I shall conclude this section with a brief account of the Atmosphere.
Atmosphere.
The Atmosphere is that thin body of air which surrounds the Earth, in which the clouds hover, and by which in their descent they are broke into drops of rain; which sometimes, according to the warmth or coldness of air, are froze into Snow, or Hailstones. Thunder and Lightning are also made in the Atmosphere, and wind is nothing else but a percussion of the air, occasioned by its different density in different places. The benefits we receive from the atmosphere are innumerable; without air no earthly creature could live, as is plainly proved by experiments made by the Air-Pump; and the wholsomeness of a climate chiefly depends upon that of its air: If there was no atmosphere to reflect the rays of the Sun, no part of the heavens would be lucid and bright, but that wherein the Sun was placed; and if a spectator should turn his back towards the Sun, he would immediately perceive it to be quite dark, and the least Stars would be seen shining as they do in the clearest night; and the Sun immediately before his setting would shine as brisk as at noon, but in a moment, as soon as he got below the horizon, the whole hemisphere of the Earth would be involved in as great a darkness as if it were midnight.
But by means of the atmosphere it happens, that while the Sun is above the horizon, the whole face of the heavens is strongly illuminated by its rays, so as to obscure the faint light of the Stars, and render them invisible; and after Sun-setting, though we receive no direct light from him, yet we enjoy its reflected light for some time: For the atmosphere being higher than we are, is a longer time before it is withdrawn from the Sun (as if a man was to run to the top of a steeple, he might see the Sun after it had been set to those at the bottom.) The rays which the atmosphere receives from the Sun, after he is withdrawn from our sight, are by refraction faintly transmitted to us; until the Sun having got about 18 degrees below the horizon, he no longer enlightens our atmosphere, and then all that part thereof which is over us becomes dark. After the same manner in the morning, when the Sun comes within 18 degrees of our horizon, he again begins to enlighten the atmosphere, and so more and more by degrees, until he rises and makes full day.
Twilight, or Crepusculum.
This small illumination of the atmosphere, and the state of the Heavens between day and night, is called the Twilight, or the Crepusculum.
The duration of twilight is different in different climates, and in the same place at different times of the year. The beginning or ending of twilight being accurately given, we may from thence easily find the height of the atmosphere, which is not always the same. The mean height of the atmosphere is computed to be about 40 miles; but it is probable, the air may extend itself a great deal further, there being properly no other limits to it, as we can conceive, but as it continually decreases in density the farther remote it is from the Earth, in a certain ratio; which at last, as to our conception, must in a manner terminate.
SECT. II.
Geographical Definitions.