18 Miles

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18 Miles Page 27

by Christopher Dewdney


  literary descriptions of, 50–53

  orographic rainfall, 117

  scent of, 52–53

  total absence of, 65

  world record holder for, 66

  See also freezing rain

  rain derrick, 57

  “Rain Mill,” 55–56

  rainbands, 100–101

  raindrops, 48–49

  rainmakers, 55–56, 60–61

  Ramsay, Bertram, 213–214

  Rankin, William, 44–46, 82, 84, 89

  Reich, Wilhelm, 60–61

  Rex, Daniel, 64

  Richardson, F.A., 164

  Richardson, Lewis Fry, 141, 148–149, 151

  Robbins, Tom, on rain, 51–52

  Romney, George, 221

  Rossby, Carl-Gustaf, 126

  Rossby waves, 126–127

  Rossetti, Christina

  on wind, 108

  on winter, 175

  Royal McBee (computer), 153–155

  Ruddiman, William, 201

  Rundstedt, Gerd von, 213–214

  Ruskin, John, on weather, 1

  Russian winter, 211–212, 215–217

  S

  Saffir, Herbert, 102

  Saffir-Simpson scale, 102–103

  Sangamonian interglacial, 176, 192, 201

  Santa Ana winds, 118–119

  Saussure, Horace Bénédict de, 137

  Schaefer, Vincent, 62

  Schrag, Daniel, 184–185

  scientific prematurity, 149

  Scott, Robert Falcon, 179

  seasonal affective disorder, 50

  seasons

  Earth’s tilt and, 156–157, 196

  latitude and, 158

  See also specific season, e.g. autumn

  Seilkopf, Heinrich, 124, 126

  seismic waves, 223–224

  self-encapsulated proteins, 12

  self-reproducing organisms, 9–11

  Seneca

  on Domus Aurea, 68

  on weather and clouds, 38–39

  Sentman, Davis, 81

  serotinal season, 159, 167

  sferics, 84

  shear boundary, 127

  sheet lightning, 78

  Shelley, Percy Bysshe

  on autumn, 166

  on Viscount Castlereagh, 138

  on wind, 112

  Shepard, Alan, 29

  Shukla, Jagadish, 155

  silver iodide, 63, 65

  Simpson, Robert, 102

  sirocco, 113, 117, 119–120

  skating, 177

  snow, 36, 48, 117, 170–173, 189–190, 198

  snow sleds, 176

  Snowball Earth, 179, 182, 184–187, 235

  snowsnakes, 176

  solar activity, climate change and, 178, 183

  Solberg, Halvor, 145

  soothsaying, 130

  Southern Oscillation, 234

  spider lightning, 79

  See also lightning

  Spitsbergen, 180–181

  spring (vernal season), 159–161

  sprites, 80–82

  squall lines, 75–76

  stadials, 176

  Stalin, Joseph, 215–216

  Stalingrad, 216–217

  Steve (strong thermal emission velocity enhancement), 31–32

  Stokes, Pringle, 138

  storm clouds, 37, 79, 81, 84, 91

  storm surges, 102–104, 107

  storms. See hurricanes; ice storms; thunderstorms

  Strabo, on wind, 119

  stratocumulus clouds, 42, 44

  stratosphere

  characteristics of, 27

  ozone layer and, 27–28

  in spring, 160

  sprites and blue jets in, 80

  thickness of, 28

  winds of, 37

  stratus clouds, 41–44

  stromatolites, 14–15, 230

  Sturtian glaciation, 187

  subduction zones, 224

  summer (aestival season), 159, 161–164

  Summer of Love, 217–219

  sun

  in Arctic winter, 157

  brightening of, 32

  color of in weather forecasting, 131

  sun (continued)

  early strength of, 13

  Goldilocks Zone and, 11–12

  sunspots, 178

  Super Outbreak (1974), 88

  supercell cumulonimbus incus (cloud), 91

  supercell thunderstorms, 85

  See also thunderstorms

  supercell updrafts, 85

  See also updrafts

  superhurricanes, 103

  supertroposphere, 234

  surface tension, 12, 36

  Swisher Rain Company, 56

  Symons, Arthur, on approach of autumn, 167

  T

  tectonic plates, 224, 232

  temperate zones, 158–159

  temperature inversion, 164

  Tennyson, Alfred, on the end of summer, 168

  terpenes, 53

  terraformers, 14

  terrestrial albedo effect, 182–183

  Themistocles, 206–208

  Theophrastus, 37, 132

  thermoclines, 68

  thermosphere, 29–32, 84, 100, 223, 227

  Thomas, Richard Grenfell, 52

  Thoreau, Henry David, on summer, 163

  thunder, 75–77, 85

  thunderstorms

  formation of, 73–74

  frequency of, 72, 78

  rainbands and, 100–101

  supercell updrafts and, 85

  tillites, 180

  Topuzovich, Kristina, 195

  Tornado Alley, 90

  tornadoes

  birth of, 89–90

  destruction caused by, 68–69

  families of, 88

  ghost tornadoes, 90

  research into, 86–89

  Super Outbreak (1974), 88

  wind speeds in, 93

  Torricelli, Evangelista, 133, 135–136

  Tower of the Winds, 113–114, 116

  trade winds, 95–98, 125, 234

  Trajan, Emperor, 210

  Travis, David, 200

  Trento, Francesco, 115–116

  trilobites, 8

  Trinity test, 150

  TRMM (tropical rainfall measuring mission), 97, 100

  TROLLS (transient red optical luminous lineaments), 81

  tropical depressions, 97–98

  tropical disturbances, 97

  tropical rainfall measuring mission (TRMM), 97, 100

  tropical waves, 97–98

  tropopause, 125

  troposphere

  clouds and, 37, 44

  ozone layer and, 27–28

  in spring and summer, 160

  supertroposphere, 234

  weather and, 27

  tsunamis, 13, 103–104

  Twain, Mark

  on lightning, 74

  on New England weather, 151–152

  typhoons

  Carmen, 101

  vs hurricanes, 101

  U

  ultraviolet radiation, 10, 17, 27

  Updike, John, on rain, 52

  updrafts

  clouds and, 47

  in cumulonimbus clouds, 45–46

  updrafts (continued)

