File:I 443 2 - fig 3.png

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I_443_2_-_fig_3.png (300 × 275 pixels, file size: 24 KB, MIME type: image/png)

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Captions

Illustration from the book "On the connexions of the physical sciences"

Summary

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Description
English: Described in the notes as follows: "Poles and equator. Let fig. 1 or 3 represent the earth, C its centre, N C S the axis of rotation, or the imaginary line about which it performs its daily revolution. Then N and S are the north and south poles, and the great circle q E Q, which divides the earth into two equal parts, is the equator. The earth is flattened at the poles, fig. 1, the equatorial diameter, q Q, exceeding the polar diameter, N S, by about 261⁄2 miles. Lesser circles, A B G, which are parallel to the equator, are circles or parallels of latitude, which is estimated in degrees, minutes, and seconds, north and south of the equator, every place in the same parallel having the same latitude. Greenwich is in the parallel of 51° 28ʹ 40ʺ. Thus terrestrial latitude is the angular distance between the direction of a plumb-line at any place and the plane of the equator. Lines such as N Q S, N G E S, fig. 3, are called meridians; all the places in any one of these lines have noon at the same instant. The meridian of Greenwich has been chosen by the British as the origin of terrestrial longitude, which is estimated in degrees, minutes, and seconds, east and west of that line. If N G E S be the meridian of Greenwich, the position of any place, B, is determined, when its latitude, Q C B, and its longitude, E C Q, are known."
Date
Source Project Gutenberg; https://gutenberg.org/ebooks/52869
Author Mary Somerville

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current21:17, 30 October 2022Thumbnail for version as of 21:17, 30 October 2022300 × 275 (24 KB)Mewasul (talk | contribs)Uploaded a work by Mary Somerville from Project Gutenberg; https://gutenberg.org/ebooks/52869 with UploadWizard

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