120
(2)
vpon this D
r. Grew alledged that he had formerly propounded a theory
of his own explicating the Pre
ssure of the air by the Di
ssolution of salts
wherein his supposition was that the said salts before Di
ssolution weighd
more (that is augmentd the pre
ssure of the air) and after Di
ssolution
Le
sse, (that is Dimini
shed the pre
ssure of the air) this was not Debated
becau
se he
.. . . promi
sed to bring in his theory as he had -
formerly
Deliverd read it in this Society the next Day -
Whil
st this was Di
scour
sing m
r. Wheeler propounded the la
st Day by m
r.
Charles howard was put to the Ballot and was cho
sen by the
suffrage
of 30 w
thout one negatiue -
S
r. Ionas more Related that m
r. Townly had made ob
seruations of the
Barometer at townley for seuerall years & that the same alterations
had hapned that at the same time had been ob
serued at London
Al
so that he him
self had ob
serued the same at Tangier for a whole
year and had not found the difference
aboue of altitude more then
one inch all that time /in that place/, whence the ^/greater/ con
stancy of the weather of
thtplace was argued, and that the
same pre
ssure of air was not the same in
all parts of
the Earth but in some places always more some always Le
sse
S
r. Chri
stopher wren vpon the Di
scour
sing of the varyings pre
ssure of
the Sea and land winds, propounded the Bermudas as a very
conuenient place to haue tryalls made of the mutations of the
Barometer the sea
sons there being very temperate & the
saidIsland Lyeing
in the incompa
ssed on euery side w
th. the sea and
very farr removed from any Land
m
r Hooke related that he had been informed by S
r. Jonas more
that ob
seruations were now making in an other Island
moremore conueniently situated for that purpose
and namely in S
tHelena on the other side of the line - .
This S
r. Ionas more confirmed and further added that the height of
the mercuriall Cylinder there had not exceeded 27 inches of altitude
The President Thought vpon the whole matter that it were very fitt
that
Experiments of this ob
seruations of this kind should be made
in as many parts of the world as could be procured and that
all Experiments of that kind where
soeuer made and by w
tsoeuer
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_122 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters