Haitian units of measurement
A number of units of measurement were used in Haiti to measure length, area, volume, etc. Since 1921, Metric system has been compulsory in Haiti.[1]
Units before the metric system
Older units before the Metric system were British, old French, and Spanish.[1]
Length
Several units were used in Haiti. One toise was 1.9488 m and one anne was 1.188 m, according to the legal equivalents during the transition period to metric system.[1][2]
Area
One carreau was equal to 1292.3 m according to the legal equivalents during the transition period to metric system.[1]
Volume
Several units were used to measure volume. Some units and their equivalents according to the transition period, are given below:[1][2]
1 baril = 0.1 m3
1 corde = 3.84 m3
1 toise = 8 m3.
gollark: This is also "behavior".
gollark: What?
gollark: We're pretty general intelligences, but there are some things we can't really do or are extremely bad at.
gollark: Would you accept something as "truly thinking" if it appeared entirely identical to a human over a text chat?
gollark: That seems somewhat silly. It takes humans a lot of training to control complex real-world machinery, and that's with lots of intuition about the physical world in general already extant.
References
- Washburn, E.W. (1926). International Critical Tables of Numerical Data, Physics, Chemistry and Technology. New York: McGraw-Hil Book Company, Inc. p. 8.
- Cardarelli, F. (2003). Encyclopaedia of Scientific Units, Weights and Measures. Their SI Equivalences and Origins. London: Springer. pp. 156. ISBN 978-1-4471-1122-1.
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