A short summary of our knowledge of this subject may be of interest to
readers of the Aeronautical Journal.
Dust devils, that is to say, columns of dust in rapid rotation, are occasionally seen in Agra. They only occur in hot, dry weather. Those of the largest size, having a diameter of two or three metres and a height of several hundred metres, only occur when the air is nearly calm. They travel to leeward at a speed of about four to six miles per hour. The dust, having reached the upper end of the column, spreads out into a diffuse, irregular mass, which may persist for some time after the dust devil that produced it has vanished.
Fig. i is copied from a book treating of dust devils and dust storms observed at and near Lahore (India) by P. F. H. Baddeley.
He states that they are never shaped like an inverted funnel, as is the case with whirlwinds in America, as described by Redfield.