Difference between revisions of "U.S. Weather Bureau Office at Little Rock"
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(New page: The '''U.S. Weather Bureau Office at Little Rock,'' Arkansas, opened on July 1, 1879. During a devastating storm which struck the city's downtown on [[Little Rock Tornado - October 2, 1894...) |
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− | The '''U.S. Weather Bureau Office at Little Rock,'' Arkansas, opened on July 1, 1879. During a devastating storm which struck the city's downtown on [[Little Rock Tornado - October 2, 1894|October 2, 1894]] the office recorded the nation's first reliable measurement of barometric pressure change from a direct tornado strike. The funnel of the cyclone may have passed directly over the local U.S. Weather Bureau office occupied by [[George S. Harkness]] at 8:28 PM. Harkness recorded a 0.38 inch pressure drop on his Richards barograph machine. | + | The '''U.S. Weather Bureau Office at Little Rock,''' Arkansas, opened on July 1, 1879. During a devastating storm which struck the city's downtown on [[Little Rock Tornado - October 2, 1894|October 2, 1894]] the office recorded the nation's first reliable measurement of barometric pressure change from a direct tornado strike. The funnel of the cyclone may have passed directly over the local U.S. Weather Bureau office occupied by [[George S. Harkness]] at 8:28 PM. Harkness recorded a 0.38 inch pressure drop on his Richards barograph machine. |
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 18:25, 14 April 2010
The U.S. Weather Bureau Office at Little Rock, Arkansas, opened on July 1, 1879. During a devastating storm which struck the city's downtown on October 2, 1894 the office recorded the nation's first reliable measurement of barometric pressure change from a direct tornado strike. The funnel of the cyclone may have passed directly over the local U.S. Weather Bureau office occupied by George S. Harkness at 8:28 PM. Harkness recorded a 0.38 inch pressure drop on his Richards barograph machine.
References
- "Cyclone at Little Rock; The State Penitentiary and Insane Asylum Wrecked," New York Times, October 3, 1894.
- "Cyclone in Arkansas; It Destroys Much Property and Many Lives are Lost," Aspen Weekly Times (Col.), October 6, 1894.
- Michele G. Melaragno, Severe Storm Engineering for Structural Design (Taylor & Francis, 1995), 126.
- "Three Dead, Seven Missing; Besides Thirty-Five Injured at Little Rock, Ark.," New York Times, October 3, 1894.
- "Wrecked by a Tornado; The Business Part of Little Rock Devastated," Cranbury Press (N.J.), October 12, 1894.