Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Durham University Observatory
Observatory in Potters Bank, Durham From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The Durham University Observatory is a weather observatory owned and operated by the University of Durham. It is a Grade II listed building[1] located at Potters Bank, Durham and was founded in 1839 initially as an astronomical and meteorological observatory (owing to the need to calculate refraction from the air temperature) by Temple Chevallier, until 1937 when the observatory moved purely to meteorological recording.[2]
Remove ads
The observatory's current director is Professor Tim Burt of the Geography Department, who is also Master of Hatfield College.
After the Radcliffe Observatory in Oxford (from 1772) and the Armagh Observatory (from 1795), Durham has the third longest unbroken meteorological record in the UK, with records dating back to 23 July 1843,[3] principally due to the work of Gordon Manley in creating a temperature record that would be comparable to Oxford's.[4] In 2022, Oxford University Press published Durham Weather and Climate since 1841, analysing the observatory's weather records and giving a history of the observations, as a sister volume to their Oxford Weather and Climate since 1767 (2019).[5] Observations were made manually until 1999, since when a Met Office automatic weather station has been used.[3]
The observatory is a World Meteorological Organization Centennial Observing Station.[6]
Remove ads
History
The university established the observatory in 1839. Funds were raised by a public appeal and the site was made available by the Dean and Chapter of Durham Cathedral. The building was designed by Anthony Salvin and was completed by 1841 with the telescope installed in 1842. The latitude of the observatory was determined in 1843 and its longitude in 1851, by Richard Carrington. An obelisk was installed in the grounds of St Leonard's School, due north of the observatory, in 1850 to check the alignment of the telescope.[7]
Remove ads
Former observers
- 1840 – 1841 Temple Chevallier[8]
- 1841 John Stewart Browne[8]
- 1842 – 1846 Arthur Beanlands[8]
- 1846 – 1849 Robert Anchor Thompson[8]
- 1849 Le Jeune[8]
- 1849 Robert Healey Blakey (acting)[8]
- 1849 – 1852 Richard Carrington[8]
- 1852 – 1853 William Ellis[8]
- 1854 – 1855 Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Rümker[8]
- 1856 – 1863 Albert Marth[8]
- 1863 – 1864 Edward Gleadowe Marshall[8]
- 1865 – 1867 Mondeford Reginald Dolman[8]
- 1867 – 1874 John Isaac Plummer[8]
- 1874 – 1885 Gabriel Alphonsus Goldney[8]
- 1885 – 1900 Henry James Carpenter[8]
- 1900 – 1919 Frederick Charles Hampshire Carpenter[8]
- 1919 – 1938 Frank Sargent[9]
- 1938 – 1939 E. Gluckauf[7]
- 1940 – 1945 A. Beecroft[7]
- 1945 – 1948 L. S. Joyce[7]
- 1949 – 1951 K. F. and G. A. Chackett[7]
- 1951 – 1957 J. Musgrave[7]
- 1957 – 1968 F. and D. Glockling[7]
- 1969 – 1999 Audrey L. Warner[7]
Remove ads
Weather records
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads