On 24 Mar, 13:53, Weatherlawyer wrote:
Back to dual quakes again by the look of things.
Only a couple of small pairs so far but the weather is absolutely
flaccid in the North Atlantic and things are wet instead of dry and
fine.
It isn't North Dacota but it isn't what it should be too, neither.
Which means a storm is brewing somewhere. And it looks like it could
be a biggie.
Really super-dooper ones occur when a long dearth takes place in the
network of quakes at 5M and larger. I don't think they are that common
when duals occur.
And all the action on hehttps://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/wxmap_cgi....cgi?&area=ngp...
seems to be going on along coastal margins mainly north of 60 degrees
north and south of 50 degrees south.
Some small stuff might blow up on he
http://satellite.ehabich.info/hurricane-watch.htm
A very flaccid North Atlantic today (24th March 2010) and an High in
the Denmark Straight. So is the Low bracketing it on the North
American mainland and the one that was yesterday's triple, to the
right, going to end in Tornadoes.
Wait a minute. It's a High between two Lows so that's a derecho right?
A right Right line squall.
Decisions, decisions!
Let's have a look at the old score board:
http://www.spc.noaa.gov/products/wwa/
Some bad stuff promised but no cuddly toys. We'll see. If that 979
drops about 5 millibars we'll have something interesting.
Or not, as the case may be.