January temperatures in the Canadian Arctic 1000-500mb.
Climatology as a branch of Geography and even of Meteorology has been mainly a descriptive subject. Hare (1960) has pointed out that only in comparatively recent years has there been an attempt to explain quantitatively how the various parameters of climate evolve and thus to approach the ultimate q...
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ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMM.1134992014-02-13T03:56:53ZJanuary temperatures in the Canadian Arctic 1000-500mb.Rayner, John. N.Geography.Climatology as a branch of Geography and even of Meteorology has been mainly a descriptive subject. Hare (1960) has pointed out that only in comparatively recent years has there been an attempt to explain quantitatively how the various parameters of climate evolve and thus to approach the ultimate question of how it is that one climate varies from another. Most of the answers are to be found through Meteorology, and must be, since the tools required for this work have been developed there. The following is an attempt to explain what processes, and of how great a magnitude, cause temperature changes in the layers of the atmosphere below 500 mb.McGill UniversityHare, F. (Supervisor)1961Electronic Thesis or Dissertationapplication/pdfenalephsysno: NNNNNNNNNTheses scanned by McGill Library.All items in eScholarship@McGill are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.Master of Science. (Department of Geography.) http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=113499 |
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en |
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Geography. Rayner, John. N. January temperatures in the Canadian Arctic 1000-500mb. |
description |
Climatology as a branch of Geography and even of Meteorology has been mainly a descriptive subject. Hare (1960) has pointed out that only in comparatively recent years has there been an attempt to explain quantitatively how the various parameters of climate evolve and thus to approach the ultimate question of how it is that one climate varies from another. Most of the answers are to be found through Meteorology, and must be, since the tools required for this work have been developed there. The following is an attempt to explain what processes, and of how great a magnitude, cause temperature changes in the layers of the atmosphere below 500 mb. |
author2 |
Hare, F. (Supervisor) |
author_facet |
Hare, F. (Supervisor) Rayner, John. N. |
author |
Rayner, John. N. |
author_sort |
Rayner, John. N. |
title |
January temperatures in the Canadian Arctic 1000-500mb. |
title_short |
January temperatures in the Canadian Arctic 1000-500mb. |
title_full |
January temperatures in the Canadian Arctic 1000-500mb. |
title_fullStr |
January temperatures in the Canadian Arctic 1000-500mb. |
title_full_unstemmed |
January temperatures in the Canadian Arctic 1000-500mb. |
title_sort |
january temperatures in the canadian arctic 1000-500mb. |
publisher |
McGill University |
publishDate |
1961 |
url |
http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=113499 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT raynerjohnn januarytemperaturesinthecanadianarctic1000500mb |
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1716641928617918464 |