Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
Reply |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Food for thought
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-en...campaign=bbcne ws&ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_mchannel=social&ns_s ource=twitter It's not the first time that this idea has been put forward but I have always said that, as our climate is currently anomalously warm for our latitude, it would be easier for circulation changes to result in cooling of our bit of the planet than warming. -- Norman Lynagh Tideswell, Derbyshire 303m a.s.l. https://peakdistrictweather.org Twitter: @TideswellWeathr |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 11/04/18 18:54, Norman Lynagh wrote:
Food for thought http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-en...campaign=bbcne ws&ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_mchannel=social&ns_s ource=twitter It's not the first time that this idea has been put forward but I have always said that, as our climate is currently anomalously warm for our latitude, it would be easier for circulation changes to result in cooling of our bit of the planet than warming. Yes, it was almost fifty years ago when I first read about sudden changes in the N Atlantic current circulation and consequent changes in climate. I think the book in which I read it was published in the early 60s. Of course, at that time they didn't know the cause of the bi-stable nature of the current system. I'm not entirely sure they've got it right even now. -- Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks. Web-site: http://www.scarlet-jade.com/ "There is nothing more frustrating than playing hide and seek with a deaf wolf." [Benton Fraser] OS: Linux [openSUSE Tumbleweed] |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wednesday, April 11, 2018 at 8:13:49 PM UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote:
On 11/04/18 18:54, Norman Lynagh wrote: Food for thought http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-en...campaign=bbcne ws&ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_mchannel=social&ns_s ource=twitter It's not the first time that this idea has been put forward but I have always said that, as our climate is currently anomalously warm for our latitude, it would be easier for circulation changes to result in cooling of our bit of the planet than warming. Yes, it was almost fifty years ago when I first read about sudden changes in the N Atlantic current circulation and consequent changes in climate. I think the book in which I read it was published in the early 60s. Of course, at that time they didn't know the cause of the bi-stable nature of the current system. I'm not entirely sure they've got it right even now. -- Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks. Web-site: http://www.scarlet-jade.com/ Well, time will tell. On a similar subject, that longstanding cold pool in the Atlantic seems less evident. At least going by this http://www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/researc...s/wkanomv2.png Also the despite the very cold March the SST in the SW Approaches is near normal, 10-11C @ Sevenstones. Mind you, that certainly can't be said for the North Sea. Also, there was a very cold May/June in 1972 (I think that was the year) The wind was generally W - SW in June. Dominated by a returning Polar Maritime I would assume. (I was a geography student at Middlesex Poly at the time) Do you have anything on the SST anomalies / circulation patterns that year? I know icebergs were blamed, but that sounds a bit simplistic to me. Graham Penzance |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 11/04/18 20:40, Graham Easterling wrote:
On Wednesday, April 11, 2018 at 8:13:49 PM UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote: On 11/04/18 18:54, Norman Lynagh wrote: Food for thought http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-en...campaign=bbcne ws&ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_mchannel=social&ns_s ource=twitter It's not the first time that this idea has been put forward but I have always said that, as our climate is currently anomalously warm for our latitude, it would be easier for circulation changes to result in cooling of our bit of the planet than warming. Yes, it was almost fifty years ago when I first read about sudden changes in the N Atlantic current circulation and consequent changes in climate. I think the book in which I read it was published in the early 60s. Of course, at that time they didn't know the cause of the bi-stable nature of the current system. I'm not entirely sure they've got it right even now. Well, time will tell. On a similar subject, that longstanding cold pool in the Atlantic seems less evident. At least going by this http://www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/researc...s/wkanomv2.png Also the despite the very cold March the SST in the SW Approaches is near normal, 10-11C @ Sevenstones. Mind you, that certainly can't be said for the North Sea. Also, there was a very cold May/June in 1972 (I think that was the year) The wind was generally W - SW in June. Dominated by a returning Polar Maritime I would assume. (I was a geography student at Middlesex Poly at the time) Do you have anything on the SST anomalies / circulation patterns that