DJ_59 wrote: If you find articles about the Old Weather project, post links here!
Link to archive of this discussion from the old forum
DJ_59 wrote: If you find articles about the Old Weather project, post links here!
The enormous potential for data rescue is illustrated by the size of the U.S. collection that remains largely unutilized. Beginning in 1847, the logbooks of the U.S. Navy, Coast Guard/Revenue Cutter Service and Coast Survey contain 24-hourly weather records per day, and include 7–10 variables per hour, although not all variables were uniformly acquired in fact until after the U.S. Civil War (1861–1865). There are roughly 22 700 logbooks in the National Archives that date between 1801 and 1941. Until 1915, most volumes contain about one year’s worth of observations, and then from 1915–1941 logbooks were generally bound in monthly volumes. Conservatively estimating that only half of these logbooks contain all 24-hourly observations that would amount to 75 500 000 weather records to be recovered. There are undoubtedly tens of millions more unrecovered weather records from the World War II era and after.
Seems to me like they are showing the wrong pageMonday, 14 December 1733. At the marker it says that there was wind from the west with a strength of bramsejls kuling (i.e. topgallant sail).
Here are two photos from the conference and a copy of the almost finalized version of the poster:Making a Difference: Translating Information Research into Practice, Policy, and Action