METEOROLOGICAL ABSTRACT. 215 



METEOROLOGICAL TABLE for 



1794. 



u 





4> 















■4-* 



-c: 



"0 . 



13 









ei 



Uh 









t*-. 



U- 



^*- . 



M 







c 









•53 < 



W CO 



° c 



-= 







1^ 



f^-s 



«.5 



tS 



as 



k2 





Mean 

 Bar. 8 



C 0* 



OH 







is 







c^ 



January, 



February, 



March, 



April, 



May, 



June, 



July, 



Auguft, 



September, 



Oaober, 



November, 



December, 



Means, 

 Total Rain, 



29.661 



49-30 



29-397 

 29.631 



59-0 



51.00 



29-595 



55-25 



29.752 

 29.884 

 29.768 



56.32 

 64.50 

 66.70 



29.720 

 29.662 

 29.516 

 29.416 

 29.691 



64.32 

 58-71 

 54-85 

 48.90 

 48.58 



29.641 



55-72 



54-25 



53-0 

 64.5 

 62.0 

 73-0 



75-° 

 72.0 



64.0 



62.0 



SZ-S 



50-5 



21.0 



38.5 

 39-25 



42.0 



48.5 

 52.0 

 49.0 

 41.0 



36-5 

 32.5 

 26,25 



39-32 



43-5 



44-43 



49-50 



50.22 



60.4 



61.7 



5998 



54-90 



50.26 



43-58 



41-33 



49-79 



41-43 

 46.00 

 48.09 

 52.98 

 56.16 

 62.30 

 66.42 

 63.03 

 57.45 

 52.43 

 45-54 

 42.50 



52.84 



41 2C 

 44-30 



45-93 

 48.30 

 47.22 

 57-40 

 58.51 

 55-40 

 52.06 

 47.29 



43-47 

 40.10 



48.34 



40.65 

 44.10 

 46.15 

 50.26 

 51,20 

 60.7c 

 62.24 



59-47 

 54.08 

 49.66 

 44.19 



41-31 



50-32 



1.40 

 2-145 



0-995 

 2.150 



1. 910 



1.07 

 2.12 

 1.84 

 3-14 

 3-53 

 4 51 

 3-92 



28^3 



REMARKS. 



The weather in January and February 1794 was very mild and open. The 

 prevailing winds were from S. W. and S. S. W. ; ufually a brilk lleady gale, but 

 fometimes more violent, particularly in February. The thermometer was as high 

 as 50i in January, and 54 in February ; and once in January fo low as 21, only for 

 a ihort time, however, during a N. W. wind; the froft lailed fome days. Very 

 little fnow fell. The temperature of thefe months was 6° or 7° above the mean 

 of the Hawkhill obfervations. There was a great deal of clear weather, and, though 

 the atmofphere was moift, there fell but little rain. 



March and April continued to maintain a fuperiority of 3 or 4 degrees in tem- 

 perature above the fame months in ordinary feafons. March was very dry, and 

 the wind frequently in the eaft. In the end of April, the weather was fqually, with 

 the wind varying from S. W. to S. E. 



In 