year? I know icebergs were blamed, but that sounds a bit simplistic to me. The pressure anomalies for those months were as follows: May: A low of -8hPa south of Iceland and west of Scotland. A trough extended across southern Scotland towards Turkey. Another trough extended to S Greenland and then NW to north of Baffin Bay. A strong WNW flow ran from the Labrador Sea to SW England. June: The low anomaly moved north to be just off SE Iceland with centre of about -12hPa. A -2hPa contour ran from the Brest peninsula to the southern tip of Greenland and thence along the NE coast of Baffin I. I recall it being 1970 when a cold July was blamed on record icebergs by people who should have known better (Lamb, Ratcliffe, Murray) but pressure anomalies for the preceding winter don't match my memory so I may have got two events mixed. However, it could also be that the anomalies calculated now are totally different from what I remember because the normals were for different periods; those I remember would have been against 1931-60 normals. A thirty-year normal has been the accepted length for comparison purposes for weather forecasts but is totally useless for climatological use and a much longer period should be used. One reason I prefer GISS 1951-80 temperature normal is that you could relabel it 1901-2000 and not be far out. ;-) The SST anomaly for the occasion I remember - whatever year it was - was that there was a belt of very cold water from Labrador to Ireland with a -2C anomaly across the middle of that area. This cold water was blamed for the cold weather but the stupid suggestion was made that it was due to the melting of a record number of icebergs off the Grand Banks. I pointed out that the anomaly had formed before the bergs could have melted and even if that point was ignored and all the bergs had suddenly melted, that could only have caused a twentieth of the intensity of the observed anomaly. I got the monthly pressure anomalies from http://iridl.ldeo.columbia.edu/maproom/ but their SST anomalies only goo back to 1981. -- Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks. Web-site: http://www.scarlet-jade.com/ "There is nothing more frustrating than playing hide and seek with a deaf wolf." [Benton Fraser] OS: Linux [openSUSE Tumbleweed] |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thursday, April 12, 2018 at 10:34:22 AM UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote:
On 11/04/18 20:40, Graham Easterling wrote: On Wednesday, April 11, 2018 at 8:13:49 PM UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote: On 11/04/18 18:54, Norman Lynagh wrote: Food for thought http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-en...campaign=bbcne ws&ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_mchannel=social&ns_s ource=twitter It's not the first time that this idea has been put forward but I have always said that, as our climate is currently anomalously warm for our latitude, it would be easier for circulation changes to result in cooling of our bit of the planet than warming. Yes, it was almost fifty years ago when I first read about sudden changes in the N Atlantic current circulation and consequent changes in climate. I think the book in which I read it was published in the early 60s. Of course, at that time they didn't know the cause of the bi-stable nature of the current system. I'm not entirely sure they've got it right even now. Well, time will tell. On a similar subject, that longstanding cold pool in the Atlantic seems less evident. At least going by this http://www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/researc...s/wkanomv2.png Also the despite the very cold March the SST in the SW Approaches is near normal, 10-11C @ Sevenstones. Mind you, that certainly can't be said for the North Sea. Also, there was a very cold May/June in 1972 (I think that was the year) The wind was generally W - SW in June. Dominated by a returning Polar Maritime I would assume. (I was a geography student at Middlesex Poly at the time) Do you have anything on the SST anomalies / circulation patterns that year? I know icebergs were blamed, but that sounds a bit simplistic to me. The pressure anomalies for those months were as follows: May: A low of -8hPa south of Iceland and west of Scotland. A trough extended across southern Scotland towards Turkey. Another trough extended to S Greenland and then NW to north of Baffin Bay. A strong WNW flow ran from the Labrador Sea to SW England. June: The low anomaly moved north to be just off SE Iceland with centre of about -12hPa. A -2hPa contour ran from the Brest peninsula to the southern tip of Greenland and thence along the NE coast of Baffin I. I recall it being 1970 when a cold July was blamed on record icebergs by people who should have known better (Lamb, Ratcliffe, Murray) but pressure anomalies for the preceding winter don't match my memory so I may have got two events mixed. However, it could also be that the anomalies calculated now are totally different from what I remember because the normals were for different periods; those I remember would have been against 1931-60 normals. A thirty-year normal has been the accepted length for comparison purposes for weather forecasts but is totally useless for climatological use and a much longer period should be used. One reason I prefer GISS 1951-80 temperature