METEOROLOGY
350 BC
Translated by E. W.WEBSTER
ARISTOTLE
384 BC - 322 BC
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WEB-PAGE TWO
BOOK II
Part 1
Let us explain the nature of the sea and
the reason why such a large mass of water
is salt and the way in which it originally
came to be.
The old writers who invented theogonies say
that the sea has springs, for they want earth
and sea to have foundations and roots of
their own. Presumably they thought that this
view was grander and more impressive as implying
that our earth was an important part of the
universe. For they believed that the whole
world had been built up round our earth and
for its sake, and that the earth was the
most important and primary part of it. Others,
wiser in human knowledge, give an account
of its origin. At first, they say, the earth
was surrounded by moisture. Then the sun
began to dry it up, part of it evaporated
and is the cause of winds and the turnings
back of the sun and the moon, while the remainder
forms the sea. So the sea is being dried
up and is growing less, and will end by being
some day entirely dried up. Others say that
the sea is a kind of sweat exuded by the
earth when the sun heats it, and that this
explains its saltness: for all sweat is salt.
Others say that the saltness is due to the
earth. Just as water strained through ashes
becomes salt, so the sea owes its saltness
to the admixture of earth with similar properties.
We must now consider the facts which prove
that the sea cannot possibly have springs.
The waters we find on the earth either flow
or are stationary. All flowing water has
springs. (By a spring, as we have explained
above, we must not understand a source from
which waters are ladled as it were from a
vessel, but a first point at which the water
which is continually forming and percolating
gathers.) Stationary water is either that
which has collected and has been left standing,
marshy pools, for instance, and lakes, which
differ merely in size, or else it comes from
springs. In this case it is always artificial,
I mean as in the case of wells, otherwise
the spring would have to be above the outlet.
Hence the water from fountains and rivers
flows of itself, whereas wells need to be
worked artificially. All the waters that
exist belong to one or other of these classes.
On the basis of this division we can sec
that the sea cannot have springs. For it
falls under neither of the two classes; it
does not flow and it is not artificial; whereas
all water from springs must belong to one
or other of them. Natural standing water
from springs is never found on such a large
scale.
Again, there are several seas that have no
communication with one another at all. The
Red Sea, for instance, communicates but slightly
with the ocean outside the straits, and the
Hyrcanian and Caspian seas are distinct from
this ocean and people dwell all round them.
Hence, if these seas had had any springs
anywhere they must have been discovered.
It is true that in straits, where the land
on either side contracts an open sea into
a small space, the sea appears to flow. But
this is because it is swinging to and fro.
In the open sea this motion is not observed,
but where the land narrows and contracts
the sea the motion that was imperceptible
in the open necessarily strikes the attention.
The whole of the Mediterranean does actually
flow. The direction of this flow is determined
by the depth of the basins and by the number
of rivers. Maeotis flows into Pontus and
Pontus into the Aegean. After that the flow
of the remaining seas is not so easy to observe.
The current of Maeotis and Pontus is due
to the number of rivers (more rivers flow
into the Euxine and Maeotis than into the
whole Mediterranean with its much larger
basin), and to their own shallowness. For
we find the sea getting deeper and deeper.
Pontus is deeper than Maeotis, the Aegean
than Pontus, the Sicilian sea than the Aegean;
the Sardinian and Tyrrhenic being the deepest
of all. (Outside the pillars of Heracles
the sea is shallow owing to the mud, but
calm, for it lies in a hollow.) We see, then,
that just as single rivers flow from mountains,
so it is with the earth as a whole: the greatest
volume of water flows from the higher regions
in the north. Their alluvium makes the northern
seas shallow, while the outer seas are deeper.
Some further evidence of the height of the
northern regions of the earth is afforded
by the view of many of the ancient meteorologists.
They believed that the sun did not pass below
the earth, but round its northern part, and
that it was the height of this which obscured
the sun and caused night.
So much to prove that there cannot be sources
of the sea and to explain its observed flow.
Part 2
We must now discuss the origin of the sea,
if it has an origin, and the cause of its
salt and bitter taste.
What made earlier writers consider the sea
to be the original and main body of water
is this. It seems reasonable to suppose that
to be the case on the analogy of the other
elements. Each of them has a main bulk which
by reason of its mass is the origin of that
element, and any parts which change and mix
with the other elements come from it. Thus
the main body of fire is in the upper region;
that of air occupies the place next inside
the region of fire; while the mass of the
earth is that round which the rest of the
elements are seen to lie. So we must clearly
look for something analogous in the case
of water. But here we can find no such single
mass, as in the case of the other elements,
except the sea. River water is not a unity,
nor is it stable, but is seen to be in a
continuous process of becoming from day to
day. It was this difficulty which made people
regard the sea as the origin and source of
moisture and of all water. And so we find
it maintained that rivers not only flow into
the sea but originate from it, the salt water
becoming sweet by filtration.
But this view involves another difficulty.
If this body of water is the origin and source
of all water, why is it salt and not sweet?
The reason for this, besides answering this
question, will ensure our having a right
first conception of the nature of the sea.
The earth is surrounded by water, just as
that is by the sphere of air, and that again
by the sphere called that of fire (which
is the outermost both on the common view
and on ours). Now the sun, moving as it does,
sets up processes of change and becoming
and decay, and by its agency the finest and
sweetest water is every day carried up and
is dissolved into vapour and rises to the
upper region, where it is condensed again
by the cold and so returns to the earth.
This, as we have said before, is the regular
course of nature.
Hence all my predecessors who supposed that
the sun was nourished by moisture are absurdly
mistaken. Some go on to say that the solstices
are due to this, the reason being that the
same places cannot always supply the sun
with nourishment and that without it he must
perish. For the fire we are familiar with
lives as long as it is fed, and the only
food for fire is moisture. As if the moisture
that is raised could reach the sun! or this
ascent were really like that performed by
flame as it comes into being, and to which
they supposed the case of the sun to be analogous!
Really there is no similarity. A flame is
a process of becoming, involving a constant
interchange of moist and dry. It cannot be
said to be nourished since it scarcely persists
as one and the same for a moment. This cannot
be true of the sun; for if it were nourished
like that, as they say it is, we should obviously
not only have a new sun every day, as Heraclitus
says, but a new sun every moment. Again,
when the sun causes the moisture to rise,
this is like fire heating water. So, as the
fire is not fed by the water above it, it
is absurd to suppose that the sun feeds on
that moisture, even if its heat made all
the water in the world evaporate. Again,
it is absurd, considering the number and
size of the stars, that these thinkers should
consider the sun only and overlook the question
how the rest of the heavenly bodies subsist.
Again, they are met by the same difficulty
as those who say that at first the earth
itself was moist and the world round the
earth was warmed by the sun, and so air was
generated and the whole firmament grew, and
the air caused winds and solstices. The objection
is that we always plainly see the water that
has been carried up coming down again. Even
if the same amount does not come back in
a year or in a given country, yet in a certain
period all that has been carried up is returned.
This implies that the celestial bodies do
not feed on it, and that we cannot distinguish
between some air which preserves its character
once it is generated and some other which
is generated but becomes water again and
so perishes; on the contrary, all the moisture
alike is dissolved and all of it condensed
back into water.
