Thread: 10:17
View Single Post
  #7   Report Post  
Old December 19th 07, 09:51 AM posted to alt.talk.weather, sci.geo.earthquakes
Weatherlawyer Weatherlawyer is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 10:17

On Dec 18, 11:21 am, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Dec 17, 6:44 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:

http://weather.unisys.com/is pretty much what is to be expected as a
standard model in mid winter in the absence of much else happening.


UNLESS...
That really deep low over Labrador/Newfoundland, when it falls over
the edge of the world, causes something interesting.


7.2 (preliminary magnitude.) This time of a phase is unstable. Doubly
so. Anything around 10 or 4 o'clock is hard to predict but being
almost 20 minutes past, for some reason I can't even guess at, is even
harder to clock.

The deep Atlantic Lows have to go north into the Arctic to ground at
Russia. One off east Greenland is 986 mb, only some 8 or 9 degrees on
a great circle from the High (1045) off Lapland,http://www.westwind.ch/?link=ukmb,ht...e/Fax/,.gif,br...

Look how deep the one just off Canada is. Bloody Americans!

It's going straight for Greenland, like the last one and that too will
probably head into the Arctic warming the ice up nicely.

I'd got the impression that Arctic winds went east to west. Perhaps
that is only for the stuff that behaves normally?

So, despite the large pressure differences, a negative oscillation.

And more volcanic activity than usual. I think I am on the ball at the
moment.

All I need is proof.


A 1032 mb High has just slipped into the sea of the east coast of the
USA.
Not volcanic after all.

MAP 7.2 2007/12/19 09:30:31 51.495 -179.473 56.3 ANDREANOF
ISLANDS, ALEUTIAN IS., ALASKA
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/...quakes_big.php

Though in about 8 days time I might have a correction. Look at all the
"H"s on
http://weather.unisys.com/
They are lined up almost north to south in 3 sets.

And look at that collection of Lows on the Atlantic map:
http://meteonet.nl/aktueel/brackall.htm