Academia scientiarum, or, The academy of sciences being a short and easie introduction to the knowledge of the liberal arts and sciences, with the names of those famous authors that have written on every particular science : in English and Latine / by D. Abercromby ...

About this Item

Title
Academia scientiarum, or, The academy of sciences being a short and easie introduction to the knowledge of the liberal arts and sciences, with the names of those famous authors that have written on every particular science : in English and Latine / by D. Abercromby ...
Author
Abercromby, David, d. 1701 or 2.
Publication
London :: Printed by H.C. for J. Taylor, L. Meredith, T. Bennet, R. Wilde ...,
1687.
Rights/Permissions

To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.

Subject terms
Knowledge, Theory of.
Philosophy -- Early works to 1800.
Science -- Early works to 1800.
Intellectual life.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A26553.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Academia scientiarum, or, The academy of sciences being a short and easie introduction to the knowledge of the liberal arts and sciences, with the names of those famous authors that have written on every particular science : in English and Latine / by D. Abercromby ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A26553.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 15, 2024.

Pages

Page 133

Sectio Vigesima secunda. Ars Nautica.

ARS Nautica, sive Histiodromica ea est quae docet qui dirigi de∣beat navis per maria ad propositum portum.

Haec ars requirit notitiam pyxidis Nauticae, & Bolidis, orae Maritimae, Promontoriorum, Rupium, Portuum distantiarum inter loca, aestuum Ma∣ritimorum, latitudinis & longitudinis cujusque loci, instrumentorum pari∣ter variorum ad investigandam syde∣rum altitudinem, ut Baculi decussati, Quadrantis, Nocturnalis, Scalarum planarum, Scalarum Gunteri, &c.

Pyxis Nautica est planum rotun∣dum, cujus circumferentia in 32 par∣tes aequales dividitur rectis lineis per centrum transeuntibus quae Rhombi dicuntur.

Page 135

Altitudo poli Navigantibus adeo utilis sic invenitur: Observa primo Meridianam solis altitudinem ope astrolabii, aut alterius cujuspiam in∣strumenti, tum substrahe declinatio∣nem solis ex altitudine jam inventa so∣lis, ope instrumenti, si declinatio solis versus polum conspicuum sit, aut adde declinationem solis observatae altitudi∣ni si sol declinaverit versus polum me∣ridionalem, residuum aut summa fu∣tura est altitudo aequatoris, cujus complementum est semper altitudo poli: Itaque si altitudo aequatoris su∣pra horizontem nostrum sit graduum sexaginta, altitudi poli futura est gra∣duum triginta: Quia si addas 30 ipsis 60, summa futura est 90; & si polus 10 tantum supra horizontem gradibus extet, aequator supra eundem extabit 80, quia hic numerus est complemen∣tum illius.

Si posset construi Clepsydra, aut ho∣rologium quod ab accurata mensura temporis parum aberraret: Illius ope

Page 137

inveniri possent hoc modo longitudi∣num differentiae: Aptetur horologium ita ut dum solvit navis ostendat horas loci unde discedimus, deinde inter navigandum nunquam cesset: Cumque libuerit scire longitudinem loci in quo sumus, ex observatione coelesti inqui∣ratur illius loci hora, quae si omnino convenerit cum hora quam horologi∣um indicat, certum erit nos esse sub eo unde discessimus meridiano, si vero plures horas observatione invenimus, quam horologium indicet, progressi sumus versus ortum, si pauciores de∣fleximus versus occidentem, dignos∣ceturque differentia longitudinum, si reducantur differentiae horarum in gradus, & minuta graduum.

Authores.

Sellerius, Everardus, Wrightius, &c.

Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem? Please contact us.