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Re: History of Stone Weight

To: mmmbob@adelphia.net, mg-mmm@Autox.Team.Net
Subject: Re: History of Stone Weight
From: Cnowlan@aol.com
Date: Wed, 12 Jan 2005 13:38:13 EST
Reply-to: Cnowlan@aol.com
Sender: owner-mg-mmm@Autox.Team.Net
Bob, 
 
    I was curious myself so did a bit of "Googling" and  came up with the 
following ( cut & paste job)....
 
 
In techniques for measuring weights, the Babylonians made important  
improvements upon the invention of the balance. Instead of just comparing the  
weights 
of two objects, they compared the weight of each object with a set of  stones 
kept just for that purpose. In the ruins of their cities, archaeologists  
have found some of these stones finely shaped and polished. It is believed that 
 
these were the world's first weight standards. 
The Babylonians used different stones for weighing different commodities. In  
modern English history, the same basis has been used for weight measurements. 
 For the horseman, the "stone" weight was 14 pounds. In weighing wool the 
stone  was 16 pounds. For the butcher and fishmonger, the stone was 8 pounds. 
The 
only  legal stone weight in the imperial system was 14 pounds. 
The Egyptians and the Greeks used a wheat seed as the smallest unit of  
weight, a standard that was very uniform and accurate for the times. The grain  
is 
still in limited use as a standard weight. However, wheat seeds are no longer  
actually put in the pan of the balance scale. Instead, a weight that is  
practically the same as that of an average grain of wheat is arbitrarily  
assigned 
to the grain. The Arabs established a small weight standard for gold,  silver 
and precious stones which very often were a part of trade or barter  deals. 
To weight the small valuable quantities, they used as a weight standard a  
small bean called a karob. This was the origin of the word carat which jewelers 
 
still use to express the weight of gems and precious metals. 
In trading between tribes and nations, many of these methods for measuring  
weights and distances gradually became intermixed, particularly by the Romans  
who spread this knowledge throughout the known world at that time, also adding 
 some standards of their own. As the Roman soldiers marched, they kept track 
of  the distance they traveled by counting paces. A pace was the distance 
covered  from the time one foot touched the ground until that same foot touched 
the  ground again, or the length of a double step. 
Cheers,  
Chris Nowlan

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