A Treatise of Practical Surveying: Which is Demonstrated from Its First Principles ... |
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Page 3
... logarithms from 1 to 10,000 ; and a table of artificial sines , tangents , and se- cants ; also , an example of calculating the con- tents of a survey , according to the method com- monly practised in the Surveyor - General's office of ...
... logarithms from 1 to 10,000 ; and a table of artificial sines , tangents , and se- cants ; also , an example of calculating the con- tents of a survey , according to the method com- monly practised in the Surveyor - General's office of ...
Page 6
... logarithm numbers , sines , tangents , and secants . The second section contains plain trigonometry , right angled and oblique , with its application in determining the measures of inaccessible heights and distances . The third section ...
... logarithm numbers , sines , tangents , and secants . The second section contains plain trigonometry , right angled and oblique , with its application in determining the measures of inaccessible heights and distances . The third section ...
Page 9
... Logarithm Numbers , Sines , Tangents , and Secants . SUR DEFINITION . URVEYING is that art which enables us to give a plan or just representation of any piece or parcel of land , and to determine the content thereof in such measure as ...
... Logarithm Numbers , Sines , Tangents , and Secants . SUR DEFINITION . URVEYING is that art which enables us to give a plan or just representation of any piece or parcel of land , and to determine the content thereof in such measure as ...
Page 66
... to measure the length of any line , knowing the scale by which it was laid down ; and on the contrary , to set off any given distance from any scale . OF LOGARITHMS . to a series of numbers in geometrical 66 GEOMETRICAL , & c .
... to measure the length of any line , knowing the scale by which it was laid down ; and on the contrary , to set off any given distance from any scale . OF LOGARITHMS . to a series of numbers in geometrical 66 GEOMETRICAL , & c .
Page 67
... Logarithms . Numbers . 1 0.00000 10 1.00000 100 2.00000 3.00000 4.00000 , & c . 1000 10000 If several geometrical means ... logarithm an- swering to the number , which is the product of the two proposed numbers . Again when one number is ...
... Logarithms . Numbers . 1 0.00000 10 1.00000 100 2.00000 3.00000 4.00000 , & c . 1000 10000 If several geometrical means ... logarithm an- swering to the number , which is the product of the two proposed numbers . Again when one number is ...
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Common terms and phrases
40 perches ABCD acres altitude Answer base bearing blank line centre chains and links chord circle circumferentor Co-sec Co-sine Co-tang Tang column contained cyphers decimal decimal fraction diameter difference distance line divided divisor draw drawn east edge EXAMPLE feet field-book figures fore four-pole chains half the sum height hypothenuse inches instrument Lat Dep Lat latitude line of numbers logarithm measure meridian distance multiplied needle number of degrees off-sets parallel parallelogram perpendicular piece of ground plane Plate prob PROBLEM proportion protractor quotient radius right angles right line scale of equal SCHOLIUM Secant second station sect semicircle side sights sine square root stationary distance sun's suppose survey taken tance tangent thence theo theodolite THEOREM trapezium triangle ABC trigonometry true amplitude two-pole chains vane variation whence
Popular passages
Page 25 - The circumference of every circle is supposed to be divided into 360 equal parts, called degrees ; and each degree into 60 equal parts, called minutes ; and each minute into 60 equal parts, called seconds ; and these into thirds, &c.
Page 207 - ... that triangles on the same base and between the same parallels are equal...
Page 40 - The angle in a semicircle is a right angle ; the angle in a segment greater than a semicircle is less than a right angle ; and the angle in a segment less than a semicircle is greater than a right angle.
Page 43 - Triangles upon equal bases, and between the same parallels, are equal to one another.
Page 103 - TO THEIR DIFFERENCE ; So IS THE TANGENT OF HALF THE SUM OF THE OPPOSITE ANGLES', To THE TANGENT OF HALF THEIR DIFFERENCE.
Page 31 - Figures which consist of more than four sides are called polygons ; if the sides are all equal to each other, they are called regular polygons. They sometimes are named from the number of. their sides, as a five-sided figure is called a pentagon, one of six sides a hexagon, &"c.
Page 31 - ... they are called regular polygons. They sometimes are named from the number of their sides, as a five-sided figure is called a pentagon, one of. six sides a hexagon, &c. but if their sides are not equal to each other, then they are called irregular polygons, as an irregular pentagon, hexagon, &c.
Page 45 - The hypothenuse of a right-angled triangle may be found by having the other two sides ; thus, the square root of the sum of the squares of the base and perpendicular, will be the hypothenuse. Cor. 2. Having the hypothenuse and one side given to find the other; the square root of the difference of the squares of the hypothenuse and given side will be the required side.
Page 265 - As the length of the whole line, Is to 57.3 Degrees,* So is the said distance, To the difference of Variation required. EXAMPLE. Suppose it be required to run a line which some years ago bore N. 45°.
Page 32 - Things that are equal to one and the same thing are equal to one another." " If equals be added to equals, the wholes are equal." " If equals be taken from equals, the remainders are equal.