164 Hovurty METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS, Marcu 16—19, 1845. 
THERMOMETERS. WIND. 
Maximum Sky 
; it clouded Species of Clouds and Meteorological Remarks. 
orce In 1 
Scud. 
Streak of sky on NE. horizon. 
Dense homogeneous cirro-strati. 
Id. 
Cirrous mass ; Cirro-strati on horizon; solar halo. 
Dense irregular cirro-strati; bluish to N. 
dea? 
Nearly homogeneous mass of cirro-strati; sky to N. 
Id. ; id. 
Cirro-strati, breaking in zenith. 
Id. 
Id. 
Id. 
Cirro-strati ; cirrous mass. 
Id. ; id. ; sky to NW. 
Cirro-stratous scud; cirro-strati. 
Cirro-cumulo-strati ; lunar corona. 
Cirro-strati. 
Id.? 
Id. 
Cirro-strati. 
Id. 
Mass of cirro-stratus. 
As before. 
Darker. 
Nearly homogeneous mass of cirro-stratus. 
Td. 
Cirro-strati and cirrous mass. 
Dense cirro-strati; rather hazy. 
Id. 3 
Id. 
Cirro-cumulo-strati ; cirro-strati; haze. 
Id. to S. 
IGE.S cirro-strati ; haze. q 
1h ides id. on horizon. — 
Woolly cirro-eumnuli; haze. 
Cirro-stratous scud ; woolly cirri; cirro-strati. 
Loose cirro-cumulo-strati ; very hazy atmosphere. 
Scud ; cirro-stratous scud ; showers to N.? 
eles; id. 3 rain®?; sky to NW. 
Cirro-cumulous scud. 
dis aurora @ 
Seud or cir.-str. to S. ; bands of cir. to N. ; faint halo. 
Linear cirri scattered over the sky; halo. 
Cirri to SE. 
Clouds to NW. and SE. ; clear. 
.|| Cirro-cumulo-strati. 
Seud. 
Clouds on E. horizon. 
Seud, &c., on E. horizon. 
Thin cir.-cum.-str. ; cum. and cir.-str. seud on horizor 
Cirro-stratous scud ; thin cirro-cumuli. 
Thin cirro-cumuli ; cirro-strati. 
Scud and szro-cumulo-strati ; flakes of snow. 
Td. q 
| Seud ; loose cumuli; cirro-cumulo-strati. 
He eee Ph 
NJwnowow or 
33-4 
34-0 
33-5 
1-6 
0-9 
1-5 
2.3 
3-5 
4-6 
5-0 
6-1 
7-2 
7:3 
7:5 
71 
4:8 
3-6 
2:3 
1:5 
1-1 
1-2 
2.0 
0-9 
1-4 
1-2 
1-9 
1-7 
1-3 
1-6 
1-7 
2.2 
2-5 
2-7 
3-1 
March 174 5%. The observation of the barometer was omitted, the reading given is a mean of the preceding and succeeding observation! 
March 174195, Kelso town bell (4 miles distant) heard very distinctly. “4 
March 184 68. Brownish atmospheric haze, very dense and even electric-looking from NW. to E.: the sun projects a strong shadow 0 
the clouds in the haze. 7. Scud, forming in ragged strings below the cirro-stratous scud, and falling in showers? to N. 
