Norwegian/Swedish mil
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A mil (Norwegian and Swedish for mile) is a unit of length, usually used to measure geographic distance, fairly common in Norway and Sweden. Today, it measures by definition 10 kilometres, but earlier in history it had different values.
[edit] History
In Norway and Sweden, the old "land mile" or "long mile" was 36,000 feet: because of the different definitions of foot then in use, in Norway this was 11.295 km and in Sweden 10688 m. (Had the Imperial foot been used, the distance would have worked out to 10972.8 m.) The distance was equal to an older unit of measurement, the "rast" ("rest, pause"), representing a suitable distance between rests when walking. [1]
When the Metric system was introduced in Norway and Sweden in 1889 (the actual law having been passed in 1875), the mil was redefined to be exactly 10 km.
A few years later, the metric system was introduced also in Finland. Even there the traditional measure which is called peninkulma in Finnish and mil in Swedish, was then redefined to be exactly 10 km. In Finland, however, it has been much less in use than in Sweden.
[edit] Usage
The mil is currently never used on road signs (kilometre is the standard for all formal written distances), but almost always in informal and imprecise situations involving distances greater than ten kilometres, such as "There are about 52 mil between Trondheim and Oslo". It is also used commonly for measuring vehicle fuel consumption ("litre per mil"). [2]