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Old March 15th 10, 02:21 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,uk.sci.weather
Weatherlawyer Weatherlawyer is offline
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Default More twins on the way

On 15 Mar, 09:46, Weatherlawyer wrote:
Here we go with the twins then; do we?

2.7 M. 03/15. 05:01. 18.9 N. 66.3 W. PUERTO RICO
3.0 M. 03/15. 04:58. 19.1 N. 66.4 W. PUERTO RICO

They show up on the Met Office North Atlantic chart too (at the time
of posting this.)

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


2 Lows in a box 40 to 50 North and 20 to 30 west. And the pair of
parallel mice running. But not in time to forecast them. (OTOH I never
rechecked for an update from yesterday's 00:00 chart.)

What else could the people whop aught to be looking at this sort of
thing be looking at if they weren't sheep instead of scientists?

The complex is going to Denmark Straight but another one is leaving
Cape Hatteras shortly after:

https://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/wxmap_cgi....cgi?&area=ngp...


And we know what that one means, don't we, my little BAH!-lames.
It is scheduled to split at 18:00 from time of posting so perhaps a
pair in auld Aleutia?

BUT....

With a storm powerful enough to show up in the Aleutians we (US not
us) can get tornadoes on the continent. Nothing much on here since the
12th:

http://www.spc.noaa.gov/climo/reports/100312_rpts.html


Now here is a quandary: What DID show up on the 12th and 13th was just
coastal (California, Oregon and Alaska. Canada not registering, eh?
Noh Mehico, I theen!)

Tantalising.
Very.