1842.] A Seventh Memoir on the Law of Storms in India. 1041 



Time. 



2nd. 



3rd. 



4th. 



6th. 



11 



29.650 



29.616 



29.592 



29.664 







.636 



.616 



.580 



.656 



1 P. M. 



.620 



.608 



.570 



.644 



2 



.612 



.594 



.548 



.630 



n. 



.608 



.586 



.542 



not obsd. 



30 



.600 



.576 



.540 



ditto. 



3i 



.600 



.576 



.532 



ditto. 



4 



.600 



.560 



.532 



ditto. 



4i 



.600 



.558 



.532 



.616 



5 



.596 



.552 



.536 



.616 



2 



.600 



.558 



.538 



not obsd. 



6 



.608 



.558 



.532 



.624 



7 



.614 



.560 



.532 



not obsd. 



8 



.624 



.572 



.562 



ditto. 



9 



.626 



.580 



.562 



ditto. 



91 



.620 



.576 



.562 



ditto. 



10 .620 .576 .562 ditto. 



[Bombay Times, June 22, 1842. 



Lohurduggah, Ramghur district. Latitude 23° 28' N. Longitude 



84° 50' E. 



" The storm of the 3rd did not reach this length. We had a few 

 puffs of wind all round the compass, with tolerably heavy showers all 

 day, but nothing more." 



22nd June, 1842. T. M. TAYLOR. 



Sumbulpoor. Lat. 21° 33' N. Long. 83° 47' E.from Messrs. Willis 

 and Earle, Calcutta, June 24, 1842. 



In a letter of June 20th, received this day from Mr. C. L. Babbing- 

 ton of Sumbulpore, in answer to some inquiries made of him in our 

 letter of the 15th instant, he says, 



" With regard to the late gale we did not experience its effects 

 here. The rains were ushered in on the 1st instant, also on the 2d 

 and 4 th by the usual North -westers, which only lasted a few hours 



