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Differences between the Ben Nevis and Fort-William Barometers when both are reduced to Sea-Level
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2012
Extract
The barometer at the Fort-William Observatory is 42 feet above sea-level, and its readings are reduced to sea-level by the ordinary tables based on Laplace's formula; but in reducing the barometer at the Ben Nevis Observatory, which is 4407 feet above sea-level, use is made of a table specially constructed by Dr Buchan, and described by him in the first volume of the Ben Nevis Observations (see Transactions, vol. xxxiv. p. 24). This table consists of the average values of the difference between the barometer on Ben Nevis and that at sea-level in Fort-William, for each successive tenth of an inch of sea-level pressure and each degree of air temperature.
- Type
- Appendix
- Information
- Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh , Volume 42 , 1902 , pp. 513 - 518
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1902
References
page 513 note * See “Relations of Pressure and Temperature,” by Dr Buchan, page 496.