On Mar 11, 12:26*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Mar 10, 7:35*pm, Adam Lea wrote:
On 10/03/12 17:14, Keith (Southend)G wrote:
Nature has a tendancy to balance things out, but I wonder
when this may occur.?
I have been wondering the same thing regarding the lack of major
hurricane landfalls in the U.S.
What storms are extant at the mo?
http://www.tropicalstormrisk.com/
(See archives at Unisys)
Mar *8 *09:40 * * Mar 15 *01:25
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html
So 3 or 4 days time the blocking will change -or alter, cyclosis of
anything in the tropics and then a slow ride through the southern belt
to Antarctica before the resulting earthquake.
Koji will blend into the mix south of Australia by mid day Wednesday
utc:
http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...Refresh+ View
I'll put it on my blog and add a link later.
Meanwhile.
Since Blocking Hioghs usually relate to strong Japanese quakes, it
might be worth selling your shares in Tepco:
"Some insiders from Japan's tightly knit nuclear industry have stepped
forward to say that Tepco and regulators had for years ignored
warnings of the possibility of a larger-than-expected tsunami in north-
eastern Japan.
Eight years ago, as a member of an influential cabinet office
committee on offshore earthquakes in northeastern Japan, Kunihiko
Shimazaki, professor emeritus of seismology at the University of
Tokyo, warned that Fukushima's coast was vulnerable to tsunamis more
than twice as tall as the forecasts of up to 17 feet put forth by
regulators and Tepco.
The committee excluded his views from debate as too speculative and
'pending further research.'
{Boy; do I know THAT feeling!}
In 2008, Tepco calculations showed Fukushima Daiichi could be hit by
tsunamis as high as 50 feet. 'They completely ignored me in order to
save Tepco money,' says Shimazaki."
http://politics.slashdot.org/story/1...8Slashdot% 29
An year ago today was it not?
I'm not forcasting another big one. The BOM chart shows Koji is going
to fail as a multi 5M shebang though the precise time is out of range
of their chart at the moment. Somewhere 80 degrees from the Weddel Sea
I think.