Abstract
THE meteorological conclusions of Mr. Aitken's important paper, published in NATURE, vol. xxiii. p. 195, will, if adopted without further examination, even temporarily, exercise an unfortunate influence upon the present attempts to rid the atmosphere of our large towns of their ever-recurring fogs, glooms, and mists, and those conclusions certainly are not supported by such evidence as we already have as to the production of fogs on a great scale, however much indicated by experiments in the laboratory. It is stated that, βIt having been also shown that all forms of combustion, perfect and imperfect, are producers of fog nuclei, it is concluded that it is hopeless to expect that, adopting more perfect forms of combustion than those at present in use, we shall thereby diminish the frequency, persistency, or density of our town fogs.β Now, first as to frequency: what are the facts with regard to localities differing in their methods or materials for producing heat? Every one living in or near London knows that fogs, thick mists, and dark days are far more frequent within than without its circumference, and experiment has shown that sunshine is both less frequent and much less intense within the metropolis. And, according to Mr. Aitken's theory, something of the same kind ought to be observed wherever large quantities of fuel are burned, whether smokeless or not. Thus, the large towns of the Continent, where wood and charcoal are in general use, would have their peculiar urban fogs. But they are free from any fogs beyond those which are common to the country. And Paris, before coal was much used, ought to have been distinguished by more frequent fogs than the surrounding country. But it was not so marked out. No oasis of fog prevailed there when the sun shone brightly beyond its precincts, as in our own capital. And Philadelphia, which burns anthracite, ought not to rejoice in a pure and transparent atmosphere.
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RUSSELL, R. Dust and Fogs. Nature 23, 267β268 (1881). https://doi.org/10.1038/023267d0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/023267d0
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