Of Sextants and Georgia Water #
The state legislators in Georgia went to the history books to try to cure their water problem:
SOON after James Camak demarcated the border between Georgia and Tennessee in 1818, he began to develop doubts about his work. Thanks to a faulty sextant and bad astronomical charts, he had drawn the line a mile south of the intended boundary, the 35th parallel. Were the error to be corrected, Georgia would find itself in possession of a short stretch of the Tennessee river.
Until recently, Georgia’s politicians did not pursue their claims to this sliver of territory very vigorously. But a bad drought, and the growing militancy of two other neighbouring states about the sharing of water, have prompted a change of heart. Last month Georgia’s state assembly passed a resolution calling on the governor to set up a commission to look into the disputed boundary.