{"id":4069,"date":"1949-10-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1949-10-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1949-vol-30-no-10-our-climate-and-our-weather\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T14:43:20","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T14:43:20","slug":"october-1949-vol-30-no-10-our-climate-and-our-weather","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1949-vol-30-no-10-our-climate-and-our-weather\/","title":{"rendered":"October 1949 &#8211; Vol. 30, No. 10 &#8211; Our Climate And Our Weather"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p>Climate is one of the greatest upsetters of human plans and                     activities. It dictates our economy, what we wear, the kind                     of house we live in, the sort of food we eat, how hard we                     work, and even when and where we spend our vacations. Farmers                     and industrial magnates must bow to it; all animal life, from                     insect to elephant, lives and dies under its rule.<\/p>\n<p>Mankind has never known a &#8220;normal&#8221; climate. We of 1949 are                     at the tail end of an ice age, living in a time following                     a period of climatic violence as great as any the earth has                     known. Several of these periods can be traced in the earth&#8217;s                     crust, and between them there have been long ages of genial                     climatic uniformity, looked upon by geologists as &#8220;normal&#8221;                     times.<\/p>\n<p>Climate runs in cycles. Our oldest rocks, around Rainy Lake                     in Western Ontario, reveal gravel deposited under physical                     conditions not greatly different from those of today.<\/p>\n<p>We are all familiar with the daily cycle in the temperate                     zones: a maximum temperature in early to mid-afternoon                     and a minimum shortly before sunrise. The annual range is                     also familiar, through the variety of temperature, rain, snow                     and wind that makes up Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter.<\/p>\n<p>Next in significance, probably, is the widely-accepted                     11-year cycle corresponding to the cycle of sunspot frequency.                     Records kept for more than two centuries show that sunspots                     wax and wane in number and extent twice in about every 23                     years on the average. Since the sun is the source of our heat                     and the basic cause of our weather changes, it is natural                     enough to suppose that cycles of weather should correspond                     to such changes in the sun&#8217;s condition, although this is not                     yet proven.<\/p>\n<h3>It is Getting Warmer<\/h3>\n<p>One point about which there seems to be general agreement                     is that the earth&#8217;s surface is getting warmer. Just a month                     ago Professor G. H. T. Kimble and Professor F. K. Hare, both                     of McGill University&#8217;s Department of Geography, totted up                     the score for this summer, added it to their charts, and decided                     that we are well on our way to a new type of climate in the                     countries bordering on the Atlantic coast.<\/p>\n<p>Summers, they say, are getting progressively hotter and                     longer; winters are milder. But, they hasten to add, our historical                     records go back only a short distance &#8211; merely for seconds                     on the clock of the earth&#8217;s progress. The present trend, detected                     in the 1880&#8217;s &#8220;may be just a shiver in the world&#8217;s weather,                     but it might also be the road back to a much different climate.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>We are rising out of a cold period that had its greatest                     depth about 1,500,000 years ago. Glaciers all over the world                     are receding rapidly; the permanently frozen subsoil in northern                     Canada is melting slowly; ships can now reach Spitsbergen,                     north of Norway, during nine months of the year instead of                     the three months of thirty years ago. When we are entirely                     out of the Ice Age there will be forests in the interior of                     Greenland where the ice is now two miles thick.<\/p>\n<h3>Climate and Food<\/h3>\n<p>No other earthly force can so mould civilizations as a change                     in climate. Men are pushed forward impetuously in some regions                     and held back to a sluggish pace in others, both physically                     and mentally. We think and act because of the burning of food                     in our tissues, and the speed of this burning depends largely                     upon the type of our food and exercise. Exercise steps up                     the rate. If the temperature and humidity are too high, our                     body temperature rises quickly. We are soon prostrated. So                     we learn to take it easy in the tropics.