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Roemer Daalderop
A romer is a cartographic measuring tool. Romer, Römer, Roemer, or similar may also refer to: People * Romer (surname) Other uses * Römer, a medieval building in Frankfurt am Main * Römer (crater), a lunar crater * Romer arm, an industrial measuring device * Romer v. Evans, a United States Supreme Court case dealing with civil rights and state laws * Rømer scale, a disused temperature scale * Romer's gap in the record of vertebrate fossils c. 360–340 million years ago * Romer Shoal Light, a lighthouse off the coast of New Jersey, United States * rummers or roemers, drinking glasses See also * Roamer (other) * Rohmer, surname * Rummer A rummer (also known as a Römer or Roemer, among other variations) was a type of large drinking glass studded with prunts to ensure a safe grip, popular mainly in the Rhineland and the Netherlands from the 15th through the 17th century. Rummers l ...
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Romer
A Reference Card or "Romer" is a device for increasing the accuracy when reading a grid reference from a map. Made from transparent plastic, paper or other materials, they are also found on most baseplate compasses. Essentially, it is a specially marked-out ruler which matches the scale of the map in use. The scales are laid out in reverse, such that by lining up the numbers given in the grid reference with the gridlines for the square in question, the corner of the Romer lies on the location whose grid reference you wish to read. Some transparent versions have a small hole at the origin when this is not at the corner of the Reference Card. This allows access to the map such that the location could be marked with a pencil if using the Reference Card in reverse having been given a grid reference to start with. They are used in many types of land navigation and map reading, to give a more accurate grid reference than one just estimated by eye from the grid lines on the map. While R ...
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Romer (surname)
Romer is a surname. Some individuals with the surname include: * Wolfgang William Romer (1640–1713), Dutch/British military engineer * Ole Rømer (1644–1710), Danish astronomer * John Lambertus Romer (1680–1754), British military engineer * Johann Jacob Roemer (1763–1819), Swiss physician and naturalist * Michał Józef Römer (1778–1853), politician, writer, and notable member of the Polish-Lithuanian gentry * Isabella Frances Romer (1798–1852), English travel writer and novelist * Edward Jan Römer (1806−1878), Polish painter * Friedrich Adolph Roemer (1809–1869), German geologist * Emma Romer (1814–1868), British soprano * Ferdinand von Roemer (1818–1891), German geologist, brother of Friedrich Adolph Roemer * John Romer (politician) (fl. 1831), 19th century Governor of Bombay * Alfred Isidore Romer, (1832–1897), Belarusian, Polish and Lithuanian painter, sculptor, carver and medalist, participant of the January Uprising (1863) * Sir Robert Romer (1840 ...
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Römer
The Römer (German surname, "Roman") is a medieval building in the Altstadt of Frankfurt am Main, Germany, and one of the city's most important landmarks. The Römer is located opposite the Old St. Nicholas church and has been the city hall (''Rathaus'') of Frankfurt for over 600 years. The Römer merchant family sold it together with a second building, the ''Goldener Schwan'' (Golden Swan), to the city council on 11 March 1405 and it was converted for use as the city hall. The ''Haus Römer'' is actually the middle building of a set of three located in the ''Römerberg'' plaza. The ''Römer'' is not a museum as it is occasionally used by the city for various purposes, for example as a ''Standesamt'' or civil registration office; the wedding rooms are located in the first and second floor of the ''Haus Löwenstein''. The former old town quarter between the Römer and St. Bartholomew's Cathedral has been redeveloped as the Dom-Römer Quarter until 2018, including several rec ...
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Römer (crater)
Römer is a lunar impact crater that is located to the north of the Sinus Amoris Sinus Amoris (Latin ''sinus amōris'' "Bay of Love") extends northward from the northeast end of the Mare Tranquillitatis. It is located at selenographic coordinates 19.9° N, 37.3° E, and lies within a diameter of 190 km. To the north of ... in the northeast section of the Moon. It was named after Danish astronomer Ole Rømer. It lies in the southwestern part of the mountainous region named the Montes Taurus. It was unofficially named as Atatürk by astronomer Hugh Percy Wilkins in his lunar map, possibly due to the fact that the Montes Taurus (or Toros Dağları in Turkish language, Turkish) are located in Turkey. To the west-northwest is the crater-bay Le Monnier (crater), Le Monnier, on the eastern edge of Mare Serenitatis. The rim of Römer has relatively high walls with a wiktionary:terrace, terraced inner surface. There is a small craterlet on the north part of the floor, and a larg ...
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Romer Arm
A ROMER Arm is a term for a portable coordinate measuring machine ROMER, a company Acquired by the Hexagon AB group, and part of the Manufacturing Intelligence division, designed the ROMER arm in the 1980s to solve the problem of how to measure large objects such as airplanes and car bodies without moving them to a dedicated measuring laboratory. A coordinate measuring machine precisely measures an object in a 3D coordinate system, often in comparison to a computer aided design Computer-aided design (CAD) is the use of computers (or ) to aid in the creation, modification, analysis, or optimization of a design. This software is used to increase the productivity of the designer, improve the quality of design, improve co ... (CAD) model. A portable coordinate measuring machine is usually a manual measuring device, which indicates that it requires a person to operate it. The arm has 6 or 7 joints and operate in the 3D world - It has 6 degree of freedoms- 3 for rotation and 3 for ...
