Last June SeattleBackPackersMagazine posted a short article
on tracking barometric pressure with a GPS; barometric
pressure. Recently my son reminded
me of a little known theorem that helps the hiker’s situational awareness. This theorem is called Buys-Ballot’s Law.
In 1857 Dutch professor
Christopher Buys Ballot postulated that there was a relationship between wind
direction and air pressure. Buys-Ballot’s law provides a rough approximation of
the location and direction of the low pressure system as it tracks through a
region.
Simply put in the northern hemisphere, if one faces the
wind, the center of a low pressure system will be to the right and slightly
behind the observer. High pressure will
be to the left and slightly ahead of the observer. Further, weather systems in the northern
hemisphere track from west to east.
Importantly for the hiker, a low pressure system is
associated with rain, snow and bad weather in general. A high pressure system is associated with
improving weather conditions.
So, if the hiker determines that high pressure is to the
west of the present location, and because the system will move from west to
east, the weather may be improving.
The YouTube video by meteorologist Vince Condella presents
this nicely; video.
Buys-Ballots Law coupled
with a GPS are both useful tools to improve the hiker’s ability to monitor and
anticipate the weather in the backcountry.
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