Abstract
IN NATURE of March 10 (p. 437), Mr. Maxwell Hall gives an interesting table of the vertical distribution of temperature and pressure in Jamaica, and, apparently in happy ignorance of the dangers of the process known as extrapolation, goes on to apply the results of observations extending to a maximum height of only 7400 feet to the determination of the probable temperature of meteorites in extra-terrestrial space. As he expresses a desire to know whether any similar results have been found in India, and as I have on several occasions during the past ten years discussed the vertical distribution of temperature and pressure in this country, I gladly take this opportunity of referring him to my papers on the meteorology of the North-West Himalaya, and on the temperature of North-Western India, published in the “Indian Meteorological Memoirs,” vols. i. and ii. From the latter I extract the following table on the mean decrement of temperature up to a height of 12,000 feet, computed from the observations of twenty-five stations combined in various ways. For each month an interpolation formula of the form T = T0 + ah + bh2 + ch3, was computed, and by its means the decrements from sea-level to 1000 feet, 1000 to 2000 feet, &c., were calculated. Finally, the average decrement for the twelve months was computed, and is here given in an abridged form. The curves for the several months differ very widely from one another, those for the summer giving the most rapid decrement at sea-level, and the decrement increasing with altitude in winter: —
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