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Title: The Aviator and the Weather Bureau
Author: Ford A. (Ford Ashman) Carpenter
Release Date: July 4, 2018 [eBook #57443]
Language: English
Character set encoding: UTF-8
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AVIATOR AND THE WEATHER BUREAU***
Note: | Images of the original pages are available through Internet Archive. See https://archive.org/details/aviatortheweathe00carpiala |
BY
FORD A. CARPENTER, LL.D.
Meteorologist
ILLUSTRATED WITH PHOTOGRAPHS AND CHARTS
BY THE AUTHOR AND OTHERS
PUBLISHED BY THE
SAN DIEGO CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
1917
Published by permission
Dated August 25, 1916
Second edition, 5,000 copies
J. Horace McFarland Company
Mt. Pleasant Press
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
3
This is a brief but general account of the history of aviation as it is associated with southern California, a description of the War Department school of aviation at San Diego, a syllabus of the course of lectures delivered there on the subject of practical meteorology as applied to aviation, a narrative of weather-study from an airplane, and a recital of subsequent active coöperation between the aviators and the U. S. Weather Bureau.A
A It may be remembered that the weather service of the United States originated with the Signal Corps of the Army and that the Weather Bureau was created from it by Act of Congress, June, 1891, and made a bureau of the U. S. Department of Agriculture. As a former member of the Signal Corps the writer enjoyed the renewal of old friendships among the officers at the Aviation School. Col. W. A. Glassford, Signal Corps, U. S. Army, Commandant of the War Department Aviation School at San Diego, kindly read the manuscript of the following pages and the writer gratefully acknowledges his valuable suggestions.
Much of the material in the following pages was obtained by the writer while detailed as Lecturer in Meteorology to the Signal Corps, War Department Aviation School at San Diego, in 1915–1916, also when detailed in the same official capacity to the U. S. Army Military Training Encampment, Monterey, 1916; and at the summer sessions of the University of California during 1914–1916.
Los Angeles, Cal.,
February, 1917.
4
To
J. S. A.
5
CHAPTER I | |
The Signal Corps Aviation School at San Diego, California | 7 |
CHAPTER II | |
Applied Meteorology for the Aviator | 11 |
CHAPTER III | |
Weather Observations from an Airplane | 16 |
CHAPTER IV | |
Investigating the Upper Air | 25 |
6
Figure No. |
Page | ||
Army airplane gliding to North Island Over U. S. Cruiser “San Diego” | Frontispiece | ||
1. | Congressional Medal awarded Wright brothers | 33 | |
2. | Ascent of sounding balloons at Avalon | 34 | |
3. | Meteorograph which made the ascent of July 27, 1913 | 35 | |
4. | First flight of airplane carrying two persons | 36 | |
5. | Sub-station at Mount Wilson Observatory | 37 | |
6. | Type of airplane used in 1911 on North Island | 38 | |
7. | Discussing a flight | 39 | |
8. | Captain Culver and parachute for determining wind-direction | 40 | |
9. | Lieutenant Gorrell, U. S. Infantry, as observer | 41 | |
10. | Point Loma from the eastern shore of North Island | 42 | |
11. | San Diego, across Spanish Bight, from U. S. Aviation School, at twilight | 43 | |
12. | Instructor Brindley and Meteorologist Carpenter in Military Tractor No. 50 | 44 | |
13. | Military Tractor No. 50 | 45 | |
14. | “Trimming” Tractor No. 50 | 46 | |
15. | Military Tractor No. 50 just before leaving the ground | 47 | |
16. | San Diego harbor at over two thousand feet altitude | 48 | |
17. | San Diego viewed from an altitude of thirty-five hundred feet | 49 | |
18. | Military Tractor No. 50 viewed from the ground | 50 | |
19. | Flying Squad’s Wind Direction Pennant Tower | 51 | |
20. | The Aviation School Motor-Boat “Pronto” | 52 | |
21. | U. S. Aviation Field at three thousand feet altitude | 53 | |
22. | Repair Shop, U. S. Aviation School, San Diego, Cal. | 54 |
7
History.—The year 1911 marked the beginning of the United States aviation school at San Diego. There is no finer tribute to the equability and general excellence of the climate of southern California than that given in the history of aëronautics. It was here, in 1900, that Chanute completed his early and epoch-making observations of the flight of gulls and pelicans. These contributed largely to the success of the Wright brothers a few years afterward. It was in southern California, six years ago, that Harkness, in an Antoinette, made his record monoplane flight to Tia Juana. San Diego witnessed the flying of the first seaplane, by Curtiss, five years ago. It is in this district that not only the War Department aviation school and a number of commercial flying schools are located, but also one of the large airplaneB factories in this country.
