| Sir Edward Herbert Bunbury - Classical geography - 1879 - 802 pages
...these things,] the correct course would be for any person attempting to draw up a map of the world, to lay down as the basis of it those points that were determined by the most correct observations, and to fit in to it those derived -from other sources, sa that their positions may suit... | |
| Edward Herbert Bunbury - Classical geography - 1883 - 800 pages
...these things,] the correct course would be for any person attempting to draw up a map of the world, to lay down as the basis of it those points that were determined by the most correct observations, and to fit in to it those derived from other sources, so that their positions may suit... | |
| Edward Herbert Bunbury - Geography, Ancient - 1883 - 792 pages
...these things,] the correct course would be for any person attempting to draw up a map of the world, to lay down as the basis of it those points that were determined by the most correct observations, and to fit in to it those derived from other sources, so that their positions may suit... | |
| Francis John Monahan - Administrative law - 1925 - 282 pages
...Langlois, GdoA ie MS. of Ptolemy's Geography preserved at ois, Geographic de PtoUmee, Paris, 1867). reform the map of the world, in accordance with the...with the principal points thus laid down in the first instance ".' 1 The method of indicating geographical position by latitude and longitude had been adopted... | |
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