APPENDIX I 



METEOROLOGICAL RESULTS 



DEDUCED FROM OBSERVATIONS TAKEN AT THE 



LIVERPOOL OBSERVATORY 



DURING TIIR TWO TKAR8 KNDINO DRCSIIBBR SIst. 1863. 



BT 



JOHN HARTNUP, ESQ., F.R.A.S. 



(Read before the Literary and Philosophical Society or 

 Liverpool, May 30th, 1853.) 



Lititu.l« of the Observatory, S3'> 21' 48" N. : Longitude. 3' 0' 1" W. CUteni of the Barometer elevated 

 Si feet alwve the meaii level of the (lea. 



The Meteorological observations taken at the Liverpool Observatory 

 during the past two years consist, first, of a continuation of the series of 

 observations commenced in 184f5, and secondly, of observations taken 

 with Osier's Self-registering Anemometer and Pluviometer, during the 

 year 185-2. 



Of the series of observations commenced in 1846, the results for the 

 five years ending December 81, 1850, form Appendix II to No. VI of 

 the Proceedings of this Society. In the introduction to those results a 

 description is given of the instruments with which the observations were 

 taken, together with a full explanation of the way in which the index 

 corrections and the corrections for diurnal range were obtained ; and 

 the explanations there given will apply equally well to the results for 

 1851 and 185'2, since no alteration whatever lias been made either in 

 the instruments, the time of taking the observations, or in the method 

 of reducing them. The table containing the force and direction of the 

 wind from estimation has, for the sake of uniformity, been continued for 

 I8')v>, notwithstanding the erection of Uie anemometer. 



For the seven yeare over which our observiait»ii> now extend, the 



