THE RAIN TREEFrom “Voyageurs anciens et modernes”(By E. T. Charton)A legendary scene in the island of Ferro
THE RAIN TREEFrom “Voyageurs anciens et modernes”(By E. T. Charton)A legendary scene in the island of Ferro
THE RAIN TREE
From “Voyageurs anciens et modernes”
(By E. T. Charton)
A legendary scene in the island of Ferro
That many plants spontaneously exude moisture under suitable conditions is well known. The phenomenon is called “guttation.” The moisture drawn up from the roots is usually transpired from the leaves in the form of invisible water vapor; i. e., it is evaporated on passing into the air. If, however, the humidity of the surrounding air is sufficientlyhigh, or its temperature sufficiently low, to check evaporation, the water will collect on the surface of the plant in liquid form, and may ultimately trickle to the ground in considerable quantities. Guttation occurs chiefly at night, or in cloudy or foggy weather. In a very dry climate it does not occur at all; and for this reason, even if the so-called rain tree could be successfully introduced in such a climate, it would not help solve the problem of irrigation.
The dripping of moisture deposited on plants by drifting fog is another common process that may have contributed to the legend of the rain tree. A classic example of this process—technically called “fog drip”—is that described by Dr. R. Marloth, who has made actual measurements of the abundant moisture captured by the vegetation of Table Mountain, South Africa, from the driving clouds of the southeast trade winds during the nearly rainless summer months. Mr. Madison Grant, writing of a similar phenomenon witnessed in the redwood forests of California, tells us that “these forests are sometimes so wet that the dripping from the high crowns is like a thin rain, and in summer it is oftentimes hard to tell whether it is raining or not, so saturated with moisture are the foliage and the trunks when the fog darkens the forest.”
A copious production of “honeydew” by plant lice, scale insects, etc., may be at the bottom of some of the rain-tree stories. F. E. Lutz, in his “Field Book of Insects,” writes of “weeping trees,” which drip fluid of insect origin, and he says of the honeydew secreted by the pear psylla (Psylla pyricola): “When the psyllas are numerous theleaves and fruit become coated with this sticky substance and it even drops from them like rain and runs down the trunk.”
The following account of the Peruvian rain tree, quoted from the traveler Spruce, was published in “Nature” of Feb. 28, 1878, by Prof. Thiselton Dyer:
“The Tamia-caspi, or rain tree of the eastern Peruvian Andes, is not a myth, but a fact, although not exactly in the way popular rumor has presented it. I first witnessed the phenomenon in September, 1855, when residing at Tarapoto. I had gone one morning at daybreak, with two assistants, into the adjacent wooded hills to botanize. A little after seven o’clock we came under a lowish spreading tree, from which with a perfectly clear sky over-head a smart rain was falling. A glance upward showed a multitude of cicadas, sucking the juices of the tender young branches and leaves and squirting forth slender streams of limpid fluid.”
The Down country of southern England is one of the few places in the world where the people go to the hilltops to seek water in dry weather. On the summits of the Downs are found many artificial shallow ponds, most of them very old. Some, indeed, date back to prehistoric times. The bottom of these ponds consists of a layer of puddled chalk or clay and is impervious to water, so that there is no loss by seepage. As the ponds are not fed by springs or surface drainage, and as lack of rain does not cause them to dry up, it is popularly believed that their maintenance depends upon dew. Hence they are called “dew ponds.”
Kipling mentions them in his poetical description of Sussex:
We have no waters to delightOur broad and brookless vales—Only the dew pond on the heightUnfed, that never fails.
We have no waters to delightOur broad and brookless vales—Only the dew pond on the heightUnfed, that never fails.
We have no waters to delightOur broad and brookless vales—Only the dew pond on the heightUnfed, that never fails.
The leading authority on dew ponds is Mr. Edward A. Martin, who has written a book about them. Mr. Martin’s experiments have demonstrated that dew can make no important contribution to the water supply of these ponds. The rainfall on the hilltops is somewhat higher than in the valleys, and the greater part of the water in the ponds is undoubtedly derived from this source. The real key to the mystery, however, is found in the wet fogs that drift in from the sea. The process of “fog drip,” which we have mentioned in connection with the rain tree, supplies the deficiencies of the rainfall, and the name “mist ponds,” occasionally applied to these bodies of water, is more appropriate than “dew ponds.”
It remains, however, an interesting paradox that, in time of drought, the farmers of the Downs drive their cattle to the hilltops to be watered and send their carts uphill to procure water for household use in the valleys below. Was it, perhaps, in this topsy-turvy region—where uplands are called “downs”—that Jack and Jill went “up the hill” on their ill-starred water quest?
Wells that predict weather changes are local curiosities in many parts of the world. Such wells are not uncommon in the United States. If the well is open at the top, its manifestations consistof occasional disturbance of the water and the discharge of numerous bubbles. If it is covered, a strong current of air is, at times, emitted from any small orifice in the cover. This may be strong enough to lift and blow away light objects placed over the aperture. Its emission is frequently accompanied by a loud whistling or roaring sound. Such occurrences are supposed to betoken an approaching storm. These wells are called “blowing wells”; sometimes “weather wells” or “barometer wells.”
In certain cases an indraft of air is sometimes observed; i. e., the well alternately “sucks” and “blows.”
As a rule these phenomena correspond to fluctuations in barometric pressure, and therefore are, in a rough way, indicative of changes in weather. It is obvious that a body of air inclosed in the earth and communicating by one or a few small openings with the air above will set up outdrafts and indrafts in adjusting its tension to that of the latter. The amount of air contained in the well itself would not suffice to produce the violent effects observed and it is therefore assumed that the typical blowing well taps a subterranean reservoir of air, probably filling the interstices of sand and gravel beds. When the pressure of the external air is diminished, some of the imprisoned air escapes. For a given body of inclosed air, the smaller the channel or channels by which it emerges, the stronger the outdraft. When the barometric pressure outside increases, the current of air flows in the reverse direction. In winter the indraft of cold air in such a well sometimes causes the water to freeze, even at a depth of 100 feet or more below the surface ofthe ground, and is therefore a source of inconvenience to the owner.
Various other circumstances may give rise to the bubbling and blowing of wells. Carbon dioxide and other gases dissolved in the well water account for the bubbling of many wells, and this process is more active at times of low barometric pressure, because at a given temperature, the amount of gas that the water can hold in solution varies with the pressure.
Another cause of the blowing of a well is, in some cases, a sudden rise in the water level (“water table”) in the surrounding ground, as after a heavy rainstorm. If the ground is overlain by an impervious stratum, the air imprisoned between this stratum and the surface of the ground water over an extensive area will escape with violence through any available channel, such as that supplied by the well.
Lastly, cases have been described in which subterranean air currents arise from the friction of rapidly flowing underground streams, setting up permanent indrafts or outdrafts through wells communicating with such streams.
Showers of blood, sulphur, manna, frogs, fishes, and what not figure in all the old chronicles, and are still frequently reported. Many occurrences of this kind are recorded in Camille Flammarion’s book “The Atmosphere,” Dr. E. E. Free’s “Movement of Soil Material by the Wind” (U. S. Bureau of Soils, Bulletin 68), and Mr. W. L. McAtee’s article “Showers of Organic Matter” in the “Monthly Weather Review” for May, 1917.
The power of the wind to whirl objects aloft is a matter of familiar observation. McAtee tells of seeing a silk hat lifted from its owner’s head and blown over a ten-story building in the city of Washington. The vortex of a tornado or a waterspout furnishes the most favorable skyward route for things that belong onterra firma. Objects weighing scores or even hundreds of pounds are lifted by these whirls. Within a mile or so of a tornado a shower of cart wheels or cook stoves would not necessarily constitute a “prodigy.” A chicken coop weighing 75 pounds has been carried four miles and a church spire seventeen miles. Oersted tells of a waterspout at Christiansö, on the Baltic, that emptied the harbor to such an extent that the greater part of the bottom was uncovered, while McAtee says that “waterspouts have been observed to accomplish the comparatively insignificant feat of emptying fish ponds and scattering their occupants.”
There is, in fact, no mystery about the way in which terrestrial objects of many sorts get into the air; nor, considering the force of the winds and their occasional strong vertical components, is it strange that such objects sometimes travel a long way from home before they return to earth.
There are, however, a great many cases of reported showers in which the objects did not really fall, as supposed. McAtee gives the following account of these spurious showers in the “Monthly Weather Review”:
“Insect larvæ.—The rains of insect larvæ that have been investigated have proved to be merely the appearance in large numbers on the surface of the ground or upon snow of the larvæ of soldier beetles (Telephorus), or sometimes caterpillars,which have been driven from their hibernating quarters by the saturation of the soil by heavy rains or melting snow.
“Ants.—Accounts of showers of ants have usually been founded on incursions of large numbers of winged ants, which of course needs no assistance from the elements to follow out their habit of swarming forth periodically in immense numbers.
“Honey; sugar.—Showers of honey and of sugar are popular names for what scientists know are exudations of certain plants, or of plant lice which feed on a great variety of plants and whose product is often known also as honeydew.
“Grains.—Showers of grain, usually considered miraculous, have in most cases been determined to be merely the accumulation by washing during heavy rains of either the seeds or root tubercles of plants of the immediate neighborhood.
“Manna.—An account of manna ‘rains’ certainly pertains to the discussion of showers of vegetable matter, for the substance manna consists of lichens of the genusLecanorabut in none of the numerous recorded instances of manna ‘rains’ is there any direct evidence that the substance really fell from the sky. These lichens form small, round bodies that are easily blown over the surface of the ground and accumulate in depressions; they are very buoyant also and hence easily drifted into masses during the run-off of rain water. Manna ‘rains’ have not occurred except in countries where these lichens are common, and as for statements of their falling down upon roofs or upon people, or for any other proofs that they really rained down, I have seen none.
“Blood rains.—The most frequently reported showers that are spurious, at least in name, are the so-called blood rains. In all times the phenomena going under this name have frightened the people and have been taken as portents of terrific calamities. One of the famous plagues of Egypt was a bloody rain which prevailed throughout the whole land, continuing three days and three nights. Homer and Virgil both allude to blood rains, and, in fact, the general subject of preternatural rains was a favorite with the older writers.
“But scientific investigation has done away with the element of mystery in these phenomena and has explained, with the others, the rains of blood. Some blood rains have been found to be the meconial fluid ejected by large numbers of certain lepidoptera simultaneously emerging from their chrysalides; other red rains are due to the rapid multiplication in rain pools of algæ and of rotifers containing red coloring matter; “red snow” results from the presence of similar organisms. But in no case have they rained down, except in the sense that their spores or eggs have at some time been transported, probably by the wind. The precipitation of moisture furnishes favorable conditions for their rapid development and multiplication.”
Most of the reported showers of blood, however, have probably been rainstorms in which the rain was colored with reddish dust. The occurrence of such dust in the atmosphere is very common in some parts of the world, as we have stated in a previous chapter. It has been asserted that rain which fell at Oppido Mamertina, Italy, May 15, 1890, actually contained blood, believed to be from birds.
Showers of supposed “sulphur” are due to pollen, chiefly from pine trees. The air in the vicinity of pine forests is sometimes filled with clouds of this material and the wind carries it for many miles. It is reported that a pollen shower at Pictou, Nova Scotia, in June, 1841, was so heavy that bucketfuls were swept up on a ship.
In the case of alleged showers of “paper” the material has been found to be the crusts of dried algæ, which form on the surface of the ground exposed by the evaporation of the water of shallow ponds.
The Weather Bureau is a bureau of information, and one of the ways in which it strives to give a good account of itself is by answering endless questions about “the year without a summer.” This title has been given to the year 1816.
Blodget, in his “Climatology of the United States,” tells us that all the summers from 1811 to 1817 were cold in this country, and that in every month of the summers of both 1812 and 1816 snows and frosts occurred in the Northern States. It is the latter summer, however, that has lived in popular tradition. The year 1816 is known further as “poverty year,” or “eighteen hundred and froze to death.” It acquired the name of “mackerel year” in New Hampshire, where people ate mackerel as a substitute for pork, little of which was fattened on account of the extreme scarcity of corn. Western Europe, also, had a cold summer in 1816, and the year as a whole seems to have been a cold one over a great part of the world.
