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A60281 The hydrostaticks, or, The weight, force, and pressure of fluid bodies, made evident by physical, and sensible experiments together vvith some miscellany observations, the last whereof is a short history of coal, and of all the common, and proper accidents thereof, a subject never treated of before / by G.S. Sinclair, George, d. 1696. 1672 (1672) Wing S3854; ESTC R38925 208,492 331

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that Decemb. 13. 1669 one Doctor Beal found the Mercury in the Baroscope never to be so high as it was then That same very day I found the hight of it 29 inches and nine ten parts which I never observed before And though the day here was dark and the Heavens covered with Clouds yet no rain for many dayes followed but much dryness and fair weather On Saturday night March 26 1670 I found the altitude no more than 27 and nine ten parts This night was exceeding windy with a great rain On February 1 1671. I found the altitude 30 inches and the Heavens most clear But in the most part of May following I have found the hight but 27 inches and five ten parts in which time there was abundance of rain OBSERVATION XIV NOvember 7. 1670. I made exact trial with the Magnetick Needle for knowing the variation and I found it vary from the North three degrees and a half towards the West Hevelius writes from Dantzick to the Royal Society at London Iuly 5. 1670 that it varies with him seven degrees twenty minuts west OBSERVATION XV. DEcember 17. 1669 I observed with a large Quadrant half 9 a clock at night the formost Guard-star when it was in the Meridian and lowest to have 41 degrees 22 minuts of altitude And on Ianuary 7. 1670 at 7 a clock in the morning I found it when it was in the Meridian and highest to have 70 degrees 27 minuts Hence I conclude the elevation of the Pole here to be 55 degrees 54 minuts 30 seconds and consequently as much at Edinburgh because both the places are upon one and the same Parallel OBSERVATION XVI FOr finding the true Meridian follow this method In some convenient place fix two Wyre strings with weights at them that they may hang perpendicular Then in the night time observe when the fourth star of the Plough begins to come near to the lowest part of the Meridian at which time you will find the Polar star highest Then so order the two strings by moving them hither and thither till both of them cover both the said Stars then shall they in that position give you the true South and North. This observation is the product of the seventh OBSERVATION XVII THere fell out in Mid and East-Lothian on Thursday May 11 1671 in the afternoon a considerable shour of hail with thunder and rain It came from the South-west with a great blast of wind and ran alongs from Picts-land-hills North-east towards the Sea coast The hail were big in several places as Musquet Ball and many of them rather oval than round Some persons suffered great loss of their young Pease others of their Glass Windows Eight or ten days before there was a considerable heat and dry VVeather For 20 dayes after cold Easterly winds with rain every day but especially in the end of the Moneth extraordinary rain and mist. This is so much the more to be observed because in this Countrey seldom such extraordinary hail falls out This year the Agues and Trembling Fevers have been most frequent and to many deadly OBSERVATION XVIII I Did hear lately of a curious Experiment in Germany made by a Person of note which I shall briefly in this Observation let the Reader understand And though I have heard since that it is now published in Print yet I hope it will not be impertinent to mention it here especially for their cause who cannot conveniently come to the knowledge of such things And for this reason also that I may explicat the Phenomena thereof from the foregoing doctrine and demonstrat particularly the true cause of that admirable effect that 's seen in it which I desiderat in the publisher The Auctor then takes two Vessels of Brass each one of them in form of half a sphere of a pretty large size Nothing can more fitly represent them for form and quantity than two Bee-skeps Only each of them hath a strong Ring of Brass upon the Center without and they are so contrived by the Artist that their orifices agree most exactly so that when they are united they represent an intire Sphere almost In one of the sides there 's a hole and a Brass Spigot in it through which the whole Air within is exsucted and drawn out namely by the help of the Air-pump And when by several exsuctions the Vessels are made empty the Stop-cock is turned about by which means no Air can come in And they remaining empty are taken from the Pump and do cleave so fast together that though a number of lusty fellows 12 on each side do pull vigorously by help of ropes fastned to the Rings yet are they not able to pull them asunder And because this will not do it he yokes in 12 Coach Horses six on every side yet are they not sufficient though they pull contrariwise to other to make a separation But to let the Spectators see that they may be pulled asunder he yokes in 9 or 10 on every side and then after much whipping and sweating they pull the one from the other The cause of this admirable effect is not the fear of vacuity as some do fancy for if that were all the Horses in Germany would not pull them asunder no not the strength of Angels It must then be some extrinsick weight and force that keeps them together which can be nothing else but the weight of the invironing Air. Because no sooner a force is applied that 's more powerful than the weight of the Air but assoon they come asunder And so neither six men nor six horses on each side are able to do it but nine or ten on each side makes a separation For understanding the true cause of this Phenomenon we must consider that the Vessels are 18 inches in diameter I● this be then according to the last Experiment there are two Pillars of Air each one of them as heavy as a Pillar of Mercury 18 inches thick and 29 inches long by which they are united Or each Pillar of Air is as heavy as a Pillar 0● Water 34 foot high and 18 inches in diameter For finding the weight of it in pounds and consequently the weight of each Pillar of Air by which the two Vessels are united follow this method First multiply 9 the semi-diameter of the Pillar by 54 the circumference and this gives you 486 the half whereof is the bounds of the Area namely 243. And because 34 foot contains 408 inches I multiply 408 by 243 the product whereof is 99144 so many square inches are in a Pillar of Water 34 foot high and 18 inches thick Now seing there are 1728 inches in a cubical foot I divide the number 99144 by this number and I find 57 square foot of Water and more And because every square foot weighs 56 pound Trois I multiply 56 by the number 57 and the product is 3192 pound which is the just weight of a Pillar of Water 34 foot high and 18