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Old September 22nd 08, 08:59 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 05:04

22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html

The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting to see
how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm

Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure areas
997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.

The last weather spells we had like it we

30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35

The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. Moon = .22 S.

7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. Moon = 12 S.

22nd September
Sun = 00:00. Moon = .27 N

29th September
Sun = 2 S. Moon = 6 S

Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines towards Hong
Kong and Hanoi.

And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the west and
a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.

This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...oto&PhotoID=16
957 mb.

Quakes for that period:
Day Magnitude
30 6.2
30 5.5
31 5.8
01 6.0
03 5.9
03 5.6
04 6.3
05 5.9
07 5.8
07 5.7
08 6.9
09 6.0
10 6.6

Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame 13S SWI 25 January 01 February 80 60

Gula 14S SWI 27 January 02 February 85 85

Gene 15P AUS 27 January 06 February 90 85

Hondo 16S SWI 04 February 24 February 125 115

- 17S AUS 07 February 10 February 40 30

Ivan 18S SWI 07 February 21 February 115 100

Nicholas 19S AUS 13 February 20 February 80 80

Wow!

I was right wasn't I.

  #2   Report Post  
Old September 22nd 08, 06:20 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 05:04


22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html

The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting to see
how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm

Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure areas
997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.

The last weather spells we had like it we

30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35

The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.

7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.

22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N

29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S

Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines towards Hong
Kong and Hanoi.

And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the west and
a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.

This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo....
957 mb.

Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6

Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60

Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85

Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85

Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115

- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30

Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100

Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80

*******

Tropical Storms March 7th to 14th 2008
George 17S AUS 03 March 09 March 110 105
Jacob 18S AUS 07 March 12 March 75 75

One caution on them is the next storm started 6 days after it
finished:
Indlala 19S SWI 12 March 06 March 115 95

Quakes for the period:

Day Magnitude
10 5.6
11 5.6
12 6.4
12 6.3
13 6.0
13 5.7
14 5.5
14 6.0
15 6.0
15 5.7

And again the charts showed severe dart-boarding in keeping with the
intensity of the tropical storms.

Furthermore the day has been dismal; cool and damp with drizzle
turning into rain for a while around noon. Today, that storm over the
Philippines became a Cat 2.

The incidence of earthquakes in the region of 6 M., or greater depends
on there being tropical storms.

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Old September 23rd 08, 03:54 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Apr 2007
Posts: 31
Default 05:04

On Sep 22, 1:59 am, Weatherlawyer wrote:
22nd to 29th September: 05:04http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html

The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting to see
how it goes.http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm

Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure areas
997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.

The last weather spells we had like it we

30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35

The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. Moon = .22 S.

7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. Moon = 12 S.

22nd September
Sun = 00:00. Moon = .27 N

29th September
Sun = 2 S. Moon = 6 S

Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines towards Hong
Kong and Hanoi.

And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the west and
a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.

This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.

Quakes for that period:
Day Magnitude
30 6.2
30 5.5
31 5.8
01 6.0
03 5.9
03 5.6
04 6.3
05 5.9
07 5.8
07 5.7
08 6.9
09 6.0
10 6.6

Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame 13S SWI 25 January 01 February 80 60

Gula 14S SWI 27 January 02 February 85 85

Gene 15P AUS 27 January 06 February 90 85

Hondo 16S SWI 04 February 24 February 125 115

- 17S AUS 07 February 10 February 40 30

Ivan 18S SWI 07 February 21 February 115 100

Nicholas 19S AUS 13 February 20 February 80 80

Wow!

I was right wasn't I.


Wow for sure! You've got to be a wizard.
  #4   Report Post  
Old September 23rd 08, 01:17 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 05:04


22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html

The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting to see
how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm

Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure areas
997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.

The last weather spells we had like it we

30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35

The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.

7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.

22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N

29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S

Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines towards Hong
Kong and Hanoi.

And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the west and
a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.