Sources of information about the cold summer in this country, besides Blodget’s book above mentioned,include Perley’s “Historic Storms of New England,” which devotes a whole chapter to the subject, and Charles Peirce’s “Weather in Philadelphia.” Peirce tells us that at Philadelphia “there was ice during every month of the year, not excepting June, July, and August, There was scarcely a vegetable came to perfection north and east of the Potomac.” According to the “Monthly Weather Review,” citing the recollections of James Winchester, of Vermont: “It is said that in June of that year snow fell to the depth of three inches in New York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey on the 17th; five inches in all the New England States, except three inches in Vermont. There was snow and ice in every month of this year. The storm of June 17 was as severe as any that ever occurred in the depth of winter; it began about noon, increasing in fury until night, by which time the roads were impassable by reason of snowdrifts; many were bewildered in the blinding storm and frozen to death.... There was a heavy snowstorm August 30th.... The year 1816 had neither spring, summer, nor autumn. The only crop of corn raised in that part of Vermont that summer was saved by keeping bonfires burning around the cornfield night and day.”
At the time of its occurrence the frigid weather of the summer of 1816 was popularly attributed to sun spots, which were big enough to be seen with the naked eye in May and June. A present-day hypothesis on the subject has been mentioned in our chapter on atmospheric dust. The dust cloud from the eruption of Tomboro, in 1815, was so vast that for three days there was darkness at a distance of 300 miles from the volcano.
A proximate cause of the cold summer is perhaps to be sought in an unusual intensity and extent of the area of low barometric pressure which is more or less permanently located in the vicinity of Iceland and, as one of the principal atmospheric “centers of action,” has a great deal to say about the weather of the countries adjacent to the North Atlantic. Dr. C. F. Brooks has called attention to the fact that the Arctic navigator, Scoresby, found unusually mild and open weather that summer in the seas east of Greenland. This would be explained by strong southerly winds, forming part of the “counter-clockwise” circulation around the Iceland low; and if the same pressure system extended its influence to our shores, persistent cold northwest winds might be expected to result over the northeastern United States.
Indian summerweatheris an undeniable fact. Every inhabitant of the northern United States and southern Canada is familiar with the mild, calm, hazy state of the atmosphere that frequently occurs in the autumn, sometimes following a brief period of unseasonable cold known as “squaw winter.” It is, however, one thing to recognize the existence of a certain type of weather as characteristic of our autumns, and quite another to admit that one definite spell of such weather occurs more or less regularly from year to year. One true summer, and only one, comes to pass each year, and occupies an approximately fixed place in the calendar. Even the so-called “year without a summer,” which we have just described, was merely a year in which the regular annual rise of the temperature curve wasless marked than usual. Indian summer, on the contrary, has never been tied down to a particular part of a particular month. In his notes on the meteorological conditions at Concord, Massachusetts, during the ten years, 1851–1860, Thoreau records the occurrence of Indian summer weather on dates all the way from September 27 to December 13; a range of 77 days.
The belief in the definite occurrence, year after year, of what has sometimes been called the “after-summer” is not peculiar to America. It prevails also in Europe, where this supposed period of renewed warmth has been assigned to certain dates, owing in part to its association with the names of particular saints in the calendar. These dates vary widely, however, from one region to another, ranging from August 15 (Julian calendar), the beginning of the “young women’s summer” of Russia, to November 15, St. Martin’s day, a date popularly associated with after-summer in Germany, Holland, France, Italy, and sometimes England.
The supposed tendency of particular types of weather to occur at about the same period every year, independently of and often in sharp contrast to the regular march of the seasons, has been described by R. Abercromby under the name of “recurrence,” and there is a large literature on the subject; especially in connection with periods of unseasonable temperature. While Indian summer is the most discussed example of recurrence in the American weather calendar, in the Old World more attention, both popular and scientific, has been devoted to a frosty period supposed to recur in May. With the elaboration of the ecclesiastical calendar, the frosts in question became definitely associatedwith the days dedicated to Saints Mamertus, Pancras, and Servatius (May 11, 12, 13), or, in south-central Europe, Saints Pancras, Servatius, and Boniface (May 12, 13, 14), hence known as the Ice Saints. These saints and their days are called in Frenchsaints de glace, and in GermanEisheiligen,Eismänner, orgestrenge Herren.
Yet other examples of the elusive phenomenon of recurrence are the “January thaw” of New England, the April “blackthorn winter” of England, and the June “sheep-cold” (Schafkälte) of Germany, dangerous to newly shorn sheep.
In the middle of the last century the cold weather of the Ice Saints was variously ascribed to the melting of the ice and snow of high latitudes, the passage of periodic meteor showers between the earth and the sun, and other far-reaching terrestrial or cosmical causes. FitzRoy believed that the liberation of latent heat in autumn during the formation of ice in the circumpolar regions was accountable for Indian summer. A review of the whole body of literature concerning supposed recurrent irregularities in the annual march of temperature will be found in the “Monthly Weather Review” (Washington) for August, 1919.
Whether recurrence, in Abercromby’s sense of the term, is a real phenomenon is still an unsettled question. Many periods of unseasonable weather occur in the course of each year, and it is easy for the uncritical observer to identify one of them with the Ice Saints, another with Indian summer, and so on. About the best that meteorologists can do at present is to explain each particular instance of such weather by reference to barometric and other conditions shown on the daily weather map.
Thevast vocabulary of meteorology is very inadequately represented in ordinary dictionaries, and has never been made the subject of a comprehensive special glossary. The writer of this book has been gathering material toward such a glossary for some years, and from the material now in hand it appears that an approximately complete English meteorological dictionary, embracing both scientific and nonscientific terms relating to the atmosphere and its phenomena, would contain upward of fifteen thousand definitions.
From this statement it will be evident that the brief glossary herewith appended is of the most fragmentary character. It includes only a selection of themeteorologicalterms found in the present book. It does not, in general, include terms pertaining primarily to physics, chemistry, astronomy, physiology, etc., even though they figure to some extent in meteorology, as all such terms used in the book are more or less satisfactorily defined in the latest editions of the large American dictionaries.
Absolute Extremes.—The highest and lowest values of a meteorological element (especially temperature) that have ever been recorded at a station; known, respectively, as theabsolute maximumand theabsolute minimum. (The term is sometimes improperly applied to the highest and lowest values for a specified year.)Aeroclinoscope.—A semaphore formerly used in Holland for displaying weather signals.Aerology.—The branch of meteorology dealing with the “free” atmosphere; i. e., all parts of the atmosphere not near the earth’s surface. Aerological investigations are made withkites and balloons, and also include observations of clouds, meteor trails, the aurora, etc.Afterglow.—1. The glow in the western sky after sunset. 2. A renewal of rosy light on mountain peaks after the first sunset illumination has faded; also calledrecoloration. This is one stage of theAlpenglow.After-summer.—A renewal of mild weather in the autumn; called Indian summer in America, St. Martin’s summer, etc., in Europe.Alpenglow.—Successive appearances and disappearances of rosy light sometimes seen on mountain peaks in clear weather after sunset or before sunrise.Altimeter.—A barometer used for measuring altitude.Alto-cumulus;Alto-stratus.—Forms of cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)Anemogram.—The record traced by a self-registering anemometer.Anemometer.—An instrument for measuring the force or speed of the wind.Aneroid Barometer.—A barometer consisting of a thin-walled metal vacuum-box, which changes its shape with changes of atmospheric pressure. The movements of the box are communicated, by levers, to an index or (in the barograph) to a recording pen.Anthelion.—A rare species of halo, consisting of a brilliant, usually white image of the sun opposite the latter in azimuth. (This term has also been applied to theglory, q. v.)Anticrepuscular Rays.—The continuation of the crepuscular rays converging toward a point in the sky opposite to the sun.Anticyclone.—An area of high barometric pressure and its attendant system of winds. (Cf.cyclone.)Antitrades.—Term formerly applied to the prevailing westerly winds of middle latitudes, but now more frequently applied to the westerly return-currents lying over the trade winds. Some writers prefer to call the former theantitradesand the latter thecountertrades.Antitwilight Arch.—The pink or purplish zone of illumination bordering the shadow of the earth (dark segment) in the part of the sky opposite the sun after sunset and before sunrise.Arcs of Lowitz.—A pair of rare halo phenomena. These arcs are directed obliquely downward from the parhelia of 22 degrees on either side of the sun toward the halo of 22 degrees.Astraphobia.—A pathological condition experienced by certain persons before and during thunderstorms.Atmometer.—An instrument for measuring evaporation; also calledatmidometer,evaporimeter, etc.Aureole.—(Seecorona. 1).Aurora.—A luminous phenomenon due to electrical discharges in the atmosphere; probably confined to the tenuous air of high altitudes. It is most commonly seen in sub-Arctic and sub-Antarctic latitudes. Calledaurora borealisoraurora australis, according to the hemisphere in which it occurs. Observations with the spectroscope seem to indicate that a faint “permanent aurora” is a normal feature of the sky in all parts of the world.“Backstays of the Sun.”—A sailor’s name for crepuscular rays extending downward from the sun.Baguio.—The name current in the Philippines for a tropical cyclone.Ballistic Wind.—A military term applied to a fictitious wind which, if affecting a projectile throughout its flight, would produce the same total effect in deflecting it from its course and altering its range as do the various winds that it actually encounters.Ballon-sonde.—A sounding-balloon.Bar.—A unit of pressure equal to 1,000,000 dynes per square centimeter. A bar = 100centibars= 1,000millibars. A barometric pressure of one bar is sometimes called a “C. G. S. atmosphere,” and is equivalent to a pressure of 29.531 inches of mercury at 32 degree F. and in latitude 45 degrees.Barisal Gun.—Same asbrontide.Barocyclonometer.—One of several instruments that have been devised for locating tropical hurricanes without the aid of a weather map.Barograph.—A self-registering barometer.Barometer.—An instrument for measuring the pressure of the atmosphere. The two principal types are themercurialand theaneroid. Themicrobarometeris used to show minute changes of pressure. Certain forms of hygroscope are popularly miscalled “barometers.”Barometer Well.—Same asblowing well.Barometric Tendency.—The change of barometric pressure within a specified time (usually three hours) before one of the regular observations.Beaufort Scale.—A scale of wind force, originally devised for use at sea, but now used also on land. The scale runs from 0 = calm to = hurricane. Many other scales are similarly employed in the noninstrumental observation of wind force.Bioclimatic Law.—A phenological law, announced by Dr. A. D. Hopkins, according to which periodical events of plant and animal life advance over the United States at the rate of 1 degree of latitude, 5 degrees of longitude, and 400 feet of altitude every four days—northward, eastward, and up-ward in spring, and southward, westward, and downward in autumn.Bishop’s Ring.—A large corona due to fine dust in the atmosphere. It has been seen after certain great volcanic eruptions, especially that of Krakatoa, in 1883.Blizzard.—A violent, intensely cold wind, laden with snow.Blowing Well.—A well which emits a strong current of air from any small opening in its cover during a fall of barometric pressure. During a rise of barometric pressure such wells are sometimes observed to “suck.” Wells that are thus responsive to barometric changes are sometimes called “barometer wells” or “weather wells.”Bora.—A cold wind of the northern Adriatic, blowing down from the high plateaus to the northward. Also, a similar wind on the northeastern coast of the Black Sea.Brave West Winds.—The boisterous westerly winds blowing over the ocean between latitudes 40 and 50 degrees S. This region is known as the “roaring forties.”Bright Segment.—The broad band of golden light that, in clear weather, borders the western horizon just after sunset and the eastern just before sunrise.Brontide.