
thumb |Joseph Priestley's [[A New Chart of History, 1765]] thumb|right|The bronze timeline "Fifteen meters of History" with background information board, Örebro, [[Sweden]] A timeline is a list of events displayed in chronological order. It is typically a graphic design showing a long bar labelled with dates paralleling it, and usually contemporaneous events.
thumb |Joseph Priestley's [[A New Chart of History, 1765]] thumb|right|The bronze timeline "Fifteen meters of History" with background information board, Örebro, [[Sweden]] A timeline is a list of events displayed in chronological order. It is typically a graphic design showing a long bar labelled with dates paralleling it, and usually contemporaneous events.
Timelines can use any suitable scale representing time, suiting the subject and data; many use a linear scale, in which a unit of distance is equal to a set amount of time. This timescale is dependent on the events in the timeline. A timeline of evolution can be over millions of years, whereas a timeline for the day of the September 11 attacks can take place over minutes, and that of an explosion over milliseconds. While many timelines use a linear timescale—especially where very large or small timespans are relevant -- logarithmic timelines entail a logarithmic scale of time; some "hurry up and wait" chronologies are depicted with zoom lens metaphors.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).