normal is that you could relabel it 1901-2000 and not be far out. ;-) The SST anomaly for the occasion I remember - whatever year it was - was that there was a belt of very cold water from Labrador to Ireland with a -2C anomaly across the middle of that area. This cold water was blamed for the cold weather but the stupid suggestion was made that it was due to the melting of a record number of icebergs off the Grand Banks. I pointed out that the anomaly had formed before the bergs could have melted and even if that point was ignored and all the bergs had suddenly melted, that could only have caused a twentieth of the intensity of the observed anomaly. I got the monthly pressure anomalies from http://iridl.ldeo.columbia.edu/maproom/ but their SST anomalies only goo back to 1981. -- Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks. Web-site: http://www.scarlet-jade.com/ "There is nothing more frustrating than playing hide and seek with a deaf wolf." [Benton Fraser] OS: Linux [openSUSE Tumbleweed] Thanks for all that. I think it was 1972, as I started at Middlesex Poly in Sept '70, and it was whilst I was there. There's a few things I remember about that June. Even in London it was often quite chilly & showery. For much of June only the Thames valley seemed to get above 15C, even though the wind was was typically from the west. I remember it being commented on that the cold June was very unusual, as it was not a northerly month. Based on the weather type, the westerly winds were predominantly returning Pm. Backed up by what you say above. Even in July, when I was back in Cornwall, working on the farm, the weather was ridiculously cool for July, and there was so much mist & drizzle, probably enhanced by the wind crossing the area of the low SST. I seem to remember that summer finally arrived in August - though I might be getting confused about that. Graham Penzance |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thursday, April 12, 2018 at 3:16:57 PM UTC+1, Graham Easterling wrote:
On Thursday, April 12, 2018 at 10:34:22 AM UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote: On 11/04/18 20:40, Graham Easterling wrote: On Wednesday, April 11, 2018 at 8:13:49 PM UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote: On 11/04/18 18:54, Norman Lynagh wrote: Food for thought http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-en...campaign=bbcne ws&ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_mchannel=social&ns_s ource=twitter It's not the first time that this idea has been put forward but I have always said that, as our climate is currently anomalously warm for our latitude, it would be easier for circulation changes to result in cooling of our bit of the planet than warming. Yes, it was almost fifty years ago when I first read about sudden changes in the N Atlantic current circulation and consequent changes in climate. I think the book in which I read it was published in the early 60s. Of course, at that time they didn't know the cause of the bi-stable nature of the current system. I'm not entirely sure they've got it right even now. Well, time will tell. On a similar subject, that longstanding cold pool in the Atlantic seems less evident. At least going by this http://www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/researc...s/wkanomv2.png Also the despite the very cold March the SST in the SW Approaches is near normal, 10-11C @ Sevenstones. Mind you, that certainly can't be said for the North Sea. Also, there was a very cold May/June in 1972 (I think that was the year) The wind was generally W - SW in June. Dominated by a returning Polar Maritime I would assume. (I was a geography student at Middlesex Poly at the time) Do you have anything on the SST anomalies / circulation patterns that year? I know icebergs were blamed, but that sounds a bit simplistic to me. The pressure anomalies for those months were as follows: May: A low of -8hPa south of Iceland and west of Scotland. A trough extended across southern Scotland towards Turkey. Another trough extended to S Greenland and then NW to north of Baffin Bay. A strong WNW flow ran from the Labrador Sea to SW England. June: The low anomaly moved north to be just off SE Iceland with centre of about -12hPa. A -2hPa contour ran from the Brest peninsula to the southern tip of Greenland and thence along the NE coast of Baffin I. I recall it being 1970 when a cold July was blamed on record icebergs by people who should have known better (Lamb, Ratcliffe, Murray) but pressure anomalies for the preceding winter don't match my memory so I may have got two events mixed. However, it could also be that the anomalies calculated now are totally different from what I remember because the normals were for different periods; those I remember would have been against 1931-60 normals. A thirty-year normal has been the accepted length for comparison purposes for weather forecasts but is totally useless for climatological use and a much longer period should be used. One reason I prefer GISS 1951-80 temperature normal is that you could relabel it 1901-2000 and not be far out. ;-) The SST anomaly for the occasion I remember - whatever year it was - was that there was a belt of very cold water from Labrador to Ireland with a -2C anomaly across the middle of that area. This cold water was blamed for the cold weather but the stupid suggestion was made that it was due to the melting of a record number of icebergs off the Grand Banks. I pointed out that the anomaly had formed before the bergs could have melted and even if that point was ignored and all the bergs had suddenly melted, that could only have caused a twentieth of the intensity of the observed anomaly. I got the monthly pressure anomalies from http://iridl.ldeo.columbia.edu/maproom/ but their SST anomalies only goo back to 1981. -- Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks. Web-site: http://www.scarlet-jade.com/ "There is nothing more frustrating than playing hide and seek with a deaf wolf." [Benton Fraser] OS: Linux [openSUSE Tumbleweed] Thanks for all that. I think it was 1972, as I started at Middlesex Poly in Sept '70, and it was whilst I was there. There's a few things I remember about that June. Even in London it was often quite chilly & showery. For much of June only the Thames valley seemed to get above 15C, even though the wind was was typically from the west. I remember it being commented on that the cold June was very unusual, as it was not a northerly month. Based on the weather type, the westerly winds were predominantly returning Pm. Backed up by what you say above. Even in July, when I was back in Cornwall, working on the farm, the weather was ridiculously cool for July, and there was so much mist & drizzle, probably enhanced by the wind crossing the area of the low SST. I seem to remember that summer finally arrived in August - though I might be getting confused about that. Graham Penzance The Met Office Monthly Weather Report of June 1972 confirms it was an exceptionally cold month, with many long-standing weather stations having their coldest June on record, e.g. Falmouth since 1869, Manchester & Ross-on-Wye since 1886, Bournemouth since 1905 and Teignmouth since 1910. The highest temperature recorded anywhere in England & wales was 23.0C, and believed to be the lowest absolute maxima since at least 1884. Dick Lovett |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thursday, April 12, 2018 at 4:53:27 PM UTC+1, wrote:
On Thursday, April 12, 2018 at 3:16:57 PM UTC+1, Graham Easterling wrote: On Thursday, April 12, 2018 at 10:34:22 AM UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote: On 11/04/18 20:40, Graham Easterling wrote: On Wednesday, April 11, 2018 at 8:13:49 PM UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote: On 11/04/18 18:54, Norman Lynagh wrote: Food for thought http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-en...campaign=bbcne ws&ocid=socialflow_twitter&ns_mchannel=social&ns_s ource=twitter It's not the first time that this idea has been put forward but I have always said that, as our climate is currently anomalously warm for our latitude, it would be easier for circulation changes to result in cooling of our bit of the planet than warming. Yes, it was almost fifty years ago when I first read about sudden changes in the N Atlantic current circulation and consequent changes in climate. I think the book in which I read it was published in the early 60s. Of course, at that time they didn't know the cause of the bi-stable nature of the current system. I'm not entirely sure they've got it right even now. Well, time will tell. On a similar subject, that longstanding cold pool in the Atlantic seems less evident. At least going by this http://www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/researc...s/wkanomv2.png Also the despite the very cold March the SST in the SW Approaches is near normal, 10-11C @ Sevenstones. Mind you, that certainly can't be said for the North Sea. Also, there was a very cold May/June in 1972 (I think that was the year) The wind was generally W - SW in June. Dominated by a returning Polar Maritime I would assume. (I was a geography student at Middlesex Poly at the time) Do you have anything on the SST anomalies / circulation patterns that year? I know icebergs were blamed, but that sounds a bit simplistic to me. The pressure anomalies for those months were as follows: May: A low of -8hPa south of Iceland and west of Scotland. A trough extended across southern Scotland towards Turkey. Another trough extended to S Greenland and then NW to north of Baffin Bay. A strong WNW flow ran from the Labrador Sea to SW England. June: The low anomaly moved north to be just off SE Iceland with centre of about -12hPa. A -2hPa contour ran from the Brest peninsula to the southern tip of Greenland and thence along the NE coast of Baffin I. I recall it being 1970 when a cold July was blamed on record icebergs by people who should have known better (Lamb, Ratcliffe, Murray) but pressure anomalies for the preceding winter don't match my memory so I may have got two events mixed. However, it could also be that the anomalies calculated now are totally different from what I remember because the normals were for different periods; those I remember would have been against 1931-60 normals. A thirty-year normal has been the accepted length for comparison purposes for weather forecasts but is totally useless for climatological use and a much longer period should be used. One reason I prefer GISS 1951-80 temperature normal is that you could relabel it 1901-2000 and not be far out. ;-) The SST anomaly for the occasion I remember - whatever year it was - was that there