The drinkable, sweet water, then, is light
and is all of it drawn up: the salt water
is heavy and remains behind, but not in its
natural place. For this is a question which
has been sufficiently discussed
(I mean about the natural place that water,
like the other elements, must in reason have),
and the answer is this. The place which we
see the sea filling is not its natural place
but that of water. It seems to belong to
the sea because the weight of the salt water
makes it remain there, while the sweet, drinkable
water which is light is carried up. The same
thing happens in animal bodies. Here, too,
the food when it enters the body is sweet,
yet the residuum and dregs of liquid food
are found to be bitter and salt. This is
because the sweet and drinkable part of it
has been drawn away by the natural animal
heat and has passed into the flesh and the
other parts of the body according to their
several natures. Now just as here it would
be wrong for any one to refuse to call the
belly the place of liquid food because that
disappears from it soon, and to call it the
place of the residuum because this is seen
to remain, so in the case of our present
subject. This place, we say, is the place
of water. Hence all rivers and all the water
that is generated flow into it: for water
flows into the deepest place, and the deepest
part of the earth is filled by the sea. Only
all the light and sweet part of it is quickly
carried off by the sun, while herest remains
for the reason we have explained. It is quite
natural that some people should have been
puzzled by the old question why such a mass
of water leaves no trace anywhere (for the
sea does not increase though innumerable
and vast rivers are flowing into it every
day.) But if one considers the matter the
solution is easy. The same amount of water
does not take as long to dry up when it is
spread out as when it is gathered in a body,
and indeed the difference is so great that
in the one case it might persist the whole
day long while in the other it might all
disappear in a moment-as for instance if
one were to spread out a cup of water over
a large table. This is the case with the
rivers: all the time they are flowing their
water forms a compact mass, but when it arrives
at a vast wide place it quickly and imperceptibly
evaporates.
But the theory of the Phaedo about rivers
and the sea is impossible. There it is said
that the earth is pierced by intercommunicating
channels and that the original head and source
of all waters is what is called Tartarus-a
mass of water about the centre, from which
all waters, flowing and standing, are derived.
This primary and original water is always
surging to and fro, and so it causes the
rivers to flow on this side of the earth's
centre and on that; for it has no fixed seat
but is always oscillating about the centre.
Its motion up and down is what fills rivers.
Many of these form lakes in various places
(our sea is an instance of one of these),
but all of them come round again in a circle
to the original source of their flow, many
at the same point, but some at a point opposite
to that from which they issued; for instance,
if they started from the other side of the
earth's centre, they might return from this
side of it. They descend only as far as the
centre, for after that all motion is upwards.
Water gets its tastes and colours from the
kind of earth the rivers happened to flow
through.
But on this theory rivers do not always flow
in the same sense. For since they flow to
the centre from which they issue forth they
will not be flowing down any more than up,
but in whatever direction the surging of
Tartarus inclines to. But at this rate we
shall get the proverbial rivers flowing upwards,
which is impossible. Again, where is the
water that is generated and what goes up
again as vapour to come from? For this must
all of it simply be ignored, since the quantity
of water is always the same and all the water
that flows out from the original source flows
back to it again. This itself is not true,
since all rivers are seen to end in the sea
except where one flows into another. Not
one of them ends in the earth, but even when
one is swallowed up it comes to the surface
again. And those rivers are large which flow
for a long distance through a lowying country,
for by their situation and length they cut
off the course of many others and swallow
them up. This is why the Istrus and the Nile
are the greatest of the rivers which flow
into our sea. Indeed, so many rivers fall
into them that there is disagreement as to
the sources of them both. All of which is
plainly impossible on the theory, and the
more so as it derives the sea from Tartarus.
Enough has been said to prove that this is
the natural place of water and not of the
sea, and to explain why sweet water is only
found in rivers, while salt water is stationary,
and to show that the sea is the end rather
than the source of water, analogous to the
residual matter of all food, and especially
liquid food, in animal bodies.
Part 3
We must now explain why the sea is salt,
and ask whether it eternally exists as identically
the same body, or whether it did not exist
at all once and some day will exist no longer,
but will dry up as some people think.
Every one admits this, that if the whole
world originated the sea did too; for they
make them come into being at the same time.
It follows that if the universe is eternal
the same must be true of the sea. Any one
who thinks like Democritus that the sea is
diminishing and will disappear in the end
reminds us of Aesop's tales. His story was
that Charybdis had twice sucked in the sea:
the first time she made the mountains visible;
the second time the islands; and when she
sucks it in for the last time she will dry
it up entirely. Such a tale is appropriate
enough to Aesop in a rage with the ferryman,
but not to serious inquirers. Whatever made
the sea remain at first, whether it was its
weight, as some even of those who hold these
views say
(for it is easy to see the cause here), or
some other reason-clearly the same thing
must make it persist for ever. They must
either deny that the water raised by the
sun will return at all, or, if it does, they
must admit that the sea persists for ever
or as long as this process goes on, and again,
that for the same period of time that sweet
water must have been carried up beforehand.
So the sea will never dry up: for before
that can happen the water that has gone up
beforehand will return to it: for if you
say that this happens once you must admit
its recurrence. If you stop the sun's course
there is no drying agency. If you let it
go on it will draw up the sweet water as
we have said whenever it approaches, and
let it descend again when it recedes. This
notion about the sea is derived from the
fact that many places are found to be drier
now than they once were. Why this is so we
have explained. The phenomenon is due to
temporary excess of rain and not to any process
of becoming in which the universe or its
parts are involved. Some day the opposite
will take place and after that the earth
will grow dry once again. We must recognize
that this process always goes on thus in
a cycle, for that is more satisfactory than
to suppose a change in the whole world in
order to explain these facts. But we have
dwelt longer on this point than it deserves.
To return to the saltness of the sea: those
who create the sea once for all, or indeed
generate it at all, cannot account for its
saltness. It makes no difference whether
the sea is the residue of all the moisture
that is about the earth and has been drawn
up by the sun, or whether all the flavour
existing in the whole mass of sweet water
is due to the admixture of a certain kind
of earth. Since the total volume of the sea
is the same once the water that evaporated
has returned, it follows that it must either
have been salt at first too, or, if not at
first, then not now either. If it was salt
from the very beginning, then we want to
know why that was so; and why, if salt water
was drawn up then, that is not the case now.
Again, if it is maintained that an admixture
of earth makes the sea salt (for they say
that earth has many flavours and is washed
down by the rivers and so makes the sea salt
by its admixture), it is strange that rivers
should not be salt too. How can the admixture
of this earth have such a striking effect
in a great quantity of water and not in each
river singly? For the sea, differing in nothing
from rivers but in being salt, is evidently
simply the totality of river water, and the
rivers are the vehicle in which that earth
is carried to their common destination.
It is equally absurd to suppose that anything
has been explained by calling the sea 'the
sweat of the earth', like Empedicles. Metaphors
are poetical and so that expression of his
may satisfy the requirements of a poem, but
as a scientific theory it is unsatisfactory.
Even in the case of the body it is a question
how the sweet liquid drunk becomes salt sweat
whether it is merely by the departure of
some element in it which is sweetest, or
by the admixture of something, as when water
is strained through ashes. Actually the saltness
seems to be due to the same cause as in the
case of the residual liquid that gathers
in the bladder. That, too, becomes bitter
and salt though the liquid we drink and that
contained in our food is sweet. If then the
bitterness is due in these cases (as with
the water strained through lye) to the presence
of a certain sort of stuff that is carried
along by the urine (as indeed we actually
find a salt deposit settling in chamber-pots)
and is secreted from the flesh in sweat (as
if the departing moisture were washing the
stuff out of the body), then no doubt the
admixture of something earthy with the water
is what makes the sea salt.
Now in the body stuff of this kind, viz.
the sediment of food, is due to failure to
digest: but how there came to be any such
thing in the earth requires explanation.
Besides, how can the drying and warming of
the earth cause the secretion such a great
quantity of water; especially as that must
be a mere fragment of what is left in the
earth? Again, waiving the question of quantity,
why does not the earth sweat now when it
happens to be in process of drying? If it
did so then, it ought to do so now. But it
does not: on the contrary, when it is dry
it graws moist, but when it is moist it does
not secrete anything at all. How then was
it possible for the earth at the beginning
when it was moist to sweat as it grew dry?
Indeed, the theory that maintains that most
of the moisture departed and was drawn up
by the sun and that what was left over is
the sea is more reasonable; but for the earth
to sweat when it is moist is impossible.
Since all the attempts to account for the
saltness of the sea seem unsuccessful let
us explain it by the help of the principle
we have used already.
Since we recognize two kinds of evaporation,
one moist, the other dry, it is clear that
the latter must be recognized as the source
of phenomena like those we are concerned
with.
But there is a question which we must discuss
first. Does the sea always remain numerically
one and consisting of the same parts, or
is it, too, one in form and volume while
its parts are in continual change, like air
and sweet water and fire? All of these are
in a constant state of change, but the form
and the quantity of each of them are fixed,
just as they are in the case of a flowing
river or a burning flame. The answer is clear,
and there is no doubt that the same account
holds good of all these things alike. They
differ in that some of them change more rapidly
or more slowly than others; and they all
are involved in a process of perishing and
becoming which yet affects them all in a
regular course.
This being so we must go on to try to explain
why the sea is salt. There are many facts
which make it clear that this taste is due
to the admixture of something. First, in
animal bodies what is least digested, the
residue of liquid food, is salt and bitter,
as we said before. All animal excreta are
undigested, but especially that which gathers
in the bladder (its extreme lightness proves
this; for everything that is digested is
condensed), and also sweat; in these then
is excreted
(along with other matter) an identical substance
to which this flavour is due. The case of
things burnt is analogous. What heat fails
to assimilate becomes the excrementary residue
in animal bodies, and, in things burnt, ashes.
That is why some people say that it was burnt
earth that made the sea salt. To say that
it was burnt earth is absurd; but to say
that it was something like burnt earth is
true. We must suppose that just as in the
cases we have described, so in the world
as a whole, everything that grows and is
naturally generated always leaves an undigested
residue, like that of things burnt, consisting
of this sort of earth. All the earthy stuff
in the dry exhalation is of this nature,
and it is the dry exhalation which accounts
for its great quantity. Now since, as we
have said, the moist and the dry evaporations
are mixed, some quantity of this stuff must
always be included in the clouds and the
water that are formed by condensation, and
must redescend to the earth in rain. This
process must always go on with such regularity
as the sublunary world admits of. and it
is the answer to the question how the sea
comes to be salt.
It also explains why rain that comes from
the south, and the first rains of autumn,
are brackish. The south is the warmest of
winds and it blows from dry and hot regions.
Hence it carries little moist vapour and
that is why it is hot. (It makes no difference
even if this is not its true character and
it is originally a cold wind, for it becomes
warm on its way by incorporating with itself
a great quantity of dry evaporation from
the places it passes over.) The north wind,
on the other hand, comb ing from moist regions,
is full of vapour and therefore cold. It
is dry in our part of the world because it
drives the clouds away before it, but in
the south it is rainy; just as the south
is a dry wind in Libya. So the south wind
charges the rain that falls with a great
quantity of this stuff. Autumn rain is brackish
because the heaviest water must fall first;
so that that which contains the greatest
quantity of this kind of earth descends quickest.
This, too, is why the sea is warm. Everything
that has been exposed to fire contains heat
potentially, as we see in the case of lye
and ashes and the dry and liquid excreta
of animals. Indeed those animals which are
hottest in the belly have the hottest excreta.
The action of this cause is continually making
the sea more salt, but some part of its saltness
is always being drawn up with the sweet water.
This is less than the sweet water in the
same ratio in which the salt and brackish
element in rain is less than the sweet, and
so the saltness of the sea remains constant
on the whole. Salt water when it turns into
vapour becomes sweet, and the vapour does
not form salt water when it condenses again.
This I know by experiment. The same thing
is true in every case of the kind: wine and
all fluids that evaporate and condense back
into a liquid state become water. They all
are water modified by a certain admixture,
the nature of which determines their flavour.
But this subject must be considered on another
more suitable occasion.
For the present let us say this. The sea
is there and some of it is continually being
drawn up and becoming sweet; this returns
from above with the rain. But it is now different
from what it was when it was drawn up, and
its weight makes it sink below the sweet
water. This process prevents the sea, as
it does rivers, from drying up except from
local causes (this must happen to sea and
rivers alike). On the other hand the parts
neither of the earth nor of the sea remain
constant but only their whole bulk. For the
same thing is true of the earth as of the
sea: some of it is carried up and some comes
down with the rain, and both that which remains
on the surface and that which comes down
again change their situations.
There is more evidence to prove that saltness
is due to the admixture of some substance,
besides that which we have adduced. Make
a vessel of wax and put it in the sea, fastening
its mouth in such a way as to prevent any
water getting in. Then the water that percolates
through the wax sides of the vessel is sweet,
the earthy stuff, the admixture of which
makes the water salt, being separated off
as it were by a filter. It is this stuff
which make salt water heavy (it weighs more
than fresh water) and thick. The difference
in consistency is such that ships with the
same cargo very nearly sink in a river when
they are quite fit to navigate in the sea.
This circumstance has before now caused loss
to shippers freighting their ships in a river.
That the thicker consistency is due to an
admixture of something is proved by the fact
that if you make strong brine by the admixture
of salt, eggs, even when they are full, float
in it. It almost becomes like mud; such a
quantity of earthy matter is there in the
sea. The same thing is done in salting fish.
Again if, as is fabled, there is a lake in
Palestine, such that if you bind a man or
beast and throw it in it floats and does
not sink, this would bear out what we have
said. They say that this lake is so bitter
and salt that no fish live in it and that
if you soak clothes in it and shake them
it cleans them. The following facts all of
them support our theory that it is some earthy
stuff in the water which makes it salt. In
Chaonia there is a spring of brackish water
that flows into a neighbouring river which
is sweet but contains no fish. The local
story is that when Heracles came from Erytheia
driving the oxen and gave the inhabitants
the choice, they chose salt in preference
to fish. They get the salt from the spring.
They boil off some of the water and let the
rest stand; when it has cooled and the heat
and moisture have evaporated together it
gives them salt, not in lumps but loose and
light like snow. It is weaker than ordinary
salt and added freely gives a sweet taste,
and it is not as white as salt generally
is. Another instance of this is found in
Umbria. There is a place there where reeds
and rushes grow. They burn some of these,
put the ashes into water and boil it off.
When a little water is left and has cooled
it gives a quantity of salt.
Most salt rivers and springs must once have
been hot. Then the original fire in them
was extinguished but the earth through which
they percolate preserves the character of
lye or ashes. Springs and rivers with all
kinds of flavours are found in many places.
These flavours must in every case be due
to the fire that is or was in them, for if
you expose earth to different degrees of
heat it assumes various kinds and shades
of flavour. It becomes full of alum and lye
and other things of the kind, and the fresh
water percolates through these and changes
its character. Sometimes it becomes acid
as in Sicania, a part of Sicily. There they
get a salt and acid water which they use
as vinegar to season some of their dishes.
