@Kent1Cooper wrote:
.... If it's really an Arc with endpoints at different elevations, distances along it will not be proportional to distances in the Z direction. For example, if its midpoint is at an elevation halfway between those of its endpoints, a point 1/4 of the way along it will not be at an elevation 1/4 of the way between the endpoint elevations. ....
To illustrate:
The green is an actual Arc with its endpoints at different elevations, which of course looks elliptical in this WCS plan view. The midpoint is halfway between the elevations of the ends; the red Points are quarter points along the length of the Arc. Note that the 1st & 3rd quarter-points are not at elevations halfway between the end- and mid-point elevations [which would be ±0.5].

And to take it to more of an extreme:

Note that the quarter-points are at elevations farther from that of the mid-point than the end-points are! The Arc goes upward from the high end before it drops, and goes below the low end before it gets there.
Kent Cooper, AIA