8r)(> EXPERIMENT STATION RECORD. 



Dccciiilx'i-, I'.M);!, recent ]>aii('rs heariiiij; on iiieleoriiloj,'y, e(c., Iliese nuiiibers coiilaiu 

 tlie lollowin;,' tirticles ami iiotc!^: 



No. 10. — Special contributions on Solar Hadialinn ami i'^aith Teiiij)erature!s (illus. ), 

 by C. (I. Knott; Studies on tlie Circulation of the Atmospheres of the Sun and of the 

 Earth — I. — The Circulation of the Sun's Atniosi)here (illus.), l)y F. il. r>ii?elo\v; A 

 Study of the Sununer Fogs of Buzzards I^ay, by F. W. l^roctor; and A Pliotograph 

 of J^ightning at Havana, Cuba (illus.), l)y "\V. C. Devereaux; and notes on sun sjKjts 

 and the weather conditions on the earth, "Weather Bureau men as instructors, sun- 

 spot ]H'riods in meteorology, the noises made by ])rojectiles and meteors, climate and 

 mankind, reliability of high-wind records, the Philippine Weather Bureau, and 

 long-range forecasting. 



No. 11. — Special contributions on Studies on the Circulation of the Atmo.spheres 

 of the Sun and of the Earth — II. — Synchronism of the Variations of the Solar 

 Prominences with the Terrestrial Barometric Pressures and the Temperatures 

 (illus.), by F. H. Bigelow; The Problem of the Cyclone (illus.), by F. J. B. Cordeiro; 

 Clou<ls on the Cucamonga Mountains (illus.), by G. R. Rounthwaite; The Earth- 

 quake of December 5, 1903, at Washington, D. C, by C. F. Marvin; Slount Whitney 

 as a Site for a Meteorological Observatory, by A. G. McAdie; Comi:)utation of the 

 Altitude of Mount Whitney, by H. L. Heiskell; Mountain and Valley Breezes, by 

 W. S. Tower; and Waterspouts at Cape May, N. J., August 24, 1902, by C. F. M. 

 Leidy; and notes on Weather Bureau men as instructors, climatology of California, 

 I)roposed pilot charts of the South Atlantic and of the South Pacific oceans, a daily 

 weather map for the northern and southern hemispheres, the meteorological observa- 

 tory at San Fernando, Spain, education of meteorologists, cooperation in (xovern- 

 ment work in science, aqueous vapor lines of the solar spectrum, seiches in Lake 

 Garda, extremes of temperature and pressure in Montana, computation of the alti- 

 tude of ]\Iount Whitney, meteorology in the universities and normal schools, oscil- 

 lations of temperature at any altitude, a waterspout, lightning j)henomenon, the 

 barometric disturbance in the Danish West Indies November 22-29, 1903, black 

 rain in Clermont County, Ohio, August 19, 1903, vertical components of atmospheric 

 motions, proportion of rainfall available for plant use, stationary and whirled 

 psychrometers, meteor observed at South Bend, Ind., terrestrial globes, periodic 

 floods in the Mississippi, island stations in the South Atlantic Ocean (illus.), and a 

 new suggestion for thermometers. 



No. 12. — Special contributions on The Use of Sounding Balloons for Meteorological 

 Observations at Great Heights, by C. Renard; The Ascension of Closed Rubber Bal- 

 loons, by H. Hergesell; Detailed Cloud Observations — A Progressive Phase in Weather 

 Forecasting, by F. L. Odenbach; Methods of Forecasting the Weather, by J. M. 

 Pernter; Kite Flying in the Tropics (illus.), by 0^ L. Fassig; Thuziderstorma at 

 Lincoln, Nebr., by J. H. Spencer; Recent Studies on the Solar Constant of Radiation 

 (illus.), by C. G. Abbot; and The Polar Aurora of October 30-November 1, 1903, by 

 J. Page; and notes on formation of hailstones (illus.), Weather Bureau men as 

 instructors, meteorology and the art of flying, the thermophone applied to geodesy, 

 periods in solar radiation and terrestrial temperatures, Southport exhibition of mete- 

 orological ai>paratus, the diffusion of odors in the atmosphere, low barometer during 

 the "President" storm of March 12, 1841, the mischief of wrong theories, aurora 

 and magnetic disturbances of October 30-November 1, 1903, storms on the southeast 

 coast of Cape Colony, density of the atmosphere under different conditions, weather 

 notes at West Cunnnington, Mass., international seismological association, meteorol- 

 ogy in Hawaii, influence of continents and oceans on the atmosphere, and origin of 

 the rare gases in the earth's atmosphere. 



Meteorological observations, W. A. Stocking, Jr. {Connecticut Storrs Sta. Rpt. 

 I'Mo, 2>P- 101-196) . — This is a record of ol)servations on temperature, pressure, 

 humidity, precipitation, and cloudiness during each month of 1902 at Storrs; rainfall 

 during the (3 months ended October 31, 1902, at 21 places in Connecticut; monthly 