—A sound resembling a distant muffled detonation, usually indefinite as to direction. Brontides are rather common in certain parts of the world. They are calledmistpoefferson the Belgian coast,Barisal gunsin the Ganges delta,bulldag,desert sounds, orHanley’s gunsin parts of Australia,gouffrein Haiti,Moodus noisesat Moodus, Connecticut,Nebelzerteiler,Seedonner,Seeschiessen, etc., in Germany,baturlio,boniti,bombiti, etc., in Italy. These sounds are probably of subterranean origin in most cases.Bump.—An upward jolt experienced by an aviator, as if running over an obstruction. A bump may be caused by any condition that suddenly increases the lift of the machine, but is perhaps most frequently due to rising air currents. Air in which bumps are experienced is said to be “bumpy.” (Cf.hole in the air.)Callina.—A Spanish name for dry fog.Calms of Cancer;Calms of Capricorn.—The belts of high pressure lying north of the northeast trade winds and south of the southeast trade winds, respectively.Center of Action.—Any one of several large areas of high and low barometric pressure, changing little in location, and persisting through a season or through the whole year; e. g., the Iceland low, the Siberian winter high, etc. Changes in the intensity and positions of these pressure systems are associated with widespread weather changes.Ceraunograph.—A self-registering thunderstorm recorder.Chinook, orChinook Wind.—A foehn blowing down the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains over the adjacent plains, in the United States and Canada. In winter, this warm, dry wind causes snow to disappear with remarkable rapidity, and hence it has been nicknamed the “snow-eater.” (Cf.foehn.) The “wet chinook” is a wind of a different character, blowing from the Pacific Ocean over the northwestern United States.Circumscribed Halo.—A halo formed by the junction of the upper and lower tangent arcs of the halo of 22 degrees, when the luminary is about 40 degrees or more above the horizon. As the altitude of the luminary increases, the circumscribed halo gradually assumes an elliptical form and finally merges into the halo of 22 degrees.Circumzenithal Arc.—A rainbow-tinted halo, often very bright, convex to the luminary and 46 degrees or a little more above it. It is sometimes called theupper quasi-tangent arc of the halo of 46 degrees, but the circumzenithal arc and the halo of 46 degrees are rarely seen at the same time.Cirro-cumulus;Cirro-stratus;Cirrus.—Forms of cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)Cistern.—The cup, containing mercury, at the base of a mercurial barometer.Climatography.—1. Descriptive and statistical climatology. 2. An account of the climate of a particular place or region.Climatology.—1. The science of climate. 2. A body of knowledge concerning the climate of any place or region; as, “the climatology of Panama.”Climograph.—A diagram introduced by Dr. Griffith Taylor, of Australia, for showing the mean monthly values of wet-bulb temperature and relative humidity at any place, and for comparing such data as recorded at different places throughout the world; especially with reference to the effects of climate on mankind. Other pairs of elements can be used in constructing climographs: e. g., the dry-bulb temperature and the relative humidity.Cloud-banner.—A bannerlike cloud streaming off from a mountain peak.Cloud-burst.—A sudden and extremely heavy downpour of rain; especially one in which the water falls in a continuous stream rather than in drops. The term has been most commonly applied to downpours in mountainous regions.Cloud-cap.—A caplike cloud crowning (1) a mountain summit, or (2) another cloud, especially a mass of cumulo-nimbus.Col.—The neck of low pressure between two anticyclones; also called asaddle.Cold Wave.—A rapid and marked fall of temperature during the cold season of the year. The United States Weather Bureau applies this term to a fall of temperature in 24 hours equaling or exceeding a specified number of degrees and reaching a specified temperature or lower; the specifications varying for different parts of the country and for different periods of the year.Collector.—A device used in measurements of atmospheric electricity for determining the potential gradient.Continental Climate.—The type of climate characteristic of the interior of a continent. As compared with a marine climate, a continental climate has a large annual and daily range of temperature.Corona.—1. A colored luminous circular area formed, by diffraction; around the sun, moon, or other source of light seen through clouds or dust haze. Coronas invariably show a brownish-red inner ring, which, together with the bluish-white inner field between the ring and the luminary, forms the so-calledaureole. Most frequently the aureole alone is visible. Well developed coronas show one or more series of spectral colors outside the aureole. 2. A luminous circle formed by the apparent convergence of auroral beams about the place in the sky toward which the dipping-needle points.Corposant.—(SeeSt. Elmo’s fire.)Countertrades.—(Seeantitrades.)Crepuscular Rays.—Beams of light radiating from the sun, seen both before and after sunrise and sunset. The beams are made visible by the presence of water-drops or dust in the atmosphere, and the intervening dark spaces are the shadows of clouds. The beams are actually parallel; their apparent divergence is the result of perspective.Critical Period.—A period in the growth of a plant when it is especially susceptible to the effects of atmospheric conditions.Cumulo-nimbus;Cumulus.—Forms of cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)Cyclone.—An area of low barometric pressure with its attendant system of winds. The cyclones of the region within the tropics (tropical cyclones) are violent storms; those of higher latitudes (extra-tropical cyclones) may be stormy or otherwise. Tropical cyclones are also calledhurricanes,typhoonsorbaguios. Extra-tropical cyclones are commonly known aslowsorbarometric depressions.Cyclonopathy.—The abnormal sensitiveness of certain persons to the weather changes attending the passage of barometric depressions.Cyclonoscope.—A pasteboard dial formerly used in the West Indies for locating cyclones.Dark Segment.—The shadow of the earth which, in clear weather, rises from the eastern horizon at sunset and sinks below the western horizon at sunrise.Deperditometer.—An instrument devised by A. Piche for measuring the cooling power of the atmosphere, with reference to its physiological effects.Depression.—A cyclonic area, or low.Desert Sounds.—(Seebrontide.)Devil.—The name applied to a dust whirlwind in India. The term is also current in South Africa.Dew.—Atmospheric moisture condensed, in liquid form, upon objects cooler than the air, especially at night.Dew-point.—The temperature at which, under ordinary conditions, condensation of water vapor begins in a cooling mass of air. It varies with the absolute humidity.Dew Pond.—The name applied in southern England to certain artificial ponds on the uplands. They contain water in the driest weather, and are popularly supposed to be fed by dew.“Doctor.”—A colloquial name for the sea breeze in tropical climates. The name is sometimes applied to other cool, invigorating breezes.Doldrums.—The equatorial belt of calms or light, variable winds, lying between the two trade-wind belts.Drought.—A protracted period of dry weather. In the United States a drought has been defined as a period of thirty or more consecutive days during which precipitation to the amount of 0.25 inch does not occur in twenty-four hours. Other quantitative definitions have been used in other countries.Dry Fog.—A haze due to the presence of dust or smoke in the air.Dust-counter.—An instrument for determining approximately the number of dust particles or condensation nuclei per unit volume in a sample of air.Dynamic Meteorology.—The branch of meteorology that treats of the motions of the atmosphere and their relations to other meteorological phenomena.Earth-air Current.—The electrical current that passes between the earth and the air on account of their difference of potential.Eddy.—A more or less fully developed vortex in the atmosphere, constituting a local irregularity in a wind. All winds near the earth’s surface contain eddies, which at any given place, produce “gusts” and “lulls.” Air containing numerous eddies is said to be “turbulent.”Electric Niagara.—(Seehail rod.)Evaporimeter.—(Seeatmometer.)Eye of the Storm.—A calm region at the center of a tropical cyclone, or a break in the clouds marking its location.Fall Wind.—A wind blowing down a mountain-side; or any wind having a strong downward component. Fall Winds include the foehn, mistral, bora, etc.False Cirrus.—Cirruslike clouds at the summit of a thundercloud; probably identical in structure with true cirrus, or cirro-stratus. Sometimes more appropriately called “thunderstorm cirrus.”Fata Morgana.—A complex form of mirage, characterized by marked distortion of images.Festoon Cloud.—Mammato-cumulus.Flashing Arcs.—Visible atmospheric sound waves, or explosion waves.Flat.—Featureless; said of weather maps.Foehn.—A dry fall wind warm for the season, characteristic of many mountainous regions. The air is cooled dynamically in ascending the mountains, but this leads to condensation, which checks the fall in temperature through the liberation of latent heat. The wind deposits its moisture as rain or snow. In descending the opposite slope it is strongly heated dynamically and arrives in the valleys beyond as a warm and very dry wind. Some writers apply this term to any wind that is dynamically heated by descent; e. g., the sinking air of an anticyclone.Foehn-sickness.—Headache, lassitude, depression, etc., attributed, in the Alpine valleys, to the blowing of the foehn.Foehn-wall(German:Föhnmauer).—A wall of cloud that forms along the crest of a mountain ridge over which the foehn is blowing.Fog.—A cloud at or near the earth’s surface. A fog and a cloud are identical in structure, though the former is due to thermal conditions of the earth’s surface, while the latter is most frequently clue to the dynamic cooling of ascending air. In ordinary speech, the term “fog” generally implies an obscurity of the atmosphere sufficiently great to interfere with navigation or locomotion. (Cf.dry fog.)Fogbow.—A rainbow, colorless or nearly so, formed in a fog.Fog-drip.—Moisture that is deposited on terrestrial objects by fog, and drips from them to the ground.Fracto-cumulus;Fracto-nimbus;Fracto-stratus.—Forms of cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)Freeze.—1. Freezing of plants without deposit of hoarfrost. 2. Freezing temperatures prevailing generally over a region; not exclusively nocturnal and not confined to the air close to the earth’s surface. (Cf.frost.)Frost.—1. The act or state of freezing. In America, a “frost” generally means the occurrence, near the beginning or end of the growing season, of nocturnal temperatures low enough to be injurious to vegetation; distinguished from a “freeze,” which is more general and severe. The Weather Bureau classifies frosts, according to their effects, as “light,” “heavy,” and “killing.” 2. Atmospheric moisture condensed upon terrestrial objects in the form of ice; sometimes frozen dew. Also calledhoarfrost.Frost-smoke.—Frozen fog rising from the water.Fulgurite.—A glassy tube formed in sandy soil or in rock by the passage of lightning.Garúa.—A wet fog of the west coast of South America.Geocoronium.—The name applied by Dr. A. Wegener to a hypothetical atmospheric gas, supposed to be much lighter than any gas now known to chemists.Glaze.—Term applied by the U. S. Weather Bureau to a smooth coating of ice on terrestrial objects due to the freezing of rain; often popularly called “sleet.” In Great Britain such a deposit is calledglazed frost. A deposit of glaze on an extensive scale constitutes an “ice storm.”Glory.—A series of concentric colored rings seen around the shadow of the observer, or of his head only, cast upon a cloud or fog bank. It is due to the diffraction of reflected light.Gouffre.—(Seebrontide.)Gradient.—Change of value of a meteorological element per unit of distance. The gradients commonly discussed in meteorology are the horizontal gradient of barometric pressure, the vertical gradient of temperature, and the vertical gradient of electric potential. British meteorologists now prefer the termlapse-ratetovertical gradient.Graupel.—A kind of granular snow, sometimes calledsoft hail.Green Flash.—A bright green coloration of the upper edge of the sun’s disk, sometimes seen when the rest of the disk is below the horizon, at sunrise or sunset.Growing Season.—In agricultural meteorology, the interval between the last killing frost in spring and the first killing frost in autumn.Gust.—A sudden brief increase in the force of the wind. Most winds near the earth’s surface are made up of alternate gusts andlulls, the majority of which are too brief to be registered by an ordinary anemometer.Hail.—Balls or irregular lumps of ice, often of considerable size, having a complex structure; large hailstones generally have a snowlike center, surrounded by layers of ice, which may be alternately clear and cloudy. Hail falls al-most exclusively in connection with thunderstorms. For so-called “soft hail” seegraupel. (Cf.sleet.)Hail Rod.—A device analogous to a lightning rod, supposed to have the property of averting the fall of hail. Hail rods have been especially popular in France, where they are calledparagrêles. Large hail rods of recent construction are known as “electric Niagaras.”Hail-shooting.—Bombarding the clouds to prevent the fall of hail.Halo.—A generic name for a large group of optical phenomena caused by ice crystals in the atmosphere. The commonest of these phenomena is thehalo of 22 degrees(i. e., of 22 degrees radius) surrounding the sun or moon. Thehalo of 46 degreesand the rarehalo of 90 degrees, orhalo of Hevelius, also surround the luminary. Other forms of halo are thetangent arcs,parhelia(or paraselenæ),parhelic(orparaselenic)circle,anthelion, etc.Harmattan.—A dry, dusty wind of the west coast of Africa, blowing from the deserts.Haze.—A lack of transparency in the atmosphere; sometimes due to irregularities in the density of the air (optical haze), sometimes to dust (dust haze, which when dense constitutesdry fog), sometimes to fine particles of water or ice (grading into truefog).Helm and Bar.