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Hence after one mile the earth drops approximately 8 inches.
 
Hence after one mile the earth drops approximately 8 inches.
  
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Ergo, looking across 30 miles the Pythagorean theorem becomes:
 
Ergo, looking across 30 miles the Pythagorean theorem becomes:
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Hence after 30 miles the earth drops approximately 600 feet.
 
Hence after 30 miles the earth drops approximately 600 feet.
  
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Whenever I have doubts about the shape of the earth I simply walk outside my home, down to the beach, and perform this simple test. The same result comes up over and over throughout the year under a plethora of different atmospheric conditions.
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''Whenever I have doubts about the shape of the earth I simply walk outside my home, down to the beach, and perform this simple test. The same result comes up over and over throughout the year under a plethora of different atmospheric conditions.'' - Tom Bishop
  
 
There are a number of different methods to calculate the drop of the Round Earth. Go ahead and look some up try a few out. You will find that the drop while looking over 30 miles is on the order of 600 feet.
 
There are a number of different methods to calculate the drop of the Round Earth. Go ahead and look some up try a few out. You will find that the drop while looking over 30 miles is on the order of 600 feet.

Revision as of 12:33, 3 May 2014

The following sections contain experimental evidence in favor of a Flat Earth.

Sinking Ship Effect

It is proven that the ship does not sink behind a hill of water, but that it is actually perspective which hides it. This demonstrates that the earth is not a globe. There have been experiments where half-sunken ships have been restored by simply looking at them through telescopes, showing that they are not actually hiding behind "hills of water".

Main article: Sinking Ship Effect

The English Mechanic

From The English Mechanic, a scientific journal:

    "The Flat Earth: another Bedford Canal experiment" (Bernard H.Watson, et al),
    ENGLISH MECHANIC, 80:160, 1904
    
    Bedford Canal, England. A repeat of the 1870 experiment
    
    "A train of empty turf-boats had just entered the Canal from the river Ouse, and
    was about proceeding to Ramsey. I arranged with the captain to place the shallowest
    boat last in the train, and to take me on to Welney Bridge, a distance of six
    miles. A good telescope was then fixed on the lowest part of the stern of the last
    boat. The sluice gate of the Old Bedford Bridge was 5ft. 8in. high, the turf-boat
    moored there was 2ft. 6in. high, and the notice board was 6ft. 6in. from the water.
    
    The sun was shining strongly upon them in the direction of the south-southwest; the
    air was exceedingly still and clear, and the surface of the water smooth as a
    molten mirror, so that everything was favourable for observation. At 1.15 p.m. the
    train started for Welney. As the boats gradually receded, the sluice gate, the
    turf-boat and the notice board continued to be visible to the naked eye for about
    four miles. When the sluice gate and the turf-boat (being of a dark colour) became
    somewhat indistinct, the notice board (which was white) was still plainly visible,
    and remained so to the end of six miles. But on looking through the telescope all
    the objects were distinctly visible throughout the whole distance. On reaching
    Welney Bridge I made very careful and repeated observations, and finding several
    men upon the banks of the canal, I called them to look through the telescope. They
    all saw distinctly the white notice board, the sluice gate, and the black turf-boat
    moored near them.
    
    Now, as the telescope was 18in. above the water, The line of sight would touch the
    horizon at one mile and a half away (if the surface were convex). The curvature of
    the remaining four miles and a half would be 13ft. 6in. Hence the turf-boat should
    have been 11ft., the top of the sluice gate 7ft. 10in., and the bottom of the
    notice board 7ft. below the horizon.
    
    My recent experiment affords undeniable proof of the Earth's unglobularity, because
    it rests not on transitory vision; but my proof remains printed on the negative of
    the photograph which Mr.Clifton took for me, and in my presence, on behalf of
    J.H.Dallmeyer, Ltd.
    
    A photograph can not 'imagine' nor lie!"

The Bishop Experiment

California Monterey Bay is a relatively long bay that sits next to the Pacific Ocean. The exact distance between the extremes of the Monterey Bay, Lovers Point in Pacific Grove and Lighthouse State Beach in Santa Cruz, is 33.4 statute miles. See this map.

On a very clear and chilly day it is possible to see Lighthouse Beach from Lovers Point and vice versa. With a good telescope, laying down on the stomach at the edge of the shore on the Lovers Point beach 20 inches above the sea level it is possible to see people at the waters edge on the adjacent beach 33 miles away near the lighthouse. The entire beach is visible down to the water splashing upon the shore. Upon looking into the telescope I can see children running in and out of the water, splashing and playing. I can see people sun bathing at the shore and teenagers merrily throwing Frisbees to one another. I can see runners jogging along the water's edge with their dogs. From my vantage point the entire beach is visible.

IF the earth is a globe, and is 24,900 English statute miles in circumference, the surface of all standing water must have a certain degree of convexity--every part must be an arc of a circle. From the summit of any such arc there will exist a curvature or declination of 8 inches in the first statute mile. In the second mile the fall will be 32 inches; in the third mile, 72 inches, or 6 feet, as shown in this chart. Ergo; looking at the opposite beach 30 miles away there should be a bulge of water over 600 feet tall blocking my view. There isn't.

Suppose that the earth is a sphere with a radius of 3,963 miles. If you are at a point P on the earth's surface and move tangent to the surface a distance of 1 mile then you can form a right angled triangle as in the diagram.

Looking over a distance of 1 mile, we can use the theorem of Pythagoras:

a2 = 3,9632 + 12 = 15,705,370

and when we square root that figure we get a = 3,963.000126 miles

Thus your position is 3,963.000126 - 3,963 = 0.000126 miles above the surface of the earth.

0.000126 miles = 12 in * 5,280 ft * 0.000126 mi = 7.98 inches

Hence after one mile the earth drops approximately 8 inches.


Ergo, looking across 30 miles the Pythagorean theorem becomes:

a2 = 39632 +302 = 15,706,269

and when we square root that figure we get a = 3,963.113549 miles

Thus your position is 3,963.113549 - 3,963 = 0.113549 miles above the surface of the earth

0.113549 miles = 5,280 ft * 0.113549 mi = 599.53872 feet

Hence after 30 miles the earth drops approximately 600 feet.


Whenever I have doubts about the shape of the earth I simply walk outside my home, down to the beach, and perform this simple test. The same result comes up over and over throughout the year under a plethora of different atmospheric conditions. - Tom Bishop

There are a number of different methods to calculate the drop of the Round Earth. Go ahead and look some up try a few out. You will find that the drop while looking over 30 miles is on the order of 600 feet.

Further Flat Earth Evidence

  • A woman named Lady Blount was among the first to peer review Rowbotham's work: Lady Blount Trials