On Tuesday, 24 June 2014 08:52:49 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Monday, 23 June 2014 23:39:25 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
The 25th 26th 27th and 28th June on the NAEFS gain definition (convergence?) and show a marked line of three Lows running across the Canadian-US border. This means that as this spell changes the volcanicity of the planet increases.
http://weather.gc.ca/ensemble/naefs/cartes_e.html
No sign of any storms.
Ah well. Maybe there is a time lag?
W T F !
2014/06/23 20:53:10
8 M. Rat Islands, Aleutian Islands
I will have to rethink all this stuff.
Not it appears there is the obvious link with volcanics...
http://www.volcanodiscovery.com/volc...i-Ubinas..html
2014/06/23 at 20:53
51.8 N. 178.8 E. 7.9 M. Rat Islands, Aleutian Islands.
That should be enough to change the weather.
I only catch up on these charts every few days or so, so I only just saw this:
http://www.opc.ncep.noaa.gov/Loops/
The Low in the Pacific retrogrades north west in a pattern I think is called a Rex Block:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_...%29#Rex_blocks
Noon on the 21st June 2014 there is a large Low system in the Gulf of Alaska.
6 hours later there is an High ousting it from above.
Sea level pressure differences in the Pacific are virtually identical to Atlantic ones so it is surprising that such a large magnitude took place (despite the fact we haven't had a large quake in months.)
The probable key to these situations is volcanic eruptions. I will have to stop thinking about them as incendiary phases of geo-physics and start treating volcanoes generally as isolated phenomena similar to tropical storms. They certainly appear on the BoM charts as natural phenomena with similar signals to tropical storms.
But then I always supposed the tornadoes of North America are iterations of Atlantic tropicals. And seeing how well they interlace with volcanic events...
It is all very confusing.