M ETEOIIOLOG I CAL JGCIRN A L , 
REMARKS. 
Seco?id Month. 24 Hoar frost. About 6, p, m. a very dark 
cloud came o’'er, lowering with an arched base, as before thun- 
der, and presently discharged a shower of large hail and rain, 
which was accompanied with a cold wind. 25 Fair, a. m, 
wet and windy p m. and night. 2 6. The same. 2/. Cirrus, 
cumulus , and cirrostratus clouds appeared together : much 
wind : about 7> p- m. wind N. W. A bright meteor passed 
from the zenith towards the N. declining a little westwards. 
28. Clear morning : wind moderate. 
Third. Month, l . Hoar frost, fair. 2.3. Light showers. A 
Nimbus appeared S. of the setting sun in the 3d. which went 
away Southward. g. Light showers. 10. a m, sleet. At 
sunset, a Cumulostratus , with a snowy appearance : some 
hail-balls in the night. 11. A Nimbus was perceptible by 7, 
a. m. forming in the N. E. There were some heavy f though 
transient) squalls of snow during the day. Abundance of 
snow fell, on this and the following night, to the Southward, 
extending as far as the coas* of France. 
RESULTS. 
Prevailing winds Westerly, with a marked interruption by a current 
from the N. E. occasioning snow about the middle of the period. 
Barometer : greatest observed height, 30’4o in. ; least 29'C9 in. 
Mean of the period 30'109 inches. 
Thermometer : greatest height 53°; least 24°; 
Mean of the period, 42*50°. 
Evaporation 1*97 in. Ruinj&c. 1*46 in. 
L. HOWARD. 
Tottenham, 
Thbd Month , 25, 1813. 
