Sunday, 19 May 2013

Last week before half term

May 2013
Mon 20th
8.50am Assembly with SportsForYouNorth
4-5 Rehearsal
Children who normally have singing on Thursday will have lessons today!!!!
2 15pm Cricket v St Wilfrids
Tue 21st
1-3pm Years 5 and 6 Mini Tennis @ Woodthorpe Tennis club
Wed 22nd
U11 Girls Rounders Tournament - Old Vicarage
Year 5 boys Taster Day at Nottingham Boys High School
Thu 23rd
Break up for Half-Term
Fri 24th

We are back after a week of exams.



The first modern Atlas of the World
The first true atlas in the modern sense was published on 22 May 1570.
Today satellite imagery is used to verify the measurements, shapes and locations of important geographic features. The maps of the world today are more accurate than they used to be. With no satellite view, old world maps could only be based on what was known or imagined about the world at the time they were drawn.
Who created the first modern Atlas of the World?
Abraham Ortelius (1527-1598), a Dutch-born cartographer, produced the first modern atlas called the Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (Theatre of the World).
Cartography is the art and science of making maps.
In Greek:
chartis = map graphein = write
After publishing a World Map in 1564, printed on eight sheets, he decided to gather a collection of maps from among his European cartographer contacts and had them engraved and bound in uniform size to produce the Theatrum Orbis Terrarum.
image: Ortelius World Map












Ortelius's World Map
(click on the image for a larger image)
Terra Australis, the great mythical southern continent at the time, is at the bottom of the map. The myth of the great southern continent was finally dispelled by the discoveries of Captain James Cook in 1769.

Quiz of the week

Toubkal is the highest mountain in which range?

Joke of the week


Knock Knock
Who's there!
Atlas!
Atlas?
Atlas it's the weekend!