<\/p>\n<p>Availability of food is important. We have seen algae, a                     low form of plant life, thriving in hot springs at 200 degrees;                     there are Siberian Arctic plants whose root-systems survive                     short periods of 90 degrees below zero air temperature; but                     most plants grow within a narrow range. For each degree of                     latitude north of the Equator and for each 400-foot increase                     in height above sea level on this North American continent,                     the date of flowering of plants of the same species is retarded                     4 days.<\/p>\n<h3>Weather and Health<\/h3>\n<p>The weather, which is a fickle actor within a changeable                     but less hastily changing climate, has much to do with our                     health. There is an undoubted connection between kinds of                     weather and prevalence of this or that malady. Hay fever belongs                     to Autumn; what is generally called &#8220;lung trouble&#8221; is more                     prevalent in Spring than in midsummer; cold damp weather increases                     the discomfort of rheumatism. A tropical climate favours the                     organisms that cause some diseases such as malaria and hookworm,                     and reduces our resistance to disease of all kinds.<\/p>\n<p>We are the kind of animal that cannot live if our body temperature                     varies too much above or below 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. Through                     extremes of temperature, from the lowest Canadian record (81                     below zero) to the highest (115) the body strives to maintain                     a constant temperature through its own heat-regulating                     machinery. In cold weather it speeds up the rate of heat production,                     contracts its surface blood vessels and even produces extra                     circulation by shivering. In hot weather the surface blood                     vessels are enlarged to carry heat more quickly from the inside                     to the outside, and the evaporation of sweat has a cooling                     effect.<\/p>\n<p>In Canada&#8217;s temperate climate, where an energetic life is                     encouraged, breakdown diseases cause medical men their greatest                     worry. Diseases affecting the lungs have been found by the                     Prudential Life Insurance Company of America to be prevalent                     in Brazil, Ecuador and Colombia. In those countries there                     is a great contrast between the 95 to 110 degrees temperature                     in the afternoon and the 50 degrees to which the thermometer                     falls in high altitudes at night. Canadians who live in an                     indoor winter climate of 80 degrees and dash out into 20 below                     zero to gossip on the street corner are &#8211; to put it mildly                     &#8211; foolish.<\/p>\n<p>As for the common cold, there probably is no disease that                     doctors know they know less about and that everyone else thinks                     he knows more about. Some people believe a cold comes from                     lack of proper food or drink; others blame their neighbours                     or a draught.<\/p>\n<p>Pepys, the English diary writer of the 1660&#8217;s, seems to                     have been particularly susceptible, as some amusing extracts                     from his diary will show; &#8220;Got a cold by sitting too long                     with my head bare for Mum to comb and wash  my ears&#8230;Got                     a strange cold in my head, by flinging off my  hat at a                     dinner and sitting with the wind on my neck&#8230;Caught  a                     cold through leaving my waistcoat unbuttoned.&#8221; Out of all                      these dire experiences he evolved a preventive device which                      will amaze many medicoes and laymen: &#8220;Myself in good health,                       but mighty apt to take cold, so that this hot weather                      I am  fain to wear a cloth before my stomach.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Heat waves, too, bring their perils to Canadians. We may                     have difficulty in subduing our inner fires quickly enough                     to meet the sudden difficulty in heat loss. Thousands of us                     may develop heatstroke of greater or lesser seriousness at                     temperatures that would not bother tropical residents in the                     least. We are inclined to eat too much carbohydrate (sugar,                     starch and fats) and then expose ourselves to the sun. This                     means that we are raising heat inside and absorbing it from                     outside at the same time.<\/p>\n<h3>Canada&#8217;s Climate<\/h3>\n<p>Canada is in the North Temperate Zone. That means, according                     to one wit, a climate where you can stay in one spot and get                     frostbite in January and sunstroke in July.<\/p>\n<p>How true he is may be seen by the remarkable table at the                     bottom of this page. Note the length of the records &#8211; ranging                     from 31 years to 105 years. In all this time there is no station                     which has not recorded at some time below-zero temperatures,                     and every station has had temperatures of 95 or over, while                     the annual averages run from 17 degrees to 49.5.