Thread: 14:30
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Old November 29th 07, 11:41 PM posted to alt.talk.weather, sci.geo.earthquakes, alt.support.arthritis
Weatherlawyer Weatherlawyer is offline
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Default 14:30

On Nov 27, 6:57 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:

Now there are three. None of them especially powerful but obviously
they are in concert, able to change the spell from cold, clear and
frosty to warm, thick gloom


Oh man, I screwed that up.

This afternoon about 3-ish I saw a massive cloud that reminded me that
this spell is supposed to produce long billows of piscene black
clouds. This spell is what it would be if super-typhoons and their ilk
were not present.

They aren't:http://www.hurricanezone.net/

Several earthquakes are due, especially in the South Pacific and
Indian Ocean border:http://neic.usgs.gov/neis/FM/http://...quakes_big.php


Let me just say that I never said that the very large magnitude quakes
that occur at the end of a simialr sequence of weather spells or that
occur near the end of a simialr sequence of lunar spells, will be in
the South Pacific in the region I am associating with this present run
of largish earthquakes.

This 7.4 for example (and the Chilean one before it) were not due to
the demise of any one particular tropical storm but to the end of the
system of them.

7.4 Mag. 2007/11/29 19:00.
14.95 degrees North 61.24 degrees West. Martinique region, Windward
Islands.

The storms all lost most of their power some days ago. So it takes
from 1 to 3 days or more to show up in a large quake like this? Who
can say?

Who can say no? But it may just be a coincidence.

And there are an awful lot of them. Another word for remarkable
coincidences are miracles. Only miracles of course, have traditionally
been linked with forecasts well in advance.
Sort of.