RELEASE) )
photo: US Coastguard
This buoy tender is hard at work off the South East coast of Alaska keeping the navigational buoys operating to aid in protecting lives and equipment. The Coast Guard maintains the "signposts" and "traffic signals"--more than 50,000 federal aids to navigation, including buoys, lighthouses, day beacons, and radio-navigation signals--on the nations waterways. (236955) ( Buoy Tender, Southeast Alaska by Robert Tandecki (ID# 90439) )
photo: Public Domain / IFCAR
Lincoln Navigator Third generation (U326).
photo: US Coastguard / Petty Officer 1st Class Mariana O'Leary.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - Fireman Robert Mundo of Aids to Navigation Team (ANT) St. Petersburg, Fla., scrapes the Point Pinnelas Aid to Navigation solar panel free of bird guano, Dec. 21, 2009, in Tampa Bay, Fla. ANT St. Petersburg is respnsible for the accuracy of aids to navigation between Fort Myers, Fla., and Horseshoe Beach, Fla. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Mariana O'Leary. (742418) ( 0912210G 1330O 087 Solar powered navigation )
photo: Public Domain / G-Man
The Birmingham Canal Navigations Main Line Canal between the International Convention Centre (left), Brindleyplace (right), and Broad Street Tunnel (ahead) in central Birmingham, England. A part of the canal originally called Deep Cutting. Photo by G-Man Nov 2004.
photo: Creative Commons / Pline
Inertial navigation unit of French IRBM S3.
photo: Creative Commons / Robert Etzel,
The Missouri River at Sioux City, IA, near the upper most navigable reach of the river today.
photo: USAF
Cluster Bombs - A B-1B Lancer unleashes cluster munitions.
photo: Creative Commons / D98rolb
A modern SiRFstarIII chip based 20-channel GPS receiver with WAAS/EGNOS support.
photo: US Coastguard
MISSISSIPPI RIVER (May 19, 2004)--The Coast Guard Cutter Greenbrier is a 75-foot rivertender homeported in Natchez, Miss. The cutter's crew patrols 299 miles of navigable waterways between Natchez and Baton Rouge, La. The mission of the cutter's crew is to service aids to navigation on the (96476) ( AIDS TO NAVIGATION (FOR RELEASE) )
photo: US Coastguard
MISSISSIPPI RIVER (May 19, 2004)--The Coast Guard Cutter Greenbrier is a 75-foot rivertender homeported in Natchez, Miss. The cutter's crew patrols 299 miles of navigable waterways between Natchez and Baton Rouge, La. The mission of the cutter's crew is to service aids to navigation on the (96479) ( AIDS TO NAVIGATION (FOR RELEASE) )