MAY,1903. MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW. 233

Average solar radiation at noon at Laueanne, S-land, in gram-enloria not sufice for the observations made in this country when per equare centimeter per mini&. considered by themselves, but if the insolation was deficient over most of the Northern Hemisphere, and continued to Month. 1897- 1902. 1903. Difference. ~_____~ be deficient for a period of several months, then some more general explanation must be sought for. If volcanic dust is January...... 0.79 0.6R 0.11 February .... 0.86 0. 71 0. 15 the cause, no doubt it will manifest itself in other ways, as, for March...... 0.89 0. 70 0. 19 instance, by causing brilliant aft,er glows following the usual sunset colors. Observations of insolation and of sunsets for M. Dufour is inclined to attribute this deficiency to the pres- t,he coming months should therefore have special interest for ence of large quantities of volcanic dust in the air as the re- meteorologists. sult of the eruptions of last year in the West Inclies. It is evident that tlie solar radiation of M. Dufour is the ~ The following monthly means of insolation observed with the radiation from the sun, as received by us on the earth, after it has been diminished by the very appreciable losses due to Bngstriim apparatus at Washiiigton, D. C., at noon on clear absorption and other atmospheric influences. This insolation, clays during April, May, and June, 1593, are added as this note as actually measured by physicists, is expressed in gritiu- goes to press: calories per square centimeter per minute. It has regular Solnr rcrtlicrtioii, ill grciiri-cnlorirs per nqiscrre cmfinteferper miiiicte. diurnal and annual variations but the abnormal variations are those that we are now considering. Observations of insolation were imde by nie for the United States Weather Bureau with an h~gstrhinelectrical coinpen- I--I sation pyrheliometer, from November 10, 1902, to March %;, 1!1113. ~ I April _.._ ._. . I 1903, at Asheville and Black Mountain, N. C., at an elev n t'1on of about 2200 feet and a latitucle of alJOUt YGO 36'. There are no previous observations at tliese points with which to coiupare ____ results, but it mas noted at the time and was the occasion vf HAILSTORMS IN PORT0 RICO. comment, that tlie measurements did not increase after Dr- cember as much as had been expected. The folloniiig are the BJ bf1. lv. H .iLl \ \NI>ER, Ohe~\ei\~cnthaT Bllrr.au, dlnlral Alwil 70, 1903 monthly averages for the dates of observation, at iiooii, in Hailstorms itre so rare in Porto Rico that the impression gram-calories per centimeter per minute: seems to be quite general even among Porto Ricans that they never occur. This is a mistake as wah recently demonstrated. The change of senson from winter to summer occurs about the middle of April :mil is, as a rule zery iuarked, being char- acterized by uiiusnnlly n ariu, sultry clays, frequent thunder- storins, the setting in of the trades, ancl in a iueasure the Le- ~~ ginning of tlie so-called rainy season. This sew \vas no ex- 1902. 0 0 36.2 ...... ception unless it be in the unusud strength with which the 31.2 ...... 1903. trades have set in. The recortls show that from the 11th to January ...... 3s. 2 ...... the litli thunderstorms were quite geileral over the island. 89.3 ...... 0.9% Ji. R The only important. because unusual. feature of the season

~~~ ~ ~~ ~ -~ worthy of special iiieiitiou was the occurrence of a heavy pre- cipitation of hail on the 12th instant in the vicinity of Caguas. Thinking a report of this iuiglit l~eof interest, efiort has been macle to secure as full ani1 izccurate inforiuntiou relative thereto as poshible. Two intelligent gentlemen, one an American and the other R Porto Rican, who were eyewitnesses of the event have been interviewed, and their reports are fully reliable and confirin other information obtained froiii other sources. The forenoon of Sunclay, April 12, 1903, was warin ani1 sul- try, very faroralde for tlie clevelopiueiit of thunderstorrus. It appears that the storm now uncler consideration liacl its begin- ning about 2 1). iu. in the neighborhovcl of Agnas Buenas, moved eastward along and down the 1 alley of tht. Bairo River, acrnss the Loizn, and up the alley of the Gurabo. The storm was accoiupanied by some lightning ant1 thuncler and very violent wids, rendered more violent ant1 destructive, no doubt, by the peculiar topogralhy along the storin's track. Some small huts were overturned and considerable claiuage done to the uncut tobacco along the valley of the Bairo River. Hail was first observed ttt ilguas Buenas where, as reported 1)y RIr. Bowser, the fall mas light, lasting :tlwut ten or twelve minutes. but hrther down the river the fall wits so heavy that