B The National Advisory Committee for Aëronautics in its report of October 17, 1916, on Nomenclature for Aëronautics, the name airplane is substituted for “Any form of aircraft heavier than air which has wing surfaces for sustention, with stabilizing surfaces, rudders for steering, and power-plant for propulsion through the air.”
Location of the School.—Whatever the final action may be as to permanent location, it has been conceded8 by all authorities that the situation of the aviation school on North Island, San Diego Bay, is ideal. (See Fig. 21.) The so-called island is connected with the peninsula of Coronado by a narrow sand-spit, and it comprises many hundred acres of level land free from buildings and any sort of overhead wires. The island fronts the ocean on the south; Point Loma on the west with the narrow entrance to the bay between; to the north is the city of San Diego across the bay; and Coronado just beyond Spanish Bight on the east. This natural arrangement gives good air conditions for beginners, and also enables them to use the smooth waters of the bay as well as the rough ocean water for the seaplanes. The proximity of this location to San Diego is also a distinct advantage. (See Fig. 11.) All of the structures of the aviation school on North Island are temporary, the buildings consisting of a scattering array of huge sheds.
Character of Instruction.—Officers from all branches of the army volunteer for this service. The qualifications of an aviator are caution, judgment, and technical skill. Deficiencies in caution and judgment being temperamental are rarely remedied, while technical skill is largely a matter of acquirement. Less than ninety days are allowed for qualification as a junior aviator, and if in that period the officer’s deficiencies are found to be inherent, he returns to his company.
The school is a place for hard work and quick thinking. Detail in the repair shop is part of the course, as is also the use of the gasoline engine in motor trucks as well as in aircraft. (See Fig. 22.) Theory and practice are closely united: the former is9 carried on by means of bi-daily lectures, while the early morning hours are devoted to flying. Pilot-and-observer machines equipped with double control are used in instruction. The aviation instructor ascends with the student and allows him to manipulate the controls, only resuming the management of the airplane in an emergency. Needless to say, the life of an instructor is a most hazardous one and full of thrills. His duty is to be on the alert to correct errors in the manipulation of the machine. After every trip the instructor reviews, point by point, the features of the flight, showing the pupil his deficiencies and explaining how he may avoid them in the future. The instruction is terse but kindly, and the manner of imparting this information leaves nothing to the imagination. After watching student and instructor, and closely studying the finished work of an aviator, it is my opinion that in no other occupation must there be such perfect coördination between mind and muscle: the perfectly qualified aviator is the modern super-man.C
C The army aviator of today is picked for his quickness of mind and body, and the first thing that strikes you about him is a sort of feline, wound-up-spring alertness. Then you note his reticence, the cool reserve of a man whose lot is to express himself in deeds rather than words. And, lastly, there is the quiet seriousness, verging almost on sadness, of a man who must hold himself ready to look death between the eyes at any moment and yet keep his mind detached for other things.—Lewis R. Freeman in the Atlantic Monthly.
Results of a Year’s Work.—During the year 1915, the students of the aviation school made 3,652 flights with a total time aloft of 1,516 hours, and a mileage of 95,000. As regards weather conditions affecting flights, it will be found interesting to note Chart No. 5 giving number of flights and duration for the fourteen months ending August, 1916, which shows that work progressed regardless of10 weather, and at an increasing rate.D In February, a military tractor-seaplane (an all-California product), 125-horsepower motor, with twenty-six gallons of gasoline, four gallons of oil, and three passengers, making a total weight of 3,100 pounds, reached an altitude of 12,362 feet. This was the world’s record, the previous altitude under the same conditions having been 9,000 feet.
D “It is estimated that the average cost to France of training each pilot is five thousand dollars ... no less than from four to six months are devoted to the training of finished pilots. Although I have just come from France, the progress of aviation is so rapid that much of my own knowledge may be out of date before I again return to the front.”—C. D. Winslow, “With the French Flying Corps,” 1917, 4–5: N. Y.
