The Introduction Of Self-Registering Meteorological Instruments
Robert P. Multhauf
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Contributions from The Museum of History and Technology: Paper 23 The Introduction of Self-Registering Meteorological Instruments
Contributions from The Museum of History and Technology: Paper 23 The Introduction of Self-Registering Meteorological Instruments
Robert P. Multhauf THE FIRST SELF-REGISTERING INSTRUMENTS      99 SELF-REGISTERING SYSTEMS     105 CONCLUSIONS     114...
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The Introduction ofSELF-REGISTERING METEOROLOGICAL INSTRUMENTS
The Introduction ofSELF-REGISTERING METEOROLOGICAL INSTRUMENTS
Robert P. Multhauf The development of self-registering meteorological instruments began very shortly after that of scientific meteorological observation itself. Yet it was not until the 1860's, two centuries after the beginning of scientific observation, that the self-registering instrument became a factor in meteorology. This time delay is attributable less to deficiencies in the techniques of instrument-making than to deficiencies in the organisation of meteorology itself. The critical factor
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The First Self-Registering Instruments
The First Self-Registering Instruments
From the middle of the 17th century meteorological observations were recorded in manuscript books known as "registers," many of which were published in the early scientific journals. The most effective utilization of these observations was in the compilation of the history of particular storms, but where a larger synthesis was concerned they tended, as Forbes has shown, to show themselves unsystematic and non-comparable. The principal problems of meteorological observation have been from the out
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Self-Registering Systems
Self-Registering Systems
In 1870 the Signal Corps, U.S. Army, took on the burden of official meteorology in the United States as the result of a joint resolution of the Congress and in accordance with Joseph Henry's dictum that the Smithsonian Institution should not become the permanent agency for such scientific work once its permanency had been decided upon. Smithsonian meteorology had not involved self-recording instruments, and neither did that of the Signal Corps at the outset "because of the expense of the apparat
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