APA (7th ed.) Citation

Phillippes, H. (1657). The advancement of the art of navigation: In two parts : the first shewing by a new canon of sines, tangents, and secants, how to resolve all cases of right-lined triangles, onely by looking into the tables without any calculation : particularly applied to all the three kinds of sailing : viz. by the plain chart, by Mercaters chart, by a great circle, and to the art of surveying : the second part, shewing several observations for the better odering of the log-line, and for the more exact and ready measuring, not onely of minutes, but seconds of time, with some new experiments and engines for the more constant finding of a ships way. Printed by R. and W. Leybourn for George Hulock ....

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Phillippes, Henry. The Advancement of the Art of Navigation: In Two Parts : The First Shewing by a New Canon of Sines, Tangents, and Secants, How to Resolve All Cases of Right-lined Triangles, Onely by Looking into the Tables Without Any Calculation : Particularly Applied to All the Three Kinds of Sailing : Viz. by the Plain Chart, by Mercaters Chart, by a Great Circle, and to the Art of Surveying : The Second Part, Shewing Several Observations for the Better Odering of the Log-line, and for the More Exact and Ready Measuring, Not Onely of Minutes, but Seconds of Time, with Some New Experiments and Engines for the More Constant Finding of a Ships Way. London: Printed by R. and W. Leybourn for George Hulock ..., 1657.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Phillippes, Henry. The Advancement of the Art of Navigation: In Two Parts : The First Shewing by a New Canon of Sines, Tangents, and Secants, How to Resolve All Cases of Right-lined Triangles, Onely by Looking into the Tables Without Any Calculation : Particularly Applied to All the Three Kinds of Sailing : Viz. by the Plain Chart, by Mercaters Chart, by a Great Circle, and to the Art of Surveying : The Second Part, Shewing Several Observations for the Better Odering of the Log-line, and for the More Exact and Ready Measuring, Not Onely of Minutes, but Seconds of Time, with Some New Experiments and Engines for the More Constant Finding of a Ships Way. Printed by R. and W. Leybourn for George Hulock ..., 1657.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.