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A26664 A short account, of the nature and use of maps as also some short discourses of the properties of the earth, and of the several inhabitants thereof : to which is subjoin'd, A catalogue of the factories and places now in possession of the English, French, Dutch, Spaniards, Portegueze and Danes, both in the East and West-Indies. Alingham, William, fl. 1694-1710. 1698 (1698) Wing A930; ESTC R19265 18,438 64

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Longitudes but they being something foreign to the present Design because not practicable without the knowledge of the nature of Projection and Calculation I purposely neglect them How to measure Distances on right lin'd Maps DIstances are easily Measured on these sort of Maps for having found the two places on the Map whose Distance you require set one foot of the Compasses in one place and extend the other foot to the other this Extent applied either to Bottom Top or Sides of the Map shews you how many Degrees they are distant which multiplied by 70 gives their distance in English Miles if there be any odd Minuits above the degrees for every 6 of them allow 7 Miles But generally to these kind of Maps there is annexed a Scale of Miles so that having the distance betwixt any two places 't is but applying it to this Scale and you have the Miles they are distant by inspection Of the Zones A Zone signifies a Belt or Girdle but here is to be understood a certain quaintity of Land included by one or two Parallels Now the Number of Zones Geographers have divided the Globe into are Five Of which there are two Temperate two Frigid or Frozen and one Torrid The Torrid Zone is that space of Earth contained betwixt the two Tropicks viz. Cancer and Capricorn being in Breadth to 47 Degrees which is 3290 English Miles upon this Zone or Tract of Earth lies most part of Africa a great part of South America also several Islands as Java Sumatra St. Thomas c. The Antients both Philosophers Divines and Poets counted this Zone altogether inhabitable by reason of the extream Heat and therefore termed it intemperate but later Discoveries have prov'd to the contrary The Inhabitants of this Zone are called Amphiscians because they have their shadows both ways at Noon that is one part of the Year it is toward the North the other part toward the South The Temperate Zones are those spaces of Earth included betwixt the Tropicks and Polar Circles the North temperate Zone being that portion of Earth contained betwixt the Tropick of Cancer and Artick Circle the South Temperate Zone is that part or portion of Earth bounded by the Tropick of Capricorn and Antarctick Circle each of these Zones are in breadth 43 Degrees that is 3010 Miles in the Northern Temperate Zone lies almost all Europe and the North part of Africa as also a considerable part of Asia and America the Southern Temperate Zone is not so well known to us it being far distant from our Habitation These Zones are termed Temperate because the Sun-beams being cast Obliquely cannot create that excessive heat as they do where they fall Perpendicular They in some measure pertake of the Extremities of Heat and Cold proceeding from the Torrid and Frigid Zones those that inhabit in these Zones are called Heteroscians because their shadows is but one way The Frigid or Frozen Zones are those two tracts of Earth environ'd by the two Polar Circles that Enclosed by the Artick Circle is called the Northern Frigid Zone the other Encompassed is the Southern Frigid Zone their Diameter is 47 Degrees which is 3290 English Miles Under the Northern Frigid Zone lies Greenland Lapland Nova Zembla and part of the Tartarian Ocean whether there is any Land in the Southern Frigid Zone is not known to us that inhabit this part of the Earth The Coldness of these Zones is caused from the very Oblique falling of the Sun's Rays upon the Earth's Surface from which his Action is so small that the heat proceeding from him in the warmest day they there have is scarce sufficient to melt the Congealed Rocks of Ice and Snow Those that inhabit these parts of the Earth are called Periscians because their shadows are thrown quite round them they are under great inconveniencies First by reason of the extream Cold they suffer and secondly because their whole year is but one Day and Night for when the Sun is once risen he sets not again for half a Year together and when he sets rises not again for as long a time Of the Climates THe Climates are certain spaces of Earth limited by two Parallels distant from the Equinoctial toward each Pole the difference betwixt the Zones and Climates is this The principal Office of the Zones is to distinguish the quality of the Air in respect of Heat and Cold and the alteration of Shadows But the office of the Climates is to shew the greatest difference in the length of the Days and Nights as also the Variation in the rising and seting of the Stars Those that live under the Equator have their Day and Night equal but those places that recede so far from the Equator as to make the difference of the longest artificial Day half an hour longer than it is where the longest day is 12 hours and a half there ends the first Climate and there the second begins if therefore according to the increase of days the Climates be reckoned there will be 24 in each Hemisphere that is in all 48 counting no farther than the Polar Circles for the places in that parallel of Latitude conciding with either Polar Circle have their longest day above 24 hours long Now Geographers have given Names only to 9 of those in the Northern Hemisphere and these Names are taken from the most famous places through which the Parallel Circles pass that bound them As Dia-Meroes Dia-Syenes Dia-Alexandrias Dia-Rhodu Dia-Rhomes Dia-Pontu Dia-Boristhenes Dia-Britanias Dia-Tanaidos The Southern Climates are distinguished by the Word Ante as Ante Dia Meroes Ate Dia Synenes c. Of the properties of the several Inhabitants of the Earth THose People living put under the Equator have great Heat having two Summers one when he passes the first of Aries the other when he passeth the first point of Libra and has also two Winters which are when he passes the first points of Cancer and Capricorne for then the Sun is farthest remote from those People though not so remote but that their Winters are much hotter than our Summers whence 't is evident their two Summers are our Spring and Autumn and our Winter and Summer their two Winters their Noon-Shades are thrown both to the North and South and sometimes directly under them that is they have none at all Their Artificial Day is always just 12 Hours long they see the whole Phaenomenae of the Heavens for all the Planets and Stars to those Inhabitants do Arise Culminate and Set once in 24 Hours Secondly For those who inhabit betwixt the Equinoctial and Topick of Cancer they have some Seasons as the former viz. two Summers and two Winters for the Sun twice a Year passeth there Zenith their Noon-shadows are likewise thrown both to the North and South part of Heaven and sometimes directly under them their longest day is something longer then 12 Hours Thirdly The Inhabitants under the Tropick of Cancer that is such People that have their Zenith in the
A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE Nature and Use OF MAPS AS ALSO Some short Discourses of the Properties of the Earth and of the several Inhabitants thereof To which is Subjoin'd A Catalogue of the Factories and places now in possession of the English French Dutch Spaniards Portegueze and Danes both in the East and West-Indies LONDON Printed and are to be Sold by Mr. Mount at the Postern on Tower-Hill Mr. Lea at the Atlas and Hercules in Cheapside Mr. Worgan Mathematical Instrument maker under St. Dunstan's Church Fleet street and William Alingham Mathematick-Teacher in 〈…〉 nel-Row Westminster 1698. TO THE READER Reader THE design of the Ensuing Treatise is a short Account of the Nature and Vse of Maps a knowledge of great advantage to several sorts of People and the principal branch of that noble Science of Geography which informs you in the Nature Property and Magnitude not only of the whole Earth but also of each distinct and particular part thereof For by this Science the Divine Merchant Souldier and Traveller may without danger of those apparent hazards they are like to fall under take a particular View of those vast and pleasant Countries they have occasion to visit or mention in their several Vocations Such with many other are the advantages of this Excellent Science But leaving this I shall give you a short account of the ensuing Treatise which as the Title informs you is the Nature and use of Maps in which I have incerted such Discourses as is requisite to give you a clear understanding of the Nature and Reason of their projection Next I proceed to their Vse in knowing how to find out any place by the most practical and Common Methods yet known and also how to Measure the Distance betwixt two places when found in any Map with other pleasant Accounts of the Distinction and Division of the Earth into Zones Climates and Parallels Lastly I have added a Catalogue of the Places and Factories now in posession of the English French Dutch Spanniards Portugueze and Danes both in the East and West-Indies as they were Collected by an Ingenious