This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo....
957 mb.

Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6

Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60

Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85

Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85

Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115

- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30

Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100

Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80

Wow!

I was right wasn't I.


Interesting that we are not suffering the slings and arrows of
outrageous weather but covered with a rather nice anticyclone, thanks
very.

And Nordic one to boot!

Yet Hagupit must be wreaking havoc just off Hong Kong. At CAt 3 it
must be affecting this spell but not here.

Interesting!

Of course seeing as it is equinox and all that....

Last time I looked the system that was Ike is now stretched out over N
Russia. One Low centre is still in the position one was in yesterday.
I don't know if it is the same one.

What is interesting is the convolutions of the 1016 mb line.

All in all rather puzzling. So cast your beadies on this:

2.6 23rd 01:19 ISLAND OF HAWAII
2.7 23rd 00:01 UNIMAK ISLAND REGION

4.8 22nd 23:34 REYKJANES RIDGE
2.6 22nd 23:06 VIRGIN ISLANDS
2.5 22nd 21:52 SOUTHERN ALASKA
2.8 22nd 21:22 CENTRAL ALASKA
3.1 22nd 20:32 CENTRAL ALASKA
5.4 22nd 20:21 SOUTH OF FIJI

See anything interesting?
  #5   Report Post  
Old September 23rd 08, 01:27 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 05:04


22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html

The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting to see
how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm

Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure areas
997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.

The last weather spells we had like it we

30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35

The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.

7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.

22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N

29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S

Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines towards Hong
Kong and Hanoi.

And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the west and
a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.

This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.

Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6

Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60

Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85

Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85

Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115

- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30

Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100

Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80

*******

Tropical Storms March 7th to 14th 2008
George *17S * * AUS * * 03 March * * * *09 March * * * *110 * * 105
Jacob * 18S * * AUS * * 07 March * * * *12 March * * * *75 * * *75

One caution on them is the next storm started 6 days after it
finished:
Indlala 19S * * SWI * * 12 March * * * *06 March * * * *115 * * 95

Quakes for the period:

Day * * Magnitude
10 * * *5.6
11 * * *5.6
12 * * *6.4
12 * * *6.3
13 * * *6.0
13 * * *5.7
14 * * *5.5
14 * * *6.0
15 * * *6.0
15 * * *5.7

And again the charts showed severe dart-boarding in keeping with
the intensity of the tropical storms.

Furthermore the day has been dismal; cool and damp with drizzle
turning into rain for a while around noon. Today, that storm over the
Philippines became a Cat 2.

The incidence of earthquakes in the region of 6 M., or greater
depends on there being tropical storms.

*******
22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html

The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting
to see how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm

Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure
areas 997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.

The last weather spells we had like it we

30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35

The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. Moon = .22 S.

7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. Moon = 12 S.

22nd September
Sun = 00:00. Moon = .27 N

29th September
Sun = 2 S. Moon = 6 S

Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines
towards Hong Kong and Hanoi.

And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the
west and a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.

This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.

Quakes for that period:
Day Magnitude
30 6.2
30 5.5
31 5.8
01 6.0
03 5.9
03 5.6
04 6.3
05 5.9
07 5.8
07 5.7
08 6.9
09 6.0
10 6.6

Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame 13S SWI 25 January 01 February 80 60

Gula 14S SWI 27 January 02 February 85 85

Gene 15P AUS 27 January 06 February 90 85

Hondo 16S SWI 04 February 24 February 125 115

- 17S AUS 07 February 10 February 40 30

Ivan 18S SWI 07 February 21 February 115 100

Nicholas 19S AUS 13 February 20 February 80 80

Wow!

I was right wasn't I.

*******
Interesting that we are not suffering the slings and arrows of
outrageous weather but covered with a rather nice anticyclone, thanks
very.

And Nordic one to boot!

Yet Hagupit must be wreaking havoc just off Hong Kong. At CAt 3 it
must be affecting this spell but not here.

Interesting!

