On Sep 7, 4:46*am, "Fievel Mousekewitz Sr \(Not A CT'er\)"
wrote:
I watched large areas of clear skis, suddenly have large paths of
clouds on radar. Nothing I can remember from weather science
explains this. Where did they just suddenly appear from?
I've seen this a few time throughout the year. But have no idea
why it happens.
OK so far.
Large body of water, water condenses. Clouds form as they
eventually come over land as moisture forms into rain and storms.
Say what?
Larger clouds aren't suppose to appear from almost nowhere, or at least
I didn't think they were suppose to.
Anyone have any ideas?
Fievel. *(Everything I ever learned about weather is becoming garbage.)
It would help if we knew where you were talking about.
Water evaporates from a large body of water and condenses over the
brow of an hill as is the case with North American weather where
everything from the Pacific hits the Rockies before rectifying itself
over the plains.
That's why they get arid zonas.
It's much the same in Europe. The UK is a microcosm of North America.
Would the times of the lunar phases of these other occasions coincide
with that for the last occasion?
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html