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Worldwide Time
System
Time
Zones
Time Zones Were Standardized in 1884
By Matt Rosenberg
Prior to the late nineteenth
century, time keeping was a purely local phenomenon. Each town would set their
clocks to noon when the sun reached its zenith each day.
A clockmaker or town clock
would be the "official" time and the citizens would set their pocket
watches and clocks to the time of the town.
Enterprising citizens would
offer their services as mobile clock setters, carrying a watch with the
accurate time to adjust the clocks in customer's homes on a weekly basis.
Travel between cities meant
having to change one's pocket watch upon arrival.
However,
once railroads began to operate and move people rapidly across great distances,
time became much more critical.
In the early years of the
railroads, the schedules were very confusing because each stop was based on a
different local time. The standardization of time was essential to efficient
operation of railroads.
In 1878, Canadian Sir Sandford Fleming proposed the system
of worldwide time zones that we use today.
He recommended that the world
be divided into twenty-four time zones, each spaced 15 degrees of longitude
apart.
Since the earth rotates once
every 24 hours and there are 360 degrees of longitude, each hour the earth
rotates one-twenty-fourth of a circle or 15 degrees of longitude.
Sir Fleming's time zones were
heralded as a brilliant solution to a chaotic problem worldwide.
United
States railroad companies began utilizing Fleming’s standard time zones on
November 18, 1883.
In 1884 an International
Prime Meridian Conference was held in Washington D.C. to standardize time and
select the prime meridian.
The conference selected the
longitude of Greenwich, England as zero degrees longitude and established the
24 time zones based on the prime meridian.
Although the time zones had
been established, not all countries switched immediately.
Though most U.S. states began
to adhere to the Pacific, Mountain, Central, and Eastern time zones by 1895,
Congress didn't make the use of these time zones mandatory until the Standard
Time Act of 1918.
How Different Regions of the World Use Time Zones
Today, many countries operate on variations of the time zones
proposed by Sir Fleming.
All of China (which should
span five time zones) uses a single time zone -- eight hours ahead of
Coordinated Universal Time (known by the abbreviation UTC, based on the time
zone running through Greenwich at 0 degrees longitude).
Australia uses three time
zones -- its central time zone is a half-hour ahead of its designated time
zone.
Several countries in the
Middle East and South Asia also utilize half-hour time zones.
Since
time zones are based on segments of longitude and lines of longitude narrow at
the poles, scientists working at the North and South Poles simply use UTC time.
Otherwise, Antarctica would be divided into 24 very thin time zones!
The
time zones of the United States are standardized by Congress and although the
lines were drawn to avoid populated areas, sometimes they've been moved to
avoid complication.
There are nine time zones in
the U.S. and its territories, they include Eastern, Central, Mountain, Pacific,
Alaska, Hawaii-Aleutian, Samoa, Wake Island, and Guam.
With
the growth of the Internet and global communication and commerce, some have
advocated a new worldwide time system.
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