Outline of the Method of Conducting a Trigonometrical Survey, for the Formation of Geographical and Topographical Maps and Plans: Military Reconnaissance, Levelling, EtcWeale, 1850 - 253 pages |
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Page 76
... axis of the telescope , being sent to the first of these marks , its angle of depression or elevation is taken ; by way of insuring accuracy , the instrument and staff are then made to change places , and the vertical arc being clamped ...
... axis of the telescope , being sent to the first of these marks , its angle of depression or elevation is taken ; by way of insuring accuracy , the instrument and staff are then made to change places , and the vertical arc being clamped ...
Page 79
... axis of the telescope may always revolve at right angles to the vertical axis of the instru- ment . This is effected by first levelling the telescope when placed over two opposite screws , and then turning it round so that the eye ...
... axis of the telescope may always revolve at right angles to the vertical axis of the instru- ment . This is effected by first levelling the telescope when placed over two opposite screws , and then turning it round so that the eye ...
Page 80
... axis is already correct ; if not , half the difference of the results must be applied to the observed height of the vane on the staff , and the cross wires adjusted to this height by means of the screws of the diaphragm at the eye ...
... axis is already correct ; if not , half the difference of the results must be applied to the observed height of the vane on the staff , and the cross wires adjusted to this height by means of the screws of the diaphragm at the eye ...
Page 81
... axis g works ( in the instrument from which the sketch was taken ) in a hollow brass cylinder h , which forms the top of a stand used for observing with a repeating circle ; but it may be made in a variety of ways so as to revolve on ...
... axis g works ( in the instrument from which the sketch was taken ) in a hollow brass cylinder h , which forms the top of a stand used for observing with a repeating circle ; but it may be made in a variety of ways so as to revolve on ...
Page 83
... axis of suspension . It can either be used for sketching in the field , being held by this ring at arm's length ; or fixed , for greater accuracy , in a frame which fits upon the top of the legs of a theodolite , with a bar of metal ...
... axis of suspension . It can either be used for sketching in the field , being held by this ring at arm's length ; or fixed , for greater accuracy , in a frame which fits upon the top of the legs of a theodolite , with a bar of metal ...
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Outline of the Method of Conducting a Trigonometrical Survey, for the ... Edward Charles Frome No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
accuracy accurate acres adjustment angles of elevation Apparent altitude ascertained astronomical axis azimuth barometer base boundaries calculated centre chain chronometer circle computed contour lines correction course curvature declination degree depression determined difference of longitude direction divisions earth equal feet field-book fixed Géodesie given Greenwich Greenwich mean ground height horizontal line hour angle inches index error instrument intersection interval laid latitude length lunar distance marked mean solar measured meridian method miles Nautical Almanac necessary noon object observed angles obtained Ordnance Survey parallax parallel pickets place of observation plane plotted pole portions position purpose radius reading reference refraction right ascension roads rods scale screw sections semidiameter sextant sidereal sides sketch slopes spherical spherical excess spirit level star stations subtractive surface taken tangent telescope temperature theodolite thermometer tion traced triangles trigonometrical points Trigonometrical Survey tube vane vertical zenith distance
Popular passages
Page 138 - Ocean, the first thing which strikes us is, that, the north-east and south-east monsoons, which are found the one on the north and the other on the south side of the...
Page 140 - An Account of the Measurement of an Arc of the Meridian, extending from Dunnose, in the Isle of Wight, Latitude 50° 37
Page 73 - AB, aBA, 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 g AD, then * " Trigonometrical Survey,
Page 74 - BA, the sum of the two refractions ; the rule for the mean refraction then in this case is, subtract the depression from the sum of the contained arc and the elevation, and half the remainder is the mean refraction *. The...
Page 81 - ... indigo), till it nearly reaches to the necks of the bottles, which are then corked for the convenience of carriage. On setting the stand tolerably level by the eye, these corks are both withdrawn, which must be done carefully, and when the tube is nearly level, or the water will be ejected with violence ; and the surface of the water in the bottles, being necessarily on the same level, gives a horizontal line in whatever direction the tube is turned, by which the vane of a levelling staff is...
Page 112 - ... diameter. B, a sliding tube of tin, moving up and down in the pot ; the head of the tube is closed, but has a slit in it, C, to admit of the thermometer passing through a collar of cork, which shuts up the slit where the thermometer is placed. D, thermometer, with so much of the scale left out as may be desirable. E, holes for the escape of steam. The pot is filled four or five inches with pure water ; the thermometer fitted into the aperture in the lid of the sliding tube, by means of a collar...
Page 114 - Assuming 30'00 inches as the average height of the barometer at the level of the sea (which is however too much), the altitude of the upper station is at once obtained by inspection of Table I, correcting for temperature of the stratum of air traversed by table II.
Page 158 - In the orthographic projection, every point of the hemisphere is referred to its diametral plane or base, by a perpendicular let fall on it, so that the representation of the hemisphere thus mapped on its base, is such as it would actually appear to an eye placed at an infinite distance from it. It is obvious, from the annexed figure, that in this projection only the central portions are represented of their true forms, while all the exterior is more and more distorted and crowded together as we...
Page 114 - When the boiling point at the upper station alone is observed, and for the lower the level of the sea, or the register of a distinct barometer is taken, then the barometric reading had better be converted into feet, by the usual method of subtracting its logarithm from 1-47712 (log. of 30 inches) and multiplying by '0006, as the differences in the column of " barometer " vary more rapidly than those in the ''''feet
Page 14 - heliotrope," which is a piece of looking-glass, so adjusted as to reflect the sun directly to any desired point, is the most perfect arrangement. For night signals, an Argand lamp is used ; or, best of all, Drummond's light, produced by a stream of oxygen gas directed through a flame of alcohol upon a ball of lime. Its distinctness is exceedingly increased by a parabolic reflector behind it, or a lens in front of it. Such a light was brilliantly visible at 66 miles distance. (385) Observations of...