Page:EB1911 - Volume 17.djvu/374

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MAGNETISM, TERRESTRIAL
359


Table I.—Magnetic Elements and their Rate of Secular Change for January 1, 1901.

Place. Absolute values. Secular change.
D. I. H. D. I. H.
  ° ′   ° ′     γ
 Pavlovsk 0 39.8E 70 36.8N .16553 − 4.1  −0.8 + 7
 Ekatarinburg 10   6.3E 70 40.5N .17783 − 4.6 +0.5  −13
 Copenhagen 10 10.4W 68 38.5N .17525      
 Stonyhurst 18 10.3W 68 48.0N .17330 − 4.0   +22
 Wilhelmshaven  12 26.0W 67 39.7N .18108 − 4.1 −2.1 +20
 Potsdam 9 54.2W 66 24.5N .18852 − 4.2 −1.6 +16
 Irkutsk 2   1.0E 70 15.8N .20122 + 0.5 +1.6 −14
 de Bilt 13 48.3W 66 55.5N .18516 − 4.4 −2.2 +14
 Kew 16 50.8W 67 10.6N .18440 − 4.2 −2.2 +25
 Greenwich 16 27.5W 67  7.3N .18465 − 4.0 −2.2 +23
 Uccle 14 11.0W 66  8.8N .18954 − 4.2 −2.1 +23
 Falmouth 18 27.3W 66 44.0N .18705 − 3.8 −2.7 +26
 Prague 9  4.4W   .19956 − 4.4   +20
 St Helier 16 58.1W 65 44.1N   − 3.5 −2.7  
 Parc St Maur 14 43.4W 64 52.3N .19755 − 4.0 −2.2 +23
 Val Joyeux 15 13.7W 65  0.0N .19670
 Munich 10 25.8W 63 18.1N .20629 − 4.8 −2.7 +21
 O’Gyalla 7 26.1W   .21164 − 4.8   +13
 Pola 9 22.7W 60 14.5N .22216 − 4.0   +23
 Toulouse 14 16.4W 60 55.9N .21945 − 3.9 −2.5 +25
 Perpignan 13 34.7W 59 57.6N .22453      
 Capo di Monte 9  8.0W 56 22.3N   − 5.2 −2.3  
 Madrid 15 39.0W          
 Coimbra 17 18.1W 59 22.0N .22786 − 3.7 −4.3 +34
 Lisbon 17 15.7W 57 53.0N .23548      
 Athens 5 38.2W 52  7.5N .26076      
 San Fernando 15 57.5W 55  8.8N .24648      
 Tokyo 4 34.9W 49  0.3N .29932      
 Zi−ka−wei 2 23.5W 45 43.5N .32875 + 1.5 −1.5 +37
 Helwan 3 39.7W 40 30.8N .30136 − 7.0 −0.4 − 7
 Hong−Kong 0 17.5E 31 22.8N .36753 + 1.8 −4.3 +45
 Kolaba 0 23.2E 21 26.5N .37436 + 2.2 +7.0 − 9
 Manila 0 52.2E 16 13.5N .38064 + 0.1 −5.3 +47
 Batavia 1   7.3E 30 35.5S .36724 + 3.0 −7.3 −11
 Mauritius 9 25.2W 54  9.4S .23820 − 4.7 +4.6 −39
 Rio de Janeiro 8  2.9W 13 20.1S .2501 +10.4 −2.3  
 Melbourne 8 25.6E 67 24.6S .23295      

The rate of movement of the needle to the east at London—and throughout Europe generally—fell off markedly subsequent to 1880. The change of declination in fact between 1880 and 1895 was only about 75% of that between 1865 and 1880, and the mean annual change from 1895 to 1900 was less than 75% of the mean annual change of the preceding fifteen years. Thus in 1902 it was at least open to doubt whether a change in the sign of the secular change were not in immediate prospect. Subsequent, however, to that date there was little further decline in the rate of secular change, and since 1905 there has been very distinct acceleration. Thus, if we derive a mean value from the eighteen European stations for which declination secular changes are given in Tables I. and II. we find

mean value from table I. −4.18
”   ”   ”   ” II. −5.21

The epoch to which the data in Table II. refer is somewhat variable, but is in all cases more recent than the epoch, January 1, 1901, for Table I., the mean difference being about 5 years.

§ 10. At Paris there seems to have been a maximum of easterly declination (about 9°) about 1580; the needle pointed to true north about 1662, and reached its extreme westerly position between 1812 and 1814. The phenomena at Rome resembled those at Paris and London, but the extreme westerly position is believed to have been attained earlier. The rate of change near the turning point seems to have been very slow, and as no fixed observatories existed in those days, the precise time of its occurrence is open to some doubt.

Perhaps the most complete observations extant as to the declination phenomena near a turning point relate to Kolaba observatory at Bombay; they were given originally by N. A. F. Moos,[1] the director of the observatory. Some of the more interesting details are given in Table IV.; here W denotes movement to be west, and so answers to a numerical diminution in the declination, which is easterly.

