Page 346 - PERSIAN 1 1873_1879 Admin Report1_Neat
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OS ADMINISTRATION REPORT OK THE PERSIAN fllll.F rOT.lTICAL RESIDENCY

                     Tliis excessive solar heat exerts also an imlircct influence by beating the
                     surrounding rocks to a very high degree; and, as owing to their geologi­
                     cal nature and colour they absorb beat rapidly and radiate it slowly,
                     the surrounding atmosphere is kept at a high temperature for many hours
                     after the Him has set, rendering the heat at night almost as unbearable
                     as that during the day.
                         The temperature in the shade has a great annual range, hut the
                     diurnal variation is slight. The highest temperature registered hits been
                     ] 0 K»° F. and the lowest 5*1° K; hut these are the two greatest extremes,
                     and have occurred under the exceptional circumstances of a hoc, dry wind
                     and a strong cold north-west wind attended with rain. The average
                     maximum temperature may he stated to bc33'80F., and the average mini­
                     mum 77 S»CT\, giving a mean of         The hottest months of the
                     year are May, June and July, and the coldest December, January ami
                     Fchru irv. The exhausting effects of a continuously high temperature
                     during five months, especially on the nervous system, may be easily ima­
                     gined ; if to these we add the effects of great humidity when the south­
                     west monsoon blows, and those of a highly rarified condition of the
                     atmosphere when the hot and dry wind prevails, causing a diminution
                     in the quantity of oxygen inhaled, and thus retarding the regressive
                     metamorphosis of tissues, we have tlie sum of the general influence of
                     the hot season in Muscat on the constitution. The hot, dry’ wind, whose
                     temperature generally varies from U9°F. to 1U1°F., and which blows
                     direct from the great Arabian desert, occasionally induces premonitory
                     sympt"in< of insolatio, whilst the damp wind, which blows over from
                     the mm charged with mni-ture almost to saturation, with a comparatively
                     lower temperature, has a depressing influence on the digestive, circulatory
                     and nervous systems.
                         The minimum of temperature, which generally occurs about the
                     month . f January, has also an unfavorable influence, especially on the
                     Arab constitution. The body, which during the previous months had
                     been under the depressing influence of the heat, becomes now liable to
                     attacks of malarial fever; and internal congestions are not uncommon.
                     The Arabs and Natives generally believe that the hot weather is decidedly
                     healthier than the cold, the effects of heat being gradual and insidious,
                     whilst those of cold generally culminating in an attack of ague or
                     remittent fever attended with congestion of the liver, spleeu or lungs,
                     are more marked and perceptible.
                         The relative humidity of the atmosphere varies according to the
                     season, but excepting when there is a hot and dry shumal, the diurnal
                     variation is slight. The greatest relative humidity 77 (saturation being
                     100) occurs about the months of July and August when the south­
                     west monsoon blows; and the least relative humidity generally in June
                     with a hot and dry thumal. The average relative humidity for the
                     year is about 63, the insolation or the difference between the maximum
                     solar thermometer and maximum dry bulb thermometer in the shade
                     being greatest when the relative humidity is very high.
                         This excessive humidity during certain months makes the atmosphere
                     very oppressive; the evaporation from the surface is greatly lessened, diges­
                     tion is impaired and the nervous system becomes depressed; still this
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