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Old October 7th 08, 02:19 PM posted to alt.talk.weather,uk.sci.weather,sci.geo.meteorology
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Here is a list of the tabs I have open in Opera. It is by no means all
of them but they are the ones I have to check out to get some idea
what I should have been saying rather than what I actually have said:

http://weather.unisys.com/images/sat_sfc_map_loop.html

Useful mix of satellite and synoptics.

http://wmc.meteoinfo.ru/losev-forc

Russian chart giving 48 hours a 12 hour update on Moscow time is
rather sporadic.

http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm

A collection of charts and info that gives a british source for
British synoptic charts. I find it updates more often than
Wetterzentrale.

http://www.weatheroffice.gc.ca/data/...is/947_100.gif
http://www.weatheroffice.gc.ca/ensem...me=00&Type=pnm

Two excellent Canadian charts. Pity they are just one a day though you
can get a later version of them if you look. I wonder what it would
cost to update it automatically?

https://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/efs/efs.html

This is an undoctored modelk run. You can get a much longer loop you
need to get into the site through a different page at first but once
oyu have their cookies you can carry on as normal.

http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/recenteqsww/

The graphic on here shows that earthquakes are clusters that occur
geometrically rather than due to loading.

http://www.spc.noaa.gov/climo/reports/081006_rpts.html

This will give the tornadic activity. It has been so quiet on there
over the last few weeks I stopped looking. When I see Chuina is active
seismically I look and see some action. (The last couple of days for
example.)

http://www.stormbanner.com/
http://satellite.ehabich.info/hurricane-watch.htm

Thes two are excellent for following tropical storms.

http://www.volcano.si.edu/reports/us...ontent=archive

This is something that gives a good overview once a week. Volcanoes re
very much the poor relation of earth science.

http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html

Lunar phases.

I have to put " " in front of them to prevent Google munging html
links. If I don't the links tend to buch up and appear as one
paragraph.

The Atlantic chart shows that the lows are going over Iceland for this
spell. A return to the Davis Strait route?

A look at the MetO charts for the September 15th to 22nd spell shows
this is definitely a mark of the beast. Let's take a look at how the
spells repeat:
15th September @ 09:13
22nd September @ 05:04
29th September @ 08:12
7th October @ 09:04
14thOctober @ 20:03

the 05:04 phase was exactly the same as the 09:13 spell. So we can
lump all three together:
15th September @ 09:13
22nd September @ 05:04
7th October @ 09:04
And the next pair are similar in their relationship. Some difference
in the tectonic and meteorological storms but the intensities are
similar. Just placing them is a PITA.
14thOctober @ 20:0329th September @ 08:12

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Old October 9th 08, 04:35 AM posted to uk.sci.weather,sci.geo.meteorology
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http://wmc.meteoinfo.ru/losev-forc

A Russian chart giving 48 hours SSP and precipitation

15th September @ 09:13
22nd September @ 05:04
7th October @ 09:04
And the next pair are similar in their relationship.


946 mb just south of the mouth of the Davis Strait. One for the record
books. Good job it's Siberia bound.

When that one gets up to around 70 N 90 W; up above Novaya Zemlya
there will be a remarkable earthquake there.

I suppose a lot depends on how many other lows join it or separate out
from it.

So if you want an experience now is your chance. And if you really
want to shine and are not put off by the shenanigans on the
encyclopaedia that didn't bring you the truth about short stock
selling before everyone else, then you can write a whole new article
on the Novaya Zemlya Effect.

(Something which, if I may be so bold as to..., is a lot more real -
and far less well known than, the Coriolis non effect.)
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Old October 9th 08, 04:45 AM posted to uk.sci.weather,sci.geo.meteorology
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On Oct 9, 4:35*am, Weatherlawyer wrote:
http://wmc.meteoinfo.ru/losev-forc

A Russian chart giving 48 hours SSP and precipitation


15th September @ 09:13
22nd September @ 05:04
7th October @ 09:04
And the next pair are similar in their relationship.


946 mb just south of the mouth of the Davis Strait. One for the record
books. Good job it's Siberia bound.

When that one gets up to around 70 N *90 W; up above Novaya Zemlya
there will be a remarkable earthquake there.

I suppose a lot depends on how many other lows join it or separate out
from it.

So if you want an experience now is your chance. And if you really
want to shine and are not put off by the shenanigans on the
encyclopaedia that didn't bring you the truth about short stock
selling before everyone else, then you can write a whole new article
on the Novaya Zemlya Effect.

(Something which, if I may be so bold as to..., is a lot more real -
and far less well known than, the Coriolis non effect.)


http://neic.usgs.gov/neis/bulletin/neic_xnbs_l.html
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Old October 9th 08, 02:55 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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On 9 Oct, 04:35, Weatherlawyer wrote:

946 mb just south of the mouth of the Davis Strait. One for the record
books. Good job it's Siberia bound.

When that one gets up to around 70 N *90 W; up above Novaya Zemlya
there will be a remarkable earthquake there.


Be sure to report back when it happens !

Richard
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Old October 9th 08, 02:57 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 09:04


"Richard Dixon" wrote in message
...
On 9 Oct, 04:35, Weatherlawyer wrote:

crap.


Be sure to report back when it happens !

