qn, 4. os om WEATHER OVER THE..MARSHALL ISLANDS 1, Wes’? .and Dry’? Seasons: ry . aie] Our knowledge, of weather -ond wind in the Central Pocific is still surprisingly ad meager, . The region :lies far from the chief trade routes of the Pacific, so that.” we do not possess the abundance of marine records, dating back to the days of the full-rigged ship, that give us so much information on susface conditions in higher oceanic latitudes and along the coasts of Asia and America. In spite of t-2 long occupation, first by Germany, then Japan, .and in spite of the location of crm oat £3 axed a3 recent weapon fests by the United St ed Forces, the Marshall Islands -cre among the least known, from a meteorological point of view, of the archipelagos The reason ligs portly .In the short observational record, of the Central . Pacific. but -more importantly, perhaps, in certain preconceived ideas, held alike by many professional meteorologists and by. operational commanders acting on their advice, thaf have fended to obscure the issues. Historically, explorers, soldiers, sailors, and scientists of the Atlantic community first learned about tropical weather in, and in the neighborhood of, the - great continents: Asia, America, and Africa. With few exceptions the torrid parts of these regions are subject fo pronounced seasonal variation in wind and weather. In some regions the seasons are spoken of as ‘monsoons, in others, as the wet mg year, has been known to laymen for centuries. Ww & \ The peoples of high latitudes in Europe and America have found nothing surprising in this: living also on continents, “ they have been used fo far greater seasonal extremes, particularly in temperature, ‘than any found in monsoon countries. So there has grown up, in the minds of , ro Aft all events, the tendency of rainfall in these places, to be associated with a specific wind direction and to occur mostly in one secson of the v) a7 Cen. (ZILA. and dry seasons. f from any large land mass, display well-marked seasonal variations in wind and In the Central Pacific, especially east of the 180th meridian, it is very dif. ficult to find, in the data that we have so far, very reliable traces of this supposed ‘universal seasonal variation. -but this seems Islands is a zone with * globe. The There is oc great variability in weather, if is true, to occur with little relation to the time of the year. ’ the region overlapping : hy weet ko Sfece- 7 Zz . weather. . “ € . both scientists and laymen, .the expectation thot oll tropical regions, even those far the equator and about the longitudes of the Hawaiian probably the Marshall Islands, “Central Pacific and consequently lying most highly variable rainfall on the whole as they do closer to Australia than the ™ atolls, come remotely under the influence of that continent show some seasonal -variafion in ‘cloud and rainfall this is overshadowed by o greater’ aperiodic Central Pacific.. In fact, But varicbility of the type found in the In the southern Marshalls this aperiodic type of variation extends : <

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