Geography 140
Introduction to Physical Geography

Lecture: Geographic Grid and Time

Time Zones, Daylight Saving Time, and the Date

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  V. In discussing the geographic grid, we saw that longitude and time are 
     closely related:  Determining longitude is basically a matter of 
     converting the difference in time between two places into a difference in 
     longitude.  In this lecture, I'll go over a few plot complications on 
     this basic theme.
     A. Standard time (time zones)
        1. Your watch is not keeping correct sun time.  That is, it does not 
           show 12:00 when the sun is due south of us at its highest point of 
           the day.  There are two sources for this discrepancy:
           a. Remember that bit about sun slow and sun fast time in the third               
              lecture about revolution at various points in the year?  The sun               
              will hit the highest spot in the sky somewhat sooner than "noon"               
              on your clock from the July aphelion until the January              
              perihelion, and it will arrive somewhat later than "noon" on 
              your clock from the January perihelion until the July aphelion. 
              This discrepancy has to do with the equation of time related to 
              our planet's elliptical orbit.
           b. The other BIG reason is your watch keeps local ZONE time, not 
              local sun time, and the next section of this lecture will deal 
              with zone time, aka standard time.
        2. Standard time is fairly new.  
           a. It used to be that we all independently set our watches to fit 
              the local sun time at our exact location.  Very commonly, a 
              local church tolled the hours based on a sundial's readings, and 
              everyone either reckoned time by the tolling or set their clocks 
              or watches when the bells tolled.  
           b. This worked just fine, since very few people travelled around 
              much.  If you moved around, even as little as 150 km, your watch 
              would be out of synch with the local sun time, and you'd be 
              constantly having to adjust your watch (or missing the 
              appointments you'd travelled to have!).
           c. It became an issue when railroad construction began to open up 
              travel opportunities and needs in the nineteenth century.  For 
              most people, this discrepancy between your watch and the local 
              sun time was a minor inconvenience, but for the railroads it was 
              a very serious problem, indeed.  As train traffic increased, it 
              became difficult to coördinate the locations of trains and 
              the times they were to be on particular stretches of track.  It 
              wouldn't do to have two trains, each assiduously trying to keep 
              its own local time accurately, arrive at the same siding on the 
              same time!  So the railroads developed zone time.  
           d. One Dr. William Hyde Wollaston (1766-1828) in England came up 
              with the idea, and it was touted by Abraham Follett Osler (1808-
              1903).  A British railroad, the Great Western Railroad, adopted 
              London standard time for the first time in November 1840.
           e. The US and Canadian railroads quickly got with the program, too, 
              the more so, since these two huge countries span a lot of 
              longitude.  They coördinated themselves and went on 
              standard time on 18 November 1883.
           f. Not everyone thought this was the bee's knees, though.  A lot of 
              people thought it violated religious precepts, tinkering with 
              God's good time, and there was an amusing episode when the City 
              Council of Detroit decreed that the city would go on standard 
              time in 1900, and only half the city complied.  You can imagine 
              the chaos.  They didn't iron out the mess until 1905, when they 
              finally got everyone onto Central Standard Time!  In 1918, 
              Congress belatedly got onto the bandwagon and decreed that the 
              United States would officially adopt Standard Time.  
        3. The idea behind standard time is that everyone in a standard time 
           zone agrees to keep the WRONG time but the SAME time for safety and 
           convenience.  
        4. Nowadays, the entire world is, theoretically, divided into 24 time 
           zones, each one roughly 15° (or one hour) wide.  Within them, 
           the time is based on the correct mean sun time of a central 
           meridian.  The central meridians are those the longitudes of which 
           can be evenly divided by 15°:  0, 15, 30, 45, 60, 75, 90, 105, 
           120, 135, 150, 165, and 180 degrees of longitude, east or west.
        5. In the contiguous 48 United States, we have four such zones, with 
           an additional three zones for the two states and a commonwealth 
           outside the contiguous 48, each with a descriptive name:
           a. Pacific Standard Time Zone, in which everyone keeps the time 
              prevailing at 120°W, so we all pretend to live in Fresno!  
              We in Long Beach are located at 118°W, so we're 2° from 
              our central meridian, meaning that our clocks run about 8 
              minutes slower than our mean sun time.  Our zone time is 8 hours 
              earlier than Greenwich Mean Time, that is, it's -8 hours, 
              Universal Time.
           b. Mountain Standard Time Zone is centered on long. 105°W., or 
              -7 hours UT.
           c. Central Standard Time Zone is centered (sorry) on long. 
