no 



FRIDTJOF NANSEN. 



M.-N. Kl. 



Hour 



Depth 



in I 

 Metres' 



Instru- 

 ment 



Corr. 



S^ioo I <^t 



Hour 



Depth 

 in i 



Metres 



Instru- 

 ment 



Corr. 

 t° C. 



S% 



Ot 



Stat. 19a. Aug. 3, 1912. Same place as Stat. 19. 

 The ship was moored to an ice-floe. 



33-09 

 •50 



.66* 

 34-58* 



-72* 



26.55 



■85 



.96 

 27.71 



Stat. 19 b. Aug. 4, 1912. Moored to the same 

 ice-floe. 



1. 10 a. m, 

 1. 00 » 

 0.40 » 

 0.50 » 

 330 » 

 2.00 » 



26.83 



-94 



27-73 



.82 



.71 



Stat. 19 c. 



1 1.50 a.m. 



» » 



0.15 p.m. 



1 1 .00 a. m. 

 0.15 p.m. 



0.40 » 

 I > 



» > 



1-45 » 



Aug. 4, 

 icefloe. 



1912. 



Mored to the same 



10 

 20 



30 



40 



50 



60 



80 



100 

 120 



150 

 620 



0.1 



1.02 



1.41 



1. 17 



1. 18 

 0.06 



.8 

 ■47 

 -1.56 

 0.27 

 0.28 

 1. 14 

 1.81 

 2.03 

 a. 05 



\-r-4' 



32.59 

 33-38 

 .70* 



34.02' 

 •05' 

 •38* 

 •375' 

 .60' 



.73* 

 .82' 



.90" 



2Ô.19 

 .76 

 -99 



27.27 



•35 



•71 



•71 



-79 



.84 

 .86 



.91 



Stat. 19 d. Aug. 4, 1912. 

 ice-floe. 



Moored to the same 



— O.I 



/ 1.42 

 I 1.44 



1-54 

 -1-45 

 -I-5I 

 — 1.04 



/ 0.19 

 \ 0.21 

 ( -0.82? 

 \[-o.64] 



32.39 1 26.03 

 33.88' 27.14 

 1 



34-19' 

 .29 

 .38' 



[-12'] 2 



•52' 

 [.36*] 2 



-38 

 .63 



-7' 



-73 

 [.66] 



1 Mr. Oyan got 34.45 ^/oo and later 34-5° °/oo. 

 but the glass-bottle was then (February 1915) 

 cracked. 



2 There has evidently been something wrong 

 with these observations at 60 and 80 metres, 

 taken by the same haul, at 5.35 p. m. The 

 water-bottles may probably not have been 

 released and closed in the proper depths but 

 during the hauling up. In that case the 

 temperatures at these two depths are also 

 doubtful, and this may be the explanation 

 of the considerable disagreement between 

 the readings of the two thermometers of the 

 Ekman Water-bottle at 80 metres, the ther- 

 mometers did not get time to take the tem- 

 perature at the depth where they happened 

 to be reversed during the hauling up. 



Stat. 19e. Aug. 4, 1912. Moored to the same 

 ice-floe. 



10.05 p. m 



10.50 » 



Stat. 20. 



40 

 60 



80 



40 

 60 



80 



27.60 



.76 

 .83 



-50 



-75 

 .83 



Aug. 5, 1912. Moored to another 

 ice-floe, after having had to move 

 about 5 miles towards ENE (magn.) 

 from Stat. 19 e. We should then be 

 in 80° 21' N, 11° 10' E, if we had not 

 drifted in a south-westerly direction 

 while a Stat. 19. 



0.2 



0.36 



0.52 



I 43 

 1.44 

 1.83 



32.87 



34-53* 

 .66* 



-79* 

 .87* 



26.40 



27.73 

 .82 



-87 

 .90 