In the neighbourhood of Lyncus, too, there
is a spring of acid water, and in Scythia
a bitter spring. The water from this makes
the whole of the river into which it flows
bitter. These differences are explained by
a knowledge of the particular mixtures that
determine different savours. But these have
been explained in another treatise.
We have now given an account of waters and
the sea, why they persist, how they change,
what their nature is, and have explained
most of their natural operations and affections.
Part 4
Let us proceed to the theory of winds. Its
basis is a distinction we have already made.
We recognize two kinds of evaporation, one
moist, the other dry. The former is called
vapour: for the other there is no general
name but we must call it a sort of smoke,
applying to the whole of it a word that is
proper to one of its forms. The moist cannot
exist without the dry nor the dry without
the moist: whenever we speak of either we
mean that it predominates. Now when the sun
in its circular course approaches, it draws
up by its heat the moist evaporation: when
it recedes the cold makes the vapour that
had been raised condense back into water
which falls and is distributed through the
earth.
(This explains why there is more rain in
winter and more by night than by day: though
the fact is not recognized because rain by
night is more apt to escape observation than
by day.) But there is a great quantity of
fire and heat in the earth, and the sun not
only draws up the moisture that lies on the
surface of it, but warms and dries the earth
itself. Consequently, since there are two
kinds of evaporation, as we have said, one
like vapour, the other like smoke, both of
them are necessarily generated. That in which
moisture predominates is the source of rain,
as we explained before, while the dry evaporation
is the source and substance of all winds.
That things must necessarily take this course
is clear from the resulting phenomena themselves,
for the evaporation that is to produce them
must necessarily differ; and the sun and
the warmth in the earth not only can but
must produce these evaporations.
Since the two evaporations are specifically
distinct, wind and rain obviously differ
and their substance is not the same, as those
say who maintain that one and the same air
when in motion is wind, but when it condenses
again is water. Air, as we have explained
in an earlier book, is made up of these as
constituents. Vapour is moist and cold (for
its fluidity is due to its moistness, and
because it derives from water it is naturally
cold, like water that has not been warmed):
whereas the smoky evaporation is hot and
dry. Hence each contributes a part, and air
is moist and hot. It is absurd that this
air that surrounds us should become wind
when in motion, whatever be the source of
its motion on the contrary the case of winds
is like that of rivers. We do not call water
that flows anyhow a river, even if there
is a great quantity of it, but only if the
flow comes from a spring. So too with the
winds; a great quantity of air might be moved
by the fall of some large object without
flowing from any source or spring.
The facts bear out our theory. It is because
the evaporation takes place uninterruptedly
but differs in degree and quantity that clouds
and winds appear in their natural proportion
according to the season; and it is because
there is now a great excess of the vaporous,
now of the dry and smoky exhalation, that
some years are rainy and wet, others windy
and dry. Sometimes there is much drought
or rain, and it prevails over a great and
continuous stretch of country. At other times
it is local; the surrounding country often
getting seasonable or even excessive rains
while there is drought in a certain part;
or, contrariwise, all the surrounding country
gets little or even no rain while a certain
part gets rain in abundance. The reason for
all this is that while the same affection
is generally apt to prevail over a considerable
district because adjacent places (unless
there is something special to differentiate
them) stand in the same relation to the sun,
yet on occasion the dry evaporation will
prevail in one part and the moist in another,
or conversely. Again the reason for this
latter is that each evaporation goes over
to that of the neighbouring district: for
instance, the dry evaporation circulates
in its own place while the moist migrates
to the next district or is even driven by
winds to some distant place: or else the
moist evaporation remains and the dry moves
away. Just as in the case of the body when
the stomach is dry the lower belly is often
in the contrary state, and when it is dry
the stomach is moist and cold, so it often
happens that the evaporations reciprocally
take one another's place and interchange.
Further, after rain wind generally rises
in those places where the rain fell, and
when rain has come on the wind ceases. These
are necessary effects of the principles we
have explained. After rain the earth is being
dried by its own heat and that from above
and gives off the evaporation which we saw
to be the material cause of. wind. Again,
suppose this secretion is present and wind
prevails; the heat is continually being thrown
off, rising to the upper region, and so the
wind ceases; then the fall in temperature
makes vapour form and condense into water.
Water also forms and cools the dry evaporation
when the clouds are driven together and the
cold concentrated in them. These are the
causes that make wind cease on the advent
of rain, and rain fall on the cessation of
wind.
The cause of the predominance of winds from
the north and from the south is the same.
(Most winds, as a matter of fact, are north
winds or south winds.) These are the only
regions which the sun does not visit: it
approaches them and recedes from them, but
its course is always over the-west and the
east. Hence clouds collect on either side,
and when the sun approaches it provokes the
moist evaporation, and when it recedes to
the opposite side there are storms and rain.
So summer and winter are due to the sun's
motion to and from the solstices, and water
ascends and falls again for the same reason.
Now since most rain falls in those regions
towards which and from which the sun turns
and these are the north and the south, and
since most evaporation must take place where
there is the greatest rainfall, just as green
wood gives most smoke, and since this evaporation
is wind, it is natural that the most and
most important winds should come from these
quarters.
(The winds from the north are called Boreae,
those from the south Noti.)
The course of winds is oblique: for though
the evaporation rises straight up from the
earth, they blow round it because all the
surrounding air follows the motion of the
heavens. Hence the question might be asked
whether winds originate from above or from
below. The motion comes from above: before
we feel the wind blowing the air betrays
its presence if there are clouds or a mist,
for their motion shows that the wind has
begun to blow before it has actually reached
us; and this implies that the source of winds
is above. But since wind is defined as 'a
quantity of dry evaporation from the earth
moving round the earth', it is clear that
while the origin of the motion is from above,
the matter and the generation of wind come
from below. The oblique movement of the rising
evaporation is caused from above: for the
motion of the heavens determines the processes
that are at a distance from the earth, and
the motion from below is vertical and every
cause is more active where it is nearest
to the effect; but in its generation and
origin wind plainly derives from the earth.
The facts bear out the view that winds are
formed by the gradual union of many evaporations
just as rivers derive their sources from
the water that oozes from the earth. Every
wind is weakest in the spot from which it
blows; as they proceed and leave their source
at a distance they gather strength. Thus
the winter in the north is windless and calm:
that is, in the north itself; but, the breeze
that blows from there so gently as to escape
observation becomes a great wind as it passes
on.
We have explained the nature and origin of
wind, the occurrence of drought and rains,
the reason why rain stops wind and wind rises
after rain, the prevalence of north and south
winds and also why wind moves in the way
it does.
Part 5
The sun both checks the formation of winds
and stimulates it. When the evaporation is
small in amount and faint the sun wastes
it and dissipates by its greater heat the
lesser heat contained in the evaporation.
It also dries up the earth, the source of
the evaporation, before the latter has appeared
in bulk: just as, when you throw a little
fuel into a great fire, it is often burnt
up before giving off any smoke. In these
ways the sun checks winds and prevents them
from rising at all: it checks them by wasting
the evaporation, and prevents their rising
by drying up the earth quickly. Hence calm
is very apt to prevail about the rising of
Orion and lasts until the coming of the Etesiae
and their 'forerunners'.
Calm is due to two causes. Either cold quenches
the evaporation, for instance a sharp frost:
or excessive heat wastes it. In the intermediate
periods, too, the causes are generally either
that the evaporation has not had time to
develop or that it has passed away and there
is none as yet to replace it.
