The Aneroid Barometer indicates variations in atmospheric pressure by the elevation and depression of the sides of an elastic metallic box from which the air is exhausted and which is kept from complete collapse by a powerful spring. In cases where extreme accuracy is not indispensable, the portability and sensibility of this instrument recommend it for use by tourists and fishermen. It is “quick in showing the variations of atmospheric pressure.”[[8]] “The Aneroid readings may be safely depended upon.”[[9]] “Its movements are always consistent.”[[10]] “Atmospheric changes are indicated first by the Aneroid.”[[11]] It is especially adapted for determining mountain altitudes, some being furnished with a scale of feet, enabling the observer to read off the height by direct observation, and if adjusted once a year by comparison with a mercurial standard is quite trustworthy. It is fully described in a small pamphlet entitled “The Aneroid Barometer: How to Buy, and How to Use it,” by a Fellow of the Meteorological Society.


[8]. Admiral Fitzroy.

[9]. James Glaisher, Esq., F.R.S.

[10]. James Belville, Esq., Royal Observatory, Greenwich.

[11]. Sir Leopold McClintock.


32.
Aneroid Barometer. Full size.

By a suitable arrangement of clockwork, revolving a cylinder bearing prepared paper, the aneroid barometer forms an admirable self-recording instrument, showing at a glance the height of the barometer: whether it is falling or rising, for how long it has been doing so, and at what rate the change is taking place, whether at the rate of 1/10th per hour, or 1/10th in twenty-four hours—facts which can only be obtained by very frequent and regular observations from an ordinary barometer, but which are nevertheless essential to a reliable “weather forecast.”[[12]]