Add to albumThis is a detail of a wooden case housing an special barometer without mercury, also known as a sympiesometer. The barometer was made around 1825, probably by Alexander Adie (1775-1858), a scientific instrument maker based in Edinburgh.
On the back of the case, in ink, are the words 'Capt Robertson/Monarch/Capt. A. Paterson's/Ship Glass/ China 1843/Repaired by 'Adie' Edinr. 1st Oct 1889/579'.
Robert Hooke devised the first barometer without mercury in the 1660s. Adie's design was developed especially for use at sea and it seems this particular example was well-travelled.
Record details
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- Online ID: 000-190-001-047-C
- Image Rights Holder: National Museums Scotland
- Project:
National Museums Scotland
Project description View all records in project
- Ref: National Museums Scotland T.1967.99
- Date: Around 1825
c. 1825
- Material: Glass fronted wooden case, silvered face, purple fluid in glass tube, mercury in glass thermometer. Inscription: PATENT / A. ADIE / EDINBURGH / No. 579 // Spencer Browning / & Rust / Agents / London //; Capt Robertson / Monarch // Capt A. Paterson's / Shi
Sympiesometer
- Dimensions: 24.50" H
- What: Sympiesometer
- Subject: 10. METEOROLOGY (Departmental Classification)
- Who: A. Adie, Edinburgh (Maker)
Captain A. Paterson (Inscribed on the Sympiesometer)
Robertson (Inscribed on the Sympiesometer)
Spencer, Browning & Rust (Inscribed on the Sympiesometer)
- Where: China
Scotland, Midlothian, Edinburgh
- Event:
- Description: Sympiesometer for meteorology, patented in 1818, by Alexander Adie, Edinburgh, c. 1825
- References:
- Adie, Alexander 'Description of the Patent Sympiesometer or New Air Barometer'. Edinburgh Philosophical Journal 1. 1819 pp 54-60
- Middleton, W E Knowles. The History of the Barometer. Baltimore, 1964. pp 378-81
- Translations:
- Related Records: