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Surveying instruments of Greece and Rome / M.J.T. Lewis.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Lewis, M. J. T., 1938- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Surveying--Greece--Instruments.
Surveying.
Surveying--Rome--Instruments.
Surveying--History.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xx, 389 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).
Edition:
1st ed.
Other Title:
Surveying Instruments of Greece & Rome
Place of Publication:
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2001.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
The Greeks and, especially, the Romans are famous for the heroic engineering of their aqueducts, tunnels and roads. They also measured the circumference of the earth and the heights of mountains with fair precision. This book presents new translations (from Greek, Latin, Arabic, Hebrew and Syriac) of all the ancient texts concerning surveying, including major sources hitherto untapped. It explores the history of surveying instruments, notably the Greek dioptra and the Roman libra, and with the help of tests with reconstructions explains how they were used in practice. This is a subject which has never been tackled before in anything like this depth. The Greeks emerge as the pioneers of instrumental surveying and, though their equipment and methods were simple by modern standards, they and the Romans can be credited with a level of technical sophistication which must count as one of the greatest achievements of the ancient world.
Contents:
Instruments and Methods
Precursors of the Greeks
Measuring distances
Orientation and right angles
Measuring heights
Levelling
Background to the dioptra
The sighting tube
Astronomical instruments
The Hipparchan dioptra
The measuring rod
Gamaliel's tube
Philo's level and staff
The dioptra
The treatises
The sources of the treatises
The minor sources
The plane astrolabe
The standard dioptra
Hero's dioptra
Other surveys
Chronological conclusions
Testing a reconstructed dioptra
The libra
The evidence
Testing a reconstructed libra
The groma
Grids
The groma and its use
The hodometer
Practical Applications
Measurement of the earth
Mountain heights
Canals and aqueducts
Early canal schemes
Aqueduct surveying
The Nimes aqueduct and others
The challenges of surveying
Tunnels
Categories
Alignment
Level
Meeting
Instruments
Roman roads
Interpolation and extrapolation
Successive approximation
Dead reckoning
Geometrical construction
The Sources
Hero of Alexandria: Dioptra
Julius Africanus: Cesti 1 15
Anonymus Byzantinus: Geodesy
Al-Karaji: The Search for Hidden Waters XXIII
The basic elements (Chapter 1)
Background to the dioptra (Chapter 2)
The dioptra (Chapter 3)
The libra (Chapter 4)
The groma (Chapter 5)
The hodometer (Chapter 6)
Measurement of the earth (Chapter 7)
Mountain heights (Chapter 8).
Notes:
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).
Includes bibliographical references (p. 355-368) and indexes.
ISBN:
1-107-12208-2
0-521-11065-3
9786610432974
0-511-17450-0
1-280-43297-7
0-511-48303-1
0-511-15444-5
0-511-04720-7
0-511-32834-6
OCLC:
559606818

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