8 articles for "Terrestrial"
Terrestrial Cycle [Astro*Index]A cycle on Earth. Any phenomenon which exhibits a repetitive nature with a period which is somewhat constant. Cycles have been studied and calculated for many thousands of categories, including: The population size of foxes, grasshoppers, owls, and salmon; the price of aluminum, butter, corn, eggs, and wheat; the production of coal, cotton, and steel; and such various events as earthquakes, Nile floods, sunspots, business failures, heart attacks, immigrations, war, and hemlines. No simple correlation has been shown between astrology and terrestrial cycles, but the topic is irresistible, and many astrologers claim success at using planetary cycles to predict such activities as stock market prices and the weather.
See also:Terrestrial Latitude [Astro*Index]
♦ Cycle ♦ Solar Cycles
Angular distance measured north and south of the Earth's equator along a meridian to a given location.
See also:Terrestrial Latitude [Munkasey M.]
♦ Earth's Equator ♦ Angular Distance ♦ Meridian
The number of degrees measured along a lineof terrestrial longitude from the Earth's Equator.
See also:Terrestrial Longitude [Astro*Index]
♦ Earth's Equator ♦ Angular Distance ♦ Meridian
Angular distance measured along the Earth's equator from the Prime Meridian (Greenwich) to the observer's meridian.
See also:Terrestrial Longitude [Munkasey M.]
♦ Earth's Equator ♦ Angular Distance ♦ Prime Meridian ♦ Meridian
An arc measured in degrees along the Earth's Equator, Eastward or Westward from the Latitude Circle which crosses the Greenwich or Zero Meridian.
See also:Terrestrial Meridian [Munkasey M.]
♦ Earth's Equator ♦ Angular Distance ♦ Prime Meridian ♦ Meridian
The same as "Terrestrial Longitude".
See also:Terrestrial Planet [Astro*Index]
♦ Geographic Coordinates ♦ Meridian
A planet with physical characteristics similar to the Earth: Mercury, Venus, and Mars.
See also:Terrestrial Pole [Astro*Index]
♦ Earth ♦ Mercury ♦ Venus ♦ Mars
Each of the two points where the axis of rotation meet the Earth's surface. The North and South Poles.
See also:
♦ Axial Rotation ♦ Geographic Coordinates
Astro*Index Copyright © 1997 Michael Erlewine
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