<\/p>\n<p>Such variety imposes a severe discipline on both bodies                     and minds. To people accustomed to more equable climes Canada                     would appear a rough school. It does turn out men and women                     whose frames are braced for activity.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/4\/2022\/08\/oct_49_1.gif\" alt=\"image\" width=\"410\" height=\"160\"><\/p>\n<p>Progress is a product of moderate adversity, not of ease                     and langour, and Canadians are not born with silver spoons                     in their mouths. We have learned more than to come in out                     of the rain: we have developed a constructive energy that                     has given us homes, factories and farms second to those of                     no country in the world, and a standard of living that is                     the envy of many.<\/p>\n<p>Most of us own an overcoat, a raincoat, rubbers, an umbrella,                     a bathing suit, a muffler, suntan lotion, cough syrup, and                     a bottle of aspirin. Some, in addition, have snow boots, ear                     muffs, parkas, mukluks and a sun hat. With this equipment                     we get along very nicely.<\/p>\n<h3>Air Conditioning<\/h3>\n<p>Northern Canada is, at certain times of year, an almost                     perfect refrigerator. The Rocky Mountains in the west keep                     currents of new air from flowing easily into that region.                     For weeks the air lies nearly still. The sun rises for only                     a short period, and thus the cooling ground and the frozen                     lakes chill the air above them. A huge mass of uniformly ice-cold,                     dry, clear air stretches from the Rockies to Labrador, from                     the prairies to as far north as north goes. It is like a glacier                     of air. The weather men call it a mass of polar continental                     air.<\/p>\n<p>Air waves, which may be 500 miles or 1,000 miles from crest                     to crest, are about the only travellers that can still move                     across national boundaries without passports, visas and permits.                     The polar air surges southward as far as the Gulf of Mexico;                     tropical air washes northward to the edge of the Arctic or                     farther. The action underlying George Stewart&#8217;s novel Storm                     was the progress of a wave along this polar front.<\/p>\n<h3>Our Polar Front<\/h3>\n<p>Today&#8217;s weather science is based on the idea that changes                     in weather are caused by conflict between great masses of                     warm and cold air along, this &#8220;polar front,&#8221; where the north-bound                     warm air meets the south-bound cold air.<\/p>\n<p>Mr. A.J. Connor, of the Air Services, Meteorological Division,                     Department of Transport, wrote us an explanation of this year&#8217;s                     unusual weather. He said:<\/p>\n<p>In Canada we expect in summer frequent incursions of polar                     air into southern districts. These serve first, to lift warmer                     and moister air to levels where precipitation may begin, and                     secondly, to occupy southern regions for a day or two of cool                     temperatures with low humidity. This year the incursions of                     continental polar air have been rather feeble in central Canada,                     allowing the usual summery flow of warm, humid air from the                     south to continue largely unchecked for unusually long periods.                     Rainfall has therefore been scanty, and the humidity oppressive                     in central regions.<\/p>\n<p>Last winter, major outflows of polar air preferred to follow                     a path along, or immediately east of, the Cordilleran region,                     bringing unusually heavy snows and an unusually long winter                     to the most westerly portion of the continent.<\/p>\n<h3>Wind and Weather<\/h3>\n<p>We have become accustomed, since our earliest days, to associate                     certain winds with certain kinds of weather, and it is surprising                     the number of times we are right. Yet, say the experts, there                     is no clear-cut relation between the two. It is possible,                     says Dr. Kimble, to have drought as well as rain with a southerly                     wind, and heat waves have accompanied north winds on occasion.                     It is air masses, not wind directions, that are really significant.<\/p>\n<p>When the difference in temperature between the equatorial                     regions and the polar regions sets up largescale movements                     of air, they are modified by the rotation of the earth, thus                     establishing a system of alternating wind belts and belts                     of calm. There are four main belts: the doldrums, the horse                     latitude belts, the trade wind belts, and the belts of the                     prevailing westerlies.<\/p>\n<p>The prevailing westerlies are north and south of the horse                     latitude belts. The air tends to move from the high pressure                     of the horse latitudes to the low pressure of the poles, deflected                     by the earth&#8217;s rotation so that winds blow from the southwest                     in the northern hemisphere and from the northwest in the southern                     hemisphere. The greater part of Canada lies in the path of                     the prevailing westerlies.<\/p>\n<h3>Our Water Supply<\/h3>\n<p>When air rises, it expands and so cools to a temperature                     lower than at the earth&#8217;s surface. Its water vapour condenses,                     thus forming great masses of minute droplets, and such a cluster                     of visible moisture is called a cloud.<\/p>\n<p>Many a cloud looks as if it had been put together painstakingly                     after a year&#8217;s work of planning and fitting. This is certainly                     true of the <em>cumulus<\/em>, thick, mountain-like masses                     often seen on a summer day about half a mile from the ground.                     The <em>cumulus <\/em>is the most majestic of clouds, moving                     in stately deliberation, with perfectly formed and sharp outlines                     which are yet as transitory as a dream. It is said that the                     great painter, Turner, declared there were only two aspects                     of nature he would not attempt to paint: the snow of the high                     Alps and a <em>cumulus cloud<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><em>Cirrus <\/em>clouds are thin, feather-like formations,                     at a height of about three to ten miles, composed of minute                     ice crystals. <em>Stratus <\/em>clouds are flat layers often                     seen near the horizon early in the day, at a height of about                     800 feet. <em>Nimbostratus <\/em>clouds, our familiar rain or                     snow clouds, are dull grey, with thinner spots that suggest                     a slowly-moving light behind the veil. They may be a                     few hundred feet or a mile high.<\/p>\n<p>An inch of rain is the amount of precipitation on a level                     moisture-proof surface to the depth of one inch. When                     we say, for example, that the total annual precipitation at                     Fredericton is 42.80, that means there is enough precipitation                     on the surface where it is measured to cover it, if level                     and moisture-proof, to a depth of 42.8 inches. As a rule,                     about ten inches of snow is required to make one inch of water.                     An inch of rain is 113 short tons of water upon an acre.<\/p>\n<h3>Humidity<\/h3>\n<p>Humidity is just another word for moisture or dampness,                     but we mean far more than that when we say &#8220;<em>the <\/em>humidity.&#8221;                     That means the degree of wetness of the air. We may express                     it in a percentage, which represents the amount of water in                     the air relative to the amount which would be present were                     the air saturated at the same temperature. A relative humidity                     of 40 per cent means that the air holds 40 per cent of the                     maximum amount of moisture which it <em>could <\/em>hold at that                     temperature; if the air is saturated, the relative humidity                     is said to be 100 per cent.<\/p>\n<p>When high humidity interferes with loss of heat from the                     body, because the air is already so moist it cannot take up                     all the moisture our bodies would like to throw off, we are                     uncomfortable. Then when a humid spell is broken by a shower                     our drowsiness may vanish.<\/p>\n<p>It would be useful to have an absolute scale of comfort                     in relation to temperature and humidity. (Scientists have                     established 68 degrees as suiting most office workers, and                     say the humidity should be 60 per cent.) But the making of                     such a chart runs up against the difficulty that there is                     a marked difference in what individuals call comfortable.                     The work in many offices and factories would be improved if                     temperatures were adapted to the comfort of the normal well                     people, and let the complaining few put on more or less clothes.<\/p>\n<h3>Weather Forecasting<\/h3>\n<p>The Meteorological Bureau does not issue forecasts primarily                     for the convenience of people who are thinking of going on                     picnics. Weather forecasts are needed by airmen, sailors,                     farmers, shippers of perishable goods, forest rangers and                     business men. The effects of weather on the cash register                     can be mighty important.<\/p>\n<p>Forecasting in Canada is done by the Department of Transport                     as a public service, and our meteorological service ranks                     with the best in the world. Main bureaus are in Vancouver,                     Edmonton, Winnipeg, Toronto, Montreal, Halifax and Gander,                     served by many reporting stations over the continent. When                     the main station has in hand all reports from its own district,                     from the other districts, from the United States, Alaska,                     Mexico, from Canada&#8217;s eleven stations north of the Arctic                     Circle, from Europe and from ships at sea, the meteorologist                     has a good idea of what conditions are likely to be during                     at least the next 24 hours. He is helped by twice-daily                     soundings of the upper air.