geographical mile - significado y definición. Qué es geographical mile
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Qué (quién) es geographical mile - definición

A UNIT OF LENGTH DETERMINED BY 1 MINUTE OF ARC ALONG THE EARTH'S EQUATOR

geographical mile         
¦ noun a distance equal to one minute of longitude or latitude at the equator (about 1,850 metres).
Mile, Visoko         
  • Church reconstruction
MEDIEVAL SITE MILE (ARNAUTOVIĆI), WITH THE CHURCH OF ST. NICHOLAS, THE CORONATION AND BURIAL CHURCH OF THE BOSNIAN KINGS (XIV AND XV CENTURY)
Mile (medieval location); Mile (Visoko)
Mile () located in the Visoko basin was a medieval crowning and burial place of Bosnian kings during the Kingdom of Bosnia (13771463). Mile is a protected national monument of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Geographical centre         
CENTROID OF A REGION OF THE EARTH'S SURFACE
Geographic center; Geographic centre; Geographical center; Geographical Centre; Geographical Center; Geographic Center; Geographic Centre; Geographical centre (disambiguation); Geographical center (disambiguation); List of geographic centers
In geography, the centroid of the two-dimensional shape of a region of the Earth's surface (projected radially to sea level or onto a geoid surface) is known as its geographic centre or geographical centre or (less commonly) gravitational centre. Informally, determining the centroid is often described as finding the point upon which the shape (cut from a uniform plane) would balance.

Wikipedia

Geographical mile

The geographical mile is an international unit of length determined by 1 minute of arc—1/60 degree—along the Earth's equator. For the international ellipsoid 1924 this equalled 1855.4 metres. The American Practical Navigator 2017 defines the geographical mile as 6,087.08 feet (1,855.342 m). Greater precision depends more on choice of ellipsoid than on more careful measurement: the length of the equator in the World Geodetic System WGS-84 is 40,075,016.6856 m, which makes the geographical mile 1,855.3248 m, while the IERS Conventions (2010) takes the equator to be 40,075,014.1723 m, making the geographical mile 1,855.3247 m, 0.1 millimetres shorter. In any ellipsoid, the length of a degree of longitude at the equator is thus exactly 60 geographical miles.

The shape of the Earth is a slightly flattened sphere, which results in the Earth's circumference being 0.168% larger when measured around the equator as compared to through the poles. The geographical mile is slightly larger than the nautical mile (which was historically linked to the circumference measured through both poles); one geographic mile is equivalent to approximately 1.00178 nautical miles.