VISUAL, GRATING AND GLASS-LENS, SOLAR SPECTRUM. 



525 



The Daily Observations are as follows 



June 1. © 



2. « 



3. 6 



9. 



10. <$ 



11. $ 



12. Tl 



13. 9 



14. \ 



15. © 



16. « 



17. 6 



18. 



19. % 



20. 9 



21. h 



22. © 



23. <L 



24. 6 



25. ^ 



26. 2/ 



27. 9 



28. Tz 



29. © 



30. <r 



Hour. 



3^ 



E.2 

 Si 



Indies. 



103 

 736 

 625 



870 

 631 



872 



632 

 908 

 993 



199 

 296 

 413 



399 

 347 

 414 



321 



279 

 293 



341 



299 

 306 



262 

 171 

 105 



124 

 283 

 236 



277 

 105 

 209 



Pi 





Grains. 

 2' 



9 -Z h 



M -* ° 



g S o 



Grains. 

 1 

 1 



1 



O 2 

 i-1 



0-03 



•20 

 ■06 

 •95 



•03 

 •20 



•02 

 ■01 



•73 



Sun-shine Recorder. 



H. 1IIN. 



1 01 



2 34 



00 



00 



00 



1 14 



00 



44 



08 



1 51 



00 



4 57 



6 04 



2 46 



2 26 



1 21 



00 



1 52 



3 09 



5 34 

 3 59 



25 

 08 

 15 



52 

 56 

 12 



30 

 24 

 23 



B. MIN. 



2 45 



3 38 



00 



38 



1 24 



2 29 



2 11 



05 



32 



1 09 



00 

 6 49 



4 59 

 6 42 



1 38 



2 59 

 20 

 09 



00 

 51 

 53 



05 

 08 



18 



43 

 39 

 41 



6 38 

 6 13 



4 38 



Wind. 



Miles per 

 Hour. 



5-84 

 8-87 

 9-63 



7-58 

 6-72 

 7-59 



10-51 



11-05 

 7-85 



7-69 

 4-26 

 664 



2-58 

 8-22 

 10-09 



7-84 

 7-96 

 4.93 



3-66 

 3-80 

 5-06 



5-07 

 7-59 

 4-69 



7-89 

 4-76 

 4-64 



4-59 

 7-29 

 7-22 



Direction. 



s.s.w. 

 s. 



N.E. 



N. 



N.W. 



W.N.W 



N.N.E. 

 N.N.W. 

 N.N.W. 



N.N.W. 



s.w. 



N. 



S.W. 

 N. 



N. 



IKW. 

 N.W. 

 N.W. 



N.N.W. 



N.N.E. 



N.E. 



N.W. 



N.E. 



N.N.W. 



N.W. 

 S.W. 

 S.S.E. 



S.E. 

 E. 

 W. 



Surrey, — projected in graphical curves ou compendious table-forms, and then photographed by himself, — ■ 

 it would appear that these two months, June and July of 1884, were peculiarly unfortunate for 

 sunshine. For not only was the preceding month of May bright with frequent sun, but the following 

 month of August was the brightest and sunniest month of that, or any name which had occurred in the 

 South of England for years. 



And yet it would have proved dangerous to trust to that precedent for another campaign, as in 

 the very next year (1885), it was the month of July that proved to be the most admirably sunny ; and 

 to a degree far beyond both May and June on one side of it, and August and September on the other. 

 — Subsequent Note. C.P.S. 



