XLIX. An account of observations made on the mountain Schehallien for finding its attraction
- 31 December 1775
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London
- Vol. 65, 500-542
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstl.1775.0050
Abstract
In the year 1772, I presented the forgoing proposal, for measuring the attraction of some hill in this kingdom by astronomical observations, to the Royal Society; who, ever inclined to promote useful observations which may enlarge our views of nature, honoured it with their approbation. A committee was in consequence appointed, of which number i was one, to consider of a proper hill whereon to try the experiment, and to prepare every thing necessary for carrying the design into execution. The Society was already provided with a ten-feet zenith sector made by Mr. Sisson, furnished with an achromatic object glass, the principal instrument requisite for this experiment, the same which I took with me to St. Helena in the year 1761; which wanted nothing to make it an excellent instrument but to have the plumb-line made adjustable, so as to pass before and bisect a fine point at the centre of the instrument. This was ordered to be done, and a new wooden stand provided for it, capable of procuring a motion of the sector about a vertical axis, by means of which it could be more easily brought into the place of the meridian, or turned half round for repeating the observations with the plane of the instrument placed the contrary way, in order to find the error of the line of collimation.Keywords
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