ABSTRACT
The Patterns of the weather have long
been important to people, especially farmers, whose crops, animal and
livelihoods depends upon the weather. In the days of sailing ships, being able
to predict the weather could be the difference between a speeds voyage to a
distance land or shipwreck in a storm. So farmers and sailors were among the
first to forecast the weather by observing its patterns though weather
sate11tes now provide much of the information on which forecasts are based, weather
stations still supply important data especially at a local level. A typical
weather station might include a barometer to measure air pressure, a
maximum/minimum to record the highest and lowest temperature, an anemometer and
wind vary to measure wind speed and direction, a rainguage to measure the
amount of rainfall, a hydrometer to measure the humidity of the atmosphere.
EZEOCHA, O (2021). Time Series Analysis Of Sunshine Case Study National Root Crops Research Institute . Repository.mouau.edu.ng: Retrieved Nov 23, 2024, from https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/time-series-analysis-of-sunshine-case-study-national-root-crops-research-institute-7-2
O., EZEOCHA. "Time Series Analysis Of Sunshine Case Study National Root Crops Research Institute " Repository.mouau.edu.ng. Repository.mouau.edu.ng, 26 Jul. 2021, https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/time-series-analysis-of-sunshine-case-study-national-root-crops-research-institute-7-2. Accessed 23 Nov. 2024.
O., EZEOCHA. "Time Series Analysis Of Sunshine Case Study National Root Crops Research Institute ". Repository.mouau.edu.ng, Repository.mouau.edu.ng, 26 Jul. 2021. Web. 23 Nov. 2024. < https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/time-series-analysis-of-sunshine-case-study-national-root-crops-research-institute-7-2 >.
O., EZEOCHA. "Time Series Analysis Of Sunshine Case Study National Root Crops Research Institute " Repository.mouau.edu.ng (2021). Accessed 23 Nov. 2024. https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/time-series-analysis-of-sunshine-case-study-national-root-crops-research-institute-7-2