Abstract
TO-DAY, between 2 and 3 p.m., with the barometer standing at 29 inches, the thermometer a little below 0° C., and the wind north-east, we had for the space of about twenty minutes an interesting fall of hail in this neighbourhood. The stones varied in size from that of a mustard-seed to that of a hemp-seed or thereabouts. Some rain accompanied them, and this became frozen in part on cold exposed surfaces. The stone sill of my study window, which faces nearly north-west, was soon covered in this way with a thin pellicle of ice, which served as a convenient resting-place for the hailstones at a low temperature. I was struck at once with their glassy appearance, and examined a number of them with a pocket lens as they lay on the cold surface of the stone, not having at hand any refrigerating arrangement adjustable to the stage of a microscope. Nor was the latter necessary. The lens showed most distinctly the clear transparency of the glass of which these hailstones consisted, and the vitreous fracture of some which had been broken by impact. Watching them as they lay, one saw minute nests of crystals form, in some cases in a peripheral zone, extending gradually inwards; but in the majority of instances the crystallization began in the centre of the ice, and gradually extended in a beautiful crystal growth more or less through the mass.
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IRVING, A. The Vitreous State of Water. Nature 37, 104 (1887). https://doi.org/10.1038/037104b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/037104b0
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