First of all, these things can only be seen on records from one location
(any location) for the same reason that the tides will be different if
they were only measured at the same time of day from the same location.
Measured from every location and an average taken, a man working blindly
with a thorough working knowledge of the natural history of Inner
Mongolia might come to the conclusion that "tidal range" and "mean sea
level" are one and the same thing.
Secondly, the same celestial observations will produce different results
to the OPs even if just over the hill. But you'd get to see similar
cycles for vaguely similar weather regions.
(You'd see it in weather stations all over Britain for example but not
in the Sahara perhaps. Although I imagine runs of droughts lasting many
years as in parts of Africa..... but I am guessing.)
Now this is the important bit:
There is a transduction of the force or enegy potential from "gravity"
or/and "inertia" into something that can be translated gently into
seismic waves or cloudscapes.
I believe it is accoustics and I have an idea it is the effect of
inertia on mascons. Possibly the rate of change of acceleration on them.
I hope no one ever institutes quotations from me ad hoc (as if I were
some sort of genius) that that is exactly what causes it -just because
some research work yet to be done one day proves me right.
I am sure it is much more complex than that.
As soon as I opened those links I could see the cycles but as soon as I
looked closer I could see that I could see them but that I couldn't say
why. You know instinctively when something is "fitting" or "right" the
way you can sense an atmosphere change when something is wrong.
I'm not talking about weather here but in all walks of life. Like you
can tell a great painting from a mediocre one even if they are both far
better than anything you might accomplish.
Sorry for waffling. It's been a long time since anyone has so much as
considered anything I've said, that I just couldn't stop.
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