400 REPORT—1862. 
Taste I.—Meteorological Observations made in Eight 
= Siphon Barometer. Dry and Wet Ther- 
o 
£8 5 A Aneroid Height above 
25 Time. Reading Barometer, | ~~“ eas 
& vA eerneteal f No. 2. sea-level, Dry. 
oS 
qa? and reduced ° 
to 32° Fahr. 
ih om? is 
2 39 30pm. 
242 0 » 
2 AZ TO) 555 
(1) 245 O » 
(2) 249 0 55 
2 49 5° » 
(3) 54 2 » 
59 2 »% 
59 19 35 
59 20 35) 
59 4° » 
” 
2 0 3) 
2 20 3) 
i, BO nbd 
(4) 
(5) 
WOW WWWWNHHHNDKND 
° 
° 
(6) 
(7) 
(8) 
WWWWWWWWWW 
“ 
oO 
vy 
S 
(9) 
(10) 
LS ty P (sun shining. 
19 3° » 340 
19 40 35 8 sooo 
(11) 
(12) 
WWI WWWWW WW WW WW 
rs) 
n 
° 
S 
(1) Thunder heard below. (2) A large town directly under us. 
(3) Mr. Coxwell’s pulse 90; Mr. Glaisher’s 100, 107, and IIo. 
(4) Looked round; brandy necessary. (5) Difficult to get dew; Mr. Coxwell helped me. 
(6) Difficult to get dew. (7) Hands and face blue. 
(8) Aspirator difficult to work. (9) Thunder loud. a 
(10) Mr. Coxwell looked over ballast, said we had better be content today and not go 
higher ; I wished to go up. (11) Unwell. Vs 
(12) Remarkable view; cirri far above; beautiful deep bluesky with cumuli far below. 
The earth and its fields very beautiful under us; here the earth not visible, a blue mist 
filling up the interstices between the cumuli; there the earth is perfectly clouded over by 
