ON THE EARTHQUAKE AND VOLCANIC PHENOMENA OF JAPAN. 125 

 Daily Waves— continued. 



N.E. I S.W. 



W. 



9-12 

 5 



1 

 15 



23 

 15 



1895. 



7 [10] 



G[15] 



6 

 5 

 6 

 5 



6? 

 6 

 9 



I 



W. 



18-21 



21 

 18-21 

 18-21 



21 

 15-21 

 18 

 straight 



Remarks 



January 14 



15 



16 



17 



18 

 19 



20 



27 

 28 

 29 , 

 30 

 31 . 



N.E. 



S.W. 



15 

 



14 

 



14 

 



10 



6 

 18 



5 

 19 



6 



24 



Up to the 20th the 

 trace is practically 

 a straight line 



18 



18 







24 



12 



24 



18-21 



_ _E. I W. 



On iaili at 14hr20m. 

 moved quickly east- 

 wards' off the scale. 

 It returned on the 

 14th at 3h., but 

 went off again at 

 121i. lom. to return 

 again next day at 

 2h. 30m. It left the 

 scale again at llh. 

 30m., and move- 

 ments seem to have 

 continued during 

 the week, the pen- 

 dulum being steady 

 and on the scale 

 from about 3 to 12 

 hours 



I 

 On the 20th it went 

 quickly eastward 

 at 7h. and returned 

 to go westwards at 

 18h. 30m. Passed 

 to the east on the 

 21st at 12h. 30m., 

 andretuniedonthe 

 22nd at 2h. 18m., 

 when it was steady 

 until 15h. 34m"., 

 when it went east- 

 wards. It was 

 steady from the 

 23rd to the 25th, 

 when at 15h. it went 

 again eastwards. 

 Returned at 31i. on 

 the 26th and re- 

 mained steady 

 7 

 23 



12 19 







18 24 







15 5 off film 

 23 



15 



12-15 off film towards 



east 

 returned at 23 hours 



I 



irregular and then 



no diagram 



N. 



S. 



?-6 

 0-3 



18 



Remarks 



18-21 

 18-24 



24 



19 



21 

 12 

 18 

 21 



15-18 



diagram bad 



The curious movements 

 of P which are large 

 displacements, taking 

 30 minutes or 1 hour 

 for their completion, 

 appear to have taken 

 place on frosty nights. 

 gives a smooth curve 

 with an amplitude of 

 4 or 5 mm. 



The waves on are de- 

 cided and regular. It 

 is difiBcult to determine 

 the hour for the south- 

 ern elongation. 



Rain. 