Of course seeing as it is equinox and all that....

Last time I looked the system that was Ike is now stretched out over N
Russia. One Low centre is still in the position one was in yesterday.

I don't know if it is the same one.
What is interesting is the convolutions of the 1016 mb line.

All in all rather puzzling. So cast your beadies on this:

2.6 23rd 01:19 ISLAND OF HAWAII
2.7 23rd 00:01 UNIMAK ISLAND REGION

4.8 22nd 23:34 REYKJANES RIDGE
2.6 22nd 23:06 VIRGIN ISLANDS
2.5 22nd 21:52 SOUTHERN ALASKA
2.8 22nd 21:22 CENTRAL ALASKA
3.1 22nd 20:32 CENTRAL ALASKA
5.4 22nd 20:21 SOUTH OF FIJI

See anything interesting?


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Old September 23rd 08, 06:54 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 05:04

On Sep 23, 2:27*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html


The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting to see
how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure areas
997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.


The last weather spells we had like it we


30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35


The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.


7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.


22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N


29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S


Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines towards Hong
Kong and Hanoi.


And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the west and
a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.


This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo....
957 mb.


Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6


Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60


Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85


Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85


Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115


- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30


Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100


Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80


*******


Tropical Storms March 7th to 14th 2008
George *17S * * AUS * * 03 March * * * *09 March * * * *110 * * 105
Jacob * 18S * * AUS * * 07 March * * * *12 March * * * *75 * * *75


One caution on them is the next storm started 6 days after it
finished:
Indlala 19S * * SWI * * 12 March * * * *06 March * * * *115 * * 95


Quakes for the period:


Day * * Magnitude
10 * * *5.6
11 * * *5.6
12 * * *6.4
12 * * *6.3
13 * * *6.0
13 * * *5.7
14 * * *5.5
14 * * *6.0
15 * * *6.0
15 * * *5.7


And again the charts showed severe dart-boarding in keeping with
the intensity of the tropical storms.


Furthermore the day has been dismal; cool and damp with drizzle
turning into rain for a while around noon. Today, that storm over the
Philippines became a Cat 2.


The incidence of earthquakes in the region of 6 M., or greater
depends on there being tropical storms.

*******
22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html


The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting
to see how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure
areas 997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.


The last weather spells we had like it we


30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35


The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.


7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.


22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N


29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S


Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines
towards Hong Kong and Hanoi.


And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the
west and a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.


This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo....
957 mb.


Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6


Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60


Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85


Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85


Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115


- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30


Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100


Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80


Wow!


I was right wasn't I.


*******
Interesting that we are not suffering the slings and arrows of
outrageous weather but covered with a rather nice anticyclone, thanks
very.

And *Nordic one to boot!

Yet Hagupit must be wreaking havoc just off Hong Kong. At CAt 3 it
must be affecting this spell but not here.

Interesting!

Of course seeing as it is equinox and all that....

Last time I looked the system that was Ike is now stretched out over N
Russia. One Low centre is still in the position one was in yesterday.

I don't know if it is the same one.
What is interesting is the convolutions of the 1016 mb line.

All in all rather puzzling. So cast your beadies on this:

2.6 * *23rd * *01:19 * *ISLAND OF HAWAII
2.7 * *23rd * *00:01 * *UNIMAK ISLAND REGION

4.8 * *22nd * *23:34 * *REYKJANES RIDGE
2.6 * *22nd * *23:06 * *VIRGIN ISLANDS
2.5 * *22nd * *21:52 * *SOUTHERN ALASKA
2.8 * *22nd * *21:22 * *CENTRAL ALASKA
3.1 * *22nd * *20:32 * *CENTRAL ALASKA
5.4 * *22nd * *20:21 * *SOUTH OF FIJI

See anything interesting?


12 hours for the next quake from the one in Hawaii. And we still
haven't had one of 5 M., or more since the one near Fiji.

