Abstract
IMAGINE a line drawn round any district, and consider all the air that passes over that line outwards and inwards in any time. Let the whole quantity of vapour of water carried across the boundary line by this air be determined. If during any particular interval of time there is just as much vapour carried outwards as inwards, there must be in that interval either no rainfall on, and no evaporation from the district, or there must be just as much rainfall as evaporation. If more vapour is carried out than in, there must be more evaporation than rainfall. Or, if more vapour enters than leaves, the difference falls in excess of rain above evaporation.
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THOMSON, W. Dr. Balfour Stewart's Meteorological Blockade . Nature 1, 306 (1870). https://doi.org/10.1038/001306a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/001306a0