—A pair of clouds seen when the “helm wind” is blowing over Crossfell, an English mountain; the “helm” capping the mountain and the “bar” lying to leeward of it.High.—An area of high barometric pressure; an anticyclone.Hoarfrost.—(Seefrost.)Hole in the Air.—A colloquial name for any condition in the atmosphere that suddenly decreases the lift of an aeroplane. (Cf.bump.)Horse Latitudes.—The regions of calms and variable winds coinciding with the subtropical high-pressure belts lying on the poleward sides of the trade winds. (The term has generally been applied only to the northern of these two regions, in the North Atlantic Ocean, or to the portion of it near Bermuda.)Hot Wave.—A period of abnormally high temperatures. It has sometimes been defined, in the United States, as a period of three or more consecutive days during each of which the maximum temperature is 90 degrees F. or over.Hot Wind.—A hot, parching wind characteristic of certain continental interiors; especially Australia, northern India and the prairie region of the United States.Humidity.—The degree to which the air is charged with water vapor; viz., the actual amount of water vapor present (absolute humidity, which may be expressed in terms of weight per unit volume or as vapor pressure), or the ratio which this amount bears to the maximum amount the air can contain at the prevailing temperature (relative humidity, expressed in percentage).Hurricane.—A tropical cyclone; especially one of the West Indies region. (A cyclone originating in this region and passing northward into the temperate zone is still called a “West India hurricane,” even after it has assumed the character of an extratropical cyclone, and, if sufficiently severe, justifies the display of “hurricane warnings” at ports of the United States. “Hurricane” is also the designation of the highest wind force on the Beaufort scale, and is thus applied to any wind exceeding about seventy-five miles an hour.)Hygrograph.—A self-registering hygrometer.Hygrometer.—Any instrument for measuring the humidity of the air.Hygroscope.—A device that gives a rough indication of the relative humidity of the air. Most hygroscopes are mere toys.Ice Rain.—1. A rain that causes a deposit of glaze. 2. Falling pellets of clear ice (calledsleetby the U. S. Weather Bureau).Ice Saints.—A period of cold weather popularly reputed in Europe to occur yearly about May 11–13 (or, in south-central Europe, May 12–14); also, the saints whose days in the ecclesiastical calendar fall on these dates.Ice Storm.—(Seeglaze.)Ignis Fatuus.—Will-o’-the-wisp. (SeeChapter XXII.)Indian Summer.—A period of mild, calm, hazy weather occurring in autumn or early winter, especially in the United States and Canada; popularly regarded as a definite event in the calendar, but weather of this type is really of irregular and intermittent occurrence. (Cf.St. Martin’s Summer.)Instrument-shelter.—The American name of the cage or screen in which thermometers are exposed at meteorological stations. Calledthermometer-screenin Great Britain.Inversion.—More fullytemperature inversion; an increase of air temperature with increase of altitude, instead of the normal decrease.Ion-counter.—An instrument for determining the number of ions present, per unit volume, in a sample of air.Isobar.—A line of equal barometric pressure. (Isobars are generally drawn on maps to show the horizontal distribution of pressure reduced to sea level, or the pressure at some specified altitude; but in a broader sense any lineon a chart or diagram drawn through places of equal pressure is an isobar.)Isohyet.—A line of equal rainfall.Isotherm.—A line of equal temperature.Isothermal Layer.—(Seestratosphere.)January Thaw.—A period of mild weather popularly supposed to recur each January, especially in New England.Katathermometer.—A device consisting of a dry-bulb and a wet-bulb thermometer, designed for measuring the cooling power of the atmosphere, with reference to its physiological effects. It was invented by Leonard Hill.Kiosk.—The name given by the U. S. Weather Bureau to a small street pavilion in which are displayed meteorological instruments, maps, tables, etc.Land and Sea Breezes. Land and Lake Breezes.—The breezes that, on certain coasts and under certain conditions, blow from the land by night and from the water by day.Lenticular Cloud.—A cloud having approximately the form of a double-convex lens, marking the position of a standing wave in the atmosphere. (SeeChapter VI.)Lightning.—A disruptive electrical discharge in the atmosphere, or, generally, the luminous phenomena attending such a discharge. The various forms of lightning are named and described in Chapter IX.Lightning Print.—A collection of marks, often treelike in form, sometimes found on the body of a person or animal that has been struck by lightning.Lightning Rod.—A metallic rod, connected with a suitable “ground,” in earth or water, set up for the purpose of protecting some structure from lightning.Light-pillar.—A form of halo, consisting of a column of light, vertical or nearly so, extending from or through the sun or moon. Called asun-pillar, or amoon-pillar, as the case may be.Line-squall.—A more or less continuous line of squalls and thunderstorms traveling broadside over the country.Looming.—An apparent elevation of distant objects by mirage.Low.—An area of low barometric pressure, with its attendant system of winds. Also called abarometric depressionorcyclone.Mackerel Sky.—An area of sky covered with cirro-cumulus clouds; especially when the clouds resemble the patterns seen on the backs of mackerel.Mammato-cumulus.—A form of cloud showing pendulous sacklike protuberances. (SeeChapter VI.)March.—The variation of a meteorological element in the course of a day, year, or other interval of time; e. g., thediurnal march of temperature; the annual march of barometric pressure.Mares’-tails.—Cirrus in long slender streaks.Marine Climate.—A type of climate characteristic of the ocean and oceanic islands. Its most prominent feature is equability of temperature.Meteorograph.—Autographic apparatus for recording simultaneously two or more meteorological elements. Certain types of meteorograph are connected, electrically or otherwise, with some of the instruments at meteorological stations; others are sent aloft attached to kites and balloons.Meteorology.—The science of the atmosphere.Millibar.—(Seebar.)Mirage.—An apparent displacement or distortion of distant objects by abnormal atmospheric refraction. Sometimes the images of objects are inverted, multiplied, etc.Mist.—Generally, a wet fog or a very fine drizzle of rain; hence the expression, “it is misting.” The “Scotch mist” of mountainous or hilly regions is a combination of thick fog and heavy drizzle; it has been suggested that this occurs when the rain clouds actually rest on the earth.Mistpoeffer.—(Seebrontide.)Mistral.—Along the Mediterranean coast, from the mouth of the Ebro to the Gulf of Genoa, a stormy, cold northerly wind, blowing down from the mountains of the interior. (The name is sometimes applied to northerly winds on the Adriatic, in Greece, and in Algeria.)Monsoon.—A wind that reverses its direction with the season, blowing more or less steadily from the interior of a continent toward the sea in winter, and in the opposite direction in the summer.Moon Dog.—A paraselene.Mountain and Valley Breezes.—The breezes that, in mountainous regions, normally blow up the slopes by day (valley breeze) and down the slopes by night (mountain breeze).Nephoscope.—An instrument for measuring the movements of clouds.Nieve Penitente.—Fields of pinnacled snow found on certain high mountains in tropical or subtropical regions.Nimbus.—The rain cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)Noctilucent Clouds.—Luminous, cirruslike clouds sometimes visible throughout the short nights of summer; supposed to be clouds of dust at great altitudes shining with reflected sunlight. Such clouds were observed during several summers after the eruption of Krakatoa (1883) and are still occasionally reported.Normal.—The average value which, in the course of years, any meteorological element is found to have on a specified date or during a specified month or other portion of the year, or during the year as a whole. Also used as an adjective in such expressions as “normal temperature,” etc. Thus, for any station at which records have been maintained for many years, we may compute the normal temperature of January 1, the normal pressure of February, the normal rainfall of the year, etc. The normal serves as a standard with which values occurring in a particular year may be compared in order to determine thedeparture from the normal.Nucleus.—A particle upon which condensation of water vapor occurs in the free atmosphere in the form of a water drop or an ice crystal.Oblique Arcs of the Anthelion.—A rare form of halo, consisting of intersecting arcs, usually white, passing through the anthelion or the place where the anthelion would occur if visible.Ozone.—An allotropic form of oxygen, which occurs transiently in small quantities in the lower atmosphere, and is supposed to be permanently present and relatively abundant at high atmospheric levels.Painter.—A dirty fog frequently experienced on the coast of Peru. The brownish deposit from it is sometimes called “Peruvian paint.”Paragrêle.—A hail rod.Paranthelion.—A halo phenomenon similar to a parhelion, but occurring at a distance of 90 degrees or more in azimuth from the sun. The solar distance of the ordinary paranthelia is 120 degrees. (Analogous phenomena produced by the moon as source of light are calledparantiselenæ.)Paraselene.—(Plu.paraselenæ.) (Seeparhelion.)Paraselenic Circle.—(Seeparhelic circle.)Parasitic Clouds.—The name formerly given to clouds capping the summits of mountains.Parhelic Circle.—A halo consisting of a white circle passing through the sun and parallel to the horizon. A similar phenomenon in connection with the moon is called aparaselenic circle.Parhelion.—A mock sun, or sun dog; a form of halo consisting of a more or less distinctly colored image of the sun at the same altitude as the latter above the horizon, and hence lying on the parhelic circle, if present. The ordinary parhelia are 22 degrees from the sun in azimuth, or a little more, according to the altitude of the luminary. Parhelia have occasionally been seen about 46 degrees from the sun. Analogous phenomena seen in connection with the moon are calledparaselenæ,mock moons,or moon dogs.Penetrating Radiation.—A form of radiation that has the property of passing through a great extent of air without being absorbed and of ionizing the air inside hermetically sealed metal vessels. It is supposed to consist of a special kind of Gamma rays and to come from the higher levels of the atmosphere.Phenology.—The study of the periodic phenomena of animal and plant life and their relations to weather and climate.Photochemical Climate.—The chemical activity of sunlight characteristic of any place or region. The variations of this feature of solar radiation are more or less strikingly different from those of solar heat and the brightness of solar light. Certain types of “chemical actinometer” are used in its measurement.Pilot Balloon.—A small free balloon the drift of which, as observed from the ground, indicates the movements of the air aloft.Pocky Cloud.—Mammato-cumulus.Pogonip.—A fog, composed of fine needles of ice, which occurs in mountainous regions of the western United States and is reputed to be very injurious to the lungs.Pollution Gauge.—A gauge for measuring soot and other impurities found in the atmosphere.Pontias.—A wind that blows by night from a narrow valley at Nyons, France.Potential Gradient.—(Seegradient.)Precipitation.—The collective name for deposits of atmospheric moisture in liquid and solid form, including rain, snow, hail, dew, hoarfrost, etc.Pressure.—An elliptical expression, current in meteorological literature, foratmospheric pressure, orbarometric pressure.Prevailing Westerlies.—The belts of winds lying on the poleward sides of the subtropical high-pressure belts.Psuchrainometer.—An instrument devised by J. R. Milne for measuring the cooling power of the atmosphere with reference to physiological effects.Psychrometer.—An instrument for measuring atmospheric humidity, consisting usually of adry-bulb thermometerand awet-bulb thermometer. The former is an ordinary mercurial thermometer. The latter has its bulb covered with muslin or other fabric, which is either permanently wet or is wetted before use. In some psychrometers there is only one thermometer, readings being taken both before and after moistening the bulb.Purple Light.—The purple or rosy glow observed over a large area of the western sky after sunset and the easternsky before sunrise; it lies above thebright segmentthat borders the horizon.Pyrheliometer.—An instrument that measures solar radiation by its heating effects.Qobar.—A dry fog or heat haze of the upper Nile region. (Also spelledkobarandgobarand occasionally applied to a hazy condition of the atmosphere in other parts of the world.)Rain Balls.—Mammato-cumulus.Rainbow.—A luminous arc formed by the refraction and reflection of light in drops of water. (SeeChapter X.)Rainfall.—A term sometimes synonymous withrain, but most frequently used in reference to amounts of precipitation (including snow, hail, etc.).Rain Gauge.—An instrument for measuring rainfall.Rain Tree.—A mythical tree which is alleged to exude copious showers of water even in the driest weather. (“Rain tree” is also the common name of an ornamental tree variously known to botanists asAlbizzia saman,Pithecolobium saman,Enterolobium saman, andSamanea saman.)Recoloration.—(Seeafterglow.)Recurrence.—The alleged tendency of any particular type of weather to occur at about the same period every year, independently of and generally in contrast to the regular march of the seasons.Refraction.—Astronomical refraction.Change in the apparent position of a heavenly body, due to atmospheric refraction.Terrestrial refraction.Change in the apparent position of distant terrestrial objects, due to the same cause.Relative Wind.—In aeronautics, the motion of the air with reference to an aeroplane or airship moving through it.Réseau.—A collection of meteorological stations operating under a common direction, or in the same territory. Aninternational réseauis a group of stations in different countries cooperating for any purpose. TheRéseau mondialis a world-wide system of selected stations, the observations of which may be utilized in studies of the meteorology of the globe.Rime.—1. Hoarfrost. 2. A rough or feathery coating of ice deposited on terrestrial objects by fog. (The second meaning is the one now used in technical literature.)Roaring Forties.—(Seebrave west winds.)Saddle.—(Seecol.)Saint Elmo’s Fire.—A luminous brush discharge of electricity from elevated objects, such as the masts and yardarms of ships, lightning rods, steeples, etc., occurring in stormy weather. Also called corposant.St. Martin’s Summer.—One of several names given in Europe to a mild period in autumn, corresponding approximately to the Indian summer of North America.Scarf Cloud.—A thin cirruslike cloud which often drapes the summits of tall cumulo-nimbus clouds.Scotch Mist.—(Seemist.)Scud.—Shreds or small detached masses of cloud moving rapidly below a rain cloud or other heavy clouds.Sea Breeze.—(Seeland and sea breezes.)Secondary.—A small cyclone developed, or tending to develop, on the border of a large one.Sensible Temperature.—The temperature felt at the surface of the human body; formerly identified, by some authorities, with the temperature indicated by the wet-bulb thermometer.Silence, Areas, Zones, or Regions of.—Regions within which a sound is not heard, though heard in regions more distant from the source.Silver Thaw.—A term variously applied to rime, glaze, and a thin coating of ice deposited on cold objects by a damp wind.Simoom.—An intensely hot and dry wind of Asian and African deserts; often described as a sand storm or dust storm, but certain authorities state that the typical simoom is free from sand or dust.Sirocco.—A name applied to various types of warm wind in the Mediterranean region. Some of these siroccos are foehns. The term is also used as the generic name for winds blowing from a warm region toward an area of low pressure in a normally colder region.Sleet.—1. Frozen or partly frozen rain; frozen raindrops in the form of particles of clear ice. 2. Snow and rain falling together. (Other definitions have been proposed and the proper technical application of this term is still a subject of controversy. In popular and engineering use the word is often applied to a coating of glaze on trees, wires, rails, etc.)Snow Bin.—A large receptacle for collecting the snowfall of an entire winter, or other long period, for measurement at one time.Snow Garland.—An elongated mass of snow suspended at the ends and sagging in the middle.Snow Mushroom.—An overhanging cap of snow resting on a tree stump, post, or the like.Snow Roller.—A mass of snow rolled by the wind; generally muff-shaped.Snow Sampler.—A device for collecting a sample of snow, cut vertically through a snowfield, for the purpose of determining the depth and density of the snow.Snow Survey.—A measurement of the total amount of snow lying over a particular area, especially with a view to determining the total amount of water it will yield, when melted, for purposes of irrigation, etc.Soft Hail.—Graupel.Sounding Balloon.—A free, unmanned balloon carrying a set of self-registering meteorological instruments.Specter of the Brocken.—The shadow of an observer and of objects in his immediate vicinity cast upon a cloud or fog bank; sometimes attended by a series of colored rings, called thegloryorBrocken-bow.Squall.—1. A sudden storm of brief duration; closely akin to a thunderstorm but not necessarily attended by thunder and lightning. 2. A sudden brief blast of wind, of longer duration than a gust.Squaw Winter.—In North America, a brief cold spell popularly reputed to precede Indian summer.Static.—(Seestray.)Storm Card.—A device intended for use on shipboard in determining the direction of a storm center from the ship.Storm Water.—The water resulting from a heavy and rapid fall of rain; especially the portion that occurs as run-off. (The term has been used mainly in connection with the subject of sewers.)Strato-cumulus.—A form of cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)Stratosphere.—The upper region of the atmosphere, formerly called theisothermal layer, in which there is no marked or systematic decrease of temperature with altitude. The stratosphere is free from clouds (except occasional dust clouds) and from strong vertical air currents, and its circulation appears to be more or less independent of that of the lower atmosphere. The height of its base, which varies with latitude and otherwise, averages between 6 and 7 miles. (Cf.troposphere.)Stray.—A natural electromagnetic wave in the ether. The term is used in reference to the effects of such waves in producing erratic signals in radiotelegraphic receivers. Strays are known collectively asstatic.Summer Day.—A day in which the temperature reaches or exceeds 77 degrees F.Sun Dog.—A mock sun or parhelion.“Sun Drawing Water.”—The sun popularly said to be “drawing water” when crepuscular rays extend down from it toward the horizon.Sunshine Recorder.—An instrument for recording the duration of sunshine; certain types also record the intensity of sunshine.Synchronous Chart.—A form of synoptic chart, such as the ordinary weather map, which shows the meteorological conditions prevailing over any area at a given moment of time.Synoptic Chart.—A chart showing the distribution of meteorological conditions over an area at a given moment or the average conditions during a given period of time, such as a month or a year.Table-cloth.—A sheet of cloud that sometimes spreads over the flat top of Table Mountain, near Cape Town.Tangent Arc.—Any halo that occurs as an arc tangent to one of the heliocentric halos.Term Hours.—Prescribed hours for taking meteorological observations.Thermal Belt.—A well-defined zone, found on some mountain-sides, in which vegetation is particularly exempt from frosts in spring and autumn. Also calledverdant zone.Thermograph.—A self-registering thermometer.Thermometer.—An instrument for measuring temperature; in meteorology, generally the temperature of the air.Maximumandminimum thermometersindicate, respectively, the highest and lowest temperatures occurring between the times of setting the instruments. Awet-bulb thermometeris used in measuring humidity. (Seepsychrometer.)Thermometer Screen.—A cage, or sometimes merely a roof, for protecting thermometers from direct sunshine and other radiation that would cause the readings to indicate a temperature different from that of the air. In the United States generally called aninstrument shelter.Thunder.—The sound produced by a lightning discharge.Thunderstorm.—A storm attended by thunder and lightning. Thunderstorms are local disturbances, often occurring as episodes of cyclones, and, in common with squalls, are marked by abrupt variations in pressure, temperature, and wind.Thunderstorm Recorder.—Any device that furnishes a record of thunderstorms, either near or distant. Most thunderstorm recorders register, by radiotelegraphy, the strays set up by lightning discharges.Tornado.—1. A violent vortex in the atmosphere, usually attended by a pendulous, more or less funnel-shaped cloud. 2. In West Africa: A violent thundersquall.Totalizer.—A form of snow gauge used chiefly in the Alps, designed to be read only once a year. (French,totalisateur.)Trade Winds.—Two belts of winds, one on either side of the equatorial doldrums, in which the winds blow almost constantly from easterly quadrants.Troposphere.—The part of the atmosphere lying below the stratosphere.Trough.—1. A line drawn at right angles to the path of a cyclonic area through all points at which the pressure has reached a minimum and is about to rise. 2. An elongated area of low barometric pressure.Twilight.—Astronomical twilightis the interval between sunrise or sunset and the total darkness of night.Civil twilightis the period of time before sunrise and after sunset during which there is enough daylight for ordinary outdoor occupations.“Twister.”—A tornado; also, a small whirling dust storm.Typhoon.—The name applied in the Far East to a tropical cyclone.Ulloa’s Ring.—1. A glory. 2. A halo (also calledBouguer’s halo) surrounding a point in the sky diametrically opposite the sun; sometimes described as a “white rainbow.”Vane.—A device that shows which way the wind blows; also calledweather vaneorwind vane.Variability.—Interdiurnal variabilityis the mean difference between successive daily means of a meteorological element.Verdant Zone.—(Seethermal belt.)Visibility.—The transparency and illumination of the atmosphere as affecting the distance at which objects can be seen. It is often expressed on a numerical scale. (This term was formerly applied by British meteorologists to a state of unusual clearness of the atmosphere, regarded as a weather prognostic.)V-shaped Depression.—A trough of low barometric pressure bounded on the weather map by V-shaped isobars.Waterspout.—A tornadolike vortex and cloud occurring over a body of water.Weather Well.—(Seeblowing well.)Wedge.—A wedge-shaped area of high barometric pressure.Wet-bulb thermometer.—(Seepsychrometer.)Wind.—Moving air; especially a mass of air having a common direction of motion. The term is generally limited to air moving horizontally, or nearly so; vertical streams of air are usually called “currents.”Wind Aloft.—The wind blowing at high levels as distinguished from that near the earth’s surface.Wind Rose.—1. A diagram showing the relative frequency and sometimes also the average strength of the winds blowing from different directions in a specified region. 2. A diagram showing the average relation between winds from different directions and the occurrence of other meteorological phenomena.Winter Day.—A day on which the temperature does not at any time rise above the freezing point.Wool-pack Cloud.—Cumulus.
Absolute Extremes.—The highest and lowest values of a meteorological element (especially temperature) that have ever been recorded at a station; known, respectively, as theabsolute maximumand theabsolute minimum. (The term is sometimes improperly applied to the highest and lowest values for a specified year.)
Aeroclinoscope.—A semaphore formerly used in Holland for displaying weather signals.
Aerology.—The branch of meteorology dealing with the “free” atmosphere; i. e., all parts of the atmosphere not near the earth’s surface. Aerological investigations are made withkites and balloons, and also include observations of clouds, meteor trails, the aurora, etc.
Afterglow.—1. The glow in the western sky after sunset. 2. A renewal of rosy light on mountain peaks after the first sunset illumination has faded; also calledrecoloration. This is one stage of theAlpenglow.
After-summer.—A renewal of mild weather in the autumn; called Indian summer in America, St. Martin’s summer, etc., in Europe.
Alpenglow.—Successive appearances and disappearances of rosy light sometimes seen on mountain peaks in clear weather after sunset or before sunrise.
Altimeter.—A barometer used for measuring altitude.
Alto-cumulus;Alto-stratus.—Forms of cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)
Anemogram.—The record traced by a self-registering anemometer.
Anemometer.—An instrument for measuring the force or speed of the wind.
Aneroid Barometer.—A barometer consisting of a thin-walled metal vacuum-box, which changes its shape with changes of atmospheric pressure. The movements of the box are communicated, by levers, to an index or (in the barograph) to a recording pen.
Anthelion.—A rare species of halo, consisting of a brilliant, usually white image of the sun opposite the latter in azimuth. (This term has also been applied to theglory, q. v.)
Anticrepuscular Rays.—The continuation of the crepuscular rays converging toward a point in the sky opposite to the sun.
Anticyclone.—An area of high barometric pressure and its attendant system of winds. (Cf.cyclone.)
Antitrades.—Term formerly applied to the prevailing westerly winds of middle latitudes, but now more frequently applied to the westerly return-currents lying over the trade winds. Some writers prefer to call the former theantitradesand the latter thecountertrades.
Antitwilight Arch.—The pink or purplish zone of illumination bordering the shadow of the earth (dark segment) in the part of the sky opposite the sun after sunset and before sunrise.
Arcs of Lowitz.—A pair of rare halo phenomena. These arcs are directed obliquely downward from the parhelia of 22 degrees on either side of the sun toward the halo of 22 degrees.
Astraphobia.—A pathological condition experienced by certain persons before and during thunderstorms.
Atmometer.—An instrument for measuring evaporation; also calledatmidometer,evaporimeter, etc.
Aureole.—(Seecorona. 1).
Aurora.—A luminous phenomenon due to electrical discharges in the atmosphere; probably confined to the tenuous air of high altitudes. It is most commonly seen in sub-Arctic and sub-Antarctic latitudes. Calledaurora borealisoraurora australis, according to the hemisphere in which it occurs. Observations with the spectroscope seem to indicate that a faint “permanent aurora” is a normal feature of the sky in all parts of the world.
“Backstays of the Sun.”—A sailor’s name for crepuscular rays extending downward from the sun.
Baguio.—The name current in the Philippines for a tropical cyclone.
Ballistic Wind.—A military term applied to a fictitious wind which, if affecting a projectile throughout its flight, would produce the same total effect in deflecting it from its course and altering its range as do the various winds that it actually encounters.
Ballon-sonde.—A sounding-balloon.
Bar.—A unit of pressure equal to 1,000,000 dynes per square centimeter. A bar = 100centibars= 1,000millibars. A barometric pressure of one bar is sometimes called a “C. G. S. atmosphere,” and is equivalent to a pressure of 29.531 inches of mercury at 32 degree F. and in latitude 45 degrees.
