768 A MKMOIR OF ELIA8 LOOMIS. 



ll{;5. Tlie desctHuliiiits of Joseph Loomis, who tamo IVom Braintree, England, in tho 

 year l{V^)*, and sottled in Windsor, Conn., in 1G:59, second edition, revisod and 

 enlarged. Svo, pp. (ill. New Haven, IS?!"). 



131. Key to treatise on algebra. Tinio, i)p. 21".t. New York, IH?.'). 



13r>. Contribntions to meteorology, being resnlts derived from an examination of the 

 United Slates weather maps and from other sourees — fonrth jiaper. Ifead 

 in N. A. .S. November, IS?;'). (With plati-.) Am. Jonr. (:$) vol. xi, pp. 1-17. 

 (Movement of areas of high barometer ; monthly minima of temperature; in- 

 flnenec of winds on the teniperatnro, moisture, and pre.ssure of the atmosphere; 

 diurnal ineiiuality in tho rainfall ; comparison of storm paths in America and 

 Europe; oscillations of the barometer in different latitudes; storms traced 

 across the Atlantic Ocean ; velocity of ocean storms; storms of .January 29 to 

 February 8, 1870, ou tho Atlantic Ocean; application of Ferrell's formula; 

 stationary storms.) 



136. Contributions lo meteorology, being results derived from an examination of the 



observations of the Fuited States Sigual Service and from other sonree« — fifth 

 paper. Read in N. A. S. April, 187H. Am. Jour. (3), vol. xii, pp. I-IG. (With 

 two plates.) (Low temperature of December, 1872; form of area.s of maximum 

 and minimum pressure; relation of rain-fall to variations of barometric press- 

 ure; stationary storms near tho coast of Newfoundland ; course and velocity 

 of storms in tropical regions.) 



137. Elements of geometry, conic sections, and plaue trigonometry. Revised edition, 



with appeudix. 8vo, pp. 443. New York, 1876. 



138. Contributions to meteorology, being resnlts derived from an examination of the 



observations of the United States Signal Service and from other sources — sixth 

 paper. Read in N. A. S. October, 1876. Am. Jour. (3), vol. xiii, pp. 1-1'.). (With 

 three plates.) (Period of unusual heat in .Tune, 1873; rain areas, their form, 

 movements, distribution, etc. ; rainfall of 2 inches at statious south of latitude 

 36° ; rain-fall of 2 inches at stations north of latitude 36^. 



139. Contributu)ns to meteorology, being results derived from an examination of 



the observations of the United States Signal Service and from other sources — 

 seventh paper. Read in N. A. S. April, 1877. Am. Jour. (3), vol. xiv, pp. 1-21. 

 (With three plates.) (Rain areas, their form, dimensions, movements, dis- 

 tribution, etc. ; areas of low pressure without rain.) 



140. Key to elements of algebra. New York, 1877. 



141. Contribution to nu'teorology, being results derived from an examination of the 



observationsof the United States Signal Service and (rom other sources — eighth 

 paper. Read in N. A. S. October, 1877. Am. .Tour. (3), vol. xv, ])p. 1-21. ( With 

 two i)lates.) (The origin and development of storms; violent wiuds ; baro- 

 metric gradient.) 



142. Contribntions to meteorologj', being results derived from an examinatiou of the 



observations of the United States Sigual Service and from other sources — ninth 

 paper. Read in N. A. S. April, 1878. Am. Jour. (3), vol. xvi, ])p. 1-21. (Willi 

 fliree plates.) (Low barometer at Portland, Oregon; low barometerutSan Fran- 

 cisco; areas of high barometer; temperatnreof Iceland and Viennacompared.) 

 (The above nine papers were translated by M. H. lirocard into French, and were 

 published as No. r>0 (2) of Moigno's Actualites Scieutifuiue. Paris, 1880, with the 

 title Memoires de M(^tdor<)logie I)ynanii(iue.) 



143. A collection of algebraic probliMus and examples for the use of colleges and high 



schools in examinations and class instruction. 8vo, ]>p. 258. New York, 1878. 



144. Contributions to meteorology, being results deriveil from an examination of the 



observations of the United States Signal .Service and from otln r sources — tenth 

 paper. Read in N. A. S. November, 1878. Am. Jour. (3), vol. xvii, pp. 1-2."). 

 (With two plates.) (Storms of the Atlantic Ocean ; lluctnatious ot the barome- 

 ter on Mount Washington and Pike's Peak ; high wiuds ou Mount Washington ; 

 liigh winds on Pike's Peak.) 



