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Regions and Seasons: Early 19th-century weather observers often looked to the damage left in the wake of a hurricane to determine how the storm functioned. However, with the advent of aircraft and radar in the 1940s, meteorologists could observe hurricanes from above. This daily weather map – issued by the U.S. Weather Bureau – illustrates a hurricane that threatened South Carolina on September 29, 1959. The concentric rings with an "L" in the center indicate the low pressure system of Hurricane Gracie, which lasted ten days. These weather maps have documented the basic atmospheric elements of temperature, pressure, precipitation, humidity and a forecast since the late 19th century.

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Page
1
Source index
0
Type
photo
Media ID
da052da75b7a1b6b
Size
unknown

Document data

ID
q524n407v
Core
obj
Type
map
DTO data
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    "stage": "normalized",
    "title": "Daily weather map",
    "description": "Regions and Seasons: Early 19th-century weather observers often looked to the damage left in the wake of a hurricane to determine how the storm functioned. However, with the advent of aircraft and radar in the 1940s, meteorologists could observe hurricanes from above. This daily weather map – issued by the U.S. Weather Bureau – illustrates a hurricane that threatened South Carolina on September 29, 1959. The concentric rings with an \"L\" in the center indicate the low pressure system of Hurricane Gracie, which lasted ten days. These weather maps have documented the basic atmospheric elements of temperature, pressure, precipitation, humidity and a forecast since the late 19th century.",
    "date": "[\"1959\"]",
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    "identifierLocal": "06_01_015944",
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    ],
    "subjects": [
        "Weather--Maps",
        "United States--Climate--Maps"
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        "North and Central America",
        "United States"
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    "publisher": "The Bureau"
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Document identity
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    "label": "Daily weather map",
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Document source metadata
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    "sourceUrl": "https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth:q524n407v",
    "contentType": "map",
    "stage": "normalized",
    "title": "Daily weather map",
    "description": "Regions and Seasons: Early 19th-century weather observers often looked to the damage left in the wake of a hurricane to determine how the storm functioned. However, with the advent of aircraft and radar in the 1940s, meteorologists could observe hurricanes from above. This daily weather map – issued by the U.S. Weather Bureau – illustrates a hurricane that threatened South Carolina on September 29, 1959. The concentric rings with an \"L\" in the center indicate the low pressure system of Hurricane Gracie, which lasted ten days. These weather maps have documented the basic atmospheric elements of temperature, pressure, precipitation, humidity and a forecast since the late 19th century.",
    "date": "[\"1959\"]",
    "year": 1959,
    "citationUrl": "https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth:q524n407v",
    "rights": "No known copyright restrictions.",
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        "United States--Climate--Maps"
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    "subjectsGeographic": [
        "North and Central America",
        "United States"
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        "Maps"
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        "Cartographic"
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Document source extras
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    "institutionArkId": "sf268508b",
    "collectionArkId": "41688024w",
    "schema:latitude": 38,
    "schema:longitude": -98,
    "extent": "5 maps on 1 sheet ; 48 x 60 cm.",
    "notes": [
        "Large surface map of the United States, southern Canada, northern Mexico, and Cuba prepared from weather observations taken at 1:30 a.m.",
        "Insets: Weather map for 1:30 p.m.--700-millibar constant pressure chart--Highest and lowest temperatures--Precipitation areas and amounts."
    ],
    "hasTranscription": false,
    "dcId": "q524n407v",
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}
Page context
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