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Weighing the World is a revealing behind-the-scenes look at the
scientific events leading to modern map making written by one of
the world's master surveyors. Edwin Danson, using a similar
approach to his earlier best seller, "Drawing the Line: How Mason
and Dixon Surveyed the Most Important Border in America" (Wiley,
2000) takes us on a journey telling the story of this experiment
that has not been written about in over two hundred years. National
jealousies, commercial and political rivalry were the underlying
causes for many of the eighteenth century's wars but war also
provided the stimulus for much commercial effort and scientific
innovation. Armies equipped with the latest weaponry marched about
the countryside, led by generals with only the vaguest of maps at
their disposal. At the start of the century there were no maps,
anywhere in the world. While there were plenty of atlases and
sketch maps of countries, regions and districts, with few
exceptions they were imperfect renditions in nature. No one knew,
with any certainty the shape of the earth or what lay beneath its
surface. Was it hollow or was it solid? Were the Andes the highest
mountain on the Earth or was it the peak of Tenerife? Was the Earth
a perfect sphere or was it slightly squashed as Sir Isaac Newton
prophesized? Just how did you accurately measure the planet? The
answers to these and other questions about the nature of the Earth,
answers we now take for granted, were complete mysteries. Danson
presents the stories of the scientists and scholars that had to
scale the Andes, cut through tropical forests and how they handled
the hardships they faced in the attempt to revolutionize our
understanding of the planet.
At the start of the 18th century there were no maps, anywhere in
the world. No one knew, with any certainty, the shape of the earth
or what lay beneath its surface. Was it hollow or solid? Were the
Andes the highest mountains on the Earth or was it the peak of
Tenerife? Was the Earth a perfect sphere or slightly squashed as
Sir Isaac Newton prophesized? In Weighing the World,
master-surveyor and bestselling author Edwin Danson presents the
stories of the scientists and scholars who cut their way through
jungles, crossed the artic tundra, and braved the world's highest
mountains to discover the truth about our Earth. Danson also
recounts the extraordinary experiment, conducted on a desolate
Scottish peak by Astromer Royal Neville Maskelyne, to understand
the so-called "attraction of mountains," the curious capability
mountians have to bend gravity, without which it would be
impossible to accurately map Earth's surface. A spell-binding
scientific adventure story, Weighing the World will intrigue anyone
curious about the shape of our planet and how we have come to know
it.
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