4. |
It is surprising that already in this fourth illustration the child, who filled the
greater part of the first picture, has completely disappeared. The reason, as we
said in the introduction, is that each time we jumped upward, we had to go ten
times higher than we were, in order to produce an image at a scale one-tenth
that of the one before. If we viewed the little girl from a height of, say, 5 meters
in picture 1, we had of necessity risen to 50 meters td see #2, to 500 meters
for #3, and now we look down from a height of 5000 meters. That is higher
than Mont Blanc, Europe's highest mountain! No wonder that the huge whale
can now hardly be distinguished. We notice a strange wavy line reaching the
school building. We wonder what that is. The next drawing will show.
1 cm. in picture = 10,000 cm. = 104 cm. = 100 M. | Scale = 1:10,000 = 1:104 |
|