Both the setting and the rising of Orion
are considered to be treacherous and stormy,
because they place at a change of season
(namely of summer or winter; and because
the size of the constellation makes its rise
last over many days) and a state of change
is always indefinite and therefore liable
to disturbance.
The Etesiae blow after the summer solstice
and the rising of the dog-star: not at the
time when the sun is closest nor when it
is distant; and they blow by day and cease
at night. The reason is that when the sun
is near it dries up the earth before evaporation
has taken place, but when it has receded
a little its heat and the evaporation are
present in the right proportion; so the ice
melts and the earth, dried by its own heat
and that of the sun, smokes and vapours.
They abate at night because the cold pf the
nights checks the melting of the ice. What
is frozen gives off no evaporation, nor does
that which contains no dryness at all: it
is only where something dry contains moisture
that it gives off evaporation under the influence
of heat.
The question is sometimes asked: why do the
north winds which we call the Etesiae blow
continuously after the summer solstice, when
there are no corresponding south winds after
the winter solstice? The facts are reasonable
enough: for the so-called 'white south winds'
do blow at the corresponding season, though
they are not equally continuous and so escape
observation and give rise to this inquiry.
The reason for this is that the north wind
I from the arctic regions which are full
of water and snow. The sun thaws them and
so the Etesiae blow: after rather than at
the summer solstice. (For the greatest heat
is developed not when the sun is nearest
to the north, but when its heat has been
felt for a considerable period and it has
not yet receded far. The 'bird winds' blow
in the same way after the winter solstice.
They, too, are weak Etesiae, but they blow
less and later than the Etesiae. They begin
to blow only on the seventieth day because
the sun is distant and therefore weaker.
They do not blow so continuously because
only things on the surface of the earth and
offering little resistance evaporate then,
the thoroughly frozen parts requiring greater
heat to melt them. So they blow intermittently
till the true Etesiae come on again at the
summer solstice: for from that time onwards
the wind tends to blow continuously.) But
the south wind blows from the tropic of Cancer
and not from the antarctic region.
There are two inhabitable sections of the
earth: one near our upper, or nothern pole,
the other near the other or southern pole;
and their shape is like that of a tambourine.
If you draw lines from the centre of the
earth they cut out a drum-shaped figure.
The lines form two cones; the base of the
one is the tropic, of the other the ever
visible circle, their vertex is at the centre
of the earth. Two other cones towards the
south pole give corresponding segments of
the earth. These sections alone are habitable.
Beyond the tropics no one can live: for there
the shade would not fall to the north, whereas
the earth is known to be uninhabitable before
the sun is in the zenith or the shade is
thrown to the south: and the regions below
the Bear are uninhabitable because of the
cold.
(The Crown, too, moves over this region:
for it is in the zenith when it is on our
meridian.)
So we see that the way in which they now
describe the geography of the earth is ridiculous.
They depict the inhabited earth as round,
but both ascertained facts and general considerations
show this to be impossible. If we reflect
we see that the inhabited region is limited
in breadth, while the climate admits of its
extending all round the earth. For we meet
with no excessive heat or cold in the direction
of its length but only in that of its breadth;
so that there is nothing to prevent our travelling
round the earth unless the extent of the
sea presents an obstacle anywhere. The records
of journeys by sea and land bear this out.
They make the length far greater than the
breadth. If we compute these voyages and
journeys the distance from the Pillars of
Heracles to India exceeds that from Aethiopia
to Maeotis and the northernmost Scythians
by a ratio of more than 5 to 3, as far as
such matters admit of accurate statement.
Yet we know the whole breadth of the region
we dwell in up to the uninhabited parts:
in one direction no one lives because of
the cold, in the other because of the heat.
But it is the sea which divides as it seems
the parts beyond India from those beyond
the Pillars of Heracles and prevents the
earth from being inhabited all round.
Now since there must be a region bearing
the same relation to the southern pole as
the place we live in bears to our pole, it
will clearly correspond in the ordering of
its winds as well as in other things. So
just as we have a north wind here, they must
have a corresponding wind from the antarctic.
This wind cannot reach us since our own north
wind is like a land breeze and does not even
reach the limits of the region we live in.
The prevalence of north winds here is due
to our lying near the north. Yet even here
they give out and fail to penetrate far:
in the southern sea beyond Libya east and
west winds are always blowing alternately,
like north and south winds with us. So it
is clear that the south wind is not the wind
that blows from the south pole. It is neither
that nor the wind from the winter tropic.
For symmetry would require another wind blowing
from the summer tropic, which there is not,
since we know that only one wind blows from
that quarter. So the south wind clearly blows
from the torrid region. Now the sun is so
near to that region that it has no water,
or snow which might melt and cause Etesiae.
But because that place is far more extensive
and open the south wind is greater and stronger
and warmer than the north and penetrates
farther to the north than the north wind
does to the south.
The origin of these winds and their relation
to one another has now been explained.
Part 6
Let us now explain the position of the winds,
their oppositions, which can blow simultaneously
with which, and which cannot, their names
and number, and any other of their affections
that have not been treated in the 'particular
questions'. What we say about their position
must be followed with the help of the figure.
For clearness' sake we have drawn the circle
of the horizon, which is round, but it represents
the zone in which we live; for that can be
divided in the same way. Let us also begin
by laying down that those things are locally
contrary which are locally most distant from
one another, just as things specifically
most remote from one another are specific
contraries. Now things that face one another
from opposite ends of a diameter are locally
most distant from one another. (See diagram.)
Let A be the point where the sun sets at
the equinox and B, the point opposite, the
place where it rises at the equinox. Let
there be another diameter cutting this at
right angles, and let the point H on it be
the north and its diametrical opposite O
the south. Let Z be the rising of the sun
at the summer solstice and E its setting
at the summer solstice; D its rising at the
winter solstice, and G its setting at the
winter solstice. Draw a diameter from Z to
G from D to E. Then since those things are
locally contrary which are most distant from
one another in space, and points diametrically
opposite are most distant from one another,
those winds must necessarily be contrary
to one another that blow from opposite ends
of a diameter.
The names of the winds according to their
position are these. Zephyrus is the wind
that blows from A, this being the point where
the sun sets at the equinox. Its contrary
is Apeliotes blowing from B the point where
the sun rises at the equinox. The wind blowing
from H, the north, is the true north wind,
called Aparctias: while Notus blowing from
O is its contrary; for this point is the
south and O is contrary to H, being diametrically
opposite to it. Caecias blows from Z, where
the sun rises at the summer solstice. Its
contrary is not the wind blowing from E but
Lips blowing from G. For Lips blows from
the point where the sun sets at the winter
solstice and is diametrically opposite to
Caecias: so it is its contrary. Eurus blows
from D, coming from the point where the sun
rises at the winter solstice. It borders
on Notus, and so we often find that people
speak of 'Euro-Noti'. Its contrary is not
Lips blowing from G but the wind that blows
from E which some call Argestes, some Olympias,
and some Sciron. This blows from the point
where the sun sets at the summer solstice,
and is the only wind that is diametrically
opposite to Eurus. These are the winds that
are diametrically opposite to one another
and their contraries.
There are other winds which have no contraries.
The wind they call Thrascias, which lies
between Argestes and Aparctias, blows from
I; and the wind called Meses, which lies
between Caecias and Aparctias, from K. (The
line IK nearly coincides with the ever visible
circle, but not quite.) These winds have
no contraries. Meses has not, or else there
would be a wind blowing from the point M
which is diametrically opposite. Thrascias
corresponding to the point I has not, for
then there would be a wind blowing from N,
the point which is diametrically opposite.
