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Old May 18th 16, 08:14 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
Weatherlawyer Weatherlawyer is offline
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On Wednesday, 18 May 2016 18:52:22 UTC+1, Col wrote:
On 18/05/2016 18:45, Ron Button wrote:
May I suggest that the above could be given his own
personal newsgroup to spew out the endless ravings which the rest of us are subjected to daily?


Congratulations, you've just given him yet another thread to latch onto. Just killfile him and be done with it.



18 May 2016. Seconded

Meanwhile there is something astonishing coming our way on Monday you will be pleased to unnote.

April in Greenland is typically very cold, though some years buck the trend.. In 2012, for example, the surface of the ice sheet started melting early and then experienced the most extensive melting since the start of the satellite record in 1978. Weather events and temperature anomalies this April suggest that 2016 may be off to a similar start.

The map above shows land surface temperatures for April 2016 compared to the 2001–2010 average for the same month. Red areas were hotter than the long-term average; some areas were as much as 20 degrees Celsius (36 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer. Blue areas were below average, and white pixels had normal temperatures. Gray pixels were areas without enough data, most likely due to excessive cloud cover.

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOT...8&src=eoa-iotd

So much for SSTs and now for the SSWs:

As the line-storms of the weekend break all records and the attention of the earthquake fraternity is sidetracked from events in South America by eruptions in Italy and activity in various places north of the equator and I once again fail to interest anyone of any importance.the chart for t +20 on the Bom site at the time of posting is showing the SSW to come.

http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...Refresh+ View

So it's just me and god then?
Pity.