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Romer V
A Reference Card or "Romer" is a device for increasing the accuracy when reading a grid reference from a map. Made from transparent plastic, paper or other materials, they are also found on most baseplate compasses. Essentially, it is a specially marked-out ruler which matches the scale of the map in use. The scales are laid out in reverse, such that by lining up the numbers given in the grid reference with the gridlines for the square in question, the corner of the Romer lies on the location whose grid reference you wish to read. Some transparent versions have a small hole at the origin when this is not at the corner of the Reference Card. This allows access to the map such that the location could be marked with a pencil if using the Reference Card in reverse having been given a grid reference to start with. They are used in many types of land navigation and map reading, to give a more accurate grid reference than one just estimated by eye from the grid lines on the map. While R ...
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Rømer Scale
The Rømer scale (; notated as °Rø), also known as Romer or Roemer, is a temperature scale named after the Danish astronomer Ole Christensen Rømer, who proposed it in 1701. It is based on the freezing point of pure water being 7.5 degrees and the boiling point of water as 60 degrees. Degree measurements In this scale, the zero was initially set using freezing brine. The boiling point of water was defined as 60 degrees. Rømer then saw that the freezing point of pure water was roughly one eighth of the way (about 7.5 degrees) between these two points, so he redefined the lower fixed point to be the freezing point of water at precisely 7.5 degrees. This did not greatly change the scale but made it easier to calibrate by defining it by reference to pure water. Thus the unit of this scale, a Rømer degree, is 100/52.5 = 40/21 of a kelvin or Celsius degree. The symbol is sometimes given as °R, but since that is also sometimes used for the Réaumur and Rankine scales, the other ...
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Romer's Gap
Romer's gap is an example of an apparent gap in the tetrapod fossil record used in the study of evolutionary biology. Such gaps represent periods from which excavators have not yet found relevant fossils. Romer's gap is named after paleontologist Alfred Romer, who first recognised it. Recent discoveries in Scotland are beginning to close this gap in palaeontological knowledge. Age Romer's gap ran from approximately 360 to 345 million years ago, corresponding to the first 15 million years of the Carboniferous, the early Mississippian (starting with the Tournaisian and moving into the Visean). The gap forms a discontinuity between the primitive forests and high diversity of fishes in the end Devonian and more modern aquatic and terrestrial assemblages of the early Carboniferous. Mechanism behind the gap There has been long debate as to why there are so few fossils from this time period. Some have suggested the problem was of fossilization itself, suggesting that there may ...
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Romer Shoal Light
Romer Shoal Light is a sparkplug lighthouse in Lower New York Bay, on the north edge of the Swash Channel, about south of Ambrose Channel and north of Sandy Hook, New Jersey, in the entrance to New York Harbor. It is in New Jersey, very close to the border with New York.USGS quadrangle for cited location Named as Romer Shoal Light Station, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 24, 2007, for its significance in architecture, engineering, transportation, and maritime history. With History and description An 1870 edition of The Historical Magazine records that the shoal was named after Colonel Wolfgang William Romer, who sounded the waters of New York Bay in 1700 on order of the governor of New York. https://www.lighthousefriends.com/light.asp?ID=655 The Light was heavily damaged during Hurricane Sandy. The non-profit that has taken over stewardship of the Light is working with FEMA and private donors to preserve this national landmark. See also * ...
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Rummer
A rummer (also known as a Römer or Roemer, among other variations) was a type of large drinking glass studded with prunts to ensure a safe grip, popular mainly in the Rhineland and the Netherlands from the 15th through the 17th century. Rummers lacked the flared bowl of the Berkemeyer and had much thinner walls. The hollow base was built up by coiling strands of molten glass around a conical core. Römers were quite distinct from the Berkemeyers, but both types evolved from the German "cabbage stalk" glasses which were cylindrical with prunts. Römers are usually green in colour and with Berkemeyers were sometimes engraved with images and inscriptions. From as early as the third century AD, skilled glass workers along the Rhine were producing work of great artistic merit. Excavations at Worms, Treves, Cologne, and in the Eifel revealed glass factories that were probably Roman in origin—indeed, ''Römer'' is German for ''Roman''. Ancient Rhenish graves have yielded gilt-decorated ...
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Roamer (other)
Roamer may refer to: * Roamer (watchmaker), a Swiss watch manufacturer * Roamer (horse), an American racehorse * Roamer, a car named after the race horse and built by the US based Barley Motor Car Co. * , more than one United States Navy ship See also * Romer (other) * Roam (other) "Roam" is the fourth single from The B-52's' 1989 hit album ''Cosmic Thing''. Roam may also refer to: * ROAM (real-time optimally adapting mesh), a computer graphics algorithm * ROAM (Réunion des Organismes d'Assurance Mutuelle) in France * Roa ... * Rohmer, surname {{disambiguation ...
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Rohmer
Rohmer is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Ann Rohmer (born 1958), Canadian television personality * Éric Rohmer (1920–2010), French film director * Paul Rohmer (1876–1977), French physician * Richard Rohmer (born 1924), Canadian military aviator and novelist * Sax Rohmer (1883–1959), English novelist * Stascha Rohmer (born 1966), German philosopher Fictional * Betty Rohmer, fictional character in ''Dead Like Me'' See also * Roamer (other) * Romer (other) A romer is a cartographic measuring tool. Romer, Römer, Roemer, or similar may also refer to: People * Romer (surname) Other uses * Römer, a medieval building in Frankfurt am Main * Römer (crater), a lunar crater * Romer arm, an industr ... {{surname, Rohmer French-language surnames ...
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