Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T02:10:17.665Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Snow Survey of the British Isles

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2017

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

This Survey, which, under the directorship of Mr. Gordon Manley, had made substantial progress until the war intervened, is to be resumed during the autumn of 1946. For a time the principal aim will again be to secure representative data relating to the occurrence of snow-cover at different altitudes in the various upland districts over the period October to June. To this end the Society is fortunate in having already been promised the help not only of a number of pre-war participators in the Survey but also of the Meteorological Office, Air Ministry. By the courtesy of the Director, Sir Nelson Johnson, records of the daily incidence of snow-cover (and where possible of its depth) at about 55 high-level meteorological stations are to be supplied to us month by month. In addition, Dr. J. Glasspoole of the British Climatology Division has suggested that a considerable number of the regular contributors to the official publication British Rainfall whose gauges are situated at altitudes of not less than 500 feet should be invited to co-operate. Dr W. A. Harwood, Superintendent of the Meteorological Office at Edinburgh, has kindly agreed to allow that office to be used as a clearing house for Scottish records, as before the war.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1947

It is particularly hoped that observers may be found who can keep a watchful eye during the summer months on the quasi-permanent snow-beds of the Allt-a-Mhuillin (Ben Nevis) and Braeriach corries, and on the long-surviving drift in the deep gulley beneath the summit of Carnedd Llewelyn. A question to be investigated is whether or not there remain to be discovered other northern hollows that usually or often harbour snow from year's end to year's end. How far this and other objects of the Survey can be covered by sources of information likely to be made available in the near future will be uncertain until the extent of the co-operation forthcoming from the Meteorological Office's corps of rainfall observers is known. Members of the Society will be notified as soon as possible of the localities from which additional data are needed. At a later stage it is intended to follow up a suggestion by the President of the Society that the Survey should include a study of the relationship between the various types of snow crystal and weather conditions.

The reorganization of the Survey is being undertaken for the Society by Mr. E. L. Hawke, Honorary Secretary of the Royal Meteorological Society, 49 Cromwell Road, London, S.W.7. Communications and further offers of help may be sent to Mr. Hawke or to the Assistant Secretary of the British Glaciological Society. The work of direction of the Survey will be shared by Mr. Hawke, Mr. S. E. Ashmore and Mr. D. L. Champion who are members of both Societies.