Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

THE WEATHER.

» No. 25. ILi S ' '5 " - ' ' S 15* -I I*? s wo «-* a 3 "•§!— -til : !! ~_ 53-1 a sm!> .2S=> 3 »S o I |2/ I , 1 BS-S S =g|22§--§3 '.' iiSt> 3°si 1 "?, P ?«4 Io 5 o li!i O Q O oO SO °O ™, "tO O3 N *__? a*» < 00 <M •£ *—• sis a- ? sllsf ~s : j fi-s" °*a S ¥5S t2 "So - S >.§- = Iff f I ==—1 ft 11 Jill Direction .. N. N.E. K. S.E. S. S-W. V. K W. No. of days _. — — 7 14 6 8 2 Very showery with heavy gales—one from E., the other, with very low barometer, from S.W.; temperature and rainfall about equal to the averages for the season. The four weeks end with the winter aoliatice, and represents what is frequently the wettest, though not the coldest, season of the year. On 12 days out of the 27 the day temperature has been below 60 - 0, but only twice below 56 - o—viz., the 20th and 21st (55'9) ; on 4 days out of the remaining 16 it haa risen above 63'0. Night readings have been—on 2 nights, below 40 - 0; on 6 more, below 450; and 10 more, below 50 0; on 9, between 50 - 0 and 65"0; and 1, above that figure. The approximate mean J will be seen to coincide very nearly with the I 15 years' average. On the two coldest ' nights (9th and 10th), there was much frost on the low-lying lands toward the Manukau. '. The fall was very sudden—l 3 degrees from ' the Bth to the 9th ; on this night the graes 1 thermometer registered 350 at the station. 1 The four weeks follow in respect of their i mean temperature, nearly their actual se- ' quence, there is only one-tenth of a degree i between the fourth and third. i No reliable obssrvations can be reported in 1 eolar radiation, the instrument being again 1 out of order. Temperature on the grass has 1 been in 7 nighti bslow 40 0, oa 16 nights be- < tween 40-0 and 50-0, on 4 nights between 50 0 i and 56 0, and once (May 25)50'6. Sun ther- 1 mometer readings are, of course, highest in ; the first week, oa account both of the period s and of the smaller amount of cloud ; 13 days 1 give readings of 70'0 and upwards; 10 daya 1 fall below 60 0. I A little more rain has fallen than was re- ] gistered for the same four weeks of last year, 1 but on fewer days. For the 25th and 31st ( May, the fall may be called heavy; five t more day 3 give falls each between half and 1 a-quartur of an inch, one nearly approaches i the latter point. The fall, as usual, has £ been chiefly after sunset; there is only one 1 out of the 20 records where rain is not re- c gistered for the nigbt. c The wind average is considerably higher t than usus.l, owing to the two severe gales i experienced duriug the month. That of the ( 6th and 7th of Juno came from 8., and i veered to S. W. as it fell, with an hourly 0 average velocity of 34J miles during the first I 24 hours. Th:it of the ISth and 19th was t from S. W. and W., with an hourly velocity g of 3J miles, varying very little during its t continuance. There has been no N. or N.E. c weather throughout the month. t The range of the barometer haa been no- f usually gr>=at. out its general average low ; T and its depression on the 17th inst. most re- 0 maskable. It fell nearly as low on the t 3rd A ugust last; also, during the singular a period of barometric depressiou in August j and September, 1874; but the observer has g no record of a lower reading, except that of C 9th August, 1875, coincident with very a high wind, and one of the heaviest rainfalls r. registered by him. 1 The tendency of the mercury this day f (21st) is rising. f Elttijj B. Dices in Government Observer. 1

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH18790623.2.42

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume XVI, Issue 5491, 23 June 1879, Page 5

Word Count
690

THE WEATHER. New Zealand Herald, Volume XVI, Issue 5491, 23 June 1879, Page 5

THE WEATHER. New Zealand Herald, Volume XVI, Issue 5491, 23 June 1879, Page 5