              90°W, or -6 hours UT.
           d. Eastern Standard Time Zone is centered on long. 75°W., or -5 
              hours UT.
           e. Most of Alaska keeps Alaskan Standard Time, centered on long. 
              135°W (-9 hours UT), Hawai'i keeps Hawai'i-Aleutian Standard 
              Time, centered at 150°W (-10 hours UT), and Puerto Rico is 
              in the Atlantic Standard Time Zone, centered on long. 60°W 
              (-4 hours UT).
        7. Globally, no-one else gives a hoot about the cutesy names we've 
           given our zones, just like we don't much care what the folks in, 
           say, Estonia call theirs (Eastern European Standard Time Zone, in 
           case you're curious, though I have no idea what that sounds like in 
           Estonian!).  So, internationally, there is a system of letters 
           assigned to the various zones: Unfortunately, it doesn't follow a 
           coherent system.
           a. Greenwich is Z, for 0 UT (sometimes called Zulu Time, though the 
              old Zulu Empire is today 2 hours later than Greenwich).
           b. All zones east of there up until the International Date Line 
              (180°) are named "A" (+1 hour UT), "B" (+2 hours UT, 
              including the Zulu Empire in today's South Africa), "C" (+3 
              hours UT), ... to "M" for most of the western half of the zone 
              straddling the IDL.
           c. All zones west of the Greenwich zone are lettered, still in 
              ascending order, from "N" (-1 hours UT), "O" (-2 hours UT), "P" 
              (-3 hours UT), ... to "X" for most of the eastern half of the 
              zone stradding the IDL.
        8. So that means that our International Zones are:
           a. Atlantic Standard Time = "Q"
           b. Eastern Standard Time = "R"
           c. Central Standard Time = "S"
           d. Mountain Standard Time = "T"
           e. Pacific Standard Time = "U"
           f. Alaska Standard Time = "V"
           g. Hawai'i-Aleutian Standard Time = "W"
        9. And, just to be difficult, not all countries play by the 
           15°/one hour rule:
           a. A few are centered on intermediate central meridians, so that 
              they're offset by half an hour, instead of a full hour (e.g, 
              Iran, which is +3:30 UT; Newfoundland, the easternmost of 
              Canada's provinces, is -3:30 UT; and India, at +5:50 UT).
           b. A few very sparsely populated places don't participate in it at 
              all, the Empty Quarter in Saudia Arabia, for example.
       10. And yet another plot complication:  The boundaries of these zones 
           do not fall exactly on the theoretical boundary meridians (which 
           are supposed to be halfway between each pair of central meridians).  
           You can see the mayhem on the international level here: 
           The boundaries follow meridians over the oceans and then zig and 
           zag all over on land.  This happens for a couple of reasons:
           a. Most smaller countries and states find it administratively 
              convenient to have their entire jurisdiction in one time zone:
                i. The boundary between international zones P and Q runs up 
                   the Andes, along the boundary between Chile and Argentina 
                   in southernmost South America (interestingly, the 
                   Falklands/Malvinas island group to the southeast of 
                   Argentina, is in the Q zone -- Britain and Argentina both 
                   claim them, but the British hold them, and their use of the 
                   Q zone seems to underscore their claim to them).
               ii. Allllllllllllll of the People's Republic of China is in the 
                   H zone, the boundaries to which then flow along much of the 
                   PRC's borders.
              iii. The boundary between U and T runs right up the border 
                   between Nevada and Utah and, farther north, between the 
                   Canadian provinces of British Columbia and Alberta.
           b. Even this will be adjusted further if there is a compelling 
              economic argument for including smaller areas in a time zone 
              different than the country, state, or province it's in.  We see 
              lots of examples at the scale of the American 
              contiguous 48 states (be patient -- this is a large graphic 
              file, and it takes a while to download):
                i. Take a look at the Pacific Northwest: The boundary between 
                   Pacific (U) and Mountain (T) standard time zones zigs 
                   around some counties in eastern Oregon and northern Idaho.
               ii. You see lots of this in the Great Plains states: western 
                   Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, and North Dakota.
              iii. Allllll of the great state of Texas is in Central Standard 
                   Time (S), ..... except the westernmost county in which El 
                   Paso is located.  El Paso is the Bright Lights of the Big 
                   City for a lot of people living just over the western state 
                   border in New Mexico, who would find commuting daily 
                   between time zones would be a serious pain.
               iv. Another example of a zig and zag around a commuting field 
                   is found up around Chicago, which is in the state of 
                   Illinois on the southwest end of Lake Michigan:  A lot of 
                   Chicago Loop commuters live in the northwest corner of 
                   Indiana, and a bunch of people living in South Chicago 
                   commute to Gary, Indiana.  Notice how the border bends 
                   around the northwesternmost counties of Indiana.
