The 'geographical mile' is a unit of length determined by 1
minute of arc along the
Earth's
equator, approximately equal to 1855.325
metres (6087.025 international
feet). Any greater precision depends more on choice of standard than on more careful measurement: the length of the
equator in the
World Geodetic System WGS-84 is 40,075,016.6856 m which makes the geographical mile 1855.3248 m, while the
International Astronomical Union standard IAU-2000 takes the
equator to be 40,075,035.5351 m making the geographical mile 1855.3257 m, almost a millimeter longer.
The unit is not used much; it is closely related to the
nautical mile, which was originally determined as 1 minute of arc along a
great circle of the Earth but is nowadays an
SI standard length defined as exactly 1852 metres.
The
Danish and
German 'geographical mile' (''mil'' and ''Meile'' respectively) is 4 minutes of arc, and was defined as approximately 7421.5 metres by the astronomer
Ole Rømer of
Denmark. In
Norway and
Sweden, this 4 minute geographical mile was mainly used at sea (''sjømil''), up to the beginning of the 20th century.
See also
★
Medieval weights and measures for details of the geographical
league of
France
★
conversion of units
★
mile for the various other miles in use