MONTH. 
JANUARY 
FEBRUARY 
7TMLOMCA ORS} NAR Reror 
SEP!IEMBER 
OCTOBER.... 
NOVEMBER.. 
DECEMBER... 
Extremes for Year . 
Means fer Year .. 
Notgrs—All the Readings are taken daily at 9 a.m. 
have been applied. 
BURTON-ON-TRENT METEOROLOGICAL SUMMARY FOR 1896. 
PRESSURE OF AIR, SHADE TEMPERATURE, 
EXTREMES 
ing of 
d 
Barometer. 
Barometer. 
inimum rea 
Maximum. 
Minimum. 
Readings. 
Readings. 
M 
Maximum Reading of 
Mean of Maximum 
Mean height of Barometer. 
Mean of Minimum 
30°00 41°18 | 14°91 
Temperatures in the Sun are taken with a Black Bulb Thermometer, in vacuo. 
calculating the Mean Relative Humidity, 
lt 
Mean Temperature 
‘Yemperature 
in the open. 
Grass. 
(corrected.) 
inimum on 
Maximum in Sun. 
M 
Mean of Dry Bulb Readings. 
HYGROMETRIC 
CONDITIONS, 
Mean of Wet Bulb Readings. 
Mean Dew Point. 
RAINFALL, 
Mean relative Humidity. 
Prevailing Direction. 
No. of days on which wind 
blew from that quarter. 
Mean Amount (0-10). 
Total Amount. 
(inches.) 
No. of days on which rain 
fell 
Maximum fall in 
24 hours, 
w 
[os] 
un 
co 
“_ 
° 
= 
CAN ceMIry QANN 
WH HK AWOUN AH ON A 
he mouth of the Rain G 
46°50 | 43°74 
auge is 1 foot above the ground and 153 
100 is taken to represent a saturated atmosphere and o a perfectly dry one. 
feet above sea-level. 
The Barometer Readings are corrected to sea-level and 32° F. ; and to the Mean ‘Temperatures in the Shade, Glaisher's Corrections 
The Vhermometers in the Shade are placed in a Stevenson’s Screen, 4 feet from the grass, as are the Dry and Wet Bulb Thermometers. The Maximum 
In 
JAMES C. WELLS. 
T. CIBBS. 