Barisal Gun.—Same asbrontide.
Barocyclonometer.—One of several instruments that have been devised for locating tropical hurricanes without the aid of a weather map.
Barograph.—A self-registering barometer.
Barometer.—An instrument for measuring the pressure of the atmosphere. The two principal types are themercurialand theaneroid. Themicrobarometeris used to show minute changes of pressure. Certain forms of hygroscope are popularly miscalled “barometers.”
Barometer Well.—Same asblowing well.
Barometric Tendency.—The change of barometric pressure within a specified time (usually three hours) before one of the regular observations.
Beaufort Scale.—A scale of wind force, originally devised for use at sea, but now used also on land. The scale runs from 0 = calm to = hurricane. Many other scales are similarly employed in the noninstrumental observation of wind force.
Bioclimatic Law.—A phenological law, announced by Dr. A. D. Hopkins, according to which periodical events of plant and animal life advance over the United States at the rate of 1 degree of latitude, 5 degrees of longitude, and 400 feet of altitude every four days—northward, eastward, and up-ward in spring, and southward, westward, and downward in autumn.
Bishop’s Ring.—A large corona due to fine dust in the atmosphere. It has been seen after certain great volcanic eruptions, especially that of Krakatoa, in 1883.
Blizzard.—A violent, intensely cold wind, laden with snow.
Blowing Well.—A well which emits a strong current of air from any small opening in its cover during a fall of barometric pressure. During a rise of barometric pressure such wells are sometimes observed to “suck.” Wells that are thus responsive to barometric changes are sometimes called “barometer wells” or “weather wells.”
Bora.—A cold wind of the northern Adriatic, blowing down from the high plateaus to the northward. Also, a similar wind on the northeastern coast of the Black Sea.
Brave West Winds.—The boisterous westerly winds blowing over the ocean between latitudes 40 and 50 degrees S. This region is known as the “roaring forties.”
Bright Segment.—The broad band of golden light that, in clear weather, borders the western horizon just after sunset and the eastern just before sunrise.
Brontide.—A sound resembling a distant muffled detonation, usually indefinite as to direction. Brontides are rather common in certain parts of the world. They are calledmistpoefferson the Belgian coast,Barisal gunsin the Ganges delta,bulldag,desert sounds, orHanley’s gunsin parts of Australia,gouffrein Haiti,Moodus noisesat Moodus, Connecticut,Nebelzerteiler,Seedonner,Seeschiessen, etc., in Germany,baturlio,boniti,bombiti, etc., in Italy. These sounds are probably of subterranean origin in most cases.
Bump.—An upward jolt experienced by an aviator, as if running over an obstruction. A bump may be caused by any condition that suddenly increases the lift of the machine, but is perhaps most frequently due to rising air currents. Air in which bumps are experienced is said to be “bumpy.” (Cf.hole in the air.)
Callina.—A Spanish name for dry fog.
Calms of Cancer;Calms of Capricorn.—The belts of high pressure lying north of the northeast trade winds and south of the southeast trade winds, respectively.
Center of Action.—Any one of several large areas of high and low barometric pressure, changing little in location, and persisting through a season or through the whole year; e. g., the Iceland low, the Siberian winter high, etc. Changes in the intensity and positions of these pressure systems are associated with widespread weather changes.
Ceraunograph.—A self-registering thunderstorm recorder.
Chinook, orChinook Wind.—A foehn blowing down the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains over the adjacent plains, in the United States and Canada. In winter, this warm, dry wind causes snow to disappear with remarkable rapidity, and hence it has been nicknamed the “snow-eater.” (Cf.foehn.) The “wet chinook” is a wind of a different character, blowing from the Pacific Ocean over the northwestern United States.
Circumscribed Halo.—A halo formed by the junction of the upper and lower tangent arcs of the halo of 22 degrees, when the luminary is about 40 degrees or more above the horizon. As the altitude of the luminary increases, the circumscribed halo gradually assumes an elliptical form and finally merges into the halo of 22 degrees.
Circumzenithal Arc.—A rainbow-tinted halo, often very bright, convex to the luminary and 46 degrees or a little more above it. It is sometimes called theupper quasi-tangent arc of the halo of 46 degrees, but the circumzenithal arc and the halo of 46 degrees are rarely seen at the same time.
Cirro-cumulus;Cirro-stratus;Cirrus.—Forms of cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)
Cistern.—The cup, containing mercury, at the base of a mercurial barometer.
Climatography.—1. Descriptive and statistical climatology. 2. An account of the climate of a particular place or region.
Climatology.—1. The science of climate. 2. A body of knowledge concerning the climate of any place or region; as, “the climatology of Panama.”
Climograph.—A diagram introduced by Dr. Griffith Taylor, of Australia, for showing the mean monthly values of wet-bulb temperature and relative humidity at any place, and for comparing such data as recorded at different places throughout the world; especially with reference to the effects of climate on mankind. Other pairs of elements can be used in constructing climographs: e. g., the dry-bulb temperature and the relative humidity.
Cloud-banner.—A bannerlike cloud streaming off from a mountain peak.
Cloud-burst.—A sudden and extremely heavy downpour of rain; especially one in which the water falls in a continuous stream rather than in drops. The term has been most commonly applied to downpours in mountainous regions.
Cloud-cap.—A caplike cloud crowning (1) a mountain summit, or (2) another cloud, especially a mass of cumulo-nimbus.
Col.—The neck of low pressure between two anticyclones; also called asaddle.
Cold Wave.—A rapid and marked fall of temperature during the cold season of the year. The United States Weather Bureau applies this term to a fall of temperature in 24 hours equaling or exceeding a specified number of degrees and reaching a specified temperature or lower; the specifications varying for different parts of the country and for different periods of the year.
Collector.—A device used in measurements of atmospheric electricity for determining the potential gradient.
Continental Climate.—The type of climate characteristic of the interior of a continent. As compared with a marine climate, a continental climate has a large annual and daily range of temperature.
Corona.—1. A colored luminous circular area formed, by diffraction; around the sun, moon, or other source of light seen through clouds or dust haze. Coronas invariably show a brownish-red inner ring, which, together with the bluish-white inner field between the ring and the luminary, forms the so-calledaureole. Most frequently the aureole alone is visible. Well developed coronas show one or more series of spectral colors outside the aureole. 2. A luminous circle formed by the apparent convergence of auroral beams about the place in the sky toward which the dipping-needle points.
Corposant.—(SeeSt. Elmo’s fire.)
Countertrades.—(Seeantitrades.)
Crepuscular Rays.—Beams of light radiating from the sun, seen both before and after sunrise and sunset. The beams are made visible by the presence of water-drops or dust in the atmosphere, and the intervening dark spaces are the shadows of clouds. The beams are actually parallel; their apparent divergence is the result of perspective.
Critical Period.—A period in the growth of a plant when it is especially susceptible to the effects of atmospheric conditions.
Cumulo-nimbus;Cumulus.—Forms of cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)
Cyclone.—An area of low barometric pressure with its attendant system of winds. The cyclones of the region within the tropics (tropical cyclones) are violent storms; those of higher latitudes (extra-tropical cyclones) may be stormy or otherwise. Tropical cyclones are also calledhurricanes,typhoonsorbaguios. Extra-tropical cyclones are commonly known aslowsorbarometric depressions.
Cyclonopathy.—The abnormal sensitiveness of certain persons to the weather changes attending the passage of barometric depressions.
Cyclonoscope.—A pasteboard dial formerly used in the West Indies for locating cyclones.
Dark Segment.—The shadow of the earth which, in clear weather, rises from the eastern horizon at sunset and sinks below the western horizon at sunrise.
Deperditometer.—An instrument devised by A. Piche for measuring the cooling power of the atmosphere, with reference to its physiological effects.
Depression.—A cyclonic area, or low.
Desert Sounds.—(Seebrontide.)
Devil.—The name applied to a dust whirlwind in India. The term is also current in South Africa.
Dew.—Atmospheric moisture condensed, in liquid form, upon objects cooler than the air, especially at night.
Dew-point.—The temperature at which, under ordinary conditions, condensation of water vapor begins in a cooling mass of air. It varies with the absolute humidity.
Dew Pond.—The name applied in southern England to certain artificial ponds on the uplands. They contain water in the driest weather, and are popularly supposed to be fed by dew.
“Doctor.”—A colloquial name for the sea breeze in tropical climates. The name is sometimes applied to other cool, invigorating breezes.
Doldrums.—The equatorial belt of calms or light, variable winds, lying between the two trade-wind belts.
Drought.—A protracted period of dry weather. In the United States a drought has been defined as a period of thirty or more consecutive days during which precipitation to the amount of 0.25 inch does not occur in twenty-four hours. Other quantitative definitions have been used in other countries.
Dry Fog.—A haze due to the presence of dust or smoke in the air.
Dust-counter.—An instrument for determining approximately the number of dust particles or condensation nuclei per unit volume in a sample of air.
Dynamic Meteorology.—The branch of meteorology that treats of the motions of the atmosphere and their relations to other meteorological phenomena.
Earth-air Current.—The electrical current that passes between the earth and the air on account of their difference of potential.
Eddy.—A more or less fully developed vortex in the atmosphere, constituting a local irregularity in a wind. All winds near the earth’s surface contain eddies, which at any given place, produce “gusts” and “lulls.” Air containing numerous eddies is said to be “turbulent.”
Electric Niagara.—(Seehail rod.)
Evaporimeter.—(Seeatmometer.)
Eye of the Storm.—A calm region at the center of a tropical cyclone, or a break in the clouds marking its location.
Fall Wind.—A wind blowing down a mountain-side; or any wind having a strong downward component. Fall Winds include the foehn, mistral, bora, etc.
False Cirrus.—Cirruslike clouds at the summit of a thundercloud; probably identical in structure with true cirrus, or cirro-stratus. Sometimes more appropriately called “thunderstorm cirrus.”
Fata Morgana.—A complex form of mirage, characterized by marked distortion of images.
Festoon Cloud.—Mammato-cumulus.
Flashing Arcs.—Visible atmospheric sound waves, or explosion waves.
Flat.—Featureless; said of weather maps.
Foehn.—A dry fall wind warm for the season, characteristic of many mountainous regions. The air is cooled dynamically in ascending the mountains, but this leads to condensation, which checks the fall in temperature through the liberation of latent heat. The wind deposits its moisture as rain or snow. In descending the opposite slope it is strongly heated dynamically and arrives in the valleys beyond as a warm and very dry wind. Some writers apply this term to any wind that is dynamically heated by descent; e. g., the sinking air of an anticyclone.
Foehn-sickness.—Headache, lassitude, depression, etc., attributed, in the Alpine valleys, to the blowing of the foehn.
Foehn-wall(German:Föhnmauer).—A wall of cloud that forms along the crest of a mountain ridge over which the foehn is blowing.
Fog.—A cloud at or near the earth’s surface. A fog and a cloud are identical in structure, though the former is due to thermal conditions of the earth’s surface, while the latter is most frequently clue to the dynamic cooling of ascending air. In ordinary speech, the term “fog” generally implies an obscurity of the atmosphere sufficiently great to interfere with navigation or locomotion. (Cf.dry fog.)
Fogbow.—A rainbow, colorless or nearly so, formed in a fog.
Fog-drip.—Moisture that is deposited on terrestrial objects by fog, and drips from them to the ground.
Fracto-cumulus;Fracto-nimbus;Fracto-stratus.—Forms of cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)
Freeze.—1. Freezing of plants without deposit of hoarfrost. 2. Freezing temperatures prevailing generally over a region; not exclusively nocturnal and not confined to the air close to the earth’s surface. (Cf.frost.)
Frost.—1. The act or state of freezing. In America, a “frost” generally means the occurrence, near the beginning or end of the growing season, of nocturnal temperatures low enough to be injurious to vegetation; distinguished from a “freeze,” which is more general and severe. The Weather Bureau classifies frosts, according to their effects, as “light,” “heavy,” and “killing.” 2. Atmospheric moisture condensed upon terrestrial objects in the form of ice; sometimes frozen dew. Also calledhoarfrost.
Frost-smoke.—Frozen fog rising from the water.
