Thread: 10:25
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Old April 25th 08, 11:48 AM posted to alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.earthquakes
Weatherlawyer Weatherlawyer is offline
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 10:25

In the North Atlantic the low that has dogged the top left hand corner
for the last few days has stated to... not so much move east as is the
norm but to extend east.

It has actually extended as far as Scandinavia where there is an
Asiatic High coming the other way. It reaches half way up Greenland
where an High stretching from over most of North America to past the
North Pole, meets it.

It is quite a serious build up of events. If it were a balloon people,
near it might well be looking pensive. But as with such explosions
those inside the pressure area are the least affected.

So where will the earthquake be?
From Earthquake.itgo.com:
PREDICTION Dt. 23rd April '08

Good sunshine day.

Suspect around 6 to 7+M quakes over

KERMAN, IRAN (28.33N 56.33E) - NORTH -CENTRAL IRAN (30.7N 50.5E)
MID-INDIAN RIDGE (15.1S 67.9E) - MINAHASSA PENINSULA( 0.1N 123.4E)

and around 5 to 6M quakes over

IRIAN JAYA REGION (3.7S 131.1E) - BANDA SEA (6.0S 130.0E)

may occur within next 48 to 380 hours from 04.30 UTC on 22nd April
2008.

http://earthquake.itgo.com/today.htm

I have always found that this man's errors are more likely due to the
event being a storm rather than an earthquake. Since he doesn't take
account of storms in his data, it is only fair that he counts his
errors as failures. So consider that when you look at his posted
results.

Note, I am not saying that the window is the same as it can not be
with the length of storm duration being substantially different.

No more is the location to be considered the same.

It will be within geometric parameters yet to be set. Something like
90 or 120 degrees different depending on the category of the storm
IIRC.

Without looking more closely it appears that the result will be on the
1012 mb surface level pressure line.

Exactly in the pressure wave path of any exploding Highs and imploding
Lows.

I doubt anyone has ever given a less rational qack-cast than that but
damnitalltohell! what a doozie if I am right.

Point to note:
These regions are places of light winds, and with no wind sheer you
tend to get large thunder cells building maybe even tornadoes.

Lack of wind sheer is also a factor in tropical storms.