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Air Apparent: How Meteorologists Learned to Map, Predict, and Dramatize Weather



Rok: 1999
ISBN: 9780226534220
OKCZID: 110073994

Citace (dle ČSN ISO 690):
MONMONIER, Mark. Air apparent: how meteorologists learned to map, predict, and dramatize weather. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, c1999. xiv, 309 s., [16] s. obr. příl.

Hodnocení: 4.5 / 5 (6 hlasů)


Anotace

 

Every night across the country, viewers tune in to their evening news to glimpse the next day's weather. They are treated to graphic images of invading air masses, colliding fronts, and growing tropical storms. Air Apparent is the story of this marvelous tool, the weather map, which in its many forms has made the atmosphere visible, understandable, and at least moderately predictable. No other maps are so spontaneously timely, so widely and frequently consulted, and so central to the daily activities of so many. The singular history of the weather map developed around the twin poles of weather's many facets and the public's varied needs. Mark Monmonier traces the contentious debates among scientists eager to unravel the enigma of storms and global change, explains the clever strategies for mapping the upper atmosphere and forecasting disaster, and exposes the turbulent efforts to detect and control air pollution. He introduces us to Karl Theodor, a Bavarian politician who devised one of the first weather-tracking networks in the late eighteenth century, and Heinrich Wilhelm Brandes, who drew the first maps of European weather in 1819--for the year of 1783. Monmonier also explores the interaction between technology--from the telegraph to the Internet--and weather forecasting. Offering the weather map we know today as a multifaceted blend of personalities, institutional conflicts, and public and private enterprise, Monmonier, whom the Washington Post called "a prose stylist of no mean ability or charm," makes us take a second, appreciative look at the image that has been central to our daily lives for years.


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