Fulgurite.—A glassy tube formed in sandy soil or in rock by the passage of lightning.
Garúa.—A wet fog of the west coast of South America.
Geocoronium.—The name applied by Dr. A. Wegener to a hypothetical atmospheric gas, supposed to be much lighter than any gas now known to chemists.
Glaze.—Term applied by the U. S. Weather Bureau to a smooth coating of ice on terrestrial objects due to the freezing of rain; often popularly called “sleet.” In Great Britain such a deposit is calledglazed frost. A deposit of glaze on an extensive scale constitutes an “ice storm.”
Glory.—A series of concentric colored rings seen around the shadow of the observer, or of his head only, cast upon a cloud or fog bank. It is due to the diffraction of reflected light.
Gouffre.—(Seebrontide.)
Gradient.—Change of value of a meteorological element per unit of distance. The gradients commonly discussed in meteorology are the horizontal gradient of barometric pressure, the vertical gradient of temperature, and the vertical gradient of electric potential. British meteorologists now prefer the termlapse-ratetovertical gradient.
Graupel.—A kind of granular snow, sometimes calledsoft hail.
Green Flash.—A bright green coloration of the upper edge of the sun’s disk, sometimes seen when the rest of the disk is below the horizon, at sunrise or sunset.
Growing Season.—In agricultural meteorology, the interval between the last killing frost in spring and the first killing frost in autumn.
Gust.—A sudden brief increase in the force of the wind. Most winds near the earth’s surface are made up of alternate gusts andlulls, the majority of which are too brief to be registered by an ordinary anemometer.
Hail.—Balls or irregular lumps of ice, often of considerable size, having a complex structure; large hailstones generally have a snowlike center, surrounded by layers of ice, which may be alternately clear and cloudy. Hail falls al-most exclusively in connection with thunderstorms. For so-called “soft hail” seegraupel. (Cf.sleet.)
Hail Rod.—A device analogous to a lightning rod, supposed to have the property of averting the fall of hail. Hail rods have been especially popular in France, where they are calledparagrêles. Large hail rods of recent construction are known as “electric Niagaras.”
Hail-shooting.—Bombarding the clouds to prevent the fall of hail.
Halo.—A generic name for a large group of optical phenomena caused by ice crystals in the atmosphere. The commonest of these phenomena is thehalo of 22 degrees(i. e., of 22 degrees radius) surrounding the sun or moon. Thehalo of 46 degreesand the rarehalo of 90 degrees, orhalo of Hevelius, also surround the luminary. Other forms of halo are thetangent arcs,parhelia(or paraselenæ),parhelic(orparaselenic)circle,anthelion, etc.
Harmattan.—A dry, dusty wind of the west coast of Africa, blowing from the deserts.
Haze.—A lack of transparency in the atmosphere; sometimes due to irregularities in the density of the air (optical haze), sometimes to dust (dust haze, which when dense constitutesdry fog), sometimes to fine particles of water or ice (grading into truefog).
Helm and Bar.—A pair of clouds seen when the “helm wind” is blowing over Crossfell, an English mountain; the “helm” capping the mountain and the “bar” lying to leeward of it.
High.—An area of high barometric pressure; an anticyclone.
Hoarfrost.—(Seefrost.)
Hole in the Air.—A colloquial name for any condition in the atmosphere that suddenly decreases the lift of an aeroplane. (Cf.bump.)
Horse Latitudes.—The regions of calms and variable winds coinciding with the subtropical high-pressure belts lying on the poleward sides of the trade winds. (The term has generally been applied only to the northern of these two regions, in the North Atlantic Ocean, or to the portion of it near Bermuda.)
Hot Wave.—A period of abnormally high temperatures. It has sometimes been defined, in the United States, as a period of three or more consecutive days during each of which the maximum temperature is 90 degrees F. or over.
Hot Wind.—A hot, parching wind characteristic of certain continental interiors; especially Australia, northern India and the prairie region of the United States.
Humidity.—The degree to which the air is charged with water vapor; viz., the actual amount of water vapor present (absolute humidity, which may be expressed in terms of weight per unit volume or as vapor pressure), or the ratio which this amount bears to the maximum amount the air can contain at the prevailing temperature (relative humidity, expressed in percentage).
Hurricane.—A tropical cyclone; especially one of the West Indies region. (A cyclone originating in this region and passing northward into the temperate zone is still called a “West India hurricane,” even after it has assumed the character of an extratropical cyclone, and, if sufficiently severe, justifies the display of “hurricane warnings” at ports of the United States. “Hurricane” is also the designation of the highest wind force on the Beaufort scale, and is thus applied to any wind exceeding about seventy-five miles an hour.)
Hygrograph.—A self-registering hygrometer.
Hygrometer.—Any instrument for measuring the humidity of the air.
Hygroscope.—A device that gives a rough indication of the relative humidity of the air. Most hygroscopes are mere toys.
Ice Rain.—1. A rain that causes a deposit of glaze. 2. Falling pellets of clear ice (calledsleetby the U. S. Weather Bureau).
Ice Saints.—A period of cold weather popularly reputed in Europe to occur yearly about May 11–13 (or, in south-central Europe, May 12–14); also, the saints whose days in the ecclesiastical calendar fall on these dates.
Ice Storm.—(Seeglaze.)
Ignis Fatuus.—Will-o’-the-wisp. (SeeChapter XXII.)
Indian Summer.—A period of mild, calm, hazy weather occurring in autumn or early winter, especially in the United States and Canada; popularly regarded as a definite event in the calendar, but weather of this type is really of irregular and intermittent occurrence. (Cf.St. Martin’s Summer.)
Instrument-shelter.—The American name of the cage or screen in which thermometers are exposed at meteorological stations. Calledthermometer-screenin Great Britain.
Inversion.—More fullytemperature inversion; an increase of air temperature with increase of altitude, instead of the normal decrease.
Ion-counter.—An instrument for determining the number of ions present, per unit volume, in a sample of air.
Isobar.—A line of equal barometric pressure. (Isobars are generally drawn on maps to show the horizontal distribution of pressure reduced to sea level, or the pressure at some specified altitude; but in a broader sense any lineon a chart or diagram drawn through places of equal pressure is an isobar.)
Isohyet.—A line of equal rainfall.
Isotherm.—A line of equal temperature.
Isothermal Layer.—(Seestratosphere.)
January Thaw.—A period of mild weather popularly supposed to recur each January, especially in New England.
Katathermometer.—A device consisting of a dry-bulb and a wet-bulb thermometer, designed for measuring the cooling power of the atmosphere, with reference to its physiological effects. It was invented by Leonard Hill.
Kiosk.—The name given by the U. S. Weather Bureau to a small street pavilion in which are displayed meteorological instruments, maps, tables, etc.
Land and Sea Breezes. Land and Lake Breezes.—The breezes that, on certain coasts and under certain conditions, blow from the land by night and from the water by day.
Lenticular Cloud.—A cloud having approximately the form of a double-convex lens, marking the position of a standing wave in the atmosphere. (SeeChapter VI.)
Lightning.—A disruptive electrical discharge in the atmosphere, or, generally, the luminous phenomena attending such a discharge. The various forms of lightning are named and described in Chapter IX.
Lightning Print.—A collection of marks, often treelike in form, sometimes found on the body of a person or animal that has been struck by lightning.
Lightning Rod.—A metallic rod, connected with a suitable “ground,” in earth or water, set up for the purpose of protecting some structure from lightning.
Light-pillar.—A form of halo, consisting of a column of light, vertical or nearly so, extending from or through the sun or moon. Called asun-pillar, or amoon-pillar, as the case may be.
Line-squall.—A more or less continuous line of squalls and thunderstorms traveling broadside over the country.
Looming.—An apparent elevation of distant objects by mirage.
Low.—An area of low barometric pressure, with its attendant system of winds. Also called abarometric depressionorcyclone.
Mackerel Sky.—An area of sky covered with cirro-cumulus clouds; especially when the clouds resemble the patterns seen on the backs of mackerel.
Mammato-cumulus.—A form of cloud showing pendulous sacklike protuberances. (SeeChapter VI.)
March.—The variation of a meteorological element in the course of a day, year, or other interval of time; e. g., thediurnal march of temperature; the annual march of barometric pressure.
Mares’-tails.—Cirrus in long slender streaks.
Marine Climate.—A type of climate characteristic of the ocean and oceanic islands. Its most prominent feature is equability of temperature.
Meteorograph.—Autographic apparatus for recording simultaneously two or more meteorological elements. Certain types of meteorograph are connected, electrically or otherwise, with some of the instruments at meteorological stations; others are sent aloft attached to kites and balloons.
Meteorology.—The science of the atmosphere.
Millibar.—(Seebar.)
Mirage.—An apparent displacement or distortion of distant objects by abnormal atmospheric refraction. Sometimes the images of objects are inverted, multiplied, etc.
Mist.—Generally, a wet fog or a very fine drizzle of rain; hence the expression, “it is misting.” The “Scotch mist” of mountainous or hilly regions is a combination of thick fog and heavy drizzle; it has been suggested that this occurs when the rain clouds actually rest on the earth.
Mistpoeffer.—(Seebrontide.)
Mistral.—Along the Mediterranean coast, from the mouth of the Ebro to the Gulf of Genoa, a stormy, cold northerly wind, blowing down from the mountains of the interior. (The name is sometimes applied to northerly winds on the Adriatic, in Greece, and in Algeria.)
Monsoon.—A wind that reverses its direction with the season, blowing more or less steadily from the interior of a continent toward the sea in winter, and in the opposite direction in the summer.
Moon Dog.—A paraselene.
Mountain and Valley Breezes.—The breezes that, in mountainous regions, normally blow up the slopes by day (valley breeze) and down the slopes by night (mountain breeze).
Nephoscope.—An instrument for measuring the movements of clouds.
Nieve Penitente.—Fields of pinnacled snow found on certain high mountains in tropical or subtropical regions.
Nimbus.—The rain cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)
Noctilucent Clouds.—Luminous, cirruslike clouds sometimes visible throughout the short nights of summer; supposed to be clouds of dust at great altitudes shining with reflected sunlight. Such clouds were observed during several summers after the eruption of Krakatoa (1883) and are still occasionally reported.
Normal.—The average value which, in the course of years, any meteorological element is found to have on a specified date or during a specified month or other portion of the year, or during the year as a whole. Also used as an adjective in such expressions as “normal temperature,” etc. Thus, for any station at which records have been maintained for many years, we may compute the normal temperature of January 1, the normal pressure of February, the normal rainfall of the year, etc. The normal serves as a standard with which values occurring in a particular year may be compared in order to determine thedeparture from the normal.
Nucleus.—A particle upon which condensation of water vapor occurs in the free atmosphere in the form of a water drop or an ice crystal.
Oblique Arcs of the Anthelion.—A rare form of halo, consisting of intersecting arcs, usually white, passing through the anthelion or the place where the anthelion would occur if visible.
Ozone.—An allotropic form of oxygen, which occurs transiently in small quantities in the lower atmosphere, and is supposed to be permanently present and relatively abundant at high atmospheric levels.
Painter.—A dirty fog frequently experienced on the coast of Peru. The brownish deposit from it is sometimes called “Peruvian paint.”
Paragrêle.—A hail rod.
Paranthelion.—A halo phenomenon similar to a parhelion, but occurring at a distance of 90 degrees or more in azimuth from the sun. The solar distance of the ordinary paranthelia is 120 degrees. (Analogous phenomena produced by the moon as source of light are calledparantiselenæ.)
Paraselene.—(Plu.paraselenæ.) (Seeparhelion.)
Paraselenic Circle.—(Seeparhelic circle.)
Parasitic Clouds.—The name formerly given to clouds capping the summits of mountains.
Parhelic Circle.—A halo consisting of a white circle passing through the sun and parallel to the horizon. A similar phenomenon in connection with the moon is called aparaselenic circle.
Parhelion.—A mock sun, or sun dog; a form of halo consisting of a more or less distinctly colored image of the sun at the same altitude as the latter above the horizon, and hence lying on the parhelic circle, if present. The ordinary parhelia are 22 degrees from the sun in azimuth, or a little more, according to the altitude of the luminary. Parhelia have occasionally been seen about 46 degrees from the sun. Analogous phenomena seen in connection with the moon are calledparaselenæ,mock moons,or moon dogs.
Penetrating Radiation.—A form of radiation that has the property of passing through a great extent of air without being absorbed and of ionizing the air inside hermetically sealed metal vessels. It is supposed to consist of a special kind of Gamma rays and to come from the higher levels of the atmosphere.
Phenology.—The study of the periodic phenomena of animal and plant life and their relations to weather and climate.
Photochemical Climate.—The chemical activity of sunlight characteristic of any place or region. The variations of this feature of solar radiation are more or less strikingly different from those of solar heat and the brightness of solar light. Certain types of “chemical actinometer” are used in its measurement.
Pilot Balloon.—A small free balloon the drift of which, as observed from the ground, indicates the movements of the air aloft.
Pocky Cloud.—Mammato-cumulus.
Pogonip.—A fog, composed of fine needles of ice, which occurs in mountainous regions of the western United States and is reputed to be very injurious to the lungs.
Pollution Gauge.—A gauge for measuring soot and other impurities found in the atmosphere.
Pontias.—A wind that blows by night from a narrow valley at Nyons, France.
Potential Gradient.—(Seegradient.)
Precipitation.—The collective name for deposits of atmospheric moisture in liquid and solid form, including rain, snow, hail, dew, hoarfrost, etc.
Pressure.—An elliptical expression, current in meteorological literature, foratmospheric pressure, orbarometric pressure.
Prevailing Westerlies.—The belts of winds lying on the poleward sides of the subtropical high-pressure belts.
Psuchrainometer.—An instrument devised by J. R. Milne for measuring the cooling power of the atmosphere with reference to physiological effects.
Psychrometer.—An instrument for measuring atmospheric humidity, consisting usually of adry-bulb thermometerand awet-bulb thermometer. The former is an ordinary mercurial thermometer. The latter has its bulb covered with muslin or other fabric, which is either permanently wet or is wetted before use. In some psychrometers there is only one thermometer, readings being taken both before and after moistening the bulb.
Purple Light.—The purple or rosy glow observed over a large area of the western sky after sunset and the easternsky before sunrise; it lies above thebright segmentthat borders the horizon.
Pyrheliometer.—An instrument that measures solar radiation by its heating effects.
Qobar.—A dry fog or heat haze of the upper Nile region. (Also spelledkobarandgobarand occasionally applied to a hazy condition of the atmosphere in other parts of the world.)
Rain Balls.—Mammato-cumulus.
Rainbow.—A luminous arc formed by the refraction and reflection of light in drops of water. (SeeChapter X.)
Rainfall.—A term sometimes synonymous withrain, but most frequently used in reference to amounts of precipitation (including snow, hail, etc.).
Rain Gauge.—An instrument for measuring rainfall.
Rain Tree.—A mythical tree which is alleged to exude copious showers of water even in the driest weather. (“Rain tree” is also the common name of an ornamental tree variously known to botanists asAlbizzia saman,Pithecolobium saman,Enterolobium saman, andSamanea saman.)
Recoloration.—(Seeafterglow.)
Recurrence.—The alleged tendency of any particular type of weather to occur at about the same period every year, independently of and generally in contrast to the regular march of the seasons.
Refraction.—Astronomical refraction.Change in the apparent position of a heavenly body, due to atmospheric refraction.Terrestrial refraction.Change in the apparent position of distant terrestrial objects, due to the same cause.
Relative Wind.—In aeronautics, the motion of the air with reference to an aeroplane or airship moving through it.
Réseau.—A collection of meteorological stations operating under a common direction, or in the same territory. Aninternational réseauis a group of stations in different countries cooperating for any purpose. TheRéseau mondialis a world-wide system of selected stations, the observations of which may be utilized in studies of the meteorology of the globe.
Rime.—1. Hoarfrost. 2. A rough or feathery coating of ice deposited on terrestrial objects by fog. (The second meaning is the one now used in technical literature.)
Roaring Forties.—(Seebrave west winds.)
Saddle.—(Seecol.)
Saint Elmo’s Fire.—A luminous brush discharge of electricity from elevated objects, such as the masts and yardarms of ships, lightning rods, steeples, etc., occurring in stormy weather. Also called corposant.
St. Martin’s Summer.—One of several names given in Europe to a mild period in autumn, corresponding approximately to the Indian summer of North America.
Scarf Cloud.—A thin cirruslike cloud which often drapes the summits of tall cumulo-nimbus clouds.
Scotch Mist.—(Seemist.)
Scud.—Shreds or small detached masses of cloud moving rapidly below a rain cloud or other heavy clouds.
Sea Breeze.—(Seeland and sea breezes.)
Secondary.—A small cyclone developed, or tending to develop, on the border of a large one.
Sensible Temperature.—The temperature felt at the surface of the human body; formerly identified, by some authorities, with the temperature indicated by the wet-bulb thermometer.
Silence, Areas, Zones, or Regions of.—Regions within which a sound is not heard, though heard in regions more distant from the source.
Silver Thaw.—A term variously applied to rime, glaze, and a thin coating of ice deposited on cold objects by a damp wind.
Simoom.—An intensely hot and dry wind of Asian and African deserts; often described as a sand storm or dust storm, but certain authorities state that the typical simoom is free from sand or dust.
Sirocco.—A name applied to various types of warm wind in the Mediterranean region. Some of these siroccos are foehns. The term is also used as the generic name for winds blowing from a warm region toward an area of low pressure in a normally colder region.
Sleet.—1. Frozen or partly frozen rain; frozen raindrops in the form of particles of clear ice. 2. Snow and rain falling together. (Other definitions have been proposed and the proper technical application of this term is still a subject of controversy. In popular and engineering use the word is often applied to a coating of glaze on trees, wires, rails, etc.)
Snow Bin.—A large receptacle for collecting the snowfall of an entire winter, or other long period, for measurement at one time.
Snow Garland.—An elongated mass of snow suspended at the ends and sagging in the middle.
Snow Mushroom.—An overhanging cap of snow resting on a tree stump, post, or the like.
Snow Roller.—A mass of snow rolled by the wind; generally muff-shaped.
Snow Sampler.—A device for collecting a sample of snow, cut vertically through a snowfield, for the purpose of determining the depth and density of the snow.
Snow Survey.—A measurement of the total amount of snow lying over a particular area, especially with a view to determining the total amount of water it will yield, when melted, for purposes of irrigation, etc.
Soft Hail.—Graupel.
Sounding Balloon.—A free, unmanned balloon carrying a set of self-registering meteorological instruments.
Specter of the Brocken.—The shadow of an observer and of objects in his immediate vicinity cast upon a cloud or fog bank; sometimes attended by a series of colored rings, called thegloryorBrocken-bow.
Squall.—1. A sudden storm of brief duration; closely akin to a thunderstorm but not necessarily attended by thunder and lightning. 2. A sudden brief blast of wind, of longer duration than a gust.
Squaw Winter.—In North America, a brief cold spell popularly reputed to precede Indian summer.
Static.—(Seestray.)
Storm Card.—A device intended for use on shipboard in determining the direction of a storm center from the ship.
Storm Water.—The water resulting from a heavy and rapid fall of rain; especially the portion that occurs as run-off. (The term has been used mainly in connection with the subject of sewers.)
Strato-cumulus.—A form of cloud. (SeeChapter VI.)
Stratosphere.—The upper region of the atmosphere, formerly called theisothermal layer, in which there is no marked or systematic decrease of temperature with altitude. The stratosphere is free from clouds (except occasional dust clouds) and from strong vertical air currents, and its circulation appears to be more or less independent of that of the lower atmosphere. The height of its base, which varies with latitude and otherwise, averages between 6 and 7 miles. (Cf.troposphere.)
Stray.—A natural electromagnetic wave in the ether. The term is used in reference to the effects of such waves in producing erratic signals in radiotelegraphic receivers. Strays are known collectively asstatic.
Summer Day.—A day in which the temperature reaches or exceeds 77 degrees F.
Sun Dog.—A mock sun or parhelion.
“Sun Drawing Water.”—The sun popularly said to be “drawing water” when crepuscular rays extend down from it toward the horizon.
Sunshine Recorder.—An instrument for recording the duration of sunshine; certain types also record the intensity of sunshine.
Synchronous Chart.—A form of synoptic chart, such as the ordinary weather map, which shows the meteorological conditions prevailing over any area at a given moment of time.
Synoptic Chart.—A chart showing the distribution of meteorological conditions over an area at a given moment or the average conditions during a given period of time, such as a month or a year.
Table-cloth.—A sheet of cloud that sometimes spreads over the flat top of Table Mountain, near Cape Town.
Tangent Arc.—Any halo that occurs as an arc tangent to one of the heliocentric halos.
Term Hours.—Prescribed hours for taking meteorological observations.
Thermal Belt.—A well-defined zone, found on some mountain-sides, in which vegetation is particularly exempt from frosts in spring and autumn. Also calledverdant zone.
Thermograph.—A self-registering thermometer.
Thermometer.—An instrument for measuring temperature; in meteorology, generally the temperature of the air.Maximumandminimum thermometersindicate, respectively, the highest and lowest temperatures occurring between the times of setting the instruments. Awet-bulb thermometeris used in measuring humidity. (Seepsychrometer.)
Thermometer Screen.—A cage, or sometimes merely a roof, for protecting thermometers from direct sunshine and other radiation that would cause the readings to indicate a temperature different from that of the air. In the United States generally called aninstrument shelter.
Thunder.—The sound produced by a lightning discharge.
Thunderstorm.—A storm attended by thunder and lightning. Thunderstorms are local disturbances, often occurring as episodes of cyclones, and, in common with squalls, are marked by abrupt variations in pressure, temperature, and wind.
Thunderstorm Recorder.—Any device that furnishes a record of thunderstorms, either near or distant. Most thunderstorm recorders register, by radiotelegraphy, the strays set up by lightning discharges.
Tornado.—1. A violent vortex in the atmosphere, usually attended by a pendulous, more or less funnel-shaped cloud. 2. In West Africa: A violent thundersquall.
Totalizer.—A form of snow gauge used chiefly in the Alps, designed to be read only once a year. (French,totalisateur.)
Trade Winds.—Two belts of winds, one on either side of the equatorial doldrums, in which the winds blow almost constantly from easterly quadrants.
Troposphere.—The part of the atmosphere lying below the stratosphere.
Trough.—1. A line drawn at right angles to the path of a cyclonic area through all points at which the pressure has reached a minimum and is about to rise. 2. An elongated area of low barometric pressure.
Twilight.—Astronomical twilightis the interval between sunrise or sunset and the total darkness of night.Civil twilightis the period of time before sunrise and after sunset during which there is enough daylight for ordinary outdoor occupations.
“Twister.”—A tornado; also, a small whirling dust storm.
Typhoon.—The name applied in the Far East to a tropical cyclone.
Ulloa’s Ring.—1. A glory. 2. A halo (also calledBouguer’s halo) surrounding a point in the sky diametrically opposite the sun; sometimes described as a “white rainbow.”
Vane.—A device that shows which way the wind blows; also calledweather vaneorwind vane.
Variability.—Interdiurnal variabilityis the mean difference between successive daily means of a meteorological element.
Verdant Zone.—(Seethermal belt.)
Visibility.—The transparency and illumination of the atmosphere as affecting the distance at which objects can be seen. It is often expressed on a numerical scale. (This term was formerly applied by British meteorologists to a state of unusual clearness of the atmosphere, regarded as a weather prognostic.)
V-shaped Depression.—A trough of low barometric pressure bounded on the weather map by V-shaped isobars.
Waterspout.—A tornadolike vortex and cloud occurring over a body of water.
Weather Well.—(Seeblowing well.)
Wedge.—A wedge-shaped area of high barometric pressure.
Wet-bulb thermometer.—(Seepsychrometer.)
Wind.—Moving air; especially a mass of air having a common direction of motion. The term is generally limited to air moving horizontally, or nearly so; vertical streams of air are usually called “currents.”
Wind Aloft.—The wind blowing at high levels as distinguished from that near the earth’s surface.
Wind Rose.—1. A diagram showing the relative frequency and sometimes also the average strength of the winds blowing from different directions in a specified region. 2. A diagram showing the average relation between winds from different directions and the occurrence of other meteorological phenomena.
Winter Day.—A day on which the temperature does not at any time rise above the freezing point.
Wool-pack Cloud.—Cumulus.