  hail and, 84–85

  hurricanes and, 101

  storms and, 73

  tornadoes and, 90

  upper atmosphere, 23–24

  Urey, Harold, 10–11

  Usher, He
nry, 121

  V

  Van Allen belt, 229

  Verlaine, Paul, on autumn, 168

  vernal season (spring). See spring (vernal season)

  Verne, Jules, 226

  Vidie, Lucien, 137

  Villa Trento-Buoni Fanciulli, 116

  Vitruvius, on wind, 110, 114

  volcanic eruptions, 9–10, 178, 184, 210–211, 232

  volcanic winter, 210–211

  von Neumann, John, 141, 150–151

  Vonnegut, Bernard, 62–63

  Vonnegut, Kurt, 62–63

  W

  warm fronts, 145, 147–148

  water

  in atmosphere, 20

  bipolarity of, 12

  as heat reservoir, 196

  wind cycles and, 165

  water cycle, 38–39

  water vapor

  clouds and, 34–35

  condensation of, 38, 147

  cycle of, 39

  dew point and, 38–39

  in Earth’s atmosphere, 9, 20, 137, 222, 229

  weather

  12th Street Riot and, 220–221

  vs climate, 204

  Dunkirk evacuation and, 213–215

  fall of Dacia and, 209–210

  Flanders offensive and, 212–213

  instinctual knowledge of, 131

  military strategy and, 208–209, 213–215

  mood and, 49–50

  Napoleon’s invasion of Russia and, 211–212

  Operation Barbarossa and, 215–217

  Summer of Love and, 219–220

  troposphere and, 27

  weaponization of, 63–64

  The Weather Book: A Manual of Practical Meteorology, 139–140

  weather charts, 139, 149

  weather forecasting

  ancient methods of, 130

  architect of, 137–138

  butterfly effect and, 154–155

  mathematics and, 131, 141–142, 144–145, 149

  use of computers in, 154–155

  weather maps, 25, 141, 142, 147

  Weather Prediction by Numerical Process, 149, 151

  Wescott, Eugene, 81

  White, Robert M., 28–30

  wildfires, 17, 118–119, 160

  William, Wordsworth, on clouds, 34

  Wilma (hurricane), 101

  wind

  anabatic winds, 118

  architecture of, 113–115

  characteristics of, 108

  direction of, 127–128

  Greek gods of, 110–113

  idiomatic terms using, 109

  katabatic winds, 118

  passive central air system and, 115–116

  Santa Ana winds, 118–119

  wind shear, 90

  wind speed, measurement system for, 122–123

  wind vanes, 113

  winter (hibernal season)

  activities during, 176–177

  art depicting, 177–178

  coldness of, 174–178

  first winter, 189–190

  as migrating climate zone, 159

  polar high and, 170

  Russian winter, 211–212, 215–217

  volcanic winter, 210–211

  Winters, Shelley, on cold, 170

  Wisconsin glaciation, 176, 192–193

  X

  xenoliths, 231

  xenon, 18

  Xerxes, 206, 208

  Z

  Zephyros, 111–114

  Zeus, 73–74, 111, 132, 157

  About the Author

  Christopher Dewdney is the award-winning, bestselling author of four books of nonfiction and eleven books of poetry. A four-time nominee for the Governor General’s Award, he won the CBC Literary Competition for poetry and has been awarded the Harbourfront Festival Prize. Christopher lives in Toronto, where he teaches writing at York University.

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  Copyright

  Copyright © Christopher Dewdney, 2018

  Published by ECW Press

  665 Gerrard Street East

  Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M4M 1Y2

  416-694-3348 / [email protected]

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any process — electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise — without the prior written permission of the copyright owners and ECW Press. The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  Cover design: Michel Vrana

  Author photo: © Greig Reekie

  Editor: Susan Renouf

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  Dewdney, Christopher, 1951–, author

  18 miles : the epic drama of our atmosphere and its weather / Christopher Dewdney.

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  Issued in print and electronic formats.

  ISBN 978-1-77041-346-7 (softcover).

  Also issued as: 978-1-77305-223-6 (ePub),

  978-1-77305-224-3 (PDF)

  1. Weather—Miscellanea. 2. Weather—Popular works.

  I. Title. II. Title: Eighteen miles.

  QC981.2.D49 2018 551.6 C2018-902515-8 2018-902516-6

  The publication of 18 Miles has been generously supported by the Canada Council for the Arts which last year invested $153 million to bring the arts to Canadians throughout the country, and by the Government of Canada. Nous remercions le Conseil des arts du Canada de son soutien. L’an dernier, le Conseil a investi 153 millions de dollars pour mettre de l’art dans la vie des Canadiennes et des Canadiens de tout le pays. Ce livre est financé en partie par le gouvernement du Canada. We also acknowledge the Ontario Arts Council (OAC), an agency of the Government of Ontario, and the contribution of the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Book Publishing Tax Credit and the Ontario Media Development Corporation.

 

 

 


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