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The Old Bedford River, photographed from the bridge at Welney, Norfolk (2008); the camera is looking downstream, south-west of the bridge. The Bedford Level experiment was a series of observations carried out along a 6-mile (10 km) length of the Old Bedford River on the Bedford Level of the Cambridgeshire Fens in the United Kingdom during the 19th and early 20th centuries to deny the curvature ...
Refraction can give the impression that Earth's surface is flat, curved more convexly than it is, or even that it is concave (this is what happened in various trials of the Bedford Level experiment). The phenomenon of variable atmospheric bending can be seen when distant objects appear to be broken into pieces or even turned upside down.
Henry Yule Oldham, (14 December 1862 – 14 March 1951) was a teacher and geographer who, in 1901, conducted the definitive version of the Bedford Level experiment, a proof that the Earth is a sphere.
Rowbotham started out as an organiser of an Owenite community at Manea in the Fens, where he formulated his ideas about the Earth.After measuring a lack of curvature on the long straight drainage ditches of the Bedford Levels in his first Bedford Level experiment, he was convinced of the flatness of the Earth and began to lecture on the topic.
Using scientific surveying equipment such as a Theodolite, the Bedford Level experiment has been repeated and water level tests proved that the water was approximately three feet (0.9 m) higher in the central section, proving that water doesn't stay perfectly flat over long distances and does curve with the Earth's gentle arc.
Young's interference experiment: Thomas Young: Confirmation Wave theory of light: 1819 Arago spot experiment François Arago: Confirmation Fresnel diffraction due to circular object 1838 Bedford Level experiment: Samuel Rowbotham: Measurement Curvature of the Earth 1843 Faraday's ice pail experiment: Michael Faraday: Demonstration ...
The Bedford Level Corporation (or alternatively the Corporation of the Bedford Level) was founded in England in 1663 to manage the draining of the Fens of East Central England. It formalised the legal status of the Company of Adventurers previously formed by the Duke of Bedford to reclaim 95,000 acres of the Bedford Level.
Funds for the work were provided by the Earl of Bedford and thirteen other Adventurers. Of the land reclaimed, the fourteen men were to receive 43,000 acres (170 km 2 ), to be shared between them, while 12,000 acres (49 km 2 ) were to be given to the king, and another 40,000 acres (160 km 2 ) were designated to provide income to maintain the ...