On May 3, 9:26 am, Weatherlawyer wrote:
There is almost no definite cyclone or anticyclone in the North
Atlantic and the only decent "dartboard" in the North Pacific is a low
with a core surface level pressure of about 990 mb.
I missed a rather special event in the Arctic. An high of 1056 just NW
of Greenland. That can't be far off a record for seal level pressures
can it?
Nagris has hit Rangoon in Further India. Two major rivers drain Burma
both port near where that storm broached:
http://www.mizzima.com/news/breaking...ws/415-cyclone...
Now a gale of 40 knots and the weather in the UK has reverted
accordingly. Soon we will see those tell tale earthquakes that match
almost to a tee their location. I wonder where.
The begged question to answer next is: Can those two be predicted?
I think I need to learn how to use a data base and will probably have
the time to do so before that particular penny drops.
The seismicity in the Andreanof Islands kicked off again at that
storm's peak too. I want to believe that the low deepening in the
North Atlantic ATM is the key. It breaks up at 1004 on Wednesday the
7th:
http://www.westwind.ch/?link=ukmb,ht...racknell+13 2
But the spell ends or changes perhaps on the 5th so it's anyone's
guess what happens then. I'm not saying anything.
It goes on for a full 9 days on this site:
https://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/efs/cgi-b...ntic%20Bas in)
Well, anyway; that's the best I can do.