Thread: 12:18
View Single Post
  #33   Report Post  
Old May 9th 08, 06:35 PM posted to uk.sci.weather,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.earthquakes
[email protected] crazyh0rse1@hotmail.com is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Oct 2007
Posts: 142
Default 12:18

On 9 May, 18:47, Harold Brooks wrote:
In article cff8a1a5-f7fd-4656-8bee-f80f10f37ca8
@x35g2000hsb.googlegroups.com, says...



On May 9, 3:47 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:


Complex problems with complex low and the Low Complex:


http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/..._pressure.html


That has just GOT to be a major volcanic eruption late saturday most
of Sunday and early Monday. Just like it shows on the model run I
posted about on this thread:


http://groups.google.com/group/uk.sc...m/thread/f7644...


This is from the NEIC: 5.5 Magnitude earthquake at 23:21 on 8th May
2008.
!8 hours since the last one, therefore a storm brewing maybe. It is
certainly heading that way.


From NEIC, based on the ~1500 M5+ earthquakes per year, there are about
480 M5.5+ earthquakes per year, or about 1 every 18 hours. (There have
been 43 5.5 or larger quakes in the last 30 days.)

Harold
--
Harold Brooks


It would now seem as if a complex low pressure at 55N 30W is being
used to predict a major volcanic eruption anywhere in the world.

But, why the Northern Atlantic? There are plenty of vigorous areas of
low pressure in the Southern Ocean between Antarctic and S. America,
S. Africa, New Zealand etc. Are these never able to contribute to
earthquakes/volcanoes?

Or is this an "upmarket, decadent, Western standard of living" theory?