the river 1~~1was bL n-liite as snow," so thick were the hail- stones. The track of the storiii qqwars to have been just north of C'tlguns, although hail fell there for almit fifteen inin- uten acscor&iig to Dr. Lngoviiio, who mas in tlie city at the time. The 1)recipitation of hail coutinuecl its far as Gurabo, but how niucli farther is not known. As to the tiize aiic1 form of the ldbtunes, there >are Heveral

Unauthenticated | Downloaded 09/29/21 02:38 PM UTC 234 MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW. MAY,1903 reports. At Aguas Buenas they are said to have been small Yesterday, about noon, there was a terrific storni along the Rio Loiza Valley, between Caguas and Carolina, during which hailstones fell thick and spherical, melting very quickly after falling. Farther down and fast. The ground was fairly rnvererl by thein and the nat,ives were the Bairo River, near where it is crossed by the military road, greatly excited over the event. There have been hailstorms before, but an eyewitness says: they are by nn nieans usual. The river Loiza rose five or six feet in the four hours it lasted. The stones were irregular; some being an inch or an inch and a quttrter long, some angular or pointed, some round. The same witness says he found hailstones sometime after the storm between the tobacco rows. Dr. Lngovifio says the stones at Caguas were disk like and melted very soon after reaching the ground. All speak of the manner in which the stones would rebound when first striking the ground. Some idea of the excitement caused by this phenomenon among the natives may be imagined when it is remembered that there were persons in Caguas over eighty years old who had never seen hailstones. The more Riinple minded de- clared that it rained pieces of salt which were " niucho frio." Some were seen nest clay on the streets exhibiting pieces of stone which they declared were thrown down froni the cloucls. Specimens of this "petrified hail ", to quote PoIr. Thomson, were sent to this office, not from Caguas, but from another town, with the statement that they had fallen from the clouds. The following is translated from La Demouracia of April 14, a paper pnblished at Caguas, Yorto Rico, and refers to the storm of April 12: Day before yesterday, between 1 anrl 2 in the afternoon, tlirre swrpt STAGES OF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER AT VICKSBURG. a down upon this city whirlwind, accompanied liy heavy raiu and wine C~mluiiuitat.41,) Mr. W. h Rcl&n, tiam Iuiectrn, 8l:ltrtl VI^ hh~rg,him, Juue thunder. Some hail fell, anrl we are inforinrtl that on '.La 11~s~"(a 15, l!lW small hill or mountain known locally as The Table), w1iic.h is in this pre- cinct, the country people saw traces of &now. The following table of masinium and niiiiimum river stages, As isseen, since the invasion (of the Ainericans)to the preseut time, even in feet, at Vialisburg, Miss., lig months, covers the years 1872 our climate has undergone changeb, and we are prebentecl with meteoro- to 1903, inclusive. The gage is that established and main- logical phenomena unknown aurl obsolete here. We are progressing. tained by the Engineer Corps, U. S. Army, and is in the south- On the next day (Monday, April 13) there was another hail- ern part of the city. The readings are as made by U. 8. storm along the valley of the Loiza River about the same hour Weather Bureau river observers. The zero of the gage has of the day. The following extract from the San Juan News of never been changed. The danger line is 45 feet. The highest April 14 is all the information obtainable relative to this storm, river stage, 52.5 feet, occurred at 1 p. m., April 16,1S97. The excepting that Dr. Lngovifio said he saw hail fall in Caguas lowest river stage, -6.5 feet, occurred on November 13-14, on Monday about 2 p. m. 1895. Maximum and ntininiimi river sfngea, in feet, crt Vic'cX.xbwg,Jfisa., from 1572-190.?, ittcltcnive.

February. hlarch. April. May. Juue. I July. Srpteiuher. Nuvemlwr. Tear.

