Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 1.djvu/161

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CHAP. in. 2. INTRODUCTION. 147 the Ethiopian, another the Scythian and Keltic, 1 and a third the Intermediate zone. 2. Polybius, indeed, is wrong in bounding certain of his zones by the arctic circles, 2 namely, the two which lie under them, and the two between these and the tropics. The im- propriety of using shifting points to mark the limits of those which are fixed has been remarked before ; and we have likewise objected to the plan of making the tropics the boundary of the torrid zone. However, in dividing the torrid zone into two parts [Polybius] seems to have been influenced by no inconsiderable reason, the same which led us to regard the whole earth as properly divided by the equa- tor into two hemispheres, north and south. We at once see that by means of this division the torrid zone is divided into two parts, thus establishing a kind of uniformity ; each hemi- sphere consisting of three entire zones, respectively similar to each other. Thus this partition 3 will admit of a division into six zones, but the other does not allow of it at all. Sup- posing you cut the earth into two portions by a line drawn through the poles, you can find no sufficient cause for di- viding the eastern and western hemispheres into six zones ; on the other hand, five would be preferable. For since both the portions of the torrid zone, divided by the equator, are similar and contiguous to each other, it would seem out of place and superfluous to separate them ; whereas the temperate and frigid zones respectively resemble each other, although lying apart. Wherefore, supposing the whole earth to con- sist of these two hemispheres, it is sufficient to divide them into five zones. If there be a temperate region under the equator, as Eratosthenes asserts, and is admitted by Poly- bius, (who adds, that it is the most elevated part of the earth, 4 and consequently subject to the drenching rains occa- 1 The ancients named the people of southern Africa, Ethiopians ; those of the north of Asia and Europe, Scythians; and those of the north-west of Europe, Kelts. 2 That is, by arctic circles which differed in respect to various lati- tudes. See Book ii. chap. ii. 2, p. 144. 3 Viz. The partition of the earth into two hemispheres, by means of the equator. 4 Gosselin concludes from this that Eratosthenes and Polybius gave to the earth the form of a spheroid flattened at the poles. Other philoso- phers supposed it was elongated at the poles, and flattened at the equator. L 2