
March 19th 06, 09:22 AM
posted to sci.geo.meteorology
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
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Dumb question #7,822 - Twisters
Harold Brooks wrote:
In article . com,
says...
I was wondering why the blocks were set out the way they were. Over on
the western side the blue paterns were large boxes but the ones for the
wind in the middle are divided into small squares.
The warnings are for counties. Counties tend to be larger in the
western US.
Thanks for that.
is there any corresponence with extreme cold weather anywhere on an arc of 90
degrees of their occurence while there are extremely high temperatures
some 15 degrees down the road? (Wouldn't that be an handy tool if it
were so?)
I can't understand what you're saying here.
You probably won't be familiar with this but there is a marked
relationship with the epicentre of largish earthquakes and the storms
that appear in their shadow zones.
No, there isn't.
Recently I noticed that every hurricane in the North Atlantic last
season occurred with periods of dull, calm overcast, or even thick fog
on occasion, in western Europe.
I was wondering if the record cold weather in Germany during the severe
cell storm or whatever it's called, that held the tornados was also a
commonality.
No.
Thanks for that, too.
Would you mind supplying a link to the research if there is one online?
It would help me to put that one to bed at least.
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