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Old March 7th 08, 07:48 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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On Mar 7, 7:19 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
I should be titling these lunar times to the nearest quarter hour for
the sake of looking them up in the future. I shall have to think that
through.

Anyway, start as you mean to precede is what I always say when ever I
say:"start as you mean to precede".

http://satellite.ehabich.info/hurricane-watch.htm
Guess which one has legs.


OK, the penny has finally dropped. With this spell, rather than
sloughing off the highs at the US/Atlantic, the air mass finds its way
up eastern Canada and I think (but can't say for sure) enters
Greenland.

From there it moves to Spitzbergen in the Arctic Ocean:
http://meteonet.nl/aktueel/brackall.htm

My problem is that I was not watching developments closely enough. I
had assumed that the behaviour was aberrant due to the likelihood of a
serious earthquake of 7M or more taking place after the closure of the
last series of spells.

Thinking about it now, Highs in the NW Atlantic at such latitudes must
be very common. They are after all part of the features of a "col".
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.g...k=gst&q=17%3A#

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Old March 8th 08, 02:43 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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Jokwe is expected to glance at Mozambique any moment now. Wind speeds
are in the region of 90 to 95 knots sustained but are likely to fall
rapidly with wind shear and landfall.

But the track looks likely to take it back out to sea and head further
south.
http://satellite.ehabich.info/hurricane-watch.htm

I'd have said the other one was going to grow and hang around. Looks
like it won't be alone. http://www.hurricanezone.net/
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Old March 8th 08, 09:27 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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On Mar 8, 3:43 am, Weatherlawyer wrote:
Jokwe is expected to glance at Mozambique any moment now. Wind speeds
are in the region of 90 to 95 knots sustained but are likely to fall
rapidly with wind shear and landfall.

But the track looks likely to take it back out to sea and head further
south.http://satellite.ehabich.info/hurricane-watch.htm

I'd have said the other one was going to grow and hang around. Looks
like it won't be alone.http://www.hurricanezone.net/


100 knots, that is going some! A Cat 3 going on Cat 4. It's knocked
the spell back, what? Going on 4 hours? 3 or 4 certainly. Let's have a
look at the angles:
http://meteonet.nl/aktueel/brackall.htm

Less than 15 degrees (just) then glancing off to the north. We got
some light rain and that was it?
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Old March 9th 08, 05:07 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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Wow!! 100 knots!!! But what we really need to know is what
kind of knots were theses? I mean, did they earn you any
boyscout badges?

Brian
--
http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism
Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html
Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html
Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes?
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Old March 9th 08, 10:59 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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On Mar 8, 10:27 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:

100 knots, that is going some! A Cat 3 going on Cat 4. It's knocked
the spell back, what? Going on 4 hours? 3 or 4 certainly. Let's have a
look at the angles:http://meteonet.nl/aktueel/brackall.htm

Less than 15 degrees (just) then glancing off to the north. We got
some light rain and that was it?


By the time I got around to posting that last, the storm was winding
down. Bloody nice day here now and no sign of the much vaunted Low
that was supposed to wreak havoc on the morrow.

What is interesting is that the Low over the NE North American
seaboard. That should be an high by now and feeding with earthquakes.


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Old March 9th 08, 10:46 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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On Mar 9, 11:59 am, Weatherlawyer wrote:

What is interesting is that the Low over the NE North American
seaboard. That should be an high by now and feeding with earthquakes.


All quiet on the Western fronts. All except for a fairly deep North
Atlantic one headed for England. The fact it has to permeate Ireland
and Wales first being incidental, I imagine.
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Old March 10th 08, 01:02 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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On Mar 9, 4:59 am, Weatherlawyer wrote:
snip


What is interesting is that the Low over the NE North American
seaboard. That should be an high by now and feeding with earthquakes.


Feeding with earthquakes??? Even if one were trying to understand
your conceptualization of meterological and seismological inter-
relatedness, what the f----- does "feeding with earthquakes" mean? Do
you even read what you type? If you don't, why should anyone?

--mirage
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Old March 10th 08, 11:19 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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On Mar 9, 11:46 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:

What is interesting is that the Low over the NE North American
seaboard. That should be an high by now and feeding with earthquakes.


All quiet on the Western fronts. All except for a fairly deep North
Atlantic one headed for England. The fact it has to permeate Ireland
and Wales first being incidental, I imagine.


http://www.sat24.nl/frame.php?html=view&country=gb
http://www.met.ie/sat/full-ir.asp

Both Jokwe and Kamba are of similar strengths to the one shown
(crossing the Irish Sea at the moment.)

Something on a BBC gardening programme late last night told of the
interaction of storms as seen today. They were visiting a park in
Argentina and the owner showed them an avenue that had been felled in
a storm the same day Katrina hit New Orleans.

Note the occluded fronts contained in this chart:
http://meteonet.nl/aktueel/brackall.htm

I can hear the trampling of little feet. It's fairly quiet here at the
mo:
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/...quakes_big.php

The indications from the Hawaii site indicate the Mozambique storm
will last the spell. So I imagine a slow build up over the next few
days, if they are correct.
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Old March 11th 08, 09:12 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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On Mar 10, 12:19 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Mar 9, 11:46 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:



What is interesting is that the Low over the NE North American
seaboard. That should be an high by now and feeding with earthquakes.


All quiet on the Western fronts. All except for a fairly deep North
Atlantic one headed for England. The fact it has to permeate Ireland
and Wales first being incidental, I imagine.


http://www.sat24.nl/frame.php?html=v...at/full-ir.asp

Both Jokwe and Kamba are of similar strengths to the one shown
(crossing the Irish Sea at the moment.)

Something on a BBC gardening programme late last night told of the
interaction of storms as seen today. They were visiting a park in
Argentina and the owner showed them an avenue that had been felled in
a storm the same day Katrina hit New Orleans.

Note the occluded fronts contained in this chart:
http://meteonet.nl/aktueel/brackall.htm

I can hear the trampling of little feet. It's fairly quiet here at the
mo:http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/...quakes_big.php

The indications from the Hawaii site indicate the Mozambique storm
will last the spell. So I imagine a slow build up over the next few
days, if they are correct.


Both tropical storms are SF 1s in the 80 and 90 knots league. The
storm that hit the south of England to much consternation (though it
is a weekly event in northern Scotland) seems to be heading for
Denmark or Germany.

It could cause a lot of damage to Holland. It will be interesting to
see where the next large quakes turn up. Things have been fairly quiet
for the last few days. Looks like there is an High leaving the eastern
US seaboard too.

All at the same time.

All that bad weather the US has had is now a Low that left
Newfoundland in the night. Its 980mb atm so I think it could hover
around Iceland but is more likely to make it across the N Atlantic for
the end of the spell.

(Which spell at 10:46 on the 14th is much the same as this one.)

So do we get a 7.5M?

I don't see why not. There is certainly something very interesting
going on. But the standard met office stuff is pretty well bang on, so
I think not. More tropical Cat 2 and 3s then, maybe I should say 3s
and 4s.

And maybe some more stuff from Hawaii and places east?


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