Posts Tagged ‘weather’

Seminar: Weather at a Time of Catastrophe

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Chris O’Brien

History (RSSS) Seminar
Thursday, 3 September, at 3.30 pm
in the McDonald Room, Menzies Library, ANU.

In 1897 Darwin was destroyed for the first time. Well over a century later, with the view back cluttered by three subsequent destructions, the 1897 cyclone is all but forgotten. Having discussed this forgetting, this seminar will recount the furies of that calamitous night. Compelled by the issue of how people understand events in their environment, it then places this event in the context of then contemporary knowledge of weather. Outlining what was known about storms and cyclones, along with the origins of this knowledge, it is clear that long before the advent of radar and satellite technology people could read the skies with considerable aptitude. In Darwin, newspaper reporting of events such as the 1897 cyclone transmitted technical and local weather knowledge to a readership far beyond scientific elites. This paper will argue that these narratives supplied readers with visual cues that enabled them to connect with their environment in a way that more recent reporting, emphasising abstract metrics such as temperature and barometric pressure, does not.

All welcome.

The Idea of Weather: 1660-1860

Thursday, August 20th, 2009
Barometer

Photo: Dan Shirley.

Julian Holland, Associate of the Centre for Historical Research, National Museum of Australia

Fenner School Seminar Series
Thursday 27 August 2009,
1-2pm, in Fenner School Forrestry Lecture Theatre, Forestry Building 48.
Australian National University

Abstract

Weather reports are the almost universal accompaniment to news bulletins. Their combination of maps, numerical data and forecasts is so familiar as to seem an unarguable commonplace. Yet the ideas, instruments and practices which underpin the modern scientific understanding of weather had a long development. A subject as large-scale, amorphous and changeable as the weather was a challenge to the technical resources, intellectual methods and cultural assumptions of past centuries. Weather forecasting as a modern scientific endeavour only had its modest and controversial beginnings in the 1860s.

This talk will look at a diverse range of ideas and circumstances which shaped the understanding of weather in the two centuries before weather forecasting began. This illustrated talk was first presented in June 2008 as the scene-setting paper for a seminar on the history of Australian meteorology held at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney as part of the 150th anniversary celebrations of Sydney Observatory.

Further information at Fenner School Seminar Series and Julian Holland’s NMA profile.