This will be interesting:
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm

There is an admittedly not very low Low just to the west of the UK. It
is right on the Mid Atlantic Ridge, so likely to wait a while for the
High over the UK to elongate.

With the moon at tdc and the sun over the equator, things are as much
a mystery to me as anyone reading this stuff.

However, there are no low Lows in the North Atlantic so where it all
falls apart as thing go critical if indeed they do go that way,
remains to be seen.

I suspect the phenomenon will bear fruit for future reference. Be that
as it may, the chances of catching a phase so squarely like this one
with such a powerful storm like that one fully on the only two
equinoxes of the year are few and far between.

There are 24 such spells. 48 if you count the half hours as unstable
versions. They repeat every 6 hours, more or less so getting a spell
to run from the start of an equinox is 1 in 3 years divided by 52 at
best. One in 24 divided by 365 at worst.

I am no mathematician and in truth I don't care. But that is the
difficulty outlined, for what it's worth.
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Old September 24th 08, 06:56 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 05:04

On Sep 23, 7:54*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Sep 23, 2:27*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:



22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html


The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting to see
how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure areas
997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.


The last weather spells we had like it we


30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35


The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.


7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.


22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N


29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S


Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines towards Hong
Kong and Hanoi.


And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the west and
a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.


This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.


Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6


Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60


Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85


Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85


Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115


- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30


Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100


Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80


*******


Tropical Storms March 7th to 14th 2008
George *17S * * AUS * * 03 March * * * *09 March * * * *110 * * 105
Jacob * 18S * * AUS * * 07 March * * * *12 March * * * *75 * * *75


One caution on them is the next storm started 6 days after it
finished:
Indlala 19S * * SWI * * 12 March * * * *06 March * * * *115 * * 95


Quakes for the period:


Day * * Magnitude
10 * * *5.6
11 * * *5.6
12 * * *6.4
12 * * *6.3
13 * * *6.0
13 * * *5.7
14 * * *5.5
14 * * *6.0
15 * * *6.0
15 * * *5.7


And again the charts showed severe dart-boarding in keeping with
the intensity of the tropical storms.


Furthermore the day has been dismal; cool and damp with drizzle
turning into rain for a while around noon. Today, that storm over the
Philippines became a Cat 2.


The incidence of earthquakes in the region of 6 M., or greater
depends on there being tropical storms.

*******
22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html


The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting
to see how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure
areas 997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.


The last weather spells we had like it we


30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35


The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.


7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.


22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N


29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S


Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines
towards Hong Kong and Hanoi.


And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the
west and a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.


This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.


Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6


Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60


Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85


Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85


Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115


- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30


Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100


Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80


Wow!


I was right wasn't I.


*******
Interesting that we are not suffering the slings and arrows of
outrageous weather but covered with a rather nice anticyclone, thanks
very.


And *Nordic one to boot!


Yet Hagupit must be wreaking havoc just off Hong Kong. At CAt 3 it
must be affecting this spell but not here.


Interesting!


Of course seeing as it is equinox and all that....


Last time I looked the system that was Ike is now stretched out over N
Russia. One Low centre is still in the position one was in yesterday.


I don't know if it is the same one.
What is interesting is the convolutions of the 1016 mb line.


All in all rather puzzling. So cast your beadies on this:


2.6 * *23rd * *01:19 * *ISLAND OF HAWAII
2.7 * *23rd * *00:01 * *UNIMAK ISLAND REGION


4.8 * *22nd * *23:34 * *REYKJANES RIDGE
2.6 * *22nd * *23:06 * *VIRGIN ISLANDS
2.5 * *22nd * *21:52 * *SOUTHERN ALASKA
2.8 * *22nd * *21:22 * *CENTRAL ALASKA
3.1 * *22nd * *20:32 * *CENTRAL ALASKA
5.4 * *22nd * *20:21 * *SOUTH OF FIJI


See anything interesting?


12 hours for the next quake from the one in Hawaii. And we still
haven't had one of 5 M., or more since the one near Fiji.

