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Comments on If this earth were cube shaped would it be possible during Magellanic era using a float ship to figure out that the earth is cube shaped?

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If this earth were cube shaped would it be possible during Magellanic era using a float ship to figure out that the earth is cube shaped?

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If this earth were cubed shape would it be possible for Magellan to prove that the earth is cube-shaped without going to space and looking at earth?

It might seem strange to think that earth might be shaped like a cube. Remember I am not saying perfect cube but rounded cube at the edge. Do you remember Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko where spacecraft Rosetta landed? It was odd shaped. So couldn't earth be odd shaped other than a sphere? If Magellan had to prove what the shape of the earth is like that then would it be possible for him to prove that earth is cube-shaped using his floating ship? I just want to know if it were possible.

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This post was sourced from https://worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/q/123482. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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The shape of the Earth is mostly a result of its gravity pulling its mass into the most efficient shape available. The oceans are also pulled towards the centre of mass, and collect on the lowest parts of the surface - covering a huge area to a depth of only a few miles because the planet is so smooth.

If Earth managed to be sufficiently rigid and hold a cube shape, its gravity would still pull on average towards its centre of mass, which would be the centre of the cube. Any water would pool in the middle of the flat faces of the cube to form roundish oceans. You could think of it as a spherical planet with several ridges reaching hundreds of miles high.

The ocean(s) would bulge outwards as if trying to form parts of a sphere. The gravity of the extremities of the planet would flatten the bulge a bit, but they'd be a lot deeper (and therefore narrower) than the current oceans. Unless there was far more water available, they would never reach the edges of the cube so a boat couldn't sail from one face to another.

As well as water, the atmosphere would pool in the lower regions, so five of the cube's faces are probably inaccessible to humans until they learn to make pressurised vehicles.

Your explorer might be able to determine the shape of the world by other means. Ancient Greek-style geometry could prove that the sea curves and the land doesn't, and as Peter Taylor pointed out, you could see the shadow of at least part of the Earth on the moon during a lunar eclipse.

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2 comment threads

vertices-->edges? (2 comments)
Other means: eclipses (2 comments)
vertices-->edges?
Jacob C.‭ wrote over 2 years ago

"Unless there was far more water available, they would never reach the vertices of the cube so a boat couldn't sail from one face to another."

You may want to change "vertices" to "edges" in that sentence.

If there was enough water that the water of each side reached the middle of the edges but not the vertices (so the vertices would be the summits of bare triangular pyramidal mountains poking out) that would allow travel from face to face, but there isn't water enough for even that.

Pastychomper‭ wrote over 2 years ago

Thanks, I've corrected it.