(But perhaps a local wind which the inhabitants
of those parts call Phoenicias blows from
that point.)
These are the most important and definite
winds and these their places.
There are more winds from the north than
from the south. The reason for this is that
the region in which we live lies nearer to
the north. Also, much more water and snow
is pushed aside into this quarter because
the other lies under the sun and its course.
When this thaws and soaks into the earth
and is exposed to the heat of the sun and
the earth it necessarily causes evaporation
to rise in greater quantities and over a
greater space.
Of the winds we have described Aparctias
is the north wind in the strict sense. Thrascias
and Meses are north winds too. (Caecias is
half north and half east.) South are that
which blows from due south and Lips. East,
the wind from the rising of the sun at the
equinox and Eurus. Phoenicias is half south
and half east. West, the wind from the true
west and that called Argestes. More generally
these winds are classified as northerly or
southerly. The west winds are counted as
northerly, for they blow from the place of
sunset and are therefore colder; the east
winds as southerly, for they are warmer because
they blow from the place of sunrise. So the
distinction of cold and hot or warm is the
basis for the division of the winds into
northerly and southerly. East winds are warmer
than west winds because the sun shines on
the east longer, whereas it leaves the west
sooner and reaches it later.
Since this is the distribution of the winds
it is clear that contrary winds cannot blow
simultaneously. They are diametrically opposite
to one another and one of the two must be
overpowered and cease. Winds that are not
diametrically opposite to one another may
blow simultaneously: for instance the winds
from Z and from D. Hence it sometimes happens
that both of them, though different winds
and blowing from different quarters, are
favourable to sailors making for the same
point.
Contrary winds commonly blow at opposite
seasons. Thus Caecias and in general the
winds north of the summer solstice blow about
the time of the spring equinox, but about
the autumn equinox Lips; and Zephyrus about
the summer solstice, but about the winter
solstice Eurus.
Aparctias, Thrascias, and Argestes are the
winds that fall on others most and stop them.
Their source is so close to us that they
are greater and stronger than other winds.
They bring fair weather most of all winds
for the same reason, for, blowing as they
do, from close at hand, they overpower the
other winds and stop them; they also blow
away the clouds that are forming and leave
a clear sky-unless they happen to be very
cold. Then they do not bring fair weather,
but being colder than they are strong they
condense the clouds before driving them away.
Caecias does not bring fair weather because
it returns upon itself. Hence the saying:
'Bringing it on himself as Caecias does clouds.'
When they cease, winds are succeeded by their
neighbours in the direction of the movement
of the sun. For an effect is most apt to
be produced in the neighbourhood of its cause,
and the cause of winds moves with the sun.
Contrary winds have either the same or contrary
effects. Thus Lips and Caecias, sometimes
called Hellespontias, are both rainy gestes
and Eurus are dry: the latter being dry at
first and rainy afterwards. Meses and Aparctias
are coldest and bring most snow. Aparctias,
Thrascias, and Argestes bring hail. Notus,
Zephyrus, and Eurus are hot. Caecias covers
the sky with heavy clouds, Lips with lighter
ones. Caecias does this because it returns
upon itself and combines the qualities of
Boreas and Eurus. By being cold it condenses
and gathers the vaporous air, and because
it is easterly it carries with it and drives
before it a great quantity of such matter.
Aparctias, Thrascias, and Argestes bring
fair weather for the reason we have explained
before. These winds and Meses are most commonly
accompanied by lightning. They are cold because
they blow from the north, and lightning is
due to cold, being ejected when the clouds
contract. Some of these same bring hail with
them for the same reason; namely, that they
cause a sudden condensation.
Hurricanes are commonest in autumn, and next
in spring: Aparctias, Thrascias, and Argestes
give rise to them most. This is because hurricanes
are generally formed when some winds are
blowing and others fall on them; and these
are the winds which are most apt to fall
on others that are blowing; the reason for
which, too, we have explained before.
The Etesiae veer round: they begin from the
north, and become for dwellers in the west
Thrasciae, Argestae, and Zephyrus (for Zephyrus
belongs to the north). For dwellers in the
east they veer round as far as Apeliotes.
So much for the winds, their origin and nature
and the properties common to them all or
peculiar to each.
Part 7
We must go on to discuss earthquakes next,
for their cause is akin to our last subject.
The theories that have been put forward up
to the present date are three, and their
authors three men, Anaxagoras of Clazomenae,
and before him Anaximenes of Miletus, and
later Democritus of Abdera.
Anaxagoras says that the ether, which naturally
moves upwards, is caught in hollows below
the earth and so shakes it, for though the
earth is really all of it equally porous,
its surface is clogged up by rain. This implies
that part of the whole sphere is 'above'
and part 'below': 'above' being the part
on which we live, 'below' the other.
This theory is perhaps too primitive to require
refutation. It is absurd to think of up and
down otherwise than as meaning that heavy
bodies move to the earth from every quarter,
and light ones, such as fire, away from it;
especially as we see that, as far as our
knowledge of the earth goes, the horizon
always changes with a change in our position,
which proves that the earth is convex and
spherical. It is absurd, too, to maintain
that the earth rests on the air because of
its size, and then to say that impact upwards
from below shakes it right through. Besides
he gives no account of the circumstances
attendant on earthquakes: for not every country
or every season is subject to them.
Democritus says that the earth is full of
water and that when a quantity of rain-water
is added to this an earthquake is the result.
The hollows in the earth being unable to
admit the excess of water it forces its way
in and so causes an earthquake. Or again,
the earth as it dries draws the water from
the fuller to the emptier parts, and the
inrush of the water as it changes its place
causes the earthquake.
Anaximenes says that the earth breaks up
when it grows wet or dry, and earthquakes
are due to the fall of these masses as they
break away. Hence earthquakes take place
in times of drought and again of heavy rain,
since, as we have explained, the earth grows
dry in time of drought and breaks up, whereas
the rain makes it sodden and destroys its
cohesion.
But if this were the case the earth ought
to be found to be sinking in many places.
Again, why do earthquakes frequently occur
in places which are not excessively subject
to drought or rain, as they ought to be on
the theory? Besides, on this view, earthquakes
ought always to be getting fewer, and should
come to an end entirely some day: the notion
of contraction by packing together implies
this. So this is impossible the theory must
be impossible too.
Part 8
We have already shown that wet and dry must
both give rise to an evaporation: earthquakes
are a necessary consequence of this fact.
The earth is essentially dry, but rain fills
it with moisture. Then the sun and its own
fire warm it and give rise to a quantity
of wind both outside and inside it. This
wind sometimes flows outwards in a single
body, sometimes inwards, and sometimes it
is divided. All these are necessary laws.
Next we must find out what body has the greatest
motive force. This will certainly be the
body that naturally moves farthest and is
most violent. Now that which has the most
rapid motion is necessarily the most violent;
for its swiftness gives its impact the greatest
force. Again, the rarest body, that which
can most readily pass through every other
body, is that which naturally moves farthest.
Wind satisfies these conditions in the highest
degree (fire only becomes flame and moves
rapidly when wind accompanies it): so that
not water nor earth is the cause of earthquakes
but wind-that is, the inrush of the external
evaporation into the earth.
Hence, since the evaporation generally follows
in a continuous body in the direction in
which it first started, and either all of
it flows inwards or all outwards, most earthquakes
and the greatest are accompanied by calm.
It is true that some take place when a wind
is blowing, but this presents no difficulty.
We sometimes find several winds blowing simultaneously.
If one of these enters the earth we get an
earthquake attended by wind. Only these earthquakes
are less severe because their source and
cause is divided.