This will be interesting: http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm

There is an admittedly not very low Low just to the west of the UK. It
is right on the Mid Atlantic Ridge, so likely to wait a while for the
High over the UK to elongate.

With the moon at tdc and the sun over the equator, things are as much
a mystery to me as anyone reading this stuff.

However, there are no low Lows in the North Atlantic so where it all
falls apart as thing go critical if indeed they do go that way,
remains to be seen.

I suspect the phenomenon will bear fruit for future reference. Be that
as it may, the chances of catching a phase so squarely like this one
with such a powerful storm like that one fully on the only two
equinoxes of the year are few and far between.

There are 24 such spells. 48 if you count the half hours as unstable
versions. They repeat every 6 hours, more or less so getting a spell
to run from the start of an equinox is 1 in 3 years divided by 52 at
best. One in 24 divided by 365 at worst.

I am no mathematician and in truth I don't care. But that is the
difficulty outlined, for what it's worth.

*******

Presumably, as a storm sets to unwind the earthquakes start arriving.
Which may go some way to explaining the behaviour of the Lows in the N
Atlantic.

The incidence of small quakes off the West coast of North America has
once again increased. There was a lapse and subsequent disjuncture
with the fore-quakes off West Mexico but the smaller stuff further
north indicates the dissipation of one storm and maybe the arrival of
the next?

Or not, as the case may be?

What is interesting is the North Atlantic Lows are all not very low
except for one. And that one is the only one that appears mobile.

And not only is it mobile, it is heading due north and for reasons
unexplained, going through the Denmark Strait. Which course was the
one taken by all previous Lows recently.

Or was it? Do Lows expand and contract in the manner of Highs? If so;
how? And more importantly: Why?

The reason that Highs occur in the USA is that the Lows have to go
uphill to cross the place. Which might not exactly explain their
contra-rotations but ....

Then they drop back down to the plains and continue eastward.

Aha!!

Vorticity....
But is that how? Or why?

Shedding answers is housing questions!

At least I am on the right track -if a truth is told.

There has to be some shear to crystallise vorticity. Just not enough
to strip the outer skin.
  #8   Report Post  
Old September 25th 08, 12:24 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 05:04

On Sep 24, 7:56*am, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Sep 23, 7:54*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:

On Sep 23, 2:27*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:


22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html


The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting to see
how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure areas
997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.


The last weather spells we had like it we


30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35


The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.


7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.


22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N


29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S


Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines towards Hong
Kong and Hanoi.


And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the west and
a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.


This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.


Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6


Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60


Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85


Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85


Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115


- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30


Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100


Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80


*******


Tropical Storms March 7th to 14th 2008
George *17S * * AUS * * 03 March * * * *09 March * * * *110 * * 105
Jacob * 18S * * AUS * * 07 March * * * *12 March * * * *75 * * *75


One caution on them is the next storm started 6 days after it
finished:
Indlala 19S * * SWI * * 12 March * * * *06 March * * * *115 * * 95


Quakes for the period:


Day * * Magnitude
10 * * *5.6
11 * * *5.6
12 * * *6.4
12 * * *6.3
13 * * *6.0
13 * * *5.7
14 * * *5.5
14 * * *6.0
15 * * *6.0
15 * * *5.7


And again the charts showed severe dart-boarding in keeping with
the intensity of the tropical storms.


Furthermore the day has been dismal; cool and damp with drizzle
turning into rain for a while around noon. Today, that storm over the
Philippines became a Cat 2.


The incidence of earthquakes in the region of 6 M., or greater
depends on there being tropical storms.
*******
22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html


The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting
to see how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure
areas 997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.


The last weather spells we had like it we


30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35


The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.


7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.


22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N


29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S


Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines
towards Hong Kong and Hanoi.


And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the
west and a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.


This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.


Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6


Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60


Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85


Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85


Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115


- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30


Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100


Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80


Wow!


I was right wasn't I.