Richard

Not to this group please Richard




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Old October 9th 08, 03:15 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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On Oct 9, 2:57*pm, "Roger Smith" wrote:
"Richard Dixon" wrote in message

...
On 9 Oct, 04:35, Weatherlawyer wrote:

crap.


Be sure to report back when it happens !

Richard

Not to this group please Richard


No, I'd really like W to report back. I think that's a forecast,
though we have no idea of the timescale, or what magnitude a
"remarkable" earthquake may be, but we have a location........if
something happens with that low pressure. All eyes on Novaya Zemlya
eh?

Please ignore that fine man Roger Smith, go with Richard's
exhortation, do keep us up to date and don't forget about it if it
fails to happen this time, W. You need to improve that success record
of yours! (Just for the record, 1 out of 8, 12.5% since April 24th -
I'd hate anyone to forget that. Even that mag 4/5 in the Aleutians
that you forecast a week, or so, ago didn't happen, W. Simple chance
would have deemed that almost a nailed on certainty!)

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Old October 11th 08, 09:32 AM posted to alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.earthquakes,uk.sci.weather,sci.geo.meteorology
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Default 09:04


960 mb now and rising. Time for a rethink about how these things
behave. It is something to do with the acoustics and the depths of the
relatively shallow waters. Without looking at just how deep the deeps
are on these courses. And the relationship with depth to storm
pressures.

Or maybe the frequencies likely to be obtained before reverberation
impacts the waves of whatever it is involved.


Looking at the sea floor of the Atlantic; it appears that there are
ridges and troughs in the floor that run parallel from the south coast
of Iceland in almost perfectly straight lines to the centre of
Newfoundland (south of the Strait of Belle Isle) and on past Nova
Scotia to Virginia and the Carolinas.

Well; not really.
The stretch doesn't seem to extend much past the bottom of Greenland.
But it is an interesting area:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/spl...8968/img/1.jpg

Perhaps it may explain certain behavioural traits. If it extended as
far as the southern 'States, perhaps the weather we know and love
would be entirely changed and there be no chance of the Arctic ever
recooling?

Meanwhile it seems that pressures in that Low are approaching levels
that will allow it to move north.

Which of course further highlights the questions about which comes
first:
Movement or pressure change; Cause and effect.

OT for the most part
The financial crisis:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=SIHw7C73s3E
.....is going to have an unfortunate impact on international services
that have served mankind faithfully for decades.

However...
It will be a terrible shame if the stuff available he
http://www1.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/i...008psguide.pdf
....is curtailed in any way.

Knowing a little bit of human behaviour, I can only forecast that it
will -in the worst imaginable and most easily avoidable way and at the
most inopportune time possible.

Let's hear it for the Chimpanzee.

This all started with the deregulation of a B movie star whose legacy
was a film about a chimpanzee and massive deregulation in both the
petrol chemical industries (think Donald Rumsfeld and Aspartame) and
the economy.

How exquisitely whatzit!
The mills of god's bio-chemicals grind slow...
but they grind fine.
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Old October 11th 08, 01:55 PM posted to alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.earthquakes,uk.sci.weather,sci.geo.meteorology
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A gathering of Lows now fills the NE North Atlantic. The weather in
Britain is exactly as it was at the start of the spell I stated at the
outside, it would be so like. A dull overcast that requires one puts a
light on at mid day if one wishes to make a major repair to an engine,
or whatever, on one's kitchen table.

(As one does. Buggrit!)

I have just been looking at the chart for the day the British tourists
were killed in Spain in a rain-storm:
The Low was little less than 1016 mb at its lowest. Hardly any
different from an High.

Norbert is crossing the Mexican Baja peninsula. Something unknown
makes them turn about when they leave the tropics. Or does it?

If so, is it the same impetus that forces more northerly storms ashore
in the same direction? Or is it no force at all, just that the effort
they spend in going west ends when they stop building?

In which case, as they stop building they'd decrease in intensity
would they not?
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Old October 11th 08, 04:20 PM posted to alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.earthquakes,uk.sci.weather,sci.geo.meteorology
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Default 09:04

On Oct 11, 1:55*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
A gathering of Lows now fills the NE North Atlantic. The weather in
Britain is exactly as it was at the start of the spell I stated at the
outside, it would be so like. A dull overcast that requires one puts a
light on at mid day if one wishes to make a major repair to an engine,
or whatever, on one's kitchen table.


Dull? Overcast?? Are you sure???

You do know what these little sun symbols on these tables mean, W,
don't you?

http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/...ons/index.html

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Old October 12th 08, 12:33 AM posted to alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.earthquakes,uk.sci.weather,sci.geo.meteorology
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On Oct 11, 4:20*pm, Dawlish wrote:
On Oct 11, 1:55*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:

A gathering of Lows now fills the NE North Atlantic. The weather in
Britain is exactly as it was at the start of the spell I stated at the
outside, it would be so like. A dull overcast that requires one puts a
light on at mid day if one wishes to make a major repair to an engine,
or whatever, on one's kitchen table.


Dull? Overcast?? Are you sure???

You do know what these little sun symbols on these tables mean, W(ho must be obeyed),
don't you?

http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/...ons/index.html


I wonder if you could specify what neotype of androgen you conform to,
for me, please.

It's just that I have atypical homophobic attrition built into my
system and need to conform to whatever parameters I might be able to
reach for your edification.

No offence distended.


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