Abstract
DURING the past four years and a half of hostilities meteorology has, like many other branches of knowledge, been utilised in naval and military operations to a far greater extent than ever before. Consequently, there are now a large number of officers in the Services who have had practical experience of the value of meteorological information when it has been prepared from sufficient data, and by men who have been thoroughly trained in the subject. It is, therefore, highly desirable that full advantage should be taken of the experience which has been gained during the war in order to meet, as adequately as possible, those demands which will be made upon meteorology in the general reconstruction which is now beginning.
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Meteorology During and After the War 1 . Nature 103, 12–16 (1919). https://doi.org/10.1038/103012a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/103012a0
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