       11. Standard Time is wonderful:  It promotes safety and convenience by 
           getting everyone in a region to agree to keep the wrong time but 
           the same time.  It does create some problems, though.  The big one 
           is that we are confronted with sudden one hour time changes as we 
           leave one time zone for the next, and there we sit, wondering what 
           to do with the *&@$%?! watches and dashboard clocks.  Here's the 
           secret (and a way around the confusing nature of the English 
           language, which misleads us here).
           a. As you go from east to west (e.g., driving from Boston to San 
              Francisco), you RELIVE an hour each time you cross a time zone 
              boundary (yeah, like that exciting stretch on I-80 heading out 
              of North Platte, Nebraska).  So, what do you do with your clock 
              if you get to relive an hour?  You set it BACK an hour.
           b. As you go from west to east (e.g., from Los Angeles to Atlanta), 
              you SKIP an hour each time you cross a time zone boundary (gosh, 
              wouldn't it be awfully nice to skip that lonesome stretch 
              through the Llano Estacado on US 70 from Roswell, NM through 
              Clovis, NM, to Lubbock, TX?). Since you skip an hour, what will 
              you be doing with the dashboard clock (after getting out your 
              car owner's manual <G>)?  To skip an hour, you'd set the 
              clock FORWARD an hour.
           c. Notice I haven't used the words, "gain" and "lose" an hour?  
              That's because English is sometimes distressingly ambiguous.  To 
              "gain" an hour means to relive an hour and set the clock back, 
              but most of us hear the word "gain" as a mathematical direction 
              and add an hour (as in from 10 am to 11 am), right?  To "lose" 
              an hour, means to skip it, but we often think "lose? okay, 
              subtract an hour, from 10 am to 9 am).  It is, therefore, NOT a 
              good idea to use the expressions, "gain" and "lose" an hour.  
              Instead, think, "I relive an hour as I cross a time zone 
              boundary going west, and I skip an hour there if I'm going 
              east."  Thinking of it this way will keep you in an unconfused 
              state.  I hope.
           d. With respect to telephone calls, plane flights, and such, places 
              EAST OF you are LATER than you, and places WEST OF you are 
              EARLIER than you, one hour for every time zone boundary in 
              between you.  Alternatively, if YOU are east of someplace, YOU 
              are later than that place, and, if YOU are west of someplace, 
              YOU are earlier than that place.  
                i. For example, we are west of Greenwich (our nearest central 
                   meridian is 120°W, or -120°, so we are earlier than 
                   Greenwich.  If it's 11 pm there, it's 3 pm here.
               ii. New York is east of us, in Eastern Standard Time.  That 
                   means that there are three time zone boundaries between us, 
                   which means that NYC is 3 hours later than we are:  If it's 
                   11 am here at the Beach, it's 2 pm there.
              iii. If you want to call your Aunt Bertha in Chicago (two time 
                   zones east of us), and you know the dear soul retires each 
                   night at 9 pm, you'd better make sure to call her before 
                   what time our time?   9 - 2 = 7 pm here.
               iv. Let's say you fly from Boston to Los Angeles.  You're on 
                   the red-eye economy flight leaving Logan at 10 pm.  The 
                   flight normally takes six hours in this direction (it's 
                   usually about five going from here to there, due to the Jet 
                   Stream, but that's another lecture).  Sooooo, when should 
                   your DEAR friends be awaiting your arrival at LA-X?  The 
                   plane leaves Boston at 10 pm EST.  There are three time 
                   zone boundaries to cross (EST-CST; CST-MST; MST-PST), so 
                   there are three hours of time difference between L.A. and 
                   Boston.  L.A. is west of Boston, so that means L.A. is 
                   three hours EARLIER.  Soooo, the plane leaves Boston at 7 
                   pm, Los Angeles time.  Add 6 hours of flying time to 7 pm 
                   (7+6=13, oops, that's an hour past midnight). So, the plane 
                   arrives at 1 am -- you'd better have VERY dear friends, if 
                   you pull this on them).
     B. Daylight Saving Time is another geographic grid and time topic. 
        1. Daylight Savings was first instituted in the US towards the end of 
           World War I, for seven months in 1918 and 1919.  The idea was to 
           save fuel for the war effort by getting people to go to bed 
           earlier, so they'd shut off the darn lights already.  By getting 
           them out of bed earlier in the mornings in the summer, too, you'd 
           get them to utilize the earlier daybreak in summer, which would 
           also help shave the electricity bills. Now, even paroxysms of 
           patriotism are not likely to motivate most folks into hitting the 
           hay any sooner (maybe our Inner Child is rebelling against our 
           Inner Parents who are ordering us to go to bed and stay there?).  
           So, the government decided to trick 'em into it.  That's what 
           Daylights Savings is all about:  snookering us into bed sooner than 
           we'd like to go.  The idea was that we would feel better about 
           going to bed at 10 pm if we could call it 11 pm. This was one 
           unpopular law and Americans rose up and forced Congress to abolish 
           it in 1919, over President Wilson's veto.
        2. Then, World War II hit.  The United States went back on Daylight 
           Saving Time, again to conserve fuel for the war effort.  It stayed 
           on year-long Daylight Savings for a few years this time, from 2 
           February 1942 through 30 September 1945.  People got used to it (or 
           resigned to it), and it lingered after the War.
        3. From 1945 to 1966, though, the Federal government didn't mandate 
           it, so states and counties and even cities were free to choose DST 
           or not.  Well, states' rights and all, the result was a crazy quilt 
           of areas observing DST and not, of areas implementing it at one 
           time of the year and others choosing a different date.  It was 
           getting kind of nutty.  It was more than just kooky, however, for 
           certain economic interests:  broadcasters and bus and train and 
           plane lines.  All this local color was creating ticked-off 
           customers and general confusion.  One memorable example was that, 
           on one dinky little stretch of Route 2, just 35 miles worth, 
           between Moundsville, WV, and Steubenville, OH, every bus driver and 
           his or her passengers had to endure SEVEN TIME CHANGES!  
        4. Congress finally got its act together and passed the Uniform Time 
           Act of 1966, which President Johnson signed into law on 13 April 
           1966.  This mandated consistent application of DST within each 
           state participating in the program.  
           a. There are a couple of exceptions:
                i. State legislatures were given the power to vote not to 
                   participate in DST, and three have, perversely, done just 
                   that:  Arizona, Hawai'i, and Indiana (that's why they are 
                   marked separately on the map of time zones I sent you to 
                   earlier, oh, heck, here 
                   is another link to it). 
               ii. Indiana changed its mind in 2006, so they now participate 
                   in Daylight Savings. 
              iii. Also, if a state includes more than one time zone, its 
                   legislature is free to allow the part in one time zone not 
                   to participate, while voting that the other part has to 
                   participate.  Indiana did just that.  
           b. In 1986, Congress voted to change the date on which we start DST 
              from the last weekend in April to the first.
                i. This extended the fuel-saving virtues of DST three weeks.
               ii. So, the US was on Daylight Savings from the middle of the 
                   FIRST weekend in April to the middle of the LAST weekend in 
                   October. 
           c. In 2005, the Energy Policy Act changed the dates yet again, this 
              time both the beginning and the ending dates, effective 2007.  
                i. Daylight Savings now starts on the second Sunday in March.
               ii. Daylight Savings now ends on the first Sunday in November.
              iii. It's on the Saturday/Sunday midnight to let us 
                   get used to the one hour "jet lag" it produces by Monday 
                   (and to let the absent-minded ones among us find out we 
                   blew it on Sunday, not on Monday, which has probably saved 
                   more than a few people's jobs!).  
           d. During Daylight Savings, we all sort of pretend we live in the 
              next time zone east of us.  So, that should tell you what to do 
              with the clocks:
                i. Spring ahead (skip the clock ahead an hour on the first 
                   weekend of April) and
               ii. Fall behind (set the clock behind an hour on the last 
                   weekend of October)
              iii. Alternatively, I've heard it "spring forward and fall back"    
        5. Other countries participate in DST but, just to make the life of a 
           travel agent uncomfortable, each country switches at dates that may 
           differ from ours.  
           a. For example, the European Union runs DST from the last Sunday in 
              March through the last Sunday in October.
           b. The Russians stay on Daylight Savings all year, but, during the 
              summer, they do double DST:  They spring ahead and fall behind, 
              which leaves them two full hours apart from standard time!
