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Finding True North with a compass

It should be noted that the components of a seismometer may affect a compass, and therefore true north should be established with the seismometer away from the compass.

To find true north, you need to know your local declination. You will be able to find this either in the legend on your map (if you have one and it is not out-dated) or by doing a search online e.g. https://www.magnetic-declination.com/ https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geomag/calculators/magcalc.shtml/

Once you have your declination, you need to check whether it is positive or negative. If it is negative, magnetic north will be west of true north, if it is positive; magnetic north will be east of true north.

Declination on a compass can usually be set it one of two ways – either by rotating the compass ring, or manually adjusting the compass screw as shown below.

Finding North - declination set by rotating the compass ring

Step 1

A compass lay flat with the magnetic north needle on top of the north orienting arrow Ensure the compass is flat and orient it so that magnetic north (needle) overlays with the orienting north arrow.

Step 2

If our declination is negative, this means that magnetic north is west of true north, for example a declination of -20° may also be called 20° west. If our declination was -20°, turn the ring on the compass 20° clockwise (or so that the south needle is pointing to 20° west declination) for the orienting arrow to point towards true north.
Alternatively, you can just rotate yourself and the compass (rather than the compass ring) until the south needle is pointing to 20° west declination. The orienting arrow will then be pointing to true north.
A compass lay flat with the compass ring rotated 20 degrees clockwise

If our declination is positive, this means that magnetic north is east of true north, for example a declination of 20° may also be called 20° east. If our declination was 20°, turn the ring on the compass 20° anti-clockwise (or so that the south needle is pointing to 20° east declination) for the orienting arrow to point towards true north.
Alternatively, you can just rotate yourself and the compass (rather than the compass ring) until the south needle is pointing to 20° east declination. The orienting arrow will then be pointing to true north.
A compass lay flat with the compass ring rotated 20 degrees anti-clockwise

Finding North - declination set by using the adjusting screw

Some compasses will allow for manual adjustment of the orienting arrow using an adjustment screw to compensate for declination and can be done instead of the above. The steps below show how to use the adjustment screw to set a negative declination (west) but the same principles apply for setting a positive (east) declination.

Step 1

Ensure the compass is flat and orient it so that magnetic north (needle) overlays with the orienting north arrow.
A compass lay flat with the magnetic north needle on top of the north orienting arrow

Step 2

Turn the screw so that the bottom part of the orienting arrow is pointing towards 20° west declination (for 20° west or -20° declination).
A compass lay flat with the inside of the compass rotated

Step 3

When you then hold your compass out, move around until the needle and the orienting arrow line up and then the directions on the compass ring will be the direction of travel. So true north is N on the compass ring.
A compass lay flat with the magnetic needle on top of the orienting arrow