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how deer mans partition time.
This private article was written by [Deactivated User], and last updated on 6 Apr 2019, 06:18.
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This article is a work in progress! Check back later in case any changes have occurred.
This article is a work in progress! Check back later in case any changes have occurred.

Section 1: Days and Smaller
how deer mans partition time. they live in somewhere equal to the west coast of Canada on human Earth; like in the Vancouver area, so when the daylight varies, it is similar to there.
a cervid day is always the (exact as possible) length of the full revolution of Earth.
1 cervid day = 1 human day ≈ 23.93 human hours
the day begins at sunrise, as opposed to midnight.
one cervid day is divided into eight partitions like this:
[insert diagram]
then, each partition is divided into four cervid hours. Notice that the length changes depending on the progress of Earth's orbit around the Sun.
however, there is an "hour proper" for clocks and modern technology, which is always held like an equinox (all eight sections equal).
1 cervid hour proper (or cervid hour at equinox) ≈ 0.748 human hours
1 cervid hour (daytime, at summer solstice) ≈ 1.013 human hours
1 cervid hour (daytime, at winter solstice) ≈ 0.510 human hours
each cervid hour is divided into 256 cervid "minutes". this is much shorter than a human minute.
1 cervid minute proper (or cervid minute at equinox) ≈ 10.52 human seconds
1 cervid minute (daytime, at summer solstice) ≈ 14.24 human seconds
1 cervid minute (daytime, at winter solstice) ≈ 7.171 human seconds
then each cervid "minute" is divided into 256 "seconds". these are also much shorter than a human second. a cervid second is too fast for anyone to react. you could react in 3 cervid seconds.
1 cervid second proper (or cervid second at equinox) ≈ 41.09 human milliseconds
1 cervid second (daytime, at summer solstice) ≈ 55.64 human milliseconds
1 cervid second (daytime, at winter solstice) ≈ 28.01 human milliseconds
there are of course, divisions of cervid seconds; but they are extremely small and more advanced.
Section 2: Weeks and Larger
A cervid week is four days.
A cervid month once attempted to match lunar cycles (but it doesn't anymore). There are 13 months per year. Twelve of the months are normal at 7 cervid weeks long. The special 7+ week month contains most of the rut (mating season), and has one or more extra days at the beginning (like human leap years) to match Earth's orbit around the Sun.
[insert diagram]
the year begins on day 1 of the month with spring equinox in it. humans did this 2,000 years ago.
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