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Gunter, Edmund, 1581-1626 English
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Canon triangulorum, or Tables of artificiall sines and tangents, to a radius of 10000,0000 parts, and each minute of the quadrant. By Edm. Gunter Professor of Astronomie in Gresham College.
Canon triangulorum, or Tables of artificiall sines and tangents, to a radius of 10000,0000 parts, and each minute of the quadrant. By Edm. Gunter Professor of Astronomie in Gresham College.
The description and vse of the sector : for such as are studious of mathematicall practise.
The description and vse of the sector : for such as are studious of mathematicall practise.
The works of Edmund Gunter : containing the description and use of the sector, cross-staff, bow, quadrant, and other instruments : with a canon of artificial sines and tangents to a radius of 10.00000 parts, and the logarithms from an unite to 10000 : the uses whereof are illustrated in the practice of arithmetick, geometry, astronomy, navigation, dialling, and fortification / and some questions in navigation added by Mr. Henry Bond, teacher of mathematicks in Ratcliff, near London ; to which is added, the description and use of another sector and quadrant, both of them invented by Mr. Sam. Foster, late professor of astronomy in Gresham Colledge, London, furnished with more lines, and differing from those of Mr. Gunters both in form and manner of working.
The works of Edmund Gunter : containing the description and use of the sector, cross-staff, bow, quadrant, and other instruments : with a canon of artificial sines and tangents to a radius of 10.00000 parts, and the logarithms from an unite to 10000 : the uses whereof are illustrated in the practice of arithmetick, geometry, astronomy, navigation, dialling, and fortification / and some questions in navigation added by Mr. Henry Bond, teacher of mathematicks in Ratcliff, near London ; to which is added, the description and use of another sector and quadrant, both of them invented by Mr. Sam. Foster, late professor of astronomy in Gresham Colledge, London, furnished with more lines, and differing from those of Mr. Gunters both in form and manner of working.