Publication:
Description and general background to ships' logbooks as a source of climatic data

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Full text at PDC
Publication Date
2005-11
Authors
García Herrera, Ricardo
Wilkinson, C.
Koek, F. B.
Prieto, M. R.
Hernández, E.
Advisors (or tutors)
Editors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer
Citations
Google Scholar
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Abstract
Meteorological observations made on board ships prior to 1854 have until now been overlooked in climatological research largely as a result of the lack of rigorous abstraction and treatment criteria. However, the CLIWOC project has shown that millions of potentially valuable observations have been preserved throughout Europe in the many logbooks that were prepared by officers in the navies of the great powers. Moreover these data can be used and treated in a fashion similar to today's ship-based instrumental observations. The most significant logbook collections are from Spain, the UK, the Netherlands and France. This paper describes the main archives where the logbooks can be found and provides an account of their contents and of the manner in which they were set out. The potential of this source is emphasised by the fact that whilst the CLIWOC project abstracted data for 300,000 days, nearly 90% of the European logbook collections have yet to be examined. This paper concludes with a discussion as to the direction of future studies in this important field.
Description
© Springer 2005.
Keywords
Citation
Bonnichon, P.: 1992, Los navegantes franceses y el descubrimiento de América (siglos XVI, XVII y XVIII). Colección Europa y América. Ed. MAPFRE, Madrid. Bourgin, G.: 1963, Inventaire des archives de la Marine. Service Hydrographique. Sous-serie 4JJ (Journaux de bord). Deposée aux Archives Nationales, Imprimerie Nationale. Paris. Garay Unibaso, F.: 1987, Correos Marítimos Españoles. Correos Marítimos Españoles a la América Española. (Yndias Occidentales). Vol. I. De 1514 a 1827, Ediciones Mensajero. Bilbao, pp. 246. García, R., Díaz, H., Herrera, R. G., Eischeid, J., Prieto, M. R., Hernández, E., Gimeno, L., Rubio, F., and Bascary, A.: 2001, ‘Atmospheric circulation changes in the tropical pacific inferred from the voyages of the manila galleons in the sixteenth eighteenth centuries’, Bull. Am. Meteorol. Soc. 82, 2435–2455. García Herrera, R., Können, G. P., Wheeler, D., Prieto, M. R., Jones, P. D., and Koek, F. B.: 2005, ‘CLIWOC: A climatological database for the world’s oceans 1750–1854’, Clim. Change, this volume. Harries, H.: 1928, ‘Nautical time’, Mariner’s Mirror 14, 364-370. Hewson, J.: 1951, A History of the Practice of Navigation, Brown, Son & Ferguson, Glasgow. Jones, P. D. and Salmon, M.: 2005, ‘Preliminary reconstructions of the North Atlantic Oscillation and the Southern Oscillation index from wind strength measures taken during the CLIWOC period’, Clim. Change, this volume. Koek, F. B. and Können, G. P.: 2005, ‘Determination of wind force and present weather terms: The Dutch case’, Clim. Change, this volume. Können, G. P., Zaiki, M., Baede, A. P. M., Mikami, T., Jones, P. D., and Tsukahara, T.: 2003, ‘Pre-1872 extension of the Japanese instrumental meteorological observation series back to 1819’, J. Clim. 16, 118–131. López Gutiérrez, A. J.: 1996, Archivo General de Indias. Inventario de la Sección de Correos, Ministerio de Educación y Cultura, Madrid, pp. 794. Oliver, J. and Kington, J. A.: 1970, ‘The usefulness of ships’ log books in the synoptic analysis of past climates’, Weather 25, 520 527. Prieto, M. R., Gallego, D., García Herrera, R., and Calvo, N.: 2005, ‘Deriving wind force significance from nautical reports through content analysis’, Clim. Change, this volume. Quetelet, A.: 1854, Rapport de la Conférence, tenue à Bruxelles, sur l’invitation du gouvernement des Etats-Unis d’Amérique, à l’effet de s’entendre sur un système uniforme d’observations météorologiques à la mer. Annuaire de l’Observ. Roy. De Belgique. 21, 155–167. Records of Fort St. George: 1960, Public Despatches from England for the years 1752–5. Egmore. Wheeler, D.: 1995, ‘The weather vocabulary of an eighteenth century mariner: The logbooks of Nicholas Pocock’, Weather 50, 298–304, reprinted in The Marine Observer, 67, 22–28, 1997. Wheeler, D. and Wilkinson, C.: 2004, ‘From calm to storm: The origin of the Beaufort Scale’, Mariners Mirror 90, 187–201. Wheeler, D.: 2005, ‘An examination of the accuracy and consistency ships’ logbook weather observations and records’, Clim.Change, this volume
Collections