mg-mmm
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: History of Stone Weight

To: "Cnowlan@aol.com" <Cnowlan@aol.com>, mmmbob@adelphia.net, mg-mmm@Autox.Team.Net
Subject: Re: History of Stone Weight
From: "Jack Hardy" <jnshardy@earthlink.net>
Date: Wed, 12 Jan 2005 16:51:49 -0800
Domainkey-signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=simple; s=test1; d=earthlink.net; h=Message-ID:X-Priority:Reply-To:X-Mailer:From:To:Subject:Date:MIME-Version:Content-type; b=HreG7x0/+daSeW16/vrhAFyQkiS9oRcQOh7l1b/HQsHHrQo0uNlTId1bNv8KopDk;
Reply-to: "Jack Hardy" <jnshardy@earthlink.net>
Sender: owner-mg-mmm@Autox.Team.Net
All,

When taking a physics course "some" time ago we breifly discussed the Rod,
Stone, Fortnight system of measurement. (;<)

Jack


> [Original Message]
> From: <Cnowlan@aol.com>
> To: <mmmbob@adelphia.net>; <mg-mmm@Autox.Team.Net>
> Date: 1/12/2005 10:38:44 AM
> Subject: Re: History of Stone Weight
>
> 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
>
> ///  unsubscribe/change address requests to majordomo@autox.team.net  or
try
> ///  http://www.team.net/cgi-bin/majorcool
> ///  http://www.team.net/mailman/listinfo
> ///  Archives at http://www.team.net/archive/mg-mmm
> ///  Send list postings to mg-mmm@autox.team.net

///  unsubscribe/change address requests to majordomo@autox.team.net  or try
///  http://www.team.net/cgi-bin/majorcool
///  http://www.team.net/mailman/listinfo
///  Archives at http://www.team.net/archive/mg-mmm
///  Send list postings to mg-mmm@autox.team.net


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>