Jefferson's system actually resembles the metric system in many ways. Its
biggest shortcoming is that Jefferson didn't hit on the idea of using
prefixes to create names for multiples of units. Consequently, his system
was burdened with a long list of names. For example, he divided his basic
distance unit, the foot (it was slightly shorter than the traditional foot)
into 10 inches. Each inch was divided into 10 lines, and each line into 10
points. For larger distances, 10 feet equaled a decade, 100 feet was a rood,
1000 feet a furlong, and there were 10 000 feet in a mile (making the
Jeffersonian mile about twice as long as the traditional mile). His basic
volume unit was the cubic foot, which he proposed to call a bushel (it was
about 3/4 the size of a traditional bushel). The basic weight unit was the
ounce, defined so that a bushel of water weighed 1000 ounces. (This is very
similar to the metric system, in which a liter of water weighs 1000 grams).


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