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rockets push off air | GPS is based on Surveying & Celestial Navigation GPS requires a flat plane cannot work on a globe @rocketspushoffair | Uploaded November 2023 | Updated October 2024, 1 hour ago.
If you don't watch the whole thing, you wont get it. Just like if you want to make a baby, and you stop too soon, then you wonder why you failed. Satellites (or balloons, look up Google Loon) must exist over a horizontal plane. The Google balloon satellites communicate with each other over 60 miles with a laser beam, which is perfectly straight and parallel to the flat motionless ground we live on.

27:50 Says it all!

"Your going to have distortions, if you're trying to force something onto a curved surface that wasn't measured on a curved surface!"

The video can end right there, and this is even mentioned in the video. Why? Because it is pointed out that earth has been measured (surveyed) in x y z coordinates (think graph paper, the z is just elevation) and then these measurements were NECESSARILY necessarily distorted to be put on a curved surface on a globe!--That's the end of the glob!


Google search: * how is mercator projection made * [1st result at top of search, below]
His most famous work, the Mercator projection, is a geographical chart where the spherical globe is flattened into a two-dimensional map, with latitude and longitude lines drawn in a straight grid. Mercator's view of the world is one that has endured through the centuries and still helps navigators today. Oct 19, 2023
google.com/search?q=how+is+mercator+projection+made&oq=how+is+mercator&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

[link from top search result]
education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/gerardus-mercator

Mercator World Map
Geradus Mercator's world maps flattened the spherical planet to make it easier to display. Displays of the landmasses are not necessarily proportional to their actual size, especially toward the poles.

If you have ever seen a map of the world in a classroom or in an atlas, chances are you have seen the work of Gerardus Mercator, a 16th-century Flemish cartographer (mapmaker). His most famous work, the Mercator projection, is a geographical chart where the spherical globe is flattened into a two-dimensional map, with latitude and longitude lines drawn in a straight grid. Mercator’s view of the world is one that has endured through the centuries and still helps navigators today.

Mercator was born in Flanders (located in modern-day Belgium) in 1512. The son of a cobbler, Mercator grew up in a poor family. He graduated from the University of Louvain in 1532, where he studied mathematics, geography, and astronomy. After graduating, Mercator developed his skills as an engraver, calligrapher, and geographer, and then began making globes and scientific instruments. As his reputation grew, Mercator published several maps of places around the world. These included an early version of his world map, which showed the globe as a heart-shaped projection.

He continued studying the sciences and making maps and instruments for wealthy, and sometimes high-profile, clients. But in 1544, Mercator was arrested under suspicion of heresy; the traveling he did for research had made church officials wary. After spending a few months in prison, he was released and continued his studies.

In 1569, Mercator published his epic world map. This map, with its Mercator projection, was designed to help sailors navigate around the globe. They could use latitude and longitude lines to plot a straight route. Mercator’s projection laid out the globe as a flattened version of a cylinder. All the latitude and longitude lines intersected at 90-degree angles. Because the projection was intended to be a reference for navigation and not land geography, the landmasses on the map are not necessarily proportional to their actual size; at higher latitudes, landmasses appear larger than their actual size. Despite these distortions, Mercator’s projection is still heavily used today.

In addition to publishing his famous projection, Mercator was the pioneer of another geographical tool we use to this day. He coined the term “atlas” (named after the Greek mythological figure who held the world on his shoulders) to describe a collection of maps. Mercator continued his cartography work for the rest of his life, publishing parts of his atlas until his death in 1594.
GPS is based on Surveying & Celestial Navigation GPS requires a flat plane cannot work on a globeDisproving Coriolis (earth spin) for dummies FLAT EARTH is realGLOBE EARTH MATHEMATICAL FRAUD EXPLAINED contrived 300:1 ratio gravity dont oppose F/2pi HOOP STRESSLARGE RADIUS FICTION of fake globe earth (play at 2x until first song ends)(optional audio)ARTIFICIAL HARD AND SOFT SUNLIGHT SET UP IN PHOTOGRAPHY directly mimics a small sun under a dome skyWHERE TO HANG YOUR HAT ON FLAT EARTH this is where the chips fallMORE CRAZY CONSPIRACY COMMENTS Tiffany Pontes DoverFLAT EARTH DENIERS HATE THIS VIDEO islands visible over 31 miles out

GPS is based on Surveying & Celestial Navigation GPS requires a flat plane cannot work on a globe @rocketspushoffair

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