Prior to 1880 the secular change at Kolaba was unmistakably to the east, and subsequent to 1883 it was clearly to the west; but between these dates opinions will probably differ as to what actually happened. The fluctuations then apparent in the sign of the annual change may be real, but it is at least conceivable that they are of instrumental origin. From 1870 to 1875 the mean annual change was −1′.2; from 1885 to 1890 it was +1′.5, from 1890 to 1895 it was +2′.0, while from 1895 to 1905 it was +2′.35, the + sign denoting movement to the west. Thus, in this case the rate of secular change has increased fairly steadily since the turning point was reached.

Table V. contains some data for St Helena and the Cape of Good Hope,[2] both places having a long magnetic history. The remarkable feature at St Helena is the uniformity in the rate of secular change. The figures for the Cape show a reversal in the direction of the secular change about 1840, but after a few years the arrested movement to the west again became visible. According, however, to J. C. Beattie’s Magnetic Survey of South Africa the movement to the west ceased shortly after 1870. A persistent movement to the east then set in, the mean annual change increasing from 1′.8 between 1873 and 1890 to 3′.8 between 1890 and 1900.

§ 11. Secular changes of declination have been particularly interesting in the United States, an area about which information is unusually complete, thanks to the labours and publications of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.[3] At present the agonic line passes in a south-easterly direction from Lake Superior to South Carolina. To the east of the agonic line the declination is westerly, and to the west it is easterly. In 1905 the declination varied from about 21° W. in the extreme north-east to about 24° E. in the extreme north-west. At present the motion of the agonic line seems to be towards the west, but it is very slow. To the east of the agonic line westerly declination is increasing, and to the west of the line, with the exception of a narrow strip immediately adjacent to it, easterly declination is increasing. The phenomena in short suggest a motion southwards in the north magnetic pole. Since 1750 declination has always been westerly in the extreme east of the States, and always easterly in the extreme west, but the position of the agonic line has altered a good deal. It was to the west of Richmond, Virginia, from 1750 to about 1772, then to the east of it until about 1838 when it once more passed to the west; since that time it has travelled farther to the west. Table VI. is intended to show the nature of the secular change throughout the whole country. As before, + denotes that the north pole of the magnet is moving to the west,—that it is moving to the east.

The data in Table VI. represent the mean change of declination per annum, derived from the period (ten years, except for 1900–1905) which ended in the year put at the top of the column. The stations are arranged in four groups, the first group representing the extreme eastern, the last group the extreme western states, the other two groups being intermediate. In each group the stations are arranged, at least approximately, in order of latitude. The data are derived from the values of the declination given in the Geodetic Survey’s Report for 1906, appendix 4, and Magnetic Tables and Magnetic Charts by L. A. Bauer, 1908. The values seem, in most cases, based to some extent on calculation, and very probably the secular change was not in reality quite so regular as the figures suggest. For the Western States the earliest data are comparatively recent, but for some of the eastern states data earlier than any in the table appear in the Report of the Coast and Geodetic Survey for 1902. These data indicate that the easterly movement of the magnet, visible in all the earlier figures for the Eastern States in Table VI., existed in all of them at least as far back as 1700. There is not very much evidence as to the secular change between 1700 and 1650, the earliest date to which the Coast and Geodetic Survey’s figures refer. The figures show a maximum of westerly declination about 1670 in New Jersey and about 1675 in Maryland. They suggest that this maximum was experienced all along the Atlantic border some time in the 17th century, but earlier in the extreme north-east than in New York or Maryland.

Examination of Table VI. shows that the needle continued to move to the east for some time after 1750 even in the Eastern States. But the rate of movement was clearly diminishing, and about 1765 the extreme easterly position was reached in Eastport, Maine, the needle then beginning to retrace its steps to the west. The phenomena visible at Maine are seen repeating themselves at places more and more to the west, in Boston about 1785, in Albany about 1800, in Washington, D.C., about 1805, in Columbus (Ohio) about 1815, in Montgomery (Alabama) about 1825, in Bloomington (Ill.) about 1830, in Des Moines (Iowa) about 1840, in Santa Rosa (New Mexico) about 1860 and in Salt Lake about 1870. In 1885 the needle was moving to the west over the whole United States with the exception of a comparatively narrow strip along the Pacific coast. Even an acute observer would have been tempted to prophesy in 1885 that at no distant date the secular change would be pronouncedly westerly right up to the Pacific. But in a few years a complete change took place. The movement to the east, which had become exceedingly small, if existent, in the Pacific states, began to accelerate; the movement to the west continued in the central, as in the eastern states, but perceptibly slackened. In 1905 the area throughout which the movement to the west still continued had greatly contracted and lay to the east of a line drawn from the west end of Lake Superior to the west of Georgia. If we take a station like Little Rock (Arkansas), we have the secular change to the west lasting for about sixty years. Further west the period shortens. At Pueblo (Colorado) it is about forty years, at Salt Lake under thirty years, at Prescott (Arizona) about twenty years. Considering how fast the area throughout which the secular change is easterly has extended to the east since 1885, one would be tempted to infer that at no distant date it will include the whole of the United States. In the extreme north-east, however, the movement of the needle to the west, which had slackened perceptibly after 1860 or 1870, is once more accelerating. Thus the auspices do not all point one way, and the future is as uncertain as it is interesting.


  1. Kolaba (Colaba) Magnetical and Meteorological Observations, 1896. Appendix Table II.
  2. (1) p. 21.
  3. Report for 1906, App. 4, see also (3) p. 102.