Radar technology.
The Answer is from spain to Argentina to Shark Islands to homonhon island to limasawa island to cebu philippines
Magellan was very curious and ambitious. he was curious when he would listen and learn about all the voyages in the Queen's castle. he was also curious when he wanted to find the strait. he was ambitious when he wouldn't give up the fight to find the money for his voyage
Generally computers (GPS) and safety first (Iraq) verses reading a map and mission first (Vietnam). The list would be long for either.
Technology aided transport navigation by allowing people to see a virtual map, or what they can also call a GPS [global positioning system] that helps an individual be able to determine where they currently at and what are the alternative ways to get through traffic or going to a destination.
Captain James Cook was the first to sight and map the eastern coastline of Australia when he was sent to observe the transit of Venus across the sun from the vantage point of Tahiti. The transit of Venus occurs when the planet Venus passes directly between the Earth and the Sun, and its unlit side can be seen as a small black circle moving across the face of the Sun. Transits of Venus occur in pairs, eight years apart, approximately once every 120 years. Cook's ship, the 'Endeavour', departed England, on 25 August 1768. Cook reached Tahiti in time for his crew and scientists to set up their instrumentation necessary to observe and report on the transit, which occurred on 3 June 1769.
The Magellan spacecraft mapped the cloud-shrouded planet Venus with radar.
Magellan probe
Venus was the planet that the spacecraft Magellan enabled scientists to research extensively.
The surface of Venus can be observed using radar imaging from spacecraft orbiting the planet. Radar can penetrate through the thick clouds covering Venus and provide detailed images of its surface features. This method has been used by missions like NASA's Magellan spacecraft to map the surface of Venus.
Spacecraft from several nations have visited Venus, including the Soviet Union’s successful Venera series made the first landings on the surface of Venus. NASA’s Magellan mission, which studied Venus from 1990 to 1994, used radar to map 98 percent of the planet’s surface. Currently, Japan’s Akatsuki is studying Venus from orbit.� 650 BC
Radar has been used to map the surface of Venus
the purpose was to make a global map of the surface of Venus
Magellan, a JPL-led project, used synthetic aperture radar to map Venus. Martin Marietta in Denver built the spacecraft, Hughes in El Segundo built the radar.
Infrared light can penetrate through clouds. The resulting images were adjusted to assign colors in the visible spectrum. You can search the web for "False-color imaging" and find more information on this image enhancement technique.
Maluku
Check Magellan website. They recently released a map update plus upgrading it to a cross-over gps...
The First spacecraft was the MESSENGER. The First spacecraft was the MESSENGER.