11
Activities of the Weather Bureau in Relation to Aëronautics.—Naturally the progress of aërial navigation has at all times been rather closely connected with the Weather Bureau. For over a decade the Bureau has not been content with surface observations but has maintained laboratories for the study of the upper air. The results of its observations are considered a mine of information for the student aviator. Prof. Charles F. Marvin, the Chief of the Weather Bureau, is a member of the National Advisory Committee for Aëronautics, and chairman of a subcommittee engaged on the determination of the problems of the atmosphere in relation to aëronautics.E
E Monthly Weather Review, 1915, 32:500. Washington.
The first official coöperation between the Weather Bureau and the War Department aviation school was inaugurated in the year 1914 by Dr. W. J. Humphreys, Professor of Meteorological Physics, when he was detailed to give a course of lectures. It was during this course that he lectured on “Holes in the Air.”F This paper has been reprinted as a textbook for the aviation school.
F Popular Science Monthly, 1914, 44:18–34, N. Y.
Early Studies in Aëronautics.—Unofficially, however, the coöperation extended back some fifteen years prior to that time, when the writer was in charge of the local office of the Weather Bureau at San Diego, and assisted the aëronautical engineer,12 Octave Chanute, in his observations and experiments on San Diego Bay.G At this time hundreds of photographs of sea-gulls, pelicans, and other soaring birds were made, and both birds and photographs studied and analyzed. Ever since then more or less interest has been taken by the writer in aërial navigation. During an assignment to the Central Office the work of the Wright brothers was observed and studied. The association with the late Octave Chanute and his friends, the Wrights, during their experimental flights at Fort Meyer, Virginia, in September, 1908, is counted among the many pleasant memories of the Washington visit. It was here that was witnessed the first flight with a passenger (see Fig. 4), Mr. Orville Wright taking up with him Major (now Colonel) George O. Squier, the present head of the aviation branch of the army. Such was the infancy of the flying-machine that at that date no fatalities had occurred. A few years later the writer had the pleasure of accompanying Mr. Glenn Curtiss while he was determining a site for his school, which was finally located on North Island. (See Fig. 6.) Shortly afterward, from this place, Harry Harkness made record amateur cross-country flights in an Antoinette monoplane.
G “Climate and Weather of San Diego,” Carpenter, 1913, 57–59, San Diego.
Active Work of the Weather Bureau.—During the score of years that the writer has been in charge of the San Diego and Los Angeles stations of the Weather Bureau, interest in flying has been cumulative. Efforts have been made to furnish aviators with available data so that at the present time a day seldom passes without conference With officials or13 students of Government or private flying schools in this vicinity.
Lectures on Meteorology as Applied to Aviation.—Through the War Department, October, 1915, on request of the commanding officer of the Signal Corps aviation school, at San Diego, the writer was directed by the Chief of the Weather Bureau to deliver two lectures of which the following are outlines:
(Illustrated by 37 lantern-slides from photographs by the author)
(Illustrated by 72 lantern-slides from photographs by the author)
16
In order to qualify as meteorologist competent to confer with aviators, it seemed desirable to become personally acquainted with some of the conditions that confronted them. As a matter of professional acquirement therefore, I was glad to accept an invitation to go aloft after the necessary official arrangements had been made with Washington.
This trip was in line with the previous endeavors of applying practical meteorology to the science of flight and appropriately extended the work which was begun in San Diego with Chanute and the sea-gulls fifteen years before.
Object of Flight.—I wished to put myself in the student’s place and learn at first hand the practical facts he demanded from weather observations and to acquaint myself with everything possible that might be of value to an aviator. There were two definite things of which I desired knowledge: first, to determine the height of the upward trend of the sea-breeze over Point Loma which causes the mysterious “woolly” of a score of years’ acquaintance from a yachting standpoint; second, to observe the extent, form, and composition of the velo cloud which is the characteristic sun-cover of California.
Preparations for the Ascent.—Aviator Instructor Oscar Brindley (the 1915 winner of the Curtiss trophy), in military tractor No. 50, was assigned17 as pilot. It may be stated here that the accepted definition of aviator is a pilot of a flying-machine heavier than air. The airplane used in my first flight (see Fig. 13) was made in Los Angeles and is the present standard army model. This tractor has an 80-horsepower engine and 8-foot propeller. It is 21 feet long, has a wing-spread of 38 feet, supporting area 364 square feet, and a flying radius, with two persons, of 300 miles. The maximum altitude attained with this model at San Diego was 13,000 feet. Before being placed in service the machines are thoroughly gone over at the repair shop (see Fig. 22), and the motors are run at full speed for twenty-four hours, after which they are taken down and subjected to scrutiny for possible defects. All of the struts, guys, and wires are closely examined; the boltheads are all drilled, wired, and soldered so that no amount of vibration will loosen them. Regardless of the length of the flight, each machine, before going up again, is given a rigid inspection and not until the mechanicians have tested every part is it pronounced ready.
