Someone pointed me at this 1896 article by George Griffith, with illustrations by Fred T. Jane (of Jane's Fighting Ships fame), which I somehow managed to miss when I checked the first volume of Pearson's Magazine for scientific romances. The reason probably being that it isn't so much a scientific romance as a "prediction" of military technology.
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Interesting that the author felt that most action would be at close quarters, despite the vastly increasing range of weaponry. To be fair, the Russians were also surprised by the long ranges used at the Battle of Tsushima.
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A knot is a measure of speed not of distance. Griffith has this right in the rest of the artical but makes the mistake in this sentence.
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