| Robert Ellis Thompson, William Wilberforce Newton, Otis H. Kendall - 1878 - 992 Seiten
...but almost invariably travel to the eastward." Farther on7 is the conclusion, and it is italicized : "that rainfall is not essential to the formation of...the principal cause of their formation, or of their progressh'e motion." Now here is a view completely opposed to the first one, and yet both are based... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1882 - 674 Seiten
...following conclusion, arrived at by Prof. Loomis, after a careful study of the US Signal Service charts. " Rainfall is not essential to the formation of areas...their formation or of their progressive motion." The last chapter of the author's work which relates to tornadoes, waterspouts, and hailstorms, has already... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1882 - 722 Seiten
...{allowing conclusion, arrived at by Prof. Loomis, after a careful study of the US Signal Service charts. " Rainfall, is not essential to the formation of areas...their formation or of their progressive motion." The last chapter of the author's work which relates to tornadoes, waterspouts, and hailstorms, has already... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1882 - 960 Seiten
...study of the US- Signal Sen-ice charts. " Rainfall is not essential to the formation of areas of low i barometer, and is not the principal cause of their formation or of their progressive motion." The last chapter of the author's work which relates to tornadoes, waterspouts, and hailstorms, has already... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1888 - 680 Seiten
...become exhausted ; " and after examining certain cyclones which were accompanied by no rain he adds : " So that it seems safe to conclude that rainfall is...principal cause of their formation or of their progressive movement." Hann arrives at similar conclusions from investigations in Europe. After investigating an... | |
| John Michels (Journalist) - 1891 - 392 Seiten
...continue without any considerable rain for eight hours, and sometimes for twenty-four hours or longer; ... so that it seems safe to conclude that rainfall is...of their formation or of their progressive motion." " In order to determine the circumstances under which storms originate and ultimately acquire their... | |
| 1894 - 1130 Seiten
...formation of clouds and rain cannot be maintained;" on p. 239 C. and G. Report he quotes Loomis as follows, "rainfall is not essential to the formation of areas...the principal cause of their formation or of their progressivemotion," and remarks "this is strictly in accordance with the theory." However, being hard... | |
| 1878 - 804 Seiten
...nearly eastward with an average velocity of abont twenty miles an hour." From this fact it is concluded that rainfall is not essential to the formation of...and is not the principal cause of their formation nor of their progressive motion. The barometer is frequently low during the hazy weather of October,... | |
| Frank Hagar Bigelow - 1915 - 456 Seiten
...cyclonic disturbances, but is by no means either a primary or a principal cause of cyclones"; p. 239, "Rainfall is not essential to the formation of areas...of their formation or of their progressive motion"; in Waldo's edition of Ferrel's "Hydrodynamics," p. 39, "The theory which attributes the whole of the... | |
| Royal Meteorological Society (Great Britain) - 2002 - 360 Seiten
...century by Charney and Eliassen (1964). Loomis (1877), in stark contrast with his earlier beliefs, stated that "It seems safe to conclude that rainfall is not...and is not the principal cause of their formation or their progressive motion". But at this time, scepticism about the thermal theory was not widespread,... | |
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