A CATALOGUE OF OBSERVATIONS OP LUMINOUS METEORS. 



391 



ima of the display also occurred about 12'" 50™, 1'' 20'", aud 1" 40'" a.m. during 

 the progress of the shower. 



Fig. 1. — Rate of apparition per minute of meteors observed by Mr. Howlett 

 at FJimwell, near Hurst Green in Sussex, on the morning of the 1-ith of 

 November 186G, with one assistant. 



Hours of Observation, 1866, November 14, a.m. 



At Leyton, Essex. — -The total numbers of meteors and their average fre- 

 quency per minute, in successive five minutes on the morning of the 14th of 

 November 1866, as observed at Mr. Barclay's observatory at Leyton, are 

 thus stated by Mr. Talmage : — 



The numbers projected, lilce the former, in a curve show that the greatest 

 frequency of the meteors at Leyton, on the morning of the 14th of November 

 1866, took place at very nearly ten minutes after one o'clock, and that ten- 



