Weather Notebook
Bryan Yeaton
 


 
Piddington's Law of Storms
Fri Dec 31, 2004

Listen in RealAudio

We remember Henry Piddington, a 19th century British official in colonial India, mostly as the man who coined the word "cyclone" to describe rotating storms. The former sea captain introduced the word in his 1884 landmark book, "The Sailor's Horn-Book for the Law of Storms." Hi, I’m Bryan Yeaton for The Weather Notebook.

The first edition warned sailors that severe tropical storms, akin to Atlantic hurricanes, in the Indian and China Seas exhibited consistently changing winds that shifted counter-clockwise as the storm passed.

Piddington described how the barometer behaved as the storm approached, giving a ballpark distance to the storm’s center, which he called "the fatal centre." He also recognized that the storm’s right side was the more dangerous.

Piddington wanted to teach mariners how to avoid the storm’s full-on winds, how best to sail within them when unavoidable, and how to profit from the tempest by using the its fringe winds to speed the ship onward. To do so, the captain must ignore compass direction and think in terms of the quadrants of a circular storm.

The book included two transparent horn cards, one for counter-clockwise winds for the Northern Hemisphere, one for clockwise winds for the Southern Hemisphere, that had wind arrows drawn on them indicating which wind direction would be blowing around the storm. The captain placed the card on his chart, matching the chart’s wind arrow with the currently observed wind direction. The card now indicated the wind directions relative to the storm’s center. With these cards, mariners had the hurricane in their hand.

"The Sailor’s Horn Book" became an immediate and lasting success; for many years, the only recognized textbook on marine storms.

Thanks to our contributing writer, meteorologist Keith Heidorn. The Weather Notebook is a program of the Mount Washington Observatory, funded by Subaru of America. Find all of our shows online at www.weathernotebook.org.




  PO Box 2310 · 2779 Main Street · North Conway, NH 03860
Business Phone (603) 356-2137 x205 · Business Fax (603) 356-0307