Forensic Astronomer Solves Fine Arts Puzzles
Astrophysicist Don Olson breaks down the barriers between science and art by analyzing literature and paintings from the past
- By Jennifer Drapkin and Sarah Zielinski
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
"Most people see liberal arts on one side and sciences on the other, but I get to break those barriers down," Olson says, though he admits that he now gives relativity relatively short shrift. "I would love to know what happened before the Big Bang," he says, "but I don't think I'm smart enough to figure that out." He adds that he prefers "problems that are challenging but solvable."
Not long after Olson dealt with Chaucer, James Pohl, a history professor at Texas State and a former marine, came to him with a different sort of problem. Pohl had been studying the November 1943 Allied assault on the Pacific island of Tarawa, in which U.S. Marine landing craft were unexpectedly grounded on a coral reef about 600 yards offshore. The marines had to disembark and wade to the beach while exposed to heavy enemy fire. More than 1,000 were killed. Pohl wanted Olson to explain what had gone wrong.
Olson figured out that the marines' assault had taken place on one of two days that year when the Moon was farthest from Earth and also in its quarter phase, creating an unusually low tide. "When people have asked me who was to blame, I can tell them with confidence that the answer is no one," says Olson.
World War II war correspondent Robert Sherrod, who had been at the battle, presented Olson's conclusions at a reunion of Tarawa survivors and told Olson that the marines were gratified that there was a scientific explanation. And a military historian included the findings in his account of the battle.
While researching Tarawa, Olson came across another amphibious-landing mystery. In Julius Caesar's account of his invasion of Britain in 55 B.C., the general wrote that after seeing the enemy atop high cliffs (of Dover), he ordered his fleet to put ashore several miles away. But the exact location of where it landed has been debated by historians for centuries: historical descriptions seem to match a spot to the northeast, but currents that day would have taken the ships southwest.
Since coming across the puzzle 20 years ago, Olson has been collecting information about it, including a firsthand account of the battle by a Roman soldier. In 2007, Olson even sailed to the site himself to test conditions. That's when he figured out that Caesar had to have put in at a point to the northeast, near the town of Deal, as historical descriptions suggest. The date given in Caesar's history—or in the transcribed copies that remain—had to be wrong, and the landing must have taken place on August 22 or 23, not the 26th, as Caesar has it.
Olson published his Caesarean findings—one of the most recent of about 50 puzzles he has solved—in the August 2008 issue of Sky & Telescope magazine, whose readers (professional and amateur astronomers), he expects, check his calculations. (So far, he's not been found in error.)
Olson also investigated the sinking of the USS Indianapolis at the end of World War II. Two torpedoes from a Japanese submarine struck the heavy cruiser around midnight on July 30, 1945. The resulting explosion killed 300 sailors, and the ship sank in the Philippine Sea, casting 900 men into shark-infested waters. Only 317 survived to be rescued four days later. The Navy charged the ship's captain, Charles B. McVay, with negligence for failing to evade enemy fire. He was court-martialed and demoted, despite protests from men under his command that he was following standard procedures and testimony from the Japanese sub commander that McVay could not have escaped the attack. McVay committed suicide in 1968. He was exonerated in 2000 by a Congressional resolution that declared "the American people should now recognize Captain McVay's lack of culpability for the tragic loss of the USS Indianapolis and the lives of the men who died."
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Related topics: Arts Astronomers Astronomy Solar System
Additional Sources
"High Tides and The Canterbury Tales," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, April 2000.
"The Tide at Tarawa," Donald W. Olson, Sky & Telescope, November 1987.
"Identifying the 'Star' in a Long-Lost van Gogh," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, April 2001.
"The Stars of Hamlet," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, November 1998.
"When the Sky Ran Red," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, February 2004.
"Reflections on Edvard Munch's Girls on the Pier," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, May 2006.
"Dating Ansel Adams's Moon and Half Dome," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, December 1994.
"Ansel Adams and an 'Autumn Moon'," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, October 2005.
"Caesar's Invasion of Britain," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, August 2008.
" 'Ill Met by Moonlight': The Sinking of the USS Indianapolis," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, July 2002.









Comments (3)
I have read the article "Celestial Sleuth" describing Dr. Dolson's forensic astronomy and my interest is peaked in other areas. I realize it is summer and Dr. Dolson is on break but I question if knowing a natal chart where the moon and sun are positioned can forescast a life path incorporating the forensic astronomy in regards to leaders who were assassinated like Mohandas Gandhi. Can one trace Gandhi's natal chart plus the forensic astronomy and gain new insights to this time of history.
Mary
Posted by Mary Greville on July 28,2009 | 01:50 PM
No astronomers or astrophysicists in my family, but my husband does keep track of our birthdays on the Asian lunar calendar and matches those to the dates they fall on the Gregorian calendar used in the West. When my nephew approached his 19th birthday, we noticed that his lunar birthday once again coincided with his Gregorian birthday. On extrapolating the lunar birthdays for other family members, it was confirmed that this 19-year coincidence is universal for all dates. In rephotographing Adams' "Autumn Moon," the date that Olsen determined the moon would match when Ansel Adams originally made his shot on Sept. 15, 1948 turns out to be 57 years later on Sept. 15, 2005. 57 years is a multiple (3x) of 19 years. So it was curious to me that Dr. Olsen made all his astronomical measurements to determine when the moon would again be in the same exact location shown in other Ansel Adams photos and missed this "magic" of the 19-year coincidence that we found by simple observation. In the case of his work on "Moon and Half Dome," instead of a near coincidence on Dec. 13, 1994, one wonders if Dr. Olsen would have achieved an even closer match had he been in Yosemite on Dec. 28, 1998 (exactly 2 x 19 years from Adams' Dec. 28, 1960).
Posted by Liz Chin on April 22,2009 | 12:17 AM
Very interesting article by Dr. Olsen. His post period photographs were both beautiful and precise as well. As regards E. Munch's, "Girls on Pier" I have often wandered why the moon did not appear in the reflection. Now I know. Now if I only knew why Edward painted the reflection of the house on left of the large tree with the roof in an incorrect alignment, large section on the left of the reflection rather than on the right as it should be, I would be pleased. I have never heard anyone address this matter. Maybe it is just artistic license. Bernard McIntyre, AR.
Posted by Bernard McIntyre on March 27,2009 | 06:17 PM