Abstract
WHEN I was studying the subject of dew-ponds, I made many hundreds of experiments on dew, and these went to show that under suitable conditions there may be upward dew or downward dew. In his “Essay on Dew”, 1814, republished in 1866, Wells stated that dew was formed from moisture already existing in the air and was deposited on the tops of good radiators. Blythe, however, said in 1836, in his edition of “Selborne”, that “the true theory of dew is that it rises from the ground and does not fall, as is the common opinion”.
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MARTIN, E. Dew: Does it Rise or Fall?. Nature 124, 513 (1929). https://doi.org/10.1038/124513a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/124513a0
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