     C. The Date and the International Date Line.
        1. By travelling far enough west, you begin to pick up more free time 
           than you're "entitled" to.  Travelling from New York to Chicago, 
           you pick up one measly hour; flying from New York to Los Angeles, 
           you pick up three hours.  Chump change so far.  But imagine flying 
           from London to Anchorage, AK (135° of longitude between their 
           central meridians would be NINE full hours!).  
        2. Now imagine you fly from L.A. to New Zealand to Singapore to New 
           Delhi to Rome to London to New York and back to L.A.?  Yep -- 24 
           hours of ill-gotten gain.  This is an injustice crying for revenge, 
           wouldn't you say?
        3. This is exactly what happened to Ferdinand Magellan's (Fernão de 
           Magelhães') crew in 1519-1522! He and his crew sailed from Seville, 
           Spain (he was a Portuguese Basque nobleman but felt he'd been aggrieved 
           by the King of Portugal and, so, to be a snot, he sailed under the 
           Spanish flag and the name Fernando Magellanes) on 10 August 1519.  
           a. This was an ill-starred, bloody expedition. You can read the
              notes of one of the crew here. 
           b. Just some of their misfortunes:  
                i. Three of his ships' captains mutineed while overwintering 
                   in Argentina, and he had two of them killed and the third 
                   marooned (their drawn-and-quartered and impaled remains 
                   were found nearly 60 years later by Sir Francis Drake, the 
                   English pirate and Queen's spy, who got into the spirit of 
                   things and had someone beheaded there for alleged mutiny, 
                   too).
               ii. Magellan's crews nearly starved and many died during the 
                   long voyage west across an ocean that had looked so 
                   peaceful after an awful passage through the Straits of 
                   Magellan that Magellan named it the "Pacific."  
              iii. Magellan got himself killed in a battle he picked with one 
                   of the peoples of one of the Philippine Islands, this on 28 
                   April 1522 (Battle of Mactan).  
           c. The last 18 members of his crew of 237 on the last remaining 
              ship of the original five struggled back into port in Seville.  
              This ship had circumnavigated the world, conclusively proving it 
              was round.  Magellan's crew did keep excellent records, and so 
              they were blown away by finding out it was the 8th of September, 
              1522, in Seville when they "knew" it "had to be" the 7th of 
              September.  
           d. This turned out to be a regular occurrence:  You sail west 
              around the world, and it's going to be a day later than your 
              records show when you get back.
        4. This is the problem eventually resolved by the International Date 
           Line.  This is a designated spot where, if you cross that meridian, 
           you have to give back all those ill-got gains at once in one big 
           lump sum of 24 hours, a full day.  
           a. If you cross that line westbound, the hours have been getting 
              set back as you travel, but now you have to skip the calendar 
              ahead one full day.  
           b. Travelling eastbound across the line, you've been skipping the 
              clock as you travel along but now you get to set the calendar 
              day back so you can relive that whole day (hopefully more 
              happily than Magellan's crew did).
           c. Crossing the International Date Line has the opposite effect of 
              crossing time zone boundaries, then, except it involves a whole 
              calendar day, not just a measly hour.
        5. So, viewed spatially, there are TWO dates on the earth at any one 
           time.  Only at noon, Greenwich Mean Time (12:00 UT) is there just 
           one date on Earth.
           a. With our modern calendar, we change the dates at midnight, a 
              convenient hour in the wee hours, when all but a few night-owls 
              are asleep.
           b. We can imagine the meridian experiencing noon and the antipodal 
              meridian experiencing midnight (and the change of date( as 
              chasing one another around the earth, passing over the fixed 
              meridians of the geographic grid.  Let's say this is on, oh, the 
              1st of October.
           c. As the midnight meridian sweeps across the earth past the 
              International Date Line, the new date of October 2nd begins and, 
              at first, covers only a narrow sliver of the earth.  As the 
              midnight meridian continues, the slice of the new day gets wider 
              and wider and the slice of the old day gets skinnier and 
              skinnier until, once more, the midnight meridian passes directly 
              over the International Date Line and that new date, October 2nd, 
              is the only one left on Earth:

              [ the change of date on Earth ]          
     D. And that concludes the lecture on the geographic grid, including 
        latitude, longitude, and time.  You now have enough material to 
        complete Lab 1, available from the course home page.  


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Document and © maintained by Dr. Rodrigue
First placed on web: 09/13/00
Last revised: 09/13/08

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