Ill have a go....... sounds like Sharpie325 is already a Flat Earther migrating here from the likes of Jeranism
Right, firstly a bit of required maths about how curvature and line of sight is measured:
d = OC = distance to the horizon
D = AB = diameter of the Earth
h = OB = height of the observer above sea level
D+h = OA = diameter of the Earth plus height of the observer above sea level
Then a refraction correction needs to be applied.
http://www.aboutcivil.org/curvature-and-refraction.htmlOr you can calculate using Earths radius

Sorry Jroa..... dem pics again.....

Then take a look at these:
This series of pictures shows ships between 15-25km from the observer, photographed from both sea level and 12m altitude. Also included are pictures of the distant shoreline of the island that lies across the bay, from both sea level and 12m altitude. There are examples of photos taken at magnifications of 1:1, 8:1 and 28:1. Lets see If we can observe a Hump or bulge over distance.
In these series are shown;
1. ships at 8 times magnification viewed from different elevations, the higher elevations revealing more of the hulls than are visible at sea level (0m)
2. Island coastland viewed at 8x magnification from different elevations, with more of the lower view of the coast visible from higher elevations
3. 28x telescope images of selected views of both coastal land and ships showing that higher magnification does not increase the proportion of the subject viewable but that higher elevation does increase the proportion of the subject that is visible.
Note: Some images have been reduced in size to make comparisons easier, the full view is available by cliking the image.
Ship 1, 1x mag. 12m alt. (enlarged to show detail)
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Ship 1, 8x mag. 12m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Ship 1, 8x mag. 12m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Ship 1, 8x mag. 0m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Ship 1, 8x mag. 0m alt. (note ship 2 behind ship1. The hull of ship 2 is not even visible)
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Ship 2, 8x mag. 0m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Ship 2, 8x mag. 12m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Ship 3, 8x mag. 0m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Ship 3, 28x mag. 0m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Ship 2, 28x mag. 1.5m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Ship 2, 28x mag. 12m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Dune, 8x mag. 0m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Dune, 8x mag. 12m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Houses on hill, 8x mag. 0m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Houses on hill, 28x mag. 1.5m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Houses on hill, 8x mag. 12m alt.
Ships Below the Horizon by
max_wedge, on Flickr
Plenty of Curavture and a "hump" can be observed