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Architect of the Clouds. Luke Howard, the Invention of Meteorology, and the Man Who Brought Order to the Sky
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- Nombre de pages189
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-31943-5
- EAN9783565319435
- Date de parution13/03/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille722 Ko
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
For most of human history, the sky was viewed as a chaotic, unpredictable canvas of the gods. Clouds were considered ephemeral, shapeless vapors that vanished too quickly to ever be studied or categorized. The scientific revolution had named the plants, the animals, and the stars, but the atmosphere remained completely untamed.
This chaos ended in 1802 thanks to an unassuming London pharmacist and amateur meteorologist named Luke Howard.
Recognizing that clouds were not random, but physical structures governed by atmospheric laws, he proposed a brilliant, elegant Latin naming system. By classifying them into three main types-Cirrus, Cumulus, and Stratus-Howard instantly provided science with a vocabulary for the sky. His taxonomy allowed researchers to finally track weather patterns globally, earning him the admiration of Goethe and laying the absolute foundation for modern meteorology. This historical biography explores the profound impact of giving a name to the transient.
It details the scientific struggles of the 19th century and how one man's quiet obsession with the weather saved millions of lives through early forecasting. Look up at the sky with renewed wonder. Discover the story of the pharmacist who caught the clouds, classified the chaos, and gave humanity the language of the atmosphere.
Recognizing that clouds were not random, but physical structures governed by atmospheric laws, he proposed a brilliant, elegant Latin naming system. By classifying them into three main types-Cirrus, Cumulus, and Stratus-Howard instantly provided science with a vocabulary for the sky. His taxonomy allowed researchers to finally track weather patterns globally, earning him the admiration of Goethe and laying the absolute foundation for modern meteorology. This historical biography explores the profound impact of giving a name to the transient.
It details the scientific struggles of the 19th century and how one man's quiet obsession with the weather saved millions of lives through early forecasting. Look up at the sky with renewed wonder. Discover the story of the pharmacist who caught the clouds, classified the chaos, and gave humanity the language of the atmosphere.



