Weather Warnings for Watchers

audiobook

Weather Warnings for Watchers

by Anonymous

EN·~2 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total
1

Weather WarningsFORWatchers

0:30
2

LIST OF WORKS OF REFERENCE.

3:55
3

PREFACE.

2:57
4

WEATHER WARNINGS.

1:32
5

I.—CALORIFICATION.

26:10
6

II.—EVAPORATION.

2:44
7

III.—RAREFACTION.

32:09
8

IV.—CONDENSATION.

37:28
9

V.—MOTION.

34:16
10

VI.—ELECTRIFICATION.

20:41

Description

A compact Victorian handbook invites listeners into the world of weather without drowning them in abstract theory. Written in a conversational tone, it promises that the forces shaping wind, clouds, rain and even lightning can be measured and understood wherever one stands. The preface frames the work as a bridge for those who have long found meteorology dull or overly technical.

The guide is packed with clear tables for calculating heights, converting temperature scales, and interpreting barometric readings, all laid out in a straightforward style. It walks through the names and forms of clouds, the mechanics of anemometers and hygrometers, and the role of solar radiation in driving atmospheric motion. While it avoids heavy mathematics, the text offers practical advice on using instruments and reading weather charts of the British Isles.

Ideal for listeners curious about the science behind the sky, this historical treatise also appeals to fans of 19th‑century scientific literature. It offers a glimpse of how early scientists sought to predict storms and calm seas, making the subject feel both familiar and intriguingly old‑fashioned.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (155K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2014-11-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

A

Anonymous

Some of the world’s most enduring books come from writers whose names were never recorded or never revealed. “Anonymous” on a title page can mean many different things: a lost identity, a deliberate choice, or a work shaped by tradition over time.

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