Weather Vanes - brief history and different types
Since the dawn of time, weather has had an impact on humans and
how they live, what they do and when. Today, there is an
unbelievable array of land-based and satellite-based equipment
to help monitor, track and predict the weather, but one
primitive tool still used widely is the weather vane.
Weather vanes are common fixtures on the tops of buildings large
and small. The earliest known weather vane was constructed atop
Athens' Tower of the Winds by an astronomer in 48 B.C., but
you've probably seen them topping everything from a historical
government building to your neighbour's barn. For official
purposes, wind is usually measured at a height of 10 metres or
33 feet, making such edifices the perfect location to install a
weather vane.
Now often relegated to uses no more pressing than decoration or
folk art, weather vanes were once key indicators of wind
direction, which affected decisions from farming to flying.
Sophisticated, modern weather vanes use wind data loggers (or
computers) to create a history of wind direction. Direction,
which is reported in terms of which direction the wind is coming
from, not going to, is a key indicator for surface weather
analysis and prediction, and therefore, very useful information.
Sometimes called 'wind vanes', traditional weather vanes are
generally comprised of several parts, including a rod, a large
lower globe, directionals, and a smaller upper globe, all of
which are fixed, and a rotating ornament on top. To accurately
indicate wind direction, the ornament must have unequal area and
unequal mass on either side of centre. This oddity allows for
lovely freeform ornaments, or more traditional arrows, scrolls,
banners, or silhouetted roosters, airplanes and other common
shapes. Another popular ornament style is the swell-bodied kind:
three-dimensional forms a few inches thick, often made of
hammered sheet copper. Similarly, full-bodied ornaments are also
three-dimensional, but are more realistic in their proportions
that swell-bodied ornaments. Rooster ornaments are particularly
popular atop church steeples thanks to a reported ninth century
papal decree calling for a cock to be installed on every
European church steeple or dome as a reminder of a prophecy made
my Jesus and recorded in Luke 22:34, that the morning cock would
not crow the morning after the Last Supper until Peter had
denounced Him three times.
Medieval towers in Europe often flew fabric pennants so that
archers would be able to see wind direction. The cloth pennants
were later replaced by metal flags, the precursor of today's
modern weather vanes.for more information on weather vanes
please go to our site at http://www.weathervanesite.com