Re: Hines- Fool Or Fraud?
- From: Horace LaBadie <hwlabadiejr@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 12 Sep 2005 11:47:36 -0400
In article <pq5bi1dd32tfil23okmduuacbekhribhd0@xxxxxxx>,
nospam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> Apparently on date Mon, 12 Sep 2005 09:06:00 -0400, Horace LaBadie
> <hwlabadiejr@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> said:
>
> >In article <piiai15gao333eao6cpav10s98pgpnj2ji@xxxxxxx>,
> > nospam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> >
> >
> >SNIP
> >
> >>
> >> I got this off a website so it may not be an accurate translation. But
> >> this
> >> section is XVI and about the wonders of Greenland:
> >>
> >> -----------------
> >> As soon as one has passed over the deepest part of the ocean, he will
> >> encounter
> >> such masses of ice in the sea, that I know no equal of it anywhere else in
> >> all
> >> the earth. Sometimes these ice fields are as flat as if they were frozen
> >> on
> >> the
> >> sea itself. They are about four or five ells thick* and extend so far out
> >> from
> >> the land that it may mean a journey of four days or more to travel across
> >> them.
> >> There is more ice to the northeast and north of the land than to the
> >> south,
> >> southwest, and west; con-sequently, whoever wishes to make the land should
> >> sail
> >> around it to the southwest and west, till he has come past all those
> >> places
> >> where ice may be looked for, and approach the land on that side. It has
> >> (...)
> >> ------------
> >>
> >> (* - I think this would translate to about three or four feet thick)
> >
> >
> >No. An English ell is 45 inches. Four to five ells equals 15-19 feet.
> >(Other ells may vary, but still more than three feet to an ell.)
>
> Blimey, so when they describe the Greenland Shark as being up to 30 ells
> long,
> they were catching sharks 110 feet long.
>
> Amazing. These days we only find 15 foot long ones, with the record at 21
> foot.
> And they report they caught a "rorqual" whale that measured 500 foot long.
> And
> even the seals weighed in at between 15 for the smallest species, to 60 feet
> long for the bearded seal. I never knew the animals of the Arctic were so
> large. But it must be so if that's how long an ell was.
>
Ells vary, but none is one foot. All are two feet or more, most greater
than three.
HWL
.
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