*******
Interesting that we are not suffering the slings and arrows of
outrageous weather but covered with a rather nice anticyclone, thanks
very.


And *Nordic one to boot!


Yet Hagupit must be wreaking havoc just off Hong Kong. At CAt 3 it
must be affecting this spell but not here.


Interesting!


Of course seeing as it is equinox and all that....


Last time I looked the system that was Ike is now stretched out over N
Russia. One Low centre is still in the position one was in yesterday.


I don't know if it is the same one.
What is interesting is the convolutions of the 1016 mb line.


All in all rather puzzling. So cast your beadies on this:


2.6 * *23rd * *01:19 * *ISLAND OF HAWAII
2.7 * *23rd * *00:01 * *UNIMAK ISLAND REGION


4.8 * *22nd * *23:34 * *REYKJANES RIDGE
2.6 * *22nd * *23:06 * *VIRGIN ISLANDS
2.5 * *22nd * *21:52 * *SOUTHERN ALASKA
2.8 * *22nd * *21:22 * *CENTRAL ALASKA
3.1 * *22nd * *20:32 * *CENTRAL ALASKA
5.4 * *22nd * *20:21 * *SOUTH OF FIJI


See anything interesting?


12 hours for the next quake from the one in Hawaii. And we still
haven't had one of 5 M., or more since the one near Fiji.


This will be interesting: http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


There is an admittedly not very low Low just to the west of the UK. It
is right on the Mid Atlantic Ridge, so likely to wait a while for the
High over the UK to elongate.


With the moon at tdc and the sun over the equator, things are as much
a mystery to me as anyone reading this stuff.


However, there are no low Lows in the North Atlantic so where it all
falls apart as thing go critical if indeed they do go that way,
remains to be seen.


I suspect the phenomenon will bear fruit for future reference. Be that
as it may, the chances of catching a phase so squarely like this one
with such a powerful storm like that one fully on the only two
equinoxes of the year are few and far between.


There are 24 such spells. 48 if you count the half hours as unstable
versions. They repeat every 6 hours, more or less so getting a spell
to run from the start of an equinox is 1 in 3 years divided by 52 at
best. One in 24 divided by 365 at worst.


I am no mathematician and in truth I don't care. But that is the
difficulty outlined, for what it's worth.


*******

Presumably, as a storm sets to unwind the earthquakes start arriving.
Which may go some way to explaining the behaviour of the Lows in the N
Atlantic.

The incidence of small quakes off the West coast of North America has
once again increased. There was a lapse and subsequent disjuncture
with the fore-quakes off West Mexico but the smaller stuff further
north indicates the dissipation of one storm and maybe the arrival of
the next?

Or not, as the case may be?

What is interesting is the North Atlantic Lows are all not very low
except for one. And that one is the only one that appears mobile.

And not only is it mobile, it is heading due north and for reasons
unexplained, going through the Denmark Strait. Which course was the
one taken by all previous Lows recently.

Or was it? Do Lows expand and contract in the manner of Highs? If so;
how? And more importantly: Why?

The reason that Highs occur in the USA is that the Lows have to go
uphill to cross the place. Which might not exactly explain their
contra-rotations but ....

Then they drop back down to the plains and continue eastward.

Aha!!

Vorticity....
But is that how? Or why?

Shedding answers is housing questions!

At least I am on the right track -if a truth is told.

There has to be some shear to crystallise vorticity. Just not enough
to strip the outer skin.