Again, most earthquakes and the severest
occur at night or, if by day, about noon,
that being generally the calmest part of
the day. For when the sun exerts its full
power (as it does about noon) it shuts the
evaporation into the earth. Night, too, is
calmer than day. The absence of the sun makes
the evaporation return into the earth like
a sort of ebb tide, corresponding to the
outward flow; especially towards dawn, for
the winds, as a rule, begin to blow then,
and if their source changes about like the
Euripus and flows inwards the quantity of
wind in the earth is greater and a more violent
earthquake results.
The severest earthquakes take place where
the sea is full of currents or the earth
spongy and cavernous: so they occur near
the Hellespont and in Achaea and Sicily,
and those parts of Euboea which correspond
to our description-where the sea is supposed
to flow in channels below the earth. The
hot springs, too, near Aedepsus are due to
a cause of this kind. It is the confined
character of these places that makes them
so liable to earthquakes. A great and therefore
violent wind is developed, which would naturally
blow away from the earth: but the onrush
of the sea in a great mass thrusts it back
into the earth. The countries that are spongy
below the surface are exposed to earthquakes
because they have room for so much wind.
For the same reason earthquakes usually take
place in spring and autumn and in times of
wet and of drought-because these are the
windiest seasons. Summer with its heat and
winter with its frost cause calm: winter
is too cold, summer too dry for winds to
form. In time of drought the air is full
of wind; drought is just the predominance
of the dry over the moist evaporation. Again,
excessive rain causes more of the evaporation
to form in the earth. Then this secretion
is shut up in a narrow compass and forced
into a smaller space by the water that fills
the cavities. Thus a great wind is compressed
into a smaller space and so gets the upper
hand, and then breaks out and beats against
the earth and shakes it violently.
We must suppose the action of the wind in
the earth to be analogous to the tremors
and throbbings caused in us by the force
of the wind contained in our bodies. Thus
some earthquakes are a sort of tremor, others
a sort of throbbing. Again, we must think
of an earthquake as something like the tremor
that often runs through the body after passing
water as the wind returns inwards from without
in one volume.
The force wind can have may be gathered not
only from what happens in the air (where
one might suppose that it owed its power
to produce such effects to its volume), but
also from what is observed in animal bodies.
Tetanus and spasms are motions of wind, and
their force is such that the united efforts
of many men do not succeed in overcoming
the movements of the patients. We must suppose,
then (to compare great things with small),
that what happens in the earth is just like
that. Our theory has been verified by actual
observation in many places. It has been known
to happen that an earthquake has continued
until the wind that caused it burst through
the earth into the air and appeared visibly
like a hurricane. This happened lately near
Heracleia in Pontus and some time past at
the island Hiera, one of the group called
the Aeolian islands. Here a portion of the
earth swelled up and a lump like a mound
rose with a noise: finally it burst, and
a great wind came out of it and threw up
live cinders and ashes which buried the neighbouring
town of Lipara and reached some of the towns
in Italy. The spot where this eruption occurred
is still to be seen.
Indeed, this must be recognized as the cause
of the fire that is generated in the earth:
the air is first broken up in small particles
and then the wind is beaten about and so
catches fire.
A phenomenon in these islands affords further
evidence of the fact that winds move below
the surface of the earth. When a south wind
is going to blow there is a premonitory indication:
a sound is heard in the places from which
the eruptions issue. This is because the
sea is being pushed on from a distance and
its advance thrusts back into the earth the
wind that was issuing from it. The reason
why there is a noise and no earthquake is
that the underground spaces are so extensive
in proportion to the quantity of the air
that is being driven on that the wind slips
away into the void beyond.
Again, our theory is supported by the facts
that the sun appears hazy and is darkened
in the absence of clouds, and that there
is sometimes calm and sharp frost before
earthquakes at sunrise. The sun is necessarily
obscured and darkened when the evaporation
which dissolves and rarefies the air begins
to withdraw into the earth. The calm, too,
and the cold towards sunrise and dawn follow
from the theory. The calm we have already
explained. There must as a rule be calm because
the wind flows back into the earth: again,
it must be most marked before the more violent
earthquakes, for when the wind is not part
outside earth, part inside, but moves in
a single body, its strength must be greater.
The cold comes because the evaporation which
is naturally and essentially hot enters the
earth. (Wind is not recognized to be hot,
because it sets the air in motion, and that
is full of a quantity of cold vapour. It
is the same with the breath we blow from
our mouth: close by it is warm, as it is
when we breathe out through the mouth, but
there is so little of it that it is scarcely
noticed, whereas at a distance it is cold
for the same reason as wind.) Well, when
this evaporation disappears into the earth
the vaporous exhalation concentrates and
causes cold in any place in which this disappearance
occurs.
A sign which sometimes precedes earthquakes
can be explained in the same way. Either
by day or a little after sunset, in fine
weather, a little, light, long-drawn cloud
is seen, like a long very straight line.
This is because the wind is leaving the air
and dying down. Something analogous to this
happens on the sea-shore. When the sea breaks
in great waves the marks left on the sand
are very thick and crooked, but when the
sea is calm they are slight and straight
(because the secretion is small). As the
sea is to the shore so the wind is to the
cloudy air; so, when the wind drops, this
very straight and thin cloud is left, a sort
of wave-mark in the air.
An earthquake sometimes coincides with an
eclipse of the moon for the same reason.
When the earth is on the point of being interposed,
but the light and heat of the sun has not
quite vanished from the air but is dying
away, the wind which causes the earthquake
before the eclipse, turns off into the earth,
and calm ensues. For there often are winds
before eclipses: at nightfall if the eclipse
is at midnight, and at midnight if the eclipse
is at dawn. They are caused by the lessening
of the warmth from the moon when its sphere
approaches the point at which the eclipse
is going to take place. So the influence
which restrained and quieted the air weakens
and the air moves again and a wind rises,
and does so later, the later the eclipse.
A severe earthquake does not stop at once
or after a single shock, but first the shocks
go on, often for about forty days; after
that, for one or even two years it gives
premonitory indications in the same place.
The severity of the earthquake is determined
by the quantity of wind and the shape of
the passages through which it flows. Where
it is beaten back and cannot easily find
its way out the shocks are most violent,
and there it must remain in a cramped space
like water that cannot escape. Any throbbing
in the body does not cease suddenly or quickly,
but by degrees according as the affection
passes off. So here the agency which created
the evaporation and gave it an impulse to
motion clearly does not at once exhaust the
whole of the material from which it forms
the wind which we call an earthquake. So
until the rest of this is exhausted the shocks
must continue, though more gently, and they
must go on until there is too little of the
evaporation left to have any perceptible
effect on the earth at all.
Subterranean noises, too, are due to the
wind; sometimes they portend earthquakes
but sometimes they have been heard without
any earthquake following. Just as the air
gives off various sounds when it is struck,
so it does when it strikes other things;
for striking involves being struck and so
the two cases are the same. The sound precedes
the shock because sound is thinner and passes
through things more readily than wind. But
when the wind is too weak by reason of thinness
to cause an earthquake the absence of a shock
is due to its filtering through readily,
though by striking hard and hollow masses
of different shapes it makes various noises,
so that the earth sometimes seems to 'bellow'
as the portentmongers say.
Water has been known to burst out during
an earthquake. But that does not make water
the cause of the earthquake. The wind is
the efficient cause whether it drives the
water along the surface or up from below:
just as winds are the causes of waves and
not waves of winds. Else we might as well
say that earth was the cause; for it is upset
in an earthquake, just like water (for effusion
is a form of upsetting). No, earth and water
are material causes (being patients, not
agents): the true cause is the wind.
