The magnetic north pole is moving...

Errr not really... what will you steer to ?
GPS does show direction, too.
true, but it does wobble about a lot, especially in rolling seas
You don't find that your magnetic compass bearing wobbles about a lot, especially in rolling seas?
Makes no difference, windvane doesn't look at the compass ;)

You may find that if you use the wind direction to navigate by, you won't always get where you thought you were heading.
 
You may find that if you use the wind direction to navigate by, you won't always get where you thought you were heading.

Yes!! but you will do it efficiently

As for magnetic deviation, my compass is so far out of sync with any thing, other than the hand held VHF in my pocket or the metal fuel can in the stern locker that 20 degrees either way is chicken feed.
Standard procedure is to just sail south until the coast of France pops up & then decide where it was I really wanted to go
 
Yes!! but you will do it efficiently

As for magnetic deviation, my compass is so far out of sync with any thing, other than the hand held VHF in my pocket or the metal fuel can in the stern locker that 20 degrees either way is chicken feed.
Standard procedure is to just sail south until the coast of France pops up & then decide where it was I really wanted to go

Perhaps not much has changed, then, since the Vikings just sailed East (because they could maintain a latitude) until the coast of [UK/ North America] popped up and then decided where it was they really wanted to go!

And there we were, thinking it really mattered where the North pole was sitting.
 
Perhaps not much has changed, then, since the Vikings just sailed East (because they could maintain a latitude) until the coast of [UK/ North America] popped up and then decided where it was they really wanted to go!

And there we were, thinking it really mattered where the North pole was sitting.

I think if they had sailed EAST, they would still be looking!
 
Bit of a simplistic calculation, but 50km/yr gives 400 years.

That's where order of magnitude guesstimates come from - that and arguments from the known resolution of datable sequences such as the magnetic anomaly stripes spreading from mid-oceanic ridges. We have an upper limit imposed by the resolution of datable sequences, and the lower limit is implied by arguments such as yours. However, the rate of change at the moment is much higher than it has been in the past - we've been watching the position of the magnetic poles simce the 19th century; some of the early Arctic and Antarctic expeditions were concerned with locating the magnetic poles.

Incidentally, the position and motion of the magnetic poles is much more complex that people usually imagine; the Earth can't be modelled as a vast bar magnet. There are two poles - the Geomagnetic pole, which is where compasses point, and the Dip pole, which is where the magnetic dip (the angle of the lines of force to the surface) is vertical. The North Geomagnetic pole (the once responsible for variation) is actually not moving very much; it's in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. The Dip Pole is scooting off over the Arctic ocean at a rate of knots, and is actually nearer Russia than Canada.

The situation in the south is similar, but the poles are not antipodal, so it isn't a mirror image of what's happening in the North.
 
There is also the question of nomenclature. Is our current North Pole to be renamed 'South', so that all the world's magnets can keep their labels, or is it to stay as 'North', in which case all the magnets will be wrong? Who decides this? Is it the IMO or a bunch of geophysicists somewhere?
 
There is also the question of nomenclature. Is our current North Pole to be renamed 'South', so that all the world's magnets can keep their labels, or is it to stay as 'North', in which case all the magnets will be wrong? Who decides this? Is it the IMO or a bunch of geophysicists somewhere?

It's worse than that - the North Magnetic Pole is actually a south pole - think about it, opposite magnetic poles attract, same poles repel. So, to attract the north pole of a magnet, the Earth's North magnetic Pole must be a south pole!

The nomenclature won't change - the terms "north and south" in magnetism are akin to positive and negative in other contexts.
 
It's worse than that - the North Magnetic Pole is actually a south pole - think about it, opposite magnetic poles attract, same poles repel. So, to attract the north pole of a magnet, the Earth's North magnetic Pole must be a south pole!

But perhaps the North pointing end of a compass is actually a magnetic South pole and we only call it North because that's the way it points. ;)

Richard
 
But perhaps the North pointing end of a compass is actually a magnetic South pole and we only call it North because that's the way it points. ;)

Richard

It is an error to assign an isolated polarity to the ends of a magnet. The full term is "North seeking" or South seeking", ok pedants the full terms are yadda yadda yadda.
So it does not matter whether a particular end of a magnet is +magnetism or -magnetism, these have not been defined. Lets face it, science will always have egg on its face over the electron débâcle.
What y'all are going to have to decide is after the flip, well more of a slop or a splurge than a flip, is whether you change the labels on the magnets or change the labels on the maps.

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Mebby we should re-label magnets anyway, instead of N and S we should draw polar bears or penguins
 
Incidentally, the position and motion of the magnetic poles is much more complex that people usually imagine; the Earth can't be modelled as a vast bar magnet. There are two poles - the Geomagnetic pole, which is where compasses point, and the Dip pole, which is where the magnetic dip (the angle of the lines of force to the surface) is vertical. The North Geomagnetic pole (the once responsible for variation) is actually not moving very much; it's in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. The Dip Pole is scooting off over the Arctic ocean at a rate of knots, and is actually nearer Russia than Canada.

That's interesting. I have to admit I'm struggling to visualise the field lines where the geomagnetic pole and dip pole are separated by a significant distance. If you were between them where would a compass point?

I presume it is the geomagnetic pole which would also determine the direction of magnetism of stripes either side of a mid-ocean ridge. So if that isn't moving much do we other evidence that points to a likely flip in the near (relatively speaking) future? After all, the dip pole could've gone for a quick spin round the Arctic in the past but if it hasn't left any evidence how do we know whether it is normal or the start of a flip.

PS maybe a magnetic pole gybe is a better term that a flip. Especially if it involves a dip pole. :)
 
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That's interesting. I have to admit I'm struggling to visualise the field lines where the geomagnetic pole and dip pole are separated by a significant distance. If you were between them where would a compass point?

I presume it is the geomagnetic pole which would also determine the direction of magnetism of stripes either side of a mid-ocean ridge. So if that isn't moving much do we other evidence that points to a likely flip in the near (relatively speaking) future? After all, the dip pole could've gone for a quick spin round the Arctic in the past but if it hasn't left any evidence how do we know whether it is normal or the start of a flip.

PS maybe a magnetic pole gybe is a better term that a flip. Especially if it involves a dip pole. :)

This: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-earth-has-more-than-one-north-pole/ explains it...
The magnetic north pole is the one you will use, its the dip pole and where compass needles end up (or down I guess). The other, the geomagnetic north pole is where the dip pole would be IF the the Earth's magnetic field were generated by a single bar magnet wit all the squiggly bits evened out.
 
There is also the question of nomenclature. Is our current North Pole to be renamed 'South', so that all the world's magnets can keep their labels, or is it to stay as 'North', in which case all the magnets will be wrong? Who decides this? Is it the IMO or a bunch of geophysicists somewhere?

I guess there are a few options.

1. Once the poles flip, we call them Modern North (to be shown downwards on the maps) and Modern South (to be shown upwards).
  • In another three quarters of a million years, our nano-engineered successors are to call them Postmodern North (to be shown upwards) and Postmodern South.
  • Compasses can remain unchanged and will still work. Maps will still look the same. Yachting magazines sell compass-rose stickers with North at the bottom, to paste over the ones printed on old-polarity charts. ISO 92476 is established to accredit the correct placement of such stickers.
  • Government takes the credit, declaring that the change it just made by United Nations Treaty to the magnetic polarity of the planet was necessary to keep pace with societal advancement.
  • The French claim to have invented the system along with the rest of post-modern 'philosophy', and so fight to have their shorter terms Nord and Sud mandated instead.
2. Once the poles flip, we call them New North (to be shown downwards on the maps) and New South (to be shown upwards).
  • In another three quarters of a million years, our nano-engineered successors are to call them Classical North (to be shown upwards) and Classical South.
  • Compasses can remain unchanged and will still work. Yachting magazines have to give away little stickers that say 'New' along with their stick-on New Compass Roses.
  • Government takes the credit, declaring through a United Nations treaty that whilst the experts may not yet agree whether the change in the earth's polarity was due to fracking, excessive working hours, jihad or man's sin, if we don't all invent new taxes to fund research to find out which it was, these changes could be happening every year by the end of our lifetimes and at gigahertz frequency by the time our children die, leading to the death of our grandchildren from the resulting radiation.
  • The French, indignant at their new position in the inferior hemisphere, turn up their noses every time they pronounce the Nouveau bit, just as they used to when referring to Nouveau-Monde wines or the Nouveaux Riches.
3. Once the poles flip, we call them North (still to be shown upwards on the maps) and South (still to be shown downwards), but maps are inverted in the up-down dimension. Australia's now at the top of the image and Brits, Scandis, Alaskans and Northern, I mean Southern, Siberians find themselves at the bottom.
  • In another three quarters of a million years, our nano-engineered successors are to maintain North (shown upwards) and South (shown downwards), but the maps get flipped again.
  • The magnetic compass industry gets a boost, the mapping industry gets a huge one, and we all get a headache. Yachting forums create threads such as this one on whether we really need compasses now that GPS and its successors are so well established.
  • Government takes the credit, pronouncing through a United Nations Declaration that the relegation of certain nations to the bottom of the page was necessary to right the wrongs of centuries of Northern Privilege. Social Justice Warriors triumph at the 'gutterisation' of those nations and the 'RightHeighting' of other ones.
  • The French, who always knew in their hearts that England was near their bottom not their head, seize on the cartography industry's once-in-a-millenium opportunity to reprint the world's maps by bidding for a second time to move 0º longitude to Paris while we're at it.
 
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