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XII. Notice respecting a Remarkable Shower of Hail which fell in Orkney on the 24th of July 1818
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2013
Extract
The notice which, at the suggestion of Dr Brewster, is now to be laid before the Society, respecting a remarkable shower of hail which lately fell in Orkney, has been drawn up partly from conversations with Richard Caithness, a plain but intelligent country man, who possesses a small farm at Hunday in the island of Stronsa, and whose property suffered severely from the shower; and partly from subsequent correspondence with the Reverend William Taylor of Stronsa, whose house lay in the track of the cloud, and with Mr Robert Lindsay, Student of Divinity, who had an opportunity of witnessing the effects of the hail at Lopness, on the neighbouring island of Sanda, when the shower was nearly exhausted. They agree in all important particulars; but even at the risk of some repetition, their own words shall, as often as possible, be employed.
The morning of the 24th of July 1818, was, in Orkney, clear and warm, with a slight air of wind at due south.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh , Volume 9 , Issue 1 , 1823 , pp. 187 - 199
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1823
References
page 189 note * These cabbages, it may be remarked, were of the large red Aberdeen sort, well known to be the strongest and coarsest of the tribe.
page 191 note * Grey oats, Avena strigosa, L.; and bigg, a small variety of Hordeum tetrastichon; which are the only kinds of white crop cultivated with success in these islands.
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