Sextants are ok for navigation, but for precise offshore work, GPS is a must...
If a ship in theatre looses the lock, it automatically goes into safe mode and all the other ships in the zone must also stop...
You could be more specific about what you mean when you say precise offshore work. GPS has only been available to non-military users since the late 80's and I do believe offshore work was done prior to then.
Brian
Before that, position keeping was done on the basis of anchors and buoys.
For example finding and extracting the lost atoms bombs in 1966 needed a whole fleet and the most advanced military and civilian equipment available, Billions in today’s Dollars.
Now, any decentish ROV equipped survey vessel could do the search and retrieval.
Our boat could, and it is not special.
Even 10 years ago, a heavy lift in the North Sea (setting a platform on its jacket), despite using GPS, needed a least 4 precisely set anchors (often 6) and that was fun to do with all the junk in the bottom (cables, pipelines, wrecks and lots of unexploded ordenance) now the crane ship can rock up in DP2, do a final survey pass, go to the start point, move to the lift, do the lift and the post lift survey while moving back.
And what they called precise in the 80’s, is often found to be up to be hundreds of meters from where they thought it was in the original “as done” survey (especially out of sight of land with no other point to triangulate from). That position has been updated multiple times since, especially with platforms, but we still find things like cables not where they are reported to be.