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A

TREATISE

ON

MATHEMATICAL INSTRUMENTS,

INCLUDING

MOST OF THE INSTRUMENTS EMPLOYED IN DRAWING,

FOR ASSISTING THE VISION, IN SURVEYING AND LEVELLING, IN PRACTICAL
ASTRONOMY, AND FOR MEASURING THE ANGLES OF CRYSTALS:

IN WHICH

THEIR CONSTRUCTION, AND THE METHODS OF

TESTING, ADJUSTING, AND USING THEM,

ARE CONCISELY EXPLAINED.

BY J. F. HEATHER, M.A.

OF THE ROYAL MILITARY ACADEMY, WOOLWICH.

LONDON:

JOHN WEALE, 59, HIGH HOLBORN.

1849.

[blocks in formation]

111

PREFACE.

An attempt has been made in the following pages to put within the reach of all a short and compendious treatise upon some of the ingenious instruments by which the scientific practitioner is aided in his observations, and in the delineation of the results obtained from them.

The instruments treated of have been divided into five classes, to each of which a part of the work has been devoted. The first part treats of Mathematical Drawing Instruments; the second, of Optical Instruments; the third, of Surveying Instruments; the fourth, of Astronomical Instruments; and the fifth, and last, of Goniometrical Instruments, for measuring the angles of crystals.

The greater part of the Wood Engravings, and some parts of the Text, of Sims's Mathematical Drawing Instruments, have been pressed into the service of the present work; and the works of the best writers upon the several parts of the subject have been consulted, and much valuable matter has been extracted from them, particularly from Pearson's Astro

nomy.

The limits of the bulk and cost of the work have forbidden any extensive excursion into the sciences, in which the instruments are used; but it is hoped that a large mass of information has here been placed in a small compass without sacrificing perspicuity to undue compression.

R. M. A.
March, 1849.

B+

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