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Old March 21st 06, 03:27 AM posted to sci.geo.meteorology,alt.talk.weather
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In this image, dust mingles with clouds over northeastern China and the
Korean Peninsula. The dust cloud appears as a pale tan, slightly
lighter than the underlying landscape. Dust clouds obscure the view of
the city of Beijing.

According to Reuters News Service, the dust resulted in a rare
phenomenon in South Korea: yellow snow. Snow laced with dust can pose a
health hazard, and the Korean weather bureau issued a dust warning.

In northeastern China and Mongolia, the storm posed the usual hazards
to respiratory tracts and eyes

Dust Storm over Eastern China

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/New...3?img_id=17214

Anyone happen to know how it is an health hazard? I know you're not
supposed to eat the yellow snow but that is ridiculous.


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Old March 21st 06, 01:37 PM posted to sci.geo.meteorology,alt.talk.weather
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Weatherlawyer wrote:
In this image, dust mingles with clouds over northeastern China and the
Korean Peninsula. The dust cloud appears as a pale tan, slightly
lighter than the underlying landscape. Dust clouds obscure the view of
the city of Beijing.

According to Reuters News Service, the dust resulted in a rare
phenomenon in South Korea: yellow snow. Snow laced with dust can pose a
health hazard, and the Korean weather bureau issued a dust warning.


Gives new meaning to don't eat yellow snow.

Scott
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Old March 21st 06, 11:29 PM posted to sci.geo.meteorology,alt.talk.weather
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Default Yellow Peril

"Weatherlawyer" skrev i melding
oups.com...

In this image, dust mingles with clouds over northeastern China and the
Korean Peninsula. The dust cloud appears as a pale tan, slightly
lighter than the underlying landscape. Dust clouds obscure the view of
the city of Beijing.

According to Reuters News Service, the dust resulted in a rare
phenomenon in South Korea: yellow snow. Snow laced with dust can pose a
health hazard, and the Korean weather bureau issued a dust warning.

In northeastern China and Mongolia, the storm posed the usual hazards
to respiratory tracts and eyes

Dust Storm over Eastern China

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/New...3?img_id=17214

Anyone happen to know how it is an health hazard? I know you're not
supposed to eat the yellow snow but that is ridiculous.



Interesting! One morning some years ago I noticed that cars was kind of
yellow after rain during the night. Then the meteorolyst said that the
reason was strong south winds that brough sand from Sahara-Dessert! Amazing
I think!

Cory


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Old March 22nd 06, 12:10 AM posted to sci.geo.meteorology,alt.talk.weather
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Default Yellow Peril

Interesting! One morning some years ago I noticed that cars was kind of
yellow after rain during the night. Then the meteorolyst said that the
reason was strong south winds that brough sand from Sahara-Dessert!
Amazing I think!

Cory


I must also say that I live in Norway and its a loooooooong way from Africa!
:-)


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Old March 22nd 06, 08:22 AM posted to sci.geo.meteorology,alt.talk.weather
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Kåre V wrote:

Interesting! One morning some years ago I noticed that cars were kind of
yellow after rain during the night. Then the meteorolist said that the
reason was strong south winds that brought sand from the Sahara desert!
Amazing I think!

Cory


I must also say that I live in Norway and its a loooooooong way from Africa!

I seem to remember reading that the wind brings a lot of pollution from
the east of the Med over to the Atlantic where it goes north to
Scandinavia.

We've had all sorts in Britain from red sand to soot from the Kuwaite
oil fires. And famously, the Chernobyl fall out.

At the start of all this kerfuffle about air pollution -maybe 20 or so
years back, the Swedes or someone, were trying to blame us for all
their poor air quality. This was for stuff that had passed over Iron
Curtain coal mines and steel mills.

Makes you wonder what politicians employ climate researchers for.
Whatever, it is it has little to do with pollution or clean air.



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Old March 22nd 06, 12:01 PM posted to sci.geo.meteorology,alt.talk.weather
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Weatherlawyer: I seem to remember reading that the wind brings a lot of
pollution from
the east of the Med over to the Atlantic where it goes north to
Scandinavia.

Cory: In the 80s we talked a lot about it in school. We were angry of the
British to. :-) Now we know it isnt that bad any longer. Scandinavia and
Norway has very clean air now, and the trees doesnt die like they did.


Weatherlawyer:We've had all sorts in Britain from red sand to soot from the
Kuwaite
oil fires. And famously, the Chernobyl fall out.

Cory: I read about the problems in northern Norway after Chernobyl fall out.
Aspesially babys that was born. They had something that I dont know the
English word for! ARG! There feet and arms wasnt like they shoud have been.

Cory, Norway


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Old March 22nd 06, 03:30 PM posted to sci.geo.meteorology,alt.talk.weather
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Kåre V wrote:
Weatherlawyer:

I seem to remember reading that the wind brings a lot of pollution from
the east of the Med over to the Atlantic where it goes north to Scandinavia.


In the 80s we talked a lot about it in school. We were angry of the
British to. :-) Now we know it isnt that bad any longer. Scandinavia and
Norway has very clean air now, and the trees doesnt die like they did.

I think you will find that the block destruction of trees in those days
was of such a pattern as to rule out acid rain.

Which rain, if it were ever acid would have become so -so it was also
alledged, from the burning of fossil fuels.

Said fossils once having been vegetation.

Kind of like eating your cake and still having it.

What I imagine happened was that the forestry workers were spraying
their plantations with weed killers designed to halt the growth of
weeds around the newly planted trees. Either mismangement or the
systemic poisoning itself, was more likely responsible for the
destruction of the trees.

See if you can find aerial photographs of the damage these forests
sustained. You will see patterns that just would not -could not- be
made by falling rain.

Another point to note is that the experts, whenever they were
identifying the acid, referred to it as sulphuric acid. Any schoolboy
knows it could not have been sulphuric acid. How come the experts never
corrected themselves?

And one more for the third witness:

When I used to work on council estates, (large blocks of streets of low
cost/rent housing) whenever we were at an house where the householder
burned coal or (especially) wood, the gutters would be vibrant with
life. The roof tiles would be covered in lichens and even mosses.

When we were at someone's with a cleaner burning fuel, say with gas or
oil central heating, the roofs were usually barren and the gutters
seldom needed cleaning.

It was around this time that governments everywhere woke up to the
perils of chemicals such as lindane (not sure of the spelling) the same
basic product as was widely used in timber preservatives, weedkillers
and various other Tabun related chemicals.

The same product by and large, that is still killing the farmers of
Chimpland's first Iraq:
VietNam.

You might want to try checking out what the forestry is like in regions
where they dumped the hydrazine and Agent Orange in the USA. (Probably
still secret, that one though.) There was talk of it on usenet groups
but it seems to have magically disappeared from all the servers.



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