^.temperature of 36° to 40° at sunrise is usually attended with frosts destructive to vegetation, the position of the thermometer being usually such as to represent less than the actual refrigeration at the open surface.'' In 1875, during October,... Autumnal Catarrh (hay Fever) - Seite 47von Morrill Wyman - 1872 - 173 SeitenVollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| Brevet Brigadier General Thomas Lawson - 1855 - 786 Seiten
...great in certain cases, that it is hardly possible to present a valuable result in regard to them. A temperature of 36° to 40° at sunrise is usually attended with frost destructive to vegetation, as the position of the thermometer is always such as to represent less than the actual refrigeration... | |
| LORIN BLODGET, - 1857 - 544 Seiten
...great at remote intervals, that it is hardly possible to present a valuable result in regard to them. A temperature of 36° to 40° at sunrise is usually...more elevated and exposed than the posts themselves, as the adjacent country usually is, and the comparisons for the month of September through the last... | |
| 1880 - 804 Seiten
...and sometimes in August. " Atemperature of 36° to 40° at sunrise is usually attended with frosts destructive to vegetation, the position of the thermometer...than the actual refrigeration at the open surface." In 1875, during October, at Milwaukee, the mercury fell seven times below the freezing point, and twice... | |
| 1881 - 846 Seiten
...and sometimes in August. " ^.temperature of 36° to 40° at sunrise is usually attended with frosts destructive to vegetation, the position of the thermometer...than the actual refrigeration at the open surface.'' In 1875, during October, at Milwaukee, the mercury fell seven times below the freezing point, and twice... | |
| Union Publishing Company - 1884 - 818 Seiten
...sometimes in August. "A temperature of 36 deg. to 40 deg. at sunrise is usually attended with frosts destructive to vegetation, the position of the thermometer...than the actual refrigeration at the open surface." In 1875, during October, at Milwaukee, the mercury fell seven times below the freezing point, and twice... | |
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