Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Clime> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 94 of
94
with 100 triples per page.
- Clime abstract "The climes (singular clime; also clima, plural climata, from Greek κλίμα klima, plural κλίματα klimata, meaning \"inclination\" or \"slope\") in classical Greco-Roman geography and astronomy were the divisions of the inhabited portion of the spherical Earth by geographic latitude.Starting with Aristotle (Meteorology 2.5,362a32), the Earth was divided into five zones, assuming two frigid climes (the arctic and antarctic) around the poles, an uninhabitable torrid clime near the equator, and two temperate climes between the frigid and the torrid ones.Different lists of climata were in use in Hellenistic and Roman time. Claudius Ptolemy was the first ancient scientist known to have devised the so-called system of seven climes (Almagest 2.12) which, due to his authority, became one of the canonical elements of late antique, medieval European and Arab geography. In Medieval Europe, the climates for 15 and 18 hours were used to calculate the changing length of daylight through the year.The modern concept of climate and the related term clime are derived from the historical concept of climata.".
- Clime thumbnail Macrobian_climatic_zones.gif?width=300.
- Clime wikiPageExternalLink Eratosthenes_Parallel_of_Rhodes_and_the_History_of_the_System_of_Climata.
- Clime wikiPageID "1899033".
- Clime wikiPageLength "8704".
- Clime wikiPageOutDegree "65".
- Clime wikiPageRevisionID "686350098".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Adulis.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Al-Biruni.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Al-Razi.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greek_astronomy.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Antarctic.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Antipodes.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Arctic.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Arctic_Circle.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Aristotle.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Aswan.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Black_Sea.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Bregenz.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Britannia.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_Greek_geographers.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Category:Physical_geography.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Catterick,_North_Yorkshire.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Climate.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Danube.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Dardanelles.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Dnieper.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Don_River_(Russia).
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Ecumene.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Equator.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Eritrea.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Four_continents.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Great_Britain.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Hellenistic_period.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Inner_Hebrides.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Latitude.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Graeco-Roman_geographers.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Lower_Egypt.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Marseille.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Meroë.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Muhammad_al-Idrisi.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Napata.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink North_Pole.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Nubia.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Phoenicia.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Ptolemy.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Rhine.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Rhodes.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Empire.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Roof_of_the_World.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Scythians.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Sea_of_Azov.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Seven_Seas.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Smyrna.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Solstice.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Somalia.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Spherical_Earth.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Sri_Lanka.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Tanais.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Taprobana.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Thebes,_Egypt.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Thule.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink Zeila.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLink File:Macrobian_climatic_zones.gif.
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "Clime".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ptolemaic climate".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "climata".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "climate zones".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "climate".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "climatic belts".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "climatic zone system".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "clime".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "established Ptolemaic system".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "northern temperate".
- Clime wikiPageWikiLinkText "zones of climate".
- Clime wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Dubious.
- Clime wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Linktext.
- Clime subject Category:Ancient_Greek_geographers.
- Clime subject Category:Physical_geography.
- Clime hypernym Divisions.
- Clime type AdministrativeRegion.
- Clime type Infographic.
- Clime type Science.
- Clime comment "The climes (singular clime; also clima, plural climata, from Greek κλίμα klima, plural κλίματα klimata, meaning \"inclination\" or \"slope\") in classical Greco-Roman geography and astronomy were the divisions of the inhabited portion of the spherical Earth by geographic latitude.Starting with Aristotle (Meteorology 2.5,362a32), the Earth was divided into five zones, assuming two frigid climes (the arctic and antarctic) around the poles, an uninhabitable torrid clime near the equator, and two temperate climes between the frigid and the torrid ones.Different lists of climata were in use in Hellenistic and Roman time. ".
- Clime label "Clime".
- Clime sameAs Q5133683.
- Clime sameAs الأقاليم_السبعة.
- Clime sameAs m.0640n7h.
- Clime sameAs m.064qt6.
- Clime sameAs Q5133683.
- Clime wasDerivedFrom Clime?oldid=686350098.
- Clime depiction Macrobian_climatic_zones.gif.
- Clime isPrimaryTopicOf Clime.