VOL. LXVI.] 



PHILOSOPHICAL TKANSACTIONS. 



45 



TABLE IV. 

 Sub-division of die s. E. 



TABLE V. 

 Sub-division of tlie n. w. 



Of the winds between the s. and w. those from the s. s. w. were this year the 

 most frequent. Here follows a general state of the winds, according to the de- 

 grees in which they prevailed respectively, collected from the 5 preceding tables. 



E.S. E.lw.N.W.JN.N.W. 



7 \ 7 I. 10 

 Missed in the journal 



E.IS.S.E.Is.E. W. In. N.E.I S. |\.W.] N . I E.N .E. N. li. W.S.W.js.W.ls.S W Sum 



ll| 12ni3,18il 20^ i2li|22ii22j| 25 |26il 45 |48i| 54^ i365j 



k 



TABLE VL 



Showing the number of feir and frosty days in each half 

 month and in the whole year. 



March 

 April 

 May. . 

 June. . 

 July . . 

 August 

 September 

 October . 

 November 

 December 

 January . 

 FebRiary 



Fair 



1st half Latt.half 



6 



15 



13 



12 



1 



5 



1 



11 



8 



15 



5 



7 



7 



9 



13 



11 



9 



7 



11 



6 



5 



9 

 11 



2 



Fair days 

 whole 

 months 



13 

 24 

 26 

 23 

 10 

 12 

 12 

 17 

 13 

 24 

 l6 

 9 



Frosty days 



, ^ 



1st half 



1 



2 



10 



1 



Latt. half 



1 

 1 



6" 

 15 



Frosty da. 

 in whole 

 months 



1 



2 



8 



25 



1 



Total frosty days, 41 



366 

 There were 11 snowy days 

 in this year, all in January, 

 with the wind between the 

 N. and E. The first snow 

 fell on the 7th, and intro- 

 duced the great frost, which 

 set in in the tlay-time: for 

 on the 7th, at 8+ in the 

 morning, it rained with the 

 thermometer at 33°, wind 

 E. N. E.; but, at 2 in the 

 afternoon of the same day, 

 the rain was turned into 

 snow, and the thermometer 



Total fair days 199 



was sunk, to 31°. There was a short remission of the frost on the 18th, the 

 thermometer at 8 in the morning of that day being at 33°; but it was sunk again 

 to 30° at 2 in the afternoon. On the 31st, at 8 in the morning, it was at 13.5 

 and only 1° higher the next morning, February 1. The frost broke in the night 

 between the 1st and 2d of February, the wind yet continuing n. e., from which 

 quarter it had set almost all the time the frost lasted. It changed to the s. e. 



