Thermometer screens and the geographies of uniformity in nineteenth-century meteorology
Author(s) -
Simon Naylor
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
notes and records the royal society journal of the history of science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.19
H-Index - 18
eISSN - 1743-0178
pISSN - 0035-9149
DOI - 10.1098/rsnr.2018.0037
Subject(s) - comparability , thermometer , order (exchange) , object (grammar) , quality (philosophy) , sociology , meteorology , geography , computer science , business , epistemology , mathematics , philosophy , physics , finance , quantum mechanics , combinatorics , artificial intelligence
By the 1860s a number of thermometer stands, screens and boxes were being used at public observatories and in private settings. The ultimate object of these humble pieces of scientific infrastructure was to protect the thermometers from precipitation and radiation. In response to concerns over the quality of designs and the comparability of results a trial of the various apparatuses was staged at Strathfield Turgiss, Hampshire, in 1868, and subsequent discussions were organized by Britain's Meteorological Society (from 1883 the Royal Meteorological Society). In an attempt to guarantee uniformity of exposure, the Society recommended the adoption of the Stevenson screen, a double-louvred box designed by Thomas Stevenson in 1866. It was promoted as an essential part of the Society's network of second-order and climatological stations across England. Despite the Meteorological Society's aim of overcoming the idiosyncrasies of geography through recourse to a uniform pattern screen, their chosen design ended up embodying a particular geography: the aesthetic and moral codes of the suburban domestic garden.
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