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Assuming every thousand fathoms roughly to represent a geographicalmile, the area would be of nine square miles.
2
Kladen informs us that the sedimentary matter transported to the sea by the Rhine would amount to a cubic geographicalmile in five thousand years.
3
The Mississippi-a river "undercharged with sediment"-witha mean discharge of about ten times that of the Rhine, deposits a cubic geographicalmile in thirty-three years.]
4
On the surface of the earth, at the equator, each side of this polygon would be one-sixtieth of a geographicalmile, or 101.46 feet.
5
This man returned on the seventh day, having travelled 240 geographicalmiles.
6
It is oblong in shape and of small extent-about270 square geographicalmiles.
7
This point was now about 120 geographicalmiles to the north of us.
8
We followed this until it lost itself, thirty geographicalmiles within the Barrier.
9
The length of this line was measured as five and a half geographicalmiles.
10
In its greatest length it is about sixty, in its greatest breadth about twenty-four, geographicalmiles.
11
The miles mentioned in the preceding paragraph are geographicalmiles, of 60 to a degree of latitude.
12
Its greatest length is two hundred and twenty geographicalmiles; its greatest width one hundred and forty.
13
My opportunities of observation consisted of a ride of ninety geographicalmiles to Bathurst, in a W.N.W.
14
The distance to the Barrier edge on the north was, at a guess, about twenty geographicalmiles.
15
Sixty geographicalmiles in two days and a night is good going-aboutas good as can be.
16
S. latitude, and 20 geographicalmiles inland, including ''the islands belonging thereto by the law of nations.''