On Dec 9, 8:38*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
Issue day 8 Forecast day 9:
http://www.weatheroffice.gc.ca/ensem.../cartes_e.html
It looks like another one to me but it may have just been this:
2012/12/08
5.1 M. @ 19:00. 7.2 S. 144.0 W. *S. P.N.G.
5.7 M. @ 16:35. 7.2 S. 143.9 W. *S. P.N.G.
So...
On with the *game.
This still looks like it has potential for another 7.5 or so:
036h sea level pressure forecast valid on Dec 10, 2012 12 UTC.
http://www.weatheroffice.gc.ca/ensem...our=36&Day=0&R...
Breaking by:
036h sea level pressure forecast valid on Dec 11, 2012 00 UTC.
What we need now is model turpitude and no more Mag 5s or greater. The
tropical storm fronts seem to be up for it, though the North Atlantic
is showing signs of duality.
Pity that.
Still; never mind eh?
2012/12/10 16:53
7.1 M. 6.5 S. 129.8 E. BANDA SEA.
Only a 7.1 but nobody's perfect.
And like I said elsewhere, I don't enjoy the references others have to
work with. Set levy!
Well I'm blowed the North Atlantic Chart from the Mess OfThis has an
analysis chart out showing the likelihood of a severe earthquake
sometime before publication.
Well done the British Government.
And well done the boys in the back room for at least preparing the
useless article. Not easy for you I am sure.
Surface pressure chart - Analysis
Issued at: 0600 on Mon 10 Dec 2012
Forecast chart (T+18)
Valid 3000 UTC Mon 08 Dec 2012
That's what it says.
The third chart is a forecast: (T+12).
Yet the legend on it states that is is:
"Valid 0000 UTC Tue 11 Dec 2012.
I'm better at forecasting earthquakes than I am at maths and I am not
exactly brilliant at forecasting earthquakes but even I can spot a
discrepancy. I suppose it comes with having an eye for anomalies.
Which kind of takes the wind out of my sails for the last chart in the
series today at the location linked.
It does indeed show another and yet more significant bout of severe
weather on its way. And this is how it works:
As previously stated elsewhere frosty weather; snow; mists; etc.;
etc., all betoken the likelihood of tropical disturbances, nee storms.
And with frost on the slates and car roofs here in sunny Stoke this
morning, I was expecting something promising but discarded it as the
present storm was still a Cat 3.
When a large cyclonic system appears in the North Atlantic it
generally indicates a Tropical Storm which then goes on according to
the situation and extent shown in the North Atlantic, to be an
hurricane.
Usually.
As seismic disturbances follow along storm front lines, the chances of
a large earthquake occurring are likely where two or more such fronts
meet and "end".
The charts on the above link were still showing the preposterous 3000
UTC Fri 06 Dec 2012 chart at 5 am this morning (
10 December 2012) so I had stopped looking at the damned thing.
(Fortunately they still publish the sensible one he
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/..._pressure.html
7 hours late and 30 hours short as usual but at least as accurate as
the best of them.)
Anyway it is now showing a large marked Tropical Storm gathering in
the same place as for Bophar at T+60 after coming apart as stated
(also in another thread.) (I'm not speculating on the Latitude and
Longitude; not even on the ocean.)
I actually got that from the BOM charts which, incidentally, don't
show a new storm budding -although they might be showing a resurgence
in the present situation.