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Tear. J J J u' i J J J J I J J < * i: mJ J J -n -Kc: m& 22 6 6 l. 02 am& ad %6 u 2 z .cM E z k Y a a - - 6; .- ; 2G M B )I ak 5 5 r .- c 5 ; 5;.- P .- E2 E 2 z 2 i? I;: il3 3 i? 2 w3 cM 3 E 2 2 z z2 - - - - ~ ~ ~ ___------__ - - - ~~ 187"...... 13.6 - 0.5 10.9 2.0 20.0 11. n 39. 3 19. 3 39.5 25.0 32. Y 17. 7 35. 3 11.0 10. s 6. IJ 6.0 2. 2 4. s I. A 4. 1 - 1.3 :m.5 - 1.3 1873...... IX.4 2.4 37.4 15. rj 3!i. 7 29. ti 39. 9 29. s a.li 39. 1 4n. 4 23. 7 23. u !I. 4 9. 2 4.4 4. 3 2. I 10. 6 3. (I 35. 5 s. 2 41.6 2.4 1874 ...... 34.9 IS. 0 35.8 29.0 4.3.0 31;. ti 45. I; 43. 1 45. i 4::. 1 $2. 5 12. 1 12. s 1;. !1 11.7 5.3 9.0 5. 5 li 1 H. u 11.3 6. 5 4.5. 7 3.0 1875...... 35.0 s. 1 29. s 9.0 41.4 lti. 7 4.3. I1 41. !I 41. H 3.5. 1; :;4, s 2s. y &l.5 3s. 7 a.:1 1s. 7 22. 1 !I. 7 11,. 0 s. 0 25. 0 11;. Y 43. 0 H. I) 1876...... w.8 20.8 q2.3 39.0 $2. 3 34. s 44. 3 $2. 0 44. H 44.2 44. 1 xs. 3 ;x. 2 21.11 2.5. li lb. 3 25.0 11. 5 14. 4 11.4 1.:. 1 3. 9 44,s 3.9 1877...... 33.5 2.1 3G. 2 19. 6 32. s 14. rj 41.2 32. 9 41. S 4n. s 40. S 25. 5 5.4 11.3 ...... 'U. 1 1lJ. 9 5.4 ]!I. II 41. s 2.1 1878...... 33. n 243 36. 6 29. 5 41.0 37. 0 40. 1 29. 3 YI. li 3:. 4 :;$I. 4 21. 7 t2.4 17. 7 ...... 2s. k 1s. 5 41.0 ...... 1879 ...... 37.0 ...... 39.5 33. 5 34.0 27. G 35.3 3%s :m.3 1.5. 4 IS. !) 15. A Iti.3 12.4 14.4 7.0 ti. 4 2.2 13. n 3. X '111. 4 13. 3 :39. 5 3. 3 1884...... 39.9 30.9 441. 0 27. 3 $2. Y 39.0 4:i. 2 41. s 41.7 25. 1 ?ti, 5 24. s 23s 9.3 14. s 9. 4 !I. 9 1. I 17. i 7. $1 31. s 13.1 43.2 7. 7 1881...... 30.3 9.0 .in. S 28 '6 41.8 40.7 41 3 UJ. 9 41. li 39. 8 :

1895...... 29.1 1.0 2%5 1.4 30.6 1.4 31.7 19. 1 24. 1 10. 2 12. 1 9.3 17. S 3. 4 9. 3 1.7 I).8 - 5.2 -4.3 - 6. 5 21. Y ~ 4. cj 31. 7 - 6. 6 1896...... 23.2 9.0 3'2. 6 9.1 30.0 17. 7 39.0 2s. 6 27. 4 17.5 x:3. 4 1% 5 30. 1 12. 6 12. 2 1.3 7. 8 2. 1 7. 5 1. 7 19.4 7. 3 39.0 1.3 1897...... 2ti.7 9.7 33.3 18.0 49.4 32. s $2. 5 49, 2 51.0 44.2 43. 4 15.2 20.6 8. e s. li 0. Y I). 2 - 2. v 4.5 - 3. 4 7. 9 - 0.8 s2.5 - 3.4 1898...... 39.2 43.0 26.0 35. 5 19: 1 49. 4 39. 4 47. S 41.9 $2. (I 13.4 25. s 12. 5 xu. 5 Y. 6 12.3 !i. 5 17.0 11.6 16.5 9.4 49.4 7.9 1899...... 39.6 1::; 39. 6 2s. 5 44. 8 2!>. s 47.3 4'. 0 45.6 37. 4 37. 1 211. 7 20. i in.:j 9. 1; 2.3 2. 2 - 1.V 2. 2 - 1.1; 12. 7 2.0 47.3 - 1.6 iwn...... 20.1 4.6 30.4 12. 3 39 0 27.9 36, 6 2s. 9 34. 0 17. 7 2s. 1 13. s 17.0 4.3 7.3 2.4 9. G 2. 9 18. 0 6. 7 XI. 3 13.0 3s. 0 2.4 1901...... 23. 9 10.9 21. 6 14.4 x2.0 7.9 39. 9 31.2 41.5 21. Y 27. R Y. 0 IS. 6 4. 3 2u. 4 6.4 11). 5 1.0 I). s - 2.2 21.6 - '3.3 41.5 - 2.3 1'902...... 25.2 6.6 31.4 s. 3 40.8 12. Y 41. 2 83. 3 32.2 14.5 25.4 1Y. 3 27.9 1:;. 7 11;. 8 5.8 17. 2 4.8 13. 1 5.5 37. 9 13.3 41.2 4,s 1903...... 33. rr 23.0 44.2 21.0 51. R 44.3 51.3 45.1 4.5.0 30.7 43. 1 ...... 51.3 ......

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