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Elias
Loomis
1811-1889
B.A.
1830
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The annals of meteorological
research in the 19th century reflect a series of contributions by American astronomer
Elias Loomis. He is credited with, among other observations, clarifying the
effects of air temperatures -- particularly converging warm and cold currents -- on the formation of fog and precipitation.
Students of nature
in Loomis's day had to trace a circuitous path starting in the more traditional
curriculum; in his case, this meant theological studies and the teaching of
Latin. But Loomis soon moved into mathematics and "natural philosophy" while
he fine-tuned his skills of observation. Besides meteorology, he earned a
reputation through published reports on shooting stars, the declination of
the magnetic needle, and the path of Halley's comet (1835).
Loomis pioneered
the depiction of weather phenomena on maps and influenced the creation of
the National Weather Service in 1869. After teaching at Western Reserve College,
New York University, and Princeton, he joined the Yale faculty in 1860. The
$300,000 that Loomis bequeathed to the University came in large part from
the more than half-million of his textbooks on mathematics, general science,
astronomy, and meteorology that were sold over the years.
Students recalled
him as "mathematics personified," referring to his minute consistency in everything,
and maintained that "it was the easiest thing in the world to imitate his
angular manner."
