Now that we don’t have to think about a possible future Europe/Glasgow zone (postings back in August) for several years at least, here’s a bit of Scottish history to consider instead. St Andrews, on the Fife coast in the east of Scotland, had a meridian line set up some 200 years before Greenwich. Here’s a quote from a press release from the University of St Andrews, who have just created a memorial to mark this line: "The 17th Century Scottish astronomer and scientific pioneer James Gregory laid down a meridian line across the floor of his lab at St Andrews University in 1673, almost 200 years before the Greenwich Meridian was established and arbitrarily adopted as the world’s official prime meridian. "Now St Andrews has recognised Gregory’s remarkable body of work with a permanent public memorial – a solid brass line which follows exactly the line of his meridian and bisects the pavement in South Street, St Andrews.” This story was picked up by The Times and the BBC (and probably others I haven’t seen). As well as the line on the lab floor there was a sighting mark outside a window and a stone marker on a hill 2.4km away. This still exists and is marked on Ordnance Survey maps. Some URLs: The University of St Andrews press release: <http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/news/archive/2014/title,250213,en.php> BBC piece: <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-29474850> The Times piece (which is behind their paywall): <http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/uk/scotland/article4224136.ece> Map showing St Andrews and Gregory’s Pillar (marked with arrow): <http://www.streetmap.co.uk/idld.srf?X=350994&Y=715496&A=Y&Z=115&lm=1&ax=3509...> Peter Ilieve