Not being prepared with a regulation aviation suit, I was loaned a leather jacket by one officer, face-goggles and safety helmet by others. I then took my place in the observer’s seat forward and was strapped into it with the safety belt (see Fig. 12). I was cautioned to let my body give way as the waist-controls were moved from side to side and not pay any attention to the steering rudder wheel which had a way of mysteriously revolving, advancing and receding.
In cranking an airplane, a certain formula is always gone through. The mechanician at the propeller18 calls out, “Close!” The aviator closes the switch and repeats the word. This short-circuits the ignition apparatus so that no spark occurs in the cylinders. The propeller is turned in order to introduce explosive mixtures into the cylinders. When ready to start the mechanician says “Open!” The aviator opens the switch and repeats the word. The charges in the cylinders then fire when the propeller is turned.
After the engine starts, the machine is “trimmed” by helpers and jockeyed for a favorable “take-off” into the air. (See Figs. 14, 15.) This model of airplane climbs on a gradient 1 to 7; its minimum speed is 41 miles per hour. In other words, if the speed is less than 41 miles per hour the machine will not fly horizontally.
The Ascent.—The tractor was headed into a 30-mile northwesterly wind so that the “take-off” was quick and easy; there were only a few seconds spent rolling over the field, when the airplane left the ground and I felt the never to be forgotten cushioning feeling of the air. For ten seconds there was experienced a decidedly weakening nervous chill, which occurred to me once before when making a high dive from a spring-board. It was the sort of physiological disturbance that can only be counteracted by immediately pulling one’s self together saying, “Well, here goes nothing!” The momentary depression was immediately followed by a corresponding elation of feeling which strange to say did not leave me during the trip and is always associated with thoughts of the journey. There was no dizziness, although I am peculiarly susceptible to the least change in balance. The earth did not recede as we progressed steadily19 upward; we seemed part of the earth, but not of it. Although the airplane reached an altitude of 3,000 feet in a comparatively few minutes, the barometer falling from 30.0 to 27.0 inches, the decreased bodily pressure was not at all noticeable.H
H Trans-American Climatic Association, 1915, 31:20, Hot Springs, Va.
Next to the supporting quality of the atmosphere I had noticed the 70-mile blast of air as the airplane pushed its way steadily onward and upward. Naturally, the exhaust of the motor in addition to the roar of the wind made conversation impossible. Some airplanes have telephone communication between observer and pilot. (See Fig. 9.) During one flight in a machine not so equipped, the passenger noticed the breaking of some apparatus. Knowing that it was impossible to make himself heard he hastily scribbled the word “Accident!” on a bit of card, whereupon the pilot shut off his engine and glided to earth.
Two-thousand Feet above Point Loma.—Carrying out my suggestion as to investigating the “woolly,” the pilot drove the machine straight for Point Loma and those unseen aërial breakers. Suddenly there were two distinct “wallops” and I felt the fuselage beneath me respond as if struck by a stuffed club. There was evidently first a surge then a drop, and it was the descending current of air that deprived the airplane of the supporting medium, hence the shock. Point Loma itself, from this altitude, and seen directly from above, looked very like a barracuda’s backbone—long, low, and ugly. Although this peninsula (see Fig. 21) is less than 500 feet high it so effectively deflects the prevailing northwesterly wind that the upward surge has been noticed by aviators20 at an altitude of 4,000 feet. It is no wonder then that these descending winds, called “woollies” (from their churning the water into isolated masses which look like tufts of wool), are dreaded alike by yachtsmen and birdmen. They have been known to carry away topsails from too closely venturing schooners and student aviators always give the vicinity of Point Loma a wide berth.
No Winds Aloft.—We had not changed our direction since leaving the ground, but after passing over Point Loma the airplane was put sharply on a port course. I had been expecting this and must confess, somewhat dreaded it, innocently thinking that a 30-mile wind added to our 70-mile rate of speed would “heel” the craft to an uncomfortable angle when the course was changed from northwesterly to southerly. What was my astonishment to find that the putting about was unaccompanied by any of the nautical motions such as tilting or canting. Theoretically one may be ever so well grounded in physical laws but it seems to take actual experience to bring their truth home to us. Of course there can be no wind in the air; when we entered the air it was moving 30 miles an hour in relation to the earth but as soon as we were free from the earth the velocity of the wind had no effect on our flight. No matter how strong the gale, so far as it concerned the airplane, if the wind be steady no difficulty is experienced; the aviator is concerned only by wind-shifts.
