Sep 1929
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1929natur.124..481r&link_type=abstract
Nature, Volume 124, Issue 3126, pp. 481 (1929).
Other
Scientific paper
DURING spring and summer Bengal is ocasionally visited by a type of severe thunderstorms locally known as the Kal-Baisakhi, or the `fateful thing' of the month of Baisakh (April 15-May 15). These storms usually approach a station from the northwest and burst suddenly with great fury. The path of a nor'wester may vary in width from a few hundred feet to a mile, and the distance overrun seldom exceeds 50 miles. These storms are more frequent in the late afternoon, although they are known to occur also at other times of the day. A nor'wester is always associated with a thunder-shower, and the precursory signs of its approach are the same as those which herald the coming of a violent thunderstorm.
Chatterji G.
Roy S. C.
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