102 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS. 



Bleivett, Rev. W. — Notes and observations for January, February, 

 and March, 1860, at Thomasville, Georgia. 



Boiven, John S.— Meteorological data from observations made by his 

 daughter near Elkhorn City, Nebraska, from June, 1858, to 

 January,' 1861, computed with a view to testing the old Ger- 

 man notion that a cold spell always occurs when the moon is in 

 Aries or Taurus. 



Brooke, Lieutenant J. 31., U. S. N. — Barometric and wind observa- 

 tions during a gale at Simoda, August 10, 1859, with graphic 

 representations of this and several other storms. 



Ganudas, Antonio. — Printed summary of meteorological and magnetic 

 observations, for the year 1860, at Guatemala College, Mexico. 



Clarke, Lawrence, Jr. — Temperature and amount of rain at Fort Kae, 

 Great Slave Lake, Hudson's Bay Territory, from October, 1859, 

 to June, 1860. (Forwarded by Mr. Kennicott.) 



Daivson, William. — Thermometer observations at Cadiz, Indiana, from 

 September, 1854, to December, 1856. 



Dirmeyer, George William, 31. J)., Secretary of the Board of Health 

 of Neiv Orleans. — Report of the Board of Health for 1860, con- 

 taining full tables of the meteorology of New Orleans for each 

 month, furnished by Dr. S. P. Moore, U. S. A. 



Du Pont, Captain S. F., II. S. N. — Printed tables of barometer, ther- 

 mometer, winds, and weather, from May to November, 1859, 

 kept on board a boat, by Mr. J. H. Hendry, chief officer of the 

 Swallow, principally in Chefoo harbor, (lat. 37° 34' N., long. 

 121° 27' E.,) the rendezvous of the French expeditionary forces 

 in the Gulf of Pecheli, a portion of the Chinese coast hitherto 

 little frequented b}^ foreigners. 



Earle, Silas, 31. D. — Register of thermometer kept at Columbia, Tuo- 

 lumne county, California, 2,200 feet above the level of the sea, 

 from June 16, 1857, to February 19, 1860. 



Fendler, Augustus. — Half-hourly barometric observations from 9 to 11 

 a. m.j and 3 to 6 p. m., made at Colonia Tovar, Venezuela, 

 from May 17 to December 12, 1857, reduced to 32°. (These are 

 the same observations that were published in the report for 1857 

 without being corrected for temperature.) 

 Hourly barometric observations from 5 a. m. to 9 p. m., made at 

 St. Louis, Missouri, from May 29 to June 30, 1860, reduced to 

 32°. 



Frey, Samuel C. — Newspaper record of barometer and thermometer 

 at Springfield, Ohio, during the years 1859 and 1860, and to 

 March, 1861. 



Humphreys, Captain A. A., U. S. Top. Eng. — "A lunar tidal wave in 

 Lake Michigan, demonstrated by Brevet Lieutenant Colonel J. 

 D. Graham^Major U. S. Top. Engs.," with diagrams. (Pamph- 

 let.) 



Jeivell, Wilson, 31. 1). — Report on meteorology and epidemics, read 

 before the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, February 1, 

 1860. The meteorological observations are from the record of 

 Prof. James A. Kirkpatrick, of the Philadelphia High School. 

 (Pamphlet.) 



Kallussowski, Dr. Henry K. — Meteorological observations at the Astro- 