<\/p>\n<p>Prediction is made difficult by the fact that so many factors                     must be kept in mind and weighed at one time. The public demands                     that a forecast shall be expressed as nearly as possible in                     one word: clear, fair, cloudy, rain. This does not allow a                     fair exercise of the forecaster&#8217;s skill, because to describe                     what will likely happen in the next 24 or 36 hours would require                     a paragraph at least. There can be great differences within                     small areas: not long ago there was rain on St. James Street                     in Montreal and none on Craig Street, only a block away. No                     matter what the forecast said, people on one of these streets                     would think the weatherman was wrong &#8211; or, as they would likely                     say, &#8220;wrong again.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>All the forecaster pretends to do is to say with reasonable                     assurance that if an existing trend continues, certain things                     will happen. The speed of the weather movement may change,                     hastening or delaying arrival of the kind of weather he forecasts.<\/p>\n<h3>Controlling Weather<\/h3>\n<p>During recent years many local rains have been induced by                     dropping dry ice on rain clouds. Mr. J. L. Orr, of the National                     Research Council of Canada told the United Nations scientific                     conference in August of successful experiments in this country.                     Analysis of the results showed that rain or snow reached the                     ground on 24 per cent of all the Canadian trials. In the applied                     experiments on selected clouds rain or snow reached the ground                     on 43 per cent of the attempts.<\/p>\n<p>Mr. Orr added: &#8220;From the scientific standpoint, the results                     achieved are noteworthy and the ability to alter the structure                     of the great majority of clouds, to produce precipitation                     from many clouds, and even, under certain conditions to generate                     clouds, is remarkable.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The advance already made in knowledge and practice indicates                     that it may be possible to put rain-making on a firm                     basis shortly. At a time when rain is badly needed in some                     crop-growing or electric power-producing part of                     Canada, the financial returns could be of significant value.                     But, says Mr. Connor in a letter on the work of Canada&#8217;s Meteorological                     Division, &#8220;if we ever get weather control on this earth, wars                     will follow, instigated by those who wish to have full control                     for their own country alone.&#8221; Then he adds facetiously: &#8220;Domestically,                     the national weather controllers will need a battalion of                     bodyguards!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>What we should like, of course, is more orderliness in the                     weather. There should be some snow and ice in winter, so that                     we are willing to work hard enough to enjoy a little leisure                     when spring comes. Spring should be a poet&#8217;s delight, with                     flowers and bees and mating birds, and it should last two                     months. Summer should be warm enough to thaw the frost out                     of our bones, give us the right tint of tan, and grow our                     garden vegetables and gladiolus to the right size, texture                     and shade. Autumn should be long enough for us to rest after                     a strenuous summer, colourful enough to gratify our aesthetic                     sense, and just cool enough to ease us gently into winter.<\/p>\n<p>Every season should dignify itself by coming in on the proper                     date. This would enable us to make, sell and buy clothes in                     a reasonably stable way, and to know whether it is necessary                     to lay in another ton of coal.<\/p>\n<p>Till these improvements can be made, the clothing manufacturer,                     the department store, the coal dealer and the consumer must                     plug along with the aid of Almanacs, the Meteorological Bureau                     and their own amateur efforts at forecasting. Perhaps it is                     better so, because if our weather ideals were achieved what                     should we grumble about?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[29],"class_list":["post-4069","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-29"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>October 1949 - Vol. 30, No. 10 - Our Climate And Our Weather - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1949-vol-30-no-10-our-climate-and-our-weather\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"October 1949 - Vol. 30, No. 10 - Our Climate And Our Weather - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Climate is one of the greatest upsetters of human plans and activities. 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