Lo. lows gentle into that good night,
Old age turns their ravings at their closing grey;
And, rage not against the dying of the light.
Though meteorology at the end knows darkest light,
Because their world had forked no lightning, they
Low gentle into that good night.
Down to the last soliton dying from sight
The frail deeds might have danced in an English bay,
And rage, rage again; the howling of the night.
Wild thing that caught and rained, the sun in flight,
Now learn, too late, the grey has poured way,
And lowered, so gentle into that good night.
Grey low, near death, who sees with blinding sight?
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and slay,
What rage, what dying of the light.
And you, sad lurker, out there on the internet,
Curse me with inattention to anything I say.
Go ahead, gentle into that good night.
See if I give a toss.

http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm
  #9   Report Post  
Old September 25th 08, 06:08 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 05:04

On Sep 25, 1:24*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Sep 24, 7:56*am, Weatherlawyer wrote:

On Sep 23, 7:54*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:


On Sep 23, 2:27*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:


22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html


The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting to see
how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure areas
997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.


The last weather spells we had like it we


30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35


The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.


7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.


22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N


29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S


Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines towards Hong
Kong and Hanoi.


And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the west and
a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.


This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.


Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6


Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60


Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85


Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85


Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115


- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30


Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100


Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80


*******


Tropical Storms March 7th to 14th 2008
George *17S * * AUS * * 03 March * * * *09 March * * * *110 * * 105
Jacob * 18S * * AUS * * 07 March * * * *12 March * * * *75 * * *75


One caution on them is the next storm started 6 days after it
finished:
Indlala 19S * * SWI * * 12 March * * * *06 March * * * *115 * * 95


Quakes for the period:


Day * * Magnitude
10 * * *5.6
11 * * *5.6
12 * * *6.4
12 * * *6.3
13 * * *6.0
13 * * *5.7
14 * * *5.5
14 * * *6.0
15 * * *6.0
15 * * *5.7


And again the charts showed severe dart-boarding in keeping with
the intensity of the tropical storms.


Furthermore the day has been dismal; cool and damp with drizzle
turning into rain for a while around noon. Today, that storm over the
Philippines became a Cat 2.


The incidence of earthquakes in the region of 6 M., or greater
depends on there being tropical storms.
*******
22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html


The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting
to see how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure
areas 997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.


The last weather spells we had like it we


30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35


The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.


7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.


22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N


29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S


Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines
towards Hong Kong and Hanoi.


And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the
west and a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.


This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.


Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6


Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60


Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85


Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85


Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115


- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30


Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100


Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80


Wow!


I was right wasn't I.


*******
Interesting that we are not suffering the slings and arrows of
outrageous weather but covered with a rather nice anticyclone, thanks
very.


And *Nordic one to boot!


Yet Hagupit must be wreaking havoc just off Hong Kong. At CAt 3 it
must be affecting this spell but not here.


Interesting!


Of course seeing as it is equinox and all that....


Last time I looked the system that was Ike is now stretched out over N
Russia. One Low centre is still in the position one was in yesterday.


I don't know if it is the same one.
What is interesting is the convolutions of the 1016 mb line.


All in all rather puzzling. So cast your beadies on this:


2.6 * *23rd * *01:19 * *ISLAND OF HAWAII
2.7 * *23rd * *00:01 * *UNIMAK ISLAND REGION


4.8 * *22nd * *23:34 * *REYKJANES RIDGE
2.6 * *22nd * *23:06 * *VIRGIN ISLANDS
2.5 * *22nd * *21:52 * *SOUTHERN ALASKA
2.8 * *22nd * *21:22 * *CENTRAL ALASKA
3.1 * *22nd * *20:32 * *CENTRAL ALASKA
5.4 * *22nd * *20:21 * *SOUTH OF FIJI


See anything interesting?


12 hours for the next quake from the one in Hawaii. And we still
haven't had one of 5 M., or more since the one near Fiji.


This will be interesting: http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


There is an admittedly not very low Low just to the west of the UK. It
is right on the Mid Atlantic Ridge, so likely to wait a while for the
High over the UK to elongate.


With the moon at tdc and the sun over the equator, things are as much
a mystery to me as anyone reading this stuff.


However, there are no low Lows in the North Atlantic so where it all
falls apart as thing go critical if indeed they do go that way,
remains to be seen.


I suspect the phenomenon will bear fruit for future reference. Be that
as it may, the chances of catching a phase so squarely like this one
with such a powerful storm like that one fully on the only two
equinoxes of the year are few and far between.


