The motivation for the earliest weather observations in Indianapolis is unknown. It seems certain to have been a scientific interest in meteorology. It may have been a natural curiosity about the environment or a desire to be part of the Smithsonian Institution’s climate network that served the public. Or, perhaps, it was to understand a recent weather event such as the one that the Indianapolis Sentinel reported that caused roosting chickens to freeze hanging upside down. They reported that on New Year’s Eve 1863, the temperature was about 50° F and raining when the chickens flew up to roost in some orchard trees. On the following morning, New Year’s Day of 1864, the chickens were found, “upside down, hanging by their claws to the twigs, frozen hard and stiff.” During the previous twelve hours, the temperature had fallen seventy degrees to a morning low of twenty degrees below zero. It was reported that fifteen Confederate soldiers being held prisoner at Camp Morton froze to death that same night and twelve others were found frozen on a train that was delivering them to the Camp.One can only wonder what effect this severe winter weather had on wild bird populations.
Popular Posts
-
Y ahora con Tristan Scott: Y ahora nuestros chicos de manera conjunta: ...
-
La foto delos 15, no mentiras la del documento de identidad, o certificado de votaciones Esta si es de colección, modelando para Dylan Ross...
-
Bueno y ahora un recorrido especial (que bueno hacerlo en la piel de los chicos) por la historia fotográfica de ELIJAH y MILO.. Un amigo ...
-
If you live in the Bay area, you're probably well acquainted with, the Berkley based , Omega Too . For the rest of you, they're the...
-
Eric Martsolf is an actor and singer who starred as Ethan Winthrop in the American soap Passions up until 2008. He is now playing the role o...
-
Selected stories about culled from the world's newspapers and other news outlets, particularly as it relates to wild birds, as gathered ...
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
Fresh-Frozen Chickens
The following description of the effects of an unusual meteorological event on domestic chickens is excerpted from History of Weather Observations: Indianapolis, Indiana, 1861—1948 (.pdf), by Glen Conner:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment