Abstract
THIS is the fourth edition of a well-known book, of which we shall unfortunately not now have any more new editions from the hand of its lamented author. The book has grown much since its first edition as a separate work in 1860. The chapter on the attraction of table lands, mountains, oceans, &c., has been much enlarged since the first edition, and also the chapter on the determination of the figure of the earth by geodetic operations. A chapter, most valuable to the student of physical mathematics, is inserted on the determination of the ellipticity of the earth (considered as a body whose surface is one of its own equipotential surfaces) from pendulum experiments, the moon's motion, and the precession of the equinoxes, respectively. The student of this subject must carefully bear in mind that no observations taken exterior to the surface of the earth can throw any light whatsoever on the internal arrangement of its matter, inasmuch as, according to the well-known theorems of Gauss, there are an infinite number of ways in which that matter might be conceived as being arranged so as to produce the same external effect. The observations above noticed, however, are calculated to throw light on the question as to whether the surface may, within the limits of approximation, be considered as a surface of equilibrium.
The Figure of the Earth.
By Archdeacon Pratt. (4th Edition. London: Macmilian and Co.)
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STUART, J. The Figure of the Earth . Nature 6, 79–80 (1872). https://doi.org/10.1038/006079b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/006079b0