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KF5JRV > TECH     10.10.19 13:54l 33 Lines 1508 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: Johnston's Physical Atlas
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>From kf5jrv%kf5jrv.#nwar.ar.usa.na@i0ojj.ampr.org Thu Oct 10 13:49:23 2019
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Johnston's Physical Atlas

The geographer and cartographer Alexander Keith Johnston (1804-1871) produced 
his Physical Atlas in 1848, which mapped terrestrial physics, such as magnetic 
directions, as well as air currents, directions of the winds, trade routes, 
and districts of hurricanes, typhoons, and monsoons.

Johnston's maps were based on the work of Heinrich Berghaus (1797-1884), a 
German geographer whose Physikalischer Atlas (1838-1848) was heavily 
influenced by Alexander von Humbolt's unified vision of Nature. Berghaus and 
Johnston had planned to produce an English volume of the atlas together, but 
it was Johnston who ended up realising the project.

This kind of 'at a glance' philosophy towards interpretations of weather 
continued to be championed by FitzRoy's successors at the Meteorological 
Office. In 1881, then Director Robert Scott (1833-1916) claimed that if 
out-stations "told us the appearance of the sky and landscape, in addition to 
sending up their instrumental readings" than the office would be better 
equipped to issue storm warnings.

73, Scott KF5JRV
Pmail: KF5JRV @ KF5JRV.#NWAR.AR.USA.NA
Email: KF5JRV@GMAIL.com




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