Designed for non-majors. This text conveys meteorological concepts in a visual and practical manner while at the same time providing students with comprehensive background in basic meteorology. The most current topics in weather are covered, including the flood of 1993, Hurricane Iniki, Hurricane Hugo, ozone depletion, the Greenhouse Effect, the latest in forecasting technology and an entirely new chapter on air pollution (Ch. 17). A 4-color cloud chart is provided at the end of the text.
Best book on meteorology ever! For a college level course, it's quite intuitive. I don't know what I would do at the meteorology event at science Olympiad without it. The section on humidity. I would have read it even if I weren't in Scioly. I recommend it to everyone who wants to know what's going on around them, or be able to look up at the sky and know what weather is coming WITHOUT tuning into the weather channel.
This is a very accessible and readable text that explains the fundamentals of atmospheric science. I read it cover to cover my quarter in grad school. Very helpful--and interesting, too.
Very much deep into the science of air covering earth surface that is fair enough for amateur stargazers. I started stargazing lately, and I thought it is much holistic to understand the atmosphere since my eye is on the sky and light interaction with atmosphere produces many tricky things. Now, I look to the stars, planets and the sun with different perspective as I understand what is perceived with my eyes is almost an illusion and not as it looks!
Fairly standard textbook. It covers the basics, is well organized, and contains compelling media to help students learn. If you're looking for an introductory text to Meteorology this is about as good as any.
This was a great book. I used it to homeschool my daughter in natural science. It implored easy to understand language and yet imparted a lot of information.
Good, clear, through introduction to meteorology, with a couple exceptions. Chapter 4 covers atmospheric visuals (refraction, mirages, sun dogs, etc.) and chapter 17 covers air pollution; in both cases, the author fails to explain what either topic has to do with meteorology or weather forecasting. Chapter 19 also has a section on "global warming".