( ^37 ) 
14 Poles,or 69r Effglijb miks and 14 Poles ; S Furlongs to a mile, 
and 4© Poles to a Furlong, Which being compared to chat meafure 
of a Degree, which is deliver'din the above-raention'd Fremb Dif- 
courfe, will be found to come very near it , they finding 73 miles 
fen.dit 5000 feet to an E;^glifi mile^ which mai^e 365000 feet ; 
whereas the 69r£^?^//)i5» miles and i4PoIes, found hy MruVormod, 
amount to 367200 feet, reckoning 5280 feet to an E^glijb mile, as 
the true meafure of it is 5 whence the difference between thefe two 
meafures appears to be no more than 2200 feet, which is not half 
an Englijb mile by 440 feet. 
If any one defire to know further the whole Circumference, as al- 
fo the Diameter and Semidiameter of the faid Terraqueous Globe 
according to this meafure^ he will eafily find, ' 
The Circumference to be _ 25056 fere/ 
The Diameter, 7966 ^ ' 
The Semidiameter, 3983 ' 
Obfervatiom made of the late Solar EcHpfe on the Rrll cf 
June, 1676. ft.v. J J 'J 
One, by Framts Smethmck Efquire, as followeth : 
I Ni t ium defe^ioni^ WG[imom(lQni h.y. 50; 2pofl med.ncUem 
Totm hcltpjis duratso, mr£ 2. 4' ^-, 
Tempts obfervatum fuit cum horologt<^ ofcillitario , vibrmte minuta. 
ftcunda, correSioper obfer vat tones. 7ubm adhibit hs fuit bom nets 
pedum 7^. ' 
The other, by Ui.Colfon at IVapping.nw London,cis followeth - 
horohofcilU PBafes^ alt, [ exaltit» 
7.34.50 
7-3^-iojdig, 
7.50.40 
dub.8. 8.34 
8.17.25 
8.27.10 
9'3P 
p.43.— 
^.48.— 
p.54.25 
P-55-55 
4.2 5 
4.28.58 
4.31- 2h 
22.4^17.315. o 
33.10 
33.30 
4 
'If 
I 
i. 
4 
non finita 
finita. j 
Soliictlti '32.10 
31-31 
•.3 8.40 
^•40.48 
7»5 5 ' Uubo epiko £fiim. 
P45 TiHbo optico mefiGir, 
8.18.3d 
8.28.21 
p.40. - 
p.44. 
p.4p. 
^^•55-3<^ 
5^.57. 6 
4.26.5(^^ 
4.25?.52 
4.3 2.1 d 