The combination of a tidal wave with an earthquake
is due to the presence of contrary winds.
It occurs when the wind which is shaking
the earth does not entirely succeed in driving
off the sea which another wind is bringing
on, but pushes it back and heaps it up in
a great mass in one place. Given this situation
it follows that when this wind gives way
the whole body of the sea, driven on by the
other wind, will burst out and overwhelm
the land. This is what happened in Achaea.
There a south wind was blowing, but outside
a north wind; then there was a calm and the
wind entered the earth, and then the tidal
wave came on and simultaneously there was
an earthquake. This was the more violent
as the sea allowed no exit to the wind that
had entered the earth, but shut it in. So
in their struggle with one another the wind
caused the earthquake, and the wave by its
settling down the inundation.
Earthquakes are local and often affect a
small district only; whereas winds are not
local. Such phenomena are local when the
evaporations at a given place are joined
by those from the next and unite; this, as
we explained, is what happens when there
is drought or excessive rain locally. Now
earthquakes do come about in this way but
winds do not. For earthquakes, rains, and
droughts have their source and origin inside
the earth, so that the sun is not equally
able to direct all the evaporations in one
direction. But on the evaporations in the
air the sun has more influence so that, when
once they have been given an impulse by its
motion, which is determined by its various
positions, they flow in one direction.
When the wind is present in sufficient quantity
there is an earthquake. The shocks are horizontal
like a tremor; except occasionally, in a
few places, where they act vertically, upwards
from below, like a throbbing. It is the vertical
direction which makes this kind of earthquake
so rare. The motive force does not easily
accumulate in great quantity in the position
required, since the surface of the earth
secretes far more of the evaporation than
its depths. Wherever an earthquake of this
kind does occur a quantity of stones comes
to the surface of the earth (as when you
throw up things in a winnowing fan), as we
see from Sipylus and the Phlegraean plain
and the district in Liguria, which were devastated
by this kind of earthquake.
Islands in the middle of the sea are less
exposed to earthquakes than those near land.
First, the volume of the sea cools the evaporations
and overpowers them by its weight and so
crushes them. Then, currents and not shocks
are produced in the sea by the action of
the winds. Again, it is so extensive that
evaporations do not collect in it but issue
from it, and these draw the evaporations
from the earth after them. Islands near the
continent really form part of it: the intervening
sea is not enough to make any difference;
but those in the open sea can only be shaken
if the whole of the sea that surrounds them
is shaken too.
We have now explained earthquakes, their
nature and cause, and the most important
of the circumstances attendant on their appearance.
Part 9
Let us go on to explain lightning and thunder,
and further whirlwind, fire-wind, and thunderbolts:
for the cause of them all is the same.
As we have said, there are two kinds of exhalation,
moist and dry, and the atmosphere contains
them both potentially. It, as we have said
before, condenses into cloud, and the density
of the clouds is highest at their upper limit.
(For they must be denser and colder on the
side where the heat escapes to the upper
region and leaves them. This explains why
hurricanes and thunderbolts and all analogous
phenomena move downwards in spite of the
fact that everything hot has a natural tendency
upwards. Just as the pips that we squeeze
between our fingers are heavy but often jump
upwards: so these things are necessarily
squeezed out away from the densest part of
the cloud.) Now the heat that escapes disperses
to the up region. But if any of the dry exhalation
is caught in the process as the air cools,
it is squeezed out as the clouds contract,
and collides in its rapid course with the
neighbouring clouds, and the sound of this
collision is what we call thunder. This collision
is analogous, to compare small with great,
to the sound we hear in a flame which men
call the laughter or the threat of Hephaestus
or of Hestia. This occurs when the wood dries
and cracks and the exhalation rushes on the
flame in a body. So in the clouds, the exhalation
is projected and its impact on dense clouds
causes thunder: the variety of the sound
is due to the irregularity of the clouds
and the hollows that intervene where their
density is interrupted. This then, is thunder,
and this its cause.
It usually happens that the exhalation that
is ejected is inflamed and burns with a thin
and faint fire: this is what we call lightning,
where we see as it were the exhalation coloured
in the act of its ejection. It comes into
existence after the collision and the thunder,
though we see it earlier because sight is
quicker than hearing. The rowing of triremes
illustrates this: the oars are going back
again before the sound of their striking
the water reaches us.
However, there are some who maintain that
there is actually fire in the clouds. Empedocles
says that it consists of some of the sun's
rays which are intercepted: Anaxagoras that
it is part of the upper ether (which he calls
fire) which has descended from above. Lightning,
then, is the gleam of this fire, and thunder
the hissing noise of its extinction in the
cloud.
But this involves the view that lightning
actually is prior to thunder and does not
merely appear to be so. Again, this intercepting
of the fire is impossible on either theory,
but especially it is said to be drawn down
from the upper ether. Some reason ought to
be given why that which naturally ascends
should descend, and why it should not always
do so, but only when it is cloudy. When the
sky is clear there is no lightning: to say
that there is, is altogether wanton.
The view that the heat of the sun's rays
intercepted in the clouds is the cause of
these phenomena is equally unattractive:
this, too, is a most careless explanation.
Thunder, lightning, and the rest must have
a separate and determinate cause assigned
to them on which they ensue. But this theory
does nothing of the sort. It is like supposing
that water, snow, and hail existed all along
and were produced when the time came and
not generated at all, as if the atmosphere
brought each to hand out of its stock from
time to time. They are concretions in the
same way as thunder and lightning are discretions,
so that if it is true of either that they
are not generated but pre-exist, the same
must be true of the other. Again, how can
any distinction be made about the intercepting
between this case and that of interception
in denser substances such as water? Water,
too, is heated by the sun and by fire: yet
when it contracts again and grows cold and
freezes no such ejection as they describe
occurs, though it ought on their the. to
take place on a proportionate scale. Boiling
is due to the exhalation generated by fire:
but it is impossible for it to exist in the
water beforehand; and besides they call the
noise 'hissing', not 'boiling'. But hissing
is really boiling on a small scale: for when
that which is brought into contact with moisture
and is in process of being extinguished gets
the better of it, then it boils and makes
the noise in question. Some-Cleidemus is
one of them-say that lightning is nothing
objective but merely an appearance. They
compare it to what happens when you strike
the sea with a rod by night and the water
is seen to shine. They say that the moisture
in the cloud is beaten about in the same
way, and that lightning is the appearance
of brightness that ensues.
This theory is due to ignorance of the theory
of reflection, which is the real cause of
that phenomenon. The water appears to shine
when struck because our sight is reflected
from it to some bright object: hence the
phenomenon occurs mainly by night: the appearance
is not seen by day because the daylight is
too in, tense and obscures it.
These are the theories of others about thunder
and lightning: some maintaining that lightning
is a reflection, the others that lightning
is fire shining through the cloud and thunder
its extinction, the fire not being generated
in each case but existing beforehand. We
say that the same stuff is wind on the earth,
and earthquake under it, and in the clouds
thunder. The essential constituent of all
these phenomena is the same: namely, the
dry exhalation. If it flows in one direction
it is wind, in another it causes earthquakes;
in the clouds, when they are in a process
of change and contract and condense into
water, it is ejected and causes thunder and
lightning and the other phenomena of the
same nature.
So much for thunder and lightning.
END OF BOOK TWO OF ARISTOTLE ON
METEOROLOGY |