On Jan 13, 9:28 am, Weatherlawyer wrote:
http://weather.unisys.com/images/sat_sfc_map_loop.html
Looks like there are two Mag 6 quakes pending, going by the current chart
on the above link. Maybe only one will be an M 6 and one just an high 5.
Now it looks like those Highs are heading inland to the Great Lakes.
It seems that the highs might slough off from the Canadian border or
maybe even further north.
Should be interesting.
This spell's tribulations were flooding in the UK and central Africa
as well as tornadoes in the US and Philippines. Perhaps interesting
was not the best word to use.
Something mor academic in these though:
2008/01/14
5.4 01:20. SOUTH WEST INDIAN RIDGE
2008/01/13
5.3 12:15. LUZON, PHILIPPINES
5.1 11:16:36 -16.000 -173.063 10.0 TONGA
2008/01/12
5.0 22:44. INDIA-BANGLADESH BORDER REGION
5.2 10:13. KEPULAUAN TALAUD, INDONESIA
5.5 08:32. SOUTH SANDWICH ISLANDS REGION
2008/01/11
5.0 04:43. SOUTH OF JAVA, INDONESIA
2008/01/10
6.3 01:37. OFF THE COAST OF OREGON
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/...quakes_big.php
The Oregon quake occurred on the last day that an high left the east
coast of the USA. (That's as near as I can tell from the Unisys site.)
If I am right, it is more circumstantial evidence that there is a
direct relationship between the two phenomena. What is a problem is
that the times involved don't seem to tie them in all that closely.
However the Unisys charts are filled in by meteorologist working to
schedules and data that is not as demanding as whatever it is in them
that relates to seismic activity.