How Many Feet in a Nautical Mile?

Nautical miles are a unit of measurement used in the air or on the sea. One nautical mile is the equivalent of 6,080 feet or 1,853 meters. You can find more information here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nautical_mile.

The nautical mile was historically defined as the length that spans one minute of arc on the surface of the Earth, measured along any meridian, making a meridian exactly 180×60 = 10,800 historical nautical miles. 6 It can therefore be used for approximate measures on a meridian as change of latitude on a nautical chart. The originally intended definition of the meter as 10?7 of a half-meridian arc makes the mean historical nautical mile exactly (2×107)/10,800 = 1,851.851851… historical meters.

Based on the current IUGG meridian of 20,003,931.4585 (standard) meters the mean historical nautical mile is 1,852.216 m. The historical definition differs from the length-based standard in that a minute of arc, and hence a nautical mile, is not a constant length at the surface of the Earth but gradually lengthens in the north-south direction with increasing distance from the equator, as a corollary of the Earth's oblateness, hence the need for "mean" in the last sentence of the previous paragraph. This length equals about 1,861 meters at the poles and 1,843 meters at the Equator.

182 Eratosthenes of Cyrene was the first to divide the surface of the earth into lines of latitude and longitude. His theory was first applied by medieval Arabic geographers, who extended the Roman mile to 1.04 nautical miles. Other nations had different definitions of the nautical mile.

This variety, in combination with the complexity of angular measure described above and the intrinsic uncertainty of geodetically derived units, militated against the extant definitions in favor of a simple unit of pure length. International agreement was achieved in 1929 when the International Extraordinary Hydrographic Conference held in Monaco adopted a definition of one international nautical mile as being equal to 1,852 meters exactly, in excellent agreement (for an integer) with both the above-mentioned values of 1,851.851 historical meters and 1,852.216 standard meters. The use of an angle-based length was first suggested by Edmund Gunter (of Gunter's chain fame).

19 During the 18th century, the relation of a mile of 6000 (geometric) feet, or a minute of arc on the earth's surface, had been advanced as a universal measure for land and sea. The metric kilometer was selected to represent a centisimal minute of arc, on the same basis, with the circle divided into 400 degrees of 100 minutes. The derived unit of speed is the knot, defined as one nautical mile per hour.

The term "log" is used to measure the distance a vessel has moved through the water. This term can also be used to measure the speed through the water (see chip log), as the speed and distance are directly related.

There are 5,280 feet in one mile. One mile is also equal to 63,360 inches, 1,760 yards, eight furlongs, 1.08 Roman miles or one third of a league.

There are 1,320 feet in a quarter mile. A mile has 5,280 feet in it. You can simply divide 5,280 by four, to get the amount of feet in a quarter mile.

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