There are 24 such spells. 48 if you count the half hours as unstable
versions. They repeat every 6 hours, more or less so getting a spell
to run from the start of an equinox is 1 in 3 years divided by 52 at
best. One in 24 divided by 365 at worst.


I am no mathematician and in truth I don't care. But that is the
difficulty outlined, for what it's worth.


*******


Presumably, as a storm sets to unwind the earthquakes start arriving.
Which may go some way to explaining the behaviour of the Lows in the N
Atlantic.


The incidence of small quakes off the West coast of North America has
once again increased. There was a lapse and subsequent disjuncture
with the fore-quakes off West Mexico but the smaller stuff further
north indicates the dissipation of one storm and maybe the arrival of
the next?


Or not, as the case may be?


What is interesting is the North Atlantic Lows are all not very low
except for one. And that one is the only one that appears mobile.


And not only is it mobile, it is heading due north and for reasons
unexplained, going through the Denmark Strait. Which course was the
one taken by all previous Lows recently.


Or was it? Do Lows expand and contract in the manner of Highs? If so;
how? And more importantly: Why?


The reason that Highs occur in the USA is that the Lows have to go
uphill to cross the place. Which might not exactly explain their
contra-rotations but ....


Then they drop back down to the plains and continue eastward.


Aha!!


Vorticity....
But is that how? Or why?


Shedding answers is housing questions!


At least I am on the right track -if a truth is told.


There has to be some shear to crystallise vorticity. Just not enough
to strip the outer skin.


Lo. lows gentle into that good night,
Old age turns their ravings at their closing grey;
And, rage not against the dying of the light.
Though meteorology at the end knows darkest light,
Because their world had forked no lightning, they
Low gentle into that good night.
Down to the last soliton dying from sight
The frail deeds might have danced in an English bay,
And rage, rage again; the howling of the night.
Wild thing that caught and rained, the sun in flight,
Now learn, too late, the grey has poured way,
And lowered, so gentle into that good night.
Grey low, near death, who sees with blinding sight?
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and slay,
What rage, what dying of the light.
And you, sad lurker, out there on the internet,
Curse me with inattention to anything I say.
Go ahead, gentle into that good night.
See if I give a toss.

http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Odd that such an extensive High, with 1032 over all of Britain, the
weather should be so cool and dull.

No prizes for guessing why seismicity has increased you know where,
though.
  #10   Report Post  
Old September 26th 08, 06:26 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default 05:04

On Sep 25, 7:08*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Sep 25, 1:24*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:

On Sep 24, 7:56*am, Weatherlawyer wrote:


On Sep 23, 7:54*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:


On Sep 23, 2:27*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:


22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html


The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting to see
how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure areas
997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.


The last weather spells we had like it we


30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35


The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.


7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.


22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N


29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S


Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines towards Hong
Kong and Hanoi.


And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the west and
a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.


This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.


Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6


Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60


Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85


Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85


Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115


- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30


Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100


Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80


*******


Tropical Storms March 7th to 14th 2008
George *17S * * AUS * * 03 March * * * *09 March * * * *110 * * 105
Jacob * 18S * * AUS * * 07 March * * * *12 March * * * *75 * * *75


One caution on them is the next storm started 6 days after it
finished:
Indlala 19S * * SWI * * 12 March * * * *06 March * * * *115 * * 95


Quakes for the period:


Day * * Magnitude
10 * * *5.6
11 * * *5.6
12 * * *6.4
12 * * *6.3
13 * * *6.0
13 * * *5.7
14 * * *5.5
14 * * *6.0
15 * * *6.0
15 * * *5.7


And again the charts showed severe dart-boarding in keeping with
the intensity of the tropical storms.


Furthermore the day has been dismal; cool and damp with drizzle
turning into rain for a while around noon. Today, that storm over the
Philippines became a Cat 2.


The incidence of earthