1904).] C. Little— r/ie Himalayan summer storm of Sept. 24thj 1903. 1^3 



Table VIII. 



Giving the temperature variation from the normal from 22nd to 30th 

 September 1903, arranged to show the westward movement of the 

 disturbance. 





September 

 22. 



September 

 23. 



September 

 24. 



September 

 25. 



Assam 



+ 1-7° 



+ 1-5° 



-r5" 



-2-9° 



North Bengal 



+ 0-8 



+ 24 



+ 0-5 



-16 



Bihar 



+ 6 



- +2-5 



+ 2-5 



+ 09 



United Provinces 



-0-4 



-0-4 



+ 0-9 



+ 1-6 



Punjab ... 



+ 3-4 



+ 2-9 



+ 3-7 



+ 4-4 



Srinagar 



+ 7-1 



+ 61 



+ 7.1 



+ 7-4 



Leh 



+ 1-7 



+ 31 



+ 2-3 



+ 30 





September 

 26. 



September 

 27. 



September 

 28. 



September 

 29. 



September 

 30. 



Assam ... 



-2^8° 



-2-8° 



+ 0-2° 



+ 0-5° 



+ r2=* 



North Bengal 



-2-8 



-0-3 



-05 



+ 0-3 



-0-2 



Bihar ... ... 



-1-4 



+ 0-5 



+ 0-7 



+ 1-3 



+ 0-5 



United Provinces 



+ 2-4 



+ 1-5 



+ 10 



+ 2-1 



+ 3-1 



Punjab ... 



+ 4-9 



+ 4-5 



+ 41 



+ 4'1 



+ 4-3 



Srinagar 



+ 91 



+ 9-6 



+ 11-0 



+ 9-9 



+ 9-5 ' 



Leh 



+ 4-4 



+ 5-8 



+ 45 



+ 5'4 



+ 5'9 



Table VII shows that temperature began to fall in Assam on the 23rd, 

 and that the change appeared in Bihar on the 24th. A rapid fall was 

 general in Assam, North Bengal and Bihar on the 25th, but it did not 

 extend to the United Provinces. There was practically no fall of 

 temperature in the United Provinces until later, when the depressions 

 moved northwestward from the nort!i of the Bay in the first week of 

 October. 



