Tonal system
The tonal system is a base 16 system of notation, arithmetic, and metrology proposed in 1859 by John W. Nystrom. In addition to new weights and measures, his proposal included a new calendar with sixteen months, a new system of coinage, and a clock with sixteen major divisions of the day. Nystrom advocated his system thus:
Names for the numbers
He proposed names for the digits, calling zero "noll" and counting :"An, de, ti, go, su, by, ra, me, ni, ko, hu, vy, la, po, fy, ton."
Because hexadecimal requires sixteen digits, Nystrom supplemented the existing decimal digits 0 through 9 with his own invented characters and changed the value of 9 to ten. Later, the hexadecimal notation overcame this same obstacle by using the digits 0 through 9 followed by the letters A through F.
The numbers 1116 and 1216 would be said "tonan", "tonde", etc. The table below shows Nystrom's names for successive powers of 1016.
Base 16 Number | Tonal Name | Base 10 Equivalent |
10 | ton | 16 |
100 | san | 256 |
1000 | mill | 4,096 |
1,0000 | bong | 65,536 |
10,0000 | tonbong | 1,048,576 |
100,0000 | sanbong | 16,777,216 |
1000,0000 | millbong | 268,435,456 |
1,0000,0000 | tam | 4,294,967,296 |
1,0000,0000,0000 | song | 16^12 |
1,0000,0000,0000,0000 | tran | 16^16 |
1,0000,0000,0000,0000,0000 | bongtran | 16^20 |
Thus, the hexadecimal number 1510,0000 would be "mill-susanton-bong". This first hexadecimal system, proposed in the 19th century, has thus far not achieved widespread usage.
Although Nystrom did not propose a language for tonal fractions, his nomenclature for units of measure does provide one: the name of a power of sixteen before the base unit's name multiplies it by that number, but a power of sixteen after the base unit's name divides it by that number. Thus, de timtons means tim.
Geography
For latitudes he put 0 at the North Pole, 4 at the equator and 8 at the South Pole. The units were called tims. They are the same as the colatitudes measured in turns times 16.Tonal | ISO 6709 | Colatitude | Colatitude |
0 | 090 | 0° | 0 |
1 | 67.5 | ||
2 | 045 | 45° | 0.125 |
3 | 022.5 | ||
4 | 000 | 90° | 0.25 |
5 | −22.5 | ||
6 | −045 | 135° | 0.375 |
7 | −67.5 | ||
8 | −090 | 180° | 0.5 |