Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/08/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Metric, shmetric. Therer is another measurement system that a large portion of the transportation industry uses. Distance is measured in nautical miles, approximately one minute of arc at the Equator. Speed is described in knots, one nautical mile per hour. The most absurd of these units in common use is the fathom. A fathom is the (archaic) unit of measurement for depth in most maritime countries and also for lengths of rope or cables. Originally it was the length of rope that could be held between a man's outstretched arms, hence Munchkins and Vikings must have had different sized fathoms. The Brits standardized on the length of the King's arms. In Arthurian times, the fathom was five feet. Interestingly, the foot is another measure of length based on a portion of human anatomy. In this case it was determined by the length of the King's foot. Thus a five foot fathom implies that Arthur was a small man with big feet. By the time of Charles the First, the fathom had grown to about five and a half feet. Queen Elizabeth had long arms but very small feet so her favorite mariner, Sir Walter Raleigh used a six foot fathom. And so it has come down to us. The modern history of the fathom is equally confusing. Samuel Clemens, as an apprentice Mississippi riverboat pilot was afflicted with a bad lisp which made it impossible for him to correctly pronounce some words beginning with "t". Rather than call out a lead line sounding of two fathoms as "mark foo", he substituted the old English word "twain". Had he been working on the railroad, he probably would have chosen another word. Since the draft of the Mississippi riverboats was always less than 12 feet, the refrain "mark twain" meant good times ahead, particularly if headed toward New Orleans. Despite its colorful and confusing history, the fathom is slowly being abandoned in most seafaring countries. A rather mundane metric system is being adopted. "Mark Twain" is now 3.6512 meters. Huck Finn would be appalled. I hope this makes everything perfectly clear. Larry Z