Author all which is humbly presented to those whose Genious leads them to the consideration of such Excellent Inquiries A NEW MAPP OF ALL THE EARTH OF THE EARTH THE Earth was in the Beginning by Command of the Most High created out of a Chaos or a confused Heap which before had no Form and was made a Habitation for Man to dwell upon that for a time he might Contemplate upon the inferiour Works of his Creator The Description of this Earth is termed Geography and the Figure that the Earth and Water do together Constitute is by many Observations and Experiments prov'd to be round or in form of a Globe hanging by nothing in the Air and by the most Accurate Observations its Circumference is found near 24971 English Miles and consequently its Diameter 7291 of the said Miles as has been found by the late Experiments of several Nations The greatest part of this Globe is covered with Water for ought we yet know which at the Creation by the Almighty Decree was gathered into one place call'd the Sea This Ball or Globe of Earth and Water is covered with a thin subtile matter call'd Air by which it is rendred Habitable in the Center of this Globe is an Actractive Power by vertue whereof all heavy Bodies though loosed from it will again return and cling to it by which faculty 't is defended from Dissolution in not permiting the least part thereof to be seperated from it This Globe by its or the Suns twofold motion enjoys the grateful Vicissitudes of Day and Night Winter and Summer the first by turning upon its own Axis once in 24 Hours and the second by having the said Axis carried about the Sun in the space of one Year by some unknown principle of Nature during the time of its other Revolution and this Axis not being perpendicular to the plain in which the said Annual Motion is performed causeth one Hemisphere to have more of the Sun 's Light for one half Year and the other Hemisphere for the other Arguments for proving the Spherick or Globular form of the Earth A Globe or Sphere is a perfect round solid Body contained under one Surface in the midst of which is a point call'd the Center from whence all Lines drawn to the out-side are equal these Lines are termed Semidiameters Of this Form and Figure is the whole Earth and Sea as we have reason to conclude from several undoubted Observations and Experiments the principal of which follows First Eclipses of the Moon which are caused by the Earths coming betwixt the Sun and Her for the Moon having no light but what she receives from the Sun is hindred of it by the Opaque Body of the Earth who interposing betwixt the Sun and Moon casts her shaddow upon the Moon which to us appears Circular thereon and therefore according to Optick Principles the Earth from whence it proceeds is a Spherick or Globular Body Secondly Eclipses of the Sun which are caused by the Moon 's passing betwixt him and those places where he appears Eclipsed for unless the Earth were Globular as Astronomers have assumed it the time when and place where Solar Eclipses should happen could not be determin'd but seeing both time and place is nicely limited their supposition of the Earth's roundess must needs be true Thirdly Because all the Phenomenae do Rise Culminate and Set sooner to the Eastern then to Western Inhabitants as has been observed by those who have carried correct Time-keepers to Sea and this proportionally according to the roundness of the Earth Fourthly Viewing from the shoar a Ship a good distance from you at first you shall only perceive her Top-sails but as she approaches nearer you shall see her Lower-sails and at last her Hull which I think is an Evident Proof of the Earth's Sphericity for did not the Globosity of the Water interpose betwixt our sight and the Ship we might more easily see her Hull than her Top-sails at first Fifthly Our Modern Navigators in their Voyages especially those that have been made round the World by Drake and Cavendish make it very apparent for sailing Eastward they have without turning back arived to the place from whence they first set Sail only they came short home by one Day and Night that is they were absent 24 Hours more by their own reckoning than by the account of them kept at Home which thing further Confirms the Earth's Sphericity Sixthly It is found by daily Practice that the Degrees of every parallel upon Earth have the same proportion to the Degrees of the Equinoctial as the Degrees of the like parallel of an Artificial Globe has to a Degree of the Equinoctial thereon described Seventhly and Lastly Common Experience shows us That sailing or going towards the North we raise the North-Pole and Northern Stars and on the contrary do depress the South-Pole and