This book contains an historical account of the weather in Barbados during the sixty-year period from 1901 to 1969. No attempt is made to present a scientific commentary on the weather. The descriptive account of the weather records in this book is very largely that of rainfall; but other factors, which together with rainfall determines the "weather", are also mentioned when relevant information is available. The details are taken from the writer's personal weather diaries, where available, and from the diaries of the late Ernest Murray Skeete and Elliot Lloyd Skeete in some of those years in the period when the writer was too immature or not in the Island. Additional notes have also been obtained from other sources. Mention is mad...
The purpose of the work is to discern differences and similarities in synoptic-scale rneteorology by...
This is an annotated version of William Hillary’s classic, “Observations on the Changes of the Air a...
Daily systematic meteorological observations made by George Marcgrave in Recife from 1640 to 1642 ha...
The aim of this thesis is (a) to analyse five years of published climatological data in order to obt...
Barbados has the distinction of a one crop economy, that crop being sugar cane. This situation has e...
During April and August 1963 the Barbados Weather Modification Project made extensive use of whole-s...
The first barometers in the Americas were provided by the Royal Society of London in 1677 to corresp...
Ascension Island has had a long intermittent record of instrumental weather recording. Here, we deve...
This submission provides tables of monthly meteorological and geophysical data from Gloucestershire ...
This paper describes a simple method for estimating long-term average monthly climate data for tropi...
We introduce the Dutch East India Company “day registers” as one of the world’s longest known pre–n...
A suite of parallel meteorological measurements were undertaken over the extended period 1884-1903 a...
Originally issued as Reference No. 60-33, series later renamed WHOI-The study is based upon the conc...
Robert Boyle was one of the most influential natural philosophers of the Enlightenment. Although he ...
The daily weather record at Malham Tarn is analysed for the period 1961–2000. In addition, monthly r...
The purpose of the work is to discern differences and similarities in synoptic-scale rneteorology by...
This is an annotated version of William Hillary’s classic, “Observations on the Changes of the Air a...
Daily systematic meteorological observations made by George Marcgrave in Recife from 1640 to 1642 ha...
The aim of this thesis is (a) to analyse five years of published climatological data in order to obt...
Barbados has the distinction of a one crop economy, that crop being sugar cane. This situation has e...
During April and August 1963 the Barbados Weather Modification Project made extensive use of whole-s...
The first barometers in the Americas were provided by the Royal Society of London in 1677 to corresp...
Ascension Island has had a long intermittent record of instrumental weather recording. Here, we deve...
This submission provides tables of monthly meteorological and geophysical data from Gloucestershire ...
This paper describes a simple method for estimating long-term average monthly climate data for tropi...
We introduce the Dutch East India Company “day registers” as one of the world’s longest known pre–n...
A suite of parallel meteorological measurements were undertaken over the extended period 1884-1903 a...
Originally issued as Reference No. 60-33, series later renamed WHOI-The study is based upon the conc...
Robert Boyle was one of the most influential natural philosophers of the Enlightenment. Although he ...
The daily weather record at Malham Tarn is analysed for the period 1961–2000. In addition, monthly r...
The purpose of the work is to discern differences and similarities in synoptic-scale rneteorology by...
This is an annotated version of William Hillary’s classic, “Observations on the Changes of the Air a...
Daily systematic meteorological observations made by George Marcgrave in Recife from 1640 to 1642 ha...