An Account of the Operations Carried Out for Accomplishing a Trigonometrical Survey of England and Wales: From the Commencement, in the Year 1784, to the End of the Year 1796, Begun Under the Direction of Royal Society, and Continued by Order of the Honourable Board of Ordance ; First Published In, and Revised From, the Philosophical Transactions, Volume 2W. Bulmer and Company, 1801 |
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Page 18
... feet broad , and five feet deep ; but the principal and secondary drains were much wider , the first being thirty , and the last twenty - five , feet in breadth . The subdivisions on the Moor , or the individual allotments of it , were ...
... feet broad , and five feet deep ; but the principal and secondary drains were much wider , the first being thirty , and the last twenty - five , feet in breadth . The subdivisions on the Moor , or the individual allotments of it , were ...
Page 39
... feet north of the stone wall , and about 150 feet eastward of the plantation . Bradley Knoll . This is a remarkable hill , very near Maiden Bradley . The highest part of the hill is towards the west , on which there is a small ring ...
... feet north of the stone wall , and about 150 feet eastward of the plantation . Bradley Knoll . This is a remarkable hill , very near Maiden Bradley . The highest part of the hill is towards the west , on which there is a small ring ...
Page 40
... feet from the ditch , and 19 from the gateway . There were but three fields in this part of the moor , at the time the base was measured . Greylock's Foss . This is towards the western extremity of the moor : a causeway leads from ...
... feet from the ditch , and 19 from the gateway . There were but three fields in this part of the moor , at the time the base was measured . Greylock's Foss . This is towards the western extremity of the moor : a causeway leads from ...
Page 41
... feet west of the corner of the hedge which forms a right angle with another abruptly running out it is also 279 feet from the ridge which divides the field . Broadway Beacon . This is a very high and remarkable spot , near the village ...
... feet west of the corner of the hedge which forms a right angle with another abruptly running out it is also 279 feet from the ridge which divides the field . Broadway Beacon . This is a very high and remarkable spot , near the village ...
Page 42
... feet westward of the pathway . Kinsworth , a village near Dunstable . The station is on the summit of a hill , about half a mile north of the village . A hedge runs across the hill , from which the station is 40 feet north- west it is ...
... feet westward of the pathway . Kinsworth , a village near Dunstable . The station is on the summit of a hill , about half a mile north of the village . A hedge runs across the hill , from which the station is 40 feet north- west it is ...
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Common terms and phrases
Allington Knoll Angles corrected Angles observed Ann's Hill Arbury Hill axis Banstead base Beachy Head Beacon Hill Black Botley Hill Bow Brickhill Bradley Knoll brass Brill Bull Barrow Butser Hill Butterton Carraton Hill Castle chain Chanctonbury Ring Church computed Crowborough Beacon deal rods Dean Hill degree depr distance Ditchling Beacon Dover Dumpdon Dundry Dunnose elev Epwell Fairlight feet Flagstaff glass rods Goudhurst ground Hampton Poorhouse Hanger Hill Hensbarrow Beacon Highclere Hind Head Hounslow Heath hypothenuses inches instrument intersected objects Karnbonellis Karnminnis King's Arbour Kinsworth Kit Hill Lansallos Leith Hill length Lidlington Light-house Maker Heights means measurement Mendip Meridian of Greenwich micrometer Moor Lynch Motteston Names of stations Nine Barrow Observed angles operation perpendicular Pertinney pickets Pilsden placed refraction Rippin Tor Rook's Hill screws Severndroog Castle Severndroog Tower Shooter's Hill side Spire staff Steeple telescope Tenterden triangles Waldershare Wendover White Horse Hill Windmill Wingreen wire
Popular passages
Page 2 - ... having been carried out with instruments of the common, or even inferior kind, and the sum allowed for it being inadequate to the execution of so great a design in the best manner, it is rather to be considered as a magnificent military sketch, than a very accurate map of a country...
Page 1 - Accurate surveys of a country are universally admitted to be works of great public utility, as affording the surest foundation for almost every kind of internal improvement in time of peace, and the best means of forming judicious plans of defence against the invasions of an enemy in time of war ; in which last circumstance, their importance usually becomes the most apparent.
Page 3 - on the conclusion of the peace of 1763 it came for the first time under the consideration of Government to make a general survey of the whole island at public cost...
Page 175 - BA, the sum of the two refractions ; hence, supposing half that sum to be the true refraction, we have the following rule when the objects are reciprocally depressed. Subtract the sum of the two depressions from the contained arc, and half the remainder is the mean refraction : — If one of the points B, instead of being depressed be elevated, suppose to the point g, the angle of elevation being gA.D, then * " Trigonometrical Survey,
Page 89 - An account of the trigonometrical operation, whereby the distance between the meridians of the Royal Observatories of Greenwich and Paris has been determined.
Page 2 - The rise and progress of the rebellion which broke out in the Highlands of Scotland in 1745, and which was finally suppressed by His Royal Highness the Duke of Cumberland at the battle of Culloden in the following year, convinced the Government of what infinite importance it would be to the State that a country, so very inaccessible by nature, should be thoroughly explored and laid open, by establishing military posts in its inmost recesses, and carrying roads of communication to its remoter parts.
Page 101 - Head ; and the length of a degree of a great circle, perpendicular to the meridian, in latitude 50° 41 . Section VI.
Page 2 - Assistant-Quarter-Master, it fell to my lot to begin, and afterwards to have a considerable share in, the execution of that map ; which being undertaken under the auspices of the Duke of Cumberland, and meant at first to be confined to the Highlands only, was nevertheless at last extended to the Lowlands...
Page xiii - An Account of the Measurement of an Arc of the Meridian, extending from Dunnose, in the Isle of Wight, Latitude 50° 37
Page 4 - ... of the most remarkable steeples, and other places, in and about the Capital, with regard to each other, and the Royal Observatory at Greenwich.