----------------------------Original message----------------------------
Hi Alice,
The (english) names of parts of the globe can be found in:
- Old Globes of the Netherlands / Peter van der Krogt (Utrecht: HES
Publishers, 1984), pp.30-31 and 277-279.
- Globes from the Western World / Elly Dekker and Peter van der Krogt
(London: Zwemmer, 1993) (esp. pp. 168-169 for the coordinate systems)
- Globi Neerlandici: The production of globes in the Netherlands / Peter van
der Krogt (Utrecht: HES Publishers, 1993).
and in the english language articles in the issues of 'Der Globusfreund',
published by the Internationale Coronelli-Gesellschaft fuer Globen- und
Instrumentenkunde in Vienna, esp.
The study and conservation of globes / A.D. Baynes-Cope. In: Der
Globusfreund 33-34 (1985/86), pp. 1-80.
Peter
At 16:04 26-07-96 EDT, you wrote:
>----------------------------Original message----------------------------
>
> O.K. gang, a little summer challenge from one of our readers
>
> What are all the named parts of a globe?
>
> Is there a nice illustration somewhere that does this? We do not
> really aggressively collect globes here, and the few globe manuals and
> texts found, really do not name the various bells and whistles that
> might cling happily to your personal globe.
>
> You know, "horizon ring," "analemma" and all that...
>
> This seems to be such an obvious thing, but I can't seem to put my
> hands on it. Come to think of it, I am not sure anyone has done this
> for a typical map either. [Is there a typical map?]
>
> Alice Hudson
> Map Division, NYPL
>
>
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Dr Peter van der Krogt
Map historian, Explokart Research Program
FRW-Cartography, University of Utrecht
P.O. Box 80.115
3508 TC UTRECHT, The Netherlands
e-mail: [log in to unmask] or [log in to unmask]
fax: +31 30 254 0604 or +31 15 212 6063
Cartography homepage: http://kartoserver.frw.ruu.nl/
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