On Nov 29, 6:37 pm, Richard Dixon wrote:
On 29 Nov, 17:42, Weatherlawyer wrote:
You really must try to distinguish the stars from the skies if you
intend to pick on things. Otherwise you will find yourself discussing
background noise and little else of any importance.
Seismological / meteorological links, anyone?
NEIC lists and a search catalogue:
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/...quakes_big.php
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/...quakes_all.php
http://neic.usgs.gov/neis/qed/
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/research/software/
http://www.ncedc.org/cnss/
US National storm warning discussion and archive:
http://www.spc.noaa.gov/products/wwa/
Sea level pressures for the North Atlantic archive:
http://www.wetterzentrale.de/topkarten/tkfaxbraar.htm
Tropical storm warnings and graphics:
http://satellite.ehabich.info/hurricane-watch.htm
http://www.hurricanezone.net/
Tropical storm archives:
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/...ification.html
NASA lists of Lunar tables and much mo
http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/eclipse.html
http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclips...se2001gmt.html
Smithsonian collection of various volcano reports. Archived weekly
announcements:
http://www.volcano.si.edu/reports/us...ontent=archive
A solar system ephemeris -one search at a time:
http://www.fourmilab.ch/cgi-bin/Solar
(If anyone has links to tables based on a Nautical Almanac, I'd be
grateful.)
If you really want to take me apart, I can give you a mess of data to
do it with. I did intend to collate it and probably will one day. But
at the moment I have no idea how a database works.