This paper describes:- aThe moisture content of subsiding polar continental air over North America, under conditions when there was no likelihood of an increase in the moisture content due to precipitation from overrunning air. Two situations of this type are discussed, and no evidence is found of any appreciable increase above 850 mb. bThe degree of homogeneity in polar continental air masses. The vertical distributions of wet-bulb potential temperature Θ1 as observed nearly simultaneously at adjacent stations within an air mass are discussed in relation to their effect on the accuracy of computations of subsidence. cThe vertical velocity of air in the warm sector of a depression. It is shown that in the warm sector considered, the ascent of the air near the surface was nearly twice as rapid as that at about 600 mb. The vertical velocity of the surface air was of the order of 4 cm./sec., and that of the air at about 600 mb. was of the order of 2 cm./sec. dThe effect of turbulence in the air near the surface. The changes of temperature and moisture content in the surface layers of a moving air mass are discussed in the light of the theory of turbulence, as developed by Richardson and Taylor.