Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - The first set of meteorological stamps in China was issued on August 25th, 1958.

The first set of meteorological stamps in China was issued on August 25th, 1958.

? 1958 The "Meteorology" special stamp issued on August 25th is the first set of meteorological stamps in New China, with a full set of 3 stamps.

The first set of Xuan paper stamps issued by China Post is a small version of China Ancient Calligraphy-Running Script, which was issued on 20 10.

6 stamps * * *, including 2 stamps of Preface to Lanting by Wang Xizhi, 2 stamps of Sacrificing My Nephew by Yan Zhenqing and 2 stamps of Huangzhou Cold Food Post by Su Shi, with face value of 1.2 yuan. It is another set of calligraphy stamps issued by the State Post Bureau after the issuance of seal script, official script and regular script stamps.

This stamp adopts Xuan paper as the printing material for the first time in printing technology and paper quality, which breaks through the traditional printing paper and is the first Xuan paper stamp in the world. Because each promotional paper is handmade, the density and thickness are different, and each set of stamps is different, so each set of stamps is unique.

Stamp Xuan paper also adopts fluorescent anti-counterfeiting technology with domestic invention patents, which makes Xuan paper stamps have strong anti-counterfeiting function and visual effect, and realizes that traditional Xuan paper technology meets the technical requirements of modern mass production and printing. The printing of Xuan paper stamps takes modern industrial printing technology and traditional Xuan paper technology as the media, so that the ancient painting and calligraphy art can be displayed in inches.

1 Paleometeorological Instrument introduces the ancient wind measuring instrument in China-Xiangfeng Wu Tong, which was invented by Zhang Heng, a scientist in the Eastern Han Dynasty. Whenever the wind comes, Wu Tong spins, and the flowers in Wu Tong's mouth spin, which makes Wu Tongfeng.

Stand still in the direction and measure the wind direction. This is the earliest meteorological instrument used to observe the wind direction in the world.

The second Meteorological Observation introduces the modern radiosonde made in China. This instrument consists of a balloon and a radiosonde, which mainly detects meteorological contents such as wind, clouds, rain, snow, thunder and electricity in the sky.

The third picture of "Meteorological Service" is the earliest meteorological observation tower in China-the Shanghai Bund Signal Tower built in modern times. The T-shaped typhoon signal is hung on the observation tower, and the typhoon impact in Hong Kong and its vicinity within 48 hours is predicted with the ground weather map as the background.