On Mar 21, 5:08*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Wednesday, 20 March 2013 16:12:48 UTC, Weatherlawyer wrote:
Weatherlawyer wrote:
Looks like something striking on Thursday night.
The http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...e=mslp-p...run today looks like it is loaded for bear. Nearly every other day on this run there looks like a tremendous earthshock going on.
The first one is from this morning at 80 degrees West.
When that crosses the continental division from South America to Antarctica, the quake or whatever will occur.
That dissipates on Frday evening but the next day something from Madagascar is thrown into the mix and that hits Antarctica first thing Sunday.
That flattens out overnight but by Monday things look black again. All points are affected by then.
Warnings of the first tropical storm of the northern season will be apparent from Tuesday. Something could conceivably hit a Cat one on Wednesday.
A depression will be short lived in the Pacific and a more extensive or several smaller patterns will develop on the opposite side of the globe (or hemisphere?)
I believe that the way that the Southern Hemisphere Block works on the
semipermanent Anticyclones in the Horus latitudes has had a
fundamental affect on the charts that BOM are putting out at the
moment. There is a remarkable amount of elongation on here initially
today:
http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...Refresh+ View
Something of a storm-like nature brews up later in the day but...
But anyway, thinkgs definitely look more clear after Thursday's quakes
(leading me to believe that they will be interesting -at least.)
Cyclosys looks to set in late Friday early Saturday wherever it
occurs. Remnants of it will last into Sunday but then things get
massively elongated.
This is because the last two contiguous Oceanic Highs can break
through (south of Africa and Australia) for a while.
Last two?
The High off western S. America never could. But you know what I mean.