The Velo Cloud Seen from Above.—In kindergarten days I remember that one of the first questions I asked was “Are clouds smoke?” And this early query was really first answered in the air. Fog on a mountain21 top may be cloud, but somehow cloud free from close proximity to the earth seems different.
The machine was put through the cloud blanket much as a horse takes a hurdle; it seemed unlike fog and more of a palpable substance. As we emerged, the sun was shining on it like a silvery sea with gently undulating surfaces and it looked for all the world as supportable as layers of cotton-wool. Many times have cloud-banks from mountain tops been observed, yet the upper side of the velo cloud from a flying-machine looked very different. The cloud was only four or five hundred feet thick and extended inland a few miles in irregular outline. The seaward edges of the velo cloud were not ragged, and apparently paralleled the coast for 10 or 15 miles.
Such was the exhilaration and confidence the air gave that I can understand how parachute jumpers confidently step off into space, for to them the air is a supporting medium no more terrible than a transparent sea to a good swimmer. I believe that the record parachute drop was made in 1916 by Colonel Maitland, of the English Royal Flying Corps, who descended in a parachute 10,000 feet from an airplane. Fifteen minutes was occupied in the descent.
Ease of Vision at 3,500 Feet Altitude.—At this altitude the ease of vision is most remarkable. At this height, with perpendicular vision, the eye is possessed of wonderful powers. In those “solitudes august with stars” men not only “mount up with wings as eagles” but are given the eagle’s unobstructed vision. Birds have been credited with much too keen vision. From this height of several thousand feet every object stood out with remarkable distinctness.22 Automobiles racing along the El Cajon boulevard to Lakeside were readily picked up with the unaided eye although 20 miles away. Looking down over the aviation field the long compass mark and the wind-direction pennant (Figs. 19 and 20) were easily distinguished. The bay and ocean, however, gave the most remarkable revelation, for the bottom of the bay and the shallow ocean shore were plainly discernible. The absence of water as well as air refraction explains why submarines cannot hide from an airplane: one of the army aviators told me that a submarine cannot ordinarily sink so low that it cannot be seen from an airplane.
Color of Landing-ground Important.—Owing to the absorption and reflection of sunlight, there is a distinct variation in the character of otherwise similar landing-ground. A field, dark from recent plowing (or burning), will heat the air over it faster than will a field of stubble, hence over the former field there will be the greater air disturbance, and this will affect the ease of landing. Air is heated by contact and convection. One of the aviators said that recently he was descending, and had all but reached the ground when a localized convectional current hurled his machine upward some distance but immediately afterward deposited him on the ground without damage.
Spiraling Down 3,000 Feet.—Speeding ever in wide circles the course lay southeast over the upper part of San Diego Bay. The city of San Diego presented the usual checkerboard appearance (Fig. 16), and even at this altitude it would seem easy to drop an orange at almost any point. The velo cloud was lifting and we could see the gradual disappearance23 as it melted rather than drifted from North Island. (See Fig. 17.)
The gliding descent was made from an altitude of 2,500 feet, starting above San Diego. As the aviation school was approached, we could see a number of machines in the air, three below and two above us, circling about like hawks. And, like soaring birds, these machines had their air-lanes, designated courses and levels being devoted to the different classes of machines. The landing was made without incident and the hour’s flight was ended.
Outline of Meteorological Work at the Aviation School.—At the close of the lecture detail, the attention of the student aviators was called to the importance of their having as thorough knowledge as possible of the fundamentals of meteorology. The application of these fundamentals to the analysis of air conditions met with in their daily flights was shown to be essential. Investigations as to varying wind direction were taken up by one of the staff instructors by the use of small parachutes to be dropped at different altitudes. (See Fig. 8.) Through the coöperation of the local official in charge of the San Diego Weather Bureau station, duplicate signal sheets were available from which the student officers made their local weather maps. From these maps and their own flights, they could arrive at some relationship between the actual and the theoretical 3,000- and 10,000-foot level maps prepared from the Bigelow formula, as used by the Bureau. Lectures were given on temperature and its distribution; winds, moisture, and clouds were also made part of the course, one of the papers of the BureauI being reprinted24 by the aviation school by permission of the Chief of the Bureau and used as a textbook. The Weather Bureau furnished the station with a standard set of meteorological instruments so that the student officers could become perfectly familiar with the regular equipment at the Weather Bureau stations.
I “Clouds of California,” Carpenter, 1914, 24, 2d ed., Ft. Leavenworth (U. S. Army Press).
Extending the Usefulness of the Bureau to the Aviators.—Practical utilization by the aviators of this district of the information possessed by the Bureau has received considerable impetus during the past six months. During the cross-country flights of April and May, 1916, the Los Angeles station was directed by the Chief of Bureau to furnish weather and flight conditions between San Diego and Los Angeles. With the aid of the general weather-map data from the regular stations, and special observations of wind, weather, and fog conditions on the immediate coast near Los Angeles, and on Mount Wilson, it was possible to issue satisfactory forecasts of flying conditions. The eye-observations of fog-heights as determined by the Weather Bureau coöperative station at the Mount Wilson Solar Observatory were especially valuable. From this mountain (6,000 feet elevation) it is possible on a good day to see the whole length of the coast from Point Firmin, San Pedro harbor to Point Loma, San Diego Bay. Knowing different levels, the observer at Mount Wilson was able to give actual thickness and extent of the fog-belt and its past twenty-four-hour history.
25
Balloon Soundings into the Stratosphere.—It was the writer’s privilege to be present when some highly interesting and instructive experiments made by the Weather Bureau in coöperation with the Smithsonian Institution, in sounding the upper air were made at Avalon, Santa Catalina Island, off the coast of southern California in July and August, 1913.J The results of this work were in close agreement with similar soundings of the upper air throughout other surveyed portions of the earth’s atmosphere, and a record ascension for this country was made on July 30—32,643 meters or 20½ miles. In common with other observations of temperatures in the stratosphere, the minimum temperature of these soundings (-90 F., August 3) was registered within the first 10 miles.K
J University of California Chronicle, 1915, 17:1–25, Berkeley.
K Monthly Weather Review, 1914, 42:410, Washington.
Of especial interest to the aviator is the table on the next page which shows wind velocities increasing with elevation as determined by observations of the Avalon balloons.
26
Table showing Theodolite observations of wind velocities (meters per second)
at elevations of 1,000 and 5,000 meters
Meters | Meters per second 5 p.m. July 24 |
Meters per second 5 p.m. July 27 |
Meters per second 10 a.m. July 31 |
Meters per second 10 a.m. Aug. 1 |
Meters per second 10 a.m. Aug. 2 |
Meters per second 5 p.m. Aug. 3 |
Meters per second 4 p.m. Aug. 7 |
Meters per second 5 p.m. Aug. 8 |
Mean |
1,000 | 2.5 | 1.0 | 5.6 | 6.6 | 2.3 | 5.8 | 7.1 | 1.9 | 4.1 |
1,500 | 6.2 | 0.8 | 6.2 | 8.1 | 3.3 | 5.0 | 6.4 | 1.5 | 4.7 |
2,000 | 8.0 | 1.2 | 5.8 | 7.0 | 4.1 | 4.5 | 6.5 | 6.0 | 5.4 |
2,500 | 10.0 | 1.8 | 10.8 | 5.7 | 5.2 | 4.2 | 4.7 | 3.6 | 5.8 |
3,000 | 12.0 | 2.3 | 9.4 | 6.1 | 7.2 | 5.2 | 3.5 | 4.1 | 6.2 |
3,500 | 12.8 | 2.5 | 8.0 | 6.7 | 7.4 | 6.1 | 4.6 | 4.6 | 6.6 |
4,000 | 13.6 | 3.8 | 11.2 | 7.4 | 9.2 | 5.2 | 6.4 | 3.2 | 7.5 |
4,500 | 14.3 | 5.2 | 14.6 | 8.5 | 11.2 | 1.8 | 7.8 | 3.0 | 8.3 |
5,000 | 21.2 | 6.2 | 12.8 | 10.3 | 10.4 | 2.3 | 3.4 | 9.5 |
27 Charts Showing Upper-air Weather Conditions.—It is believed that the following charts when examined in connection with the accompanying explanation in the text will give the reader something of an outline as to the conditions existing in the upper regions of the atmosphere.
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Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.
Simple typographical errors were corrected.
Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained; occurrences of inconsistent hyphenation have not been changed.
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