The Complete Weather Guide a Span Classsearchtermspan Classsearchterm
The Complete Weather Guide a Span Classsearchtermspan Classsearchterm
Joseph Taylor
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It follows that this is the season when the exhalations, that ascend so copiously at sun. Rise, are condensed, and consequently at this season we must expect rain. If therefore exhalations rise in the new moon, it indicates that the air is in a fit disposition to support them for some time : consequently, we may expect them to continue floating till the next regular change of weather, that is, till the old of the moon, or rather till towards the next change. The observation, therefore, is very ...pro- perly and cautiously worded, directing us to expect rain IN the old and IN the new, and not AT the old or new ; because experience shews that these changes of the weather happen not exactly at the change of the moon, but a day or Ill two before or after. Several instances of this occur in Capt. Dampier's " History of Winds and Storms at Sea. " SECTION IV. PROGNOSTICS OF THE WEATHER, TAKEN FROM RAIN. XIV. Sudden Rains never last long: But when the Air gruzes thick by Degrees, and the Sun, Moon and Stars shine dimmer and dimmer, then it is like to rain six Hours usually.
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