was a belt of very cold water from Labrador to Ireland with a -2C anomaly across the middle of that area. This cold water was blamed for the cold weather but the stupid suggestion was made that it was due to the melting of a record number of icebergs off the Grand Banks. I pointed out that the anomaly had formed before the bergs could have melted and even if that point was ignored and all the bergs had suddenly melted, that could only have caused a twentieth of the intensity of the observed anomaly. I got the monthly pressure anomalies from http://iridl.ldeo.columbia.edu/maproom/ but their SST anomalies only goo back to 1981. -- Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks. Web-site: http://www.scarlet-jade.com/ "There is nothing more frustrating than playing hide and seek with a deaf wolf." [Benton Fraser] OS: Linux [openSUSE Tumbleweed] Thanks for all that. I think it was 1972, as I started at Middlesex Poly in Sept '70, and it was whilst I was there. There's a few things I remember about that June. Even in London it was often quite chilly & showery. For much of June only the Thames valley seemed to get above 15C, even though the wind was was typically from the west. I remember it being commented on that the cold June was very unusual, as it was not a northerly month. Based on the weather type, the westerly winds were predominantly returning Pm. Backed up by what you say above. Even in July, when I was back in Cornwall, working on the farm, the weather was ridiculously cool for July, and there was so much mist & drizzle, probably enhanced by the wind crossing the area of the low SST. I seem to remember that summer finally arrived in August - though I might be getting confused about that. Graham Penzance The Met Office Monthly Weather Report of June 1972 confirms it was an exceptionally cold month, with many long-standing weather stations having their coldest June on record, e.g. Falmouth since 1869, Manchester & Ross-on-Wye since 1886, Bournemouth since 1905 and Teignmouth since 1910. The highest temperature recorded anywhere in England & wales was 23.0C, and believed to be the lowest absolute maxima since at least 1884. Dick Lovett Interesting - thanks. Graham Penzance |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 11/04/2018 18:54, Norman Lynagh wrote:
Food for thought Norman, I have been led to believe that the Gulf Stream/North Atlantic Drift is wind driven? I have attended many lectures and a few conferences that have stated to the above. Which is right? -- Nick Gardner Otter Valley, Devon 20 m amsl http://www.ottervalleyweather.me.uk |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thursday, April 12, 2018 at 7:58:23 PM UTC+1, Nick Gardner wrote:
On 11/04/2018 18:54, Norman Lynagh wrote: Food for thought Norman, I have been led to believe that the Gulf Stream/North Atlantic Drift is wind driven? I have attended many lectures and a few conferences that have stated to the above. Which is right? -- Nick Gardner Otter Valley, Devon 20 m amsl http://www.ottervalleyweather.me.uk Also, don't forget the coriolis effect. Graham Penzance |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 12/04/18 19:58, Nick Gardner wrote:
On 11/04/2018 18:54, Norman Lynagh wrote: Food for thought Norman, I have been led to believe that the Gulf Stream/North Atlantic Drift is wind driven? I have attended many lectures and a few conferences that have stated to the above. Which is right? I think the answer is yes and no. The circulation is partially wind-driven; an explanation given fifty-odd years ago for any sudden switch-off of the NAD in the past was a weakening of the subtropical high, although the author was clutching at straws to explain this bi-stable nature of the circulation. The Gulf Stream is mainly a density current. Along the eastern seaboard of the USA, the warm water of the Gulf Stream is of a lower density to the cold, inshore water fed by the Labrador Current. The surface of the warm water is higher than the cold and water flows from high water level to low. As happens when air flows from surface high pressure to low, the Coriolis effect results in the water flowing roughly parallel to the SST isotherms. Although the NAD has disappeared in the past at times, any talk of the Gulf Stream itself shutting down can be dismissed; I reckon it would take the Earth to stop spinning for that to happen. In any case, evidence from Sargassum weed shows that the clockwise circulation of warm water has continued for at least 30,000 years. -- Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks. Web-site: http://www.scarlet-jade.com/ "There is nothing more frustrating than playing hide and seek with a deaf wolf." [Benton Fraser] OS: Linux [openSUSE Tumbleweed] |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Ocean Changes May Have Dire Impact on People— NOT | sci.geo.meteorology (Meteorology) | |||
Disruption of North Atlantic thermohaline circulation leadingto Ice Age? | sci.geo.meteorology (Meteorology) | |||
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Ocean changes 'will cool Europe' | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) | |||
NASA Study Links Wind and Current Changes to Indian Ocean Warming | sci.geo.meteorology (Meteorology) | |||
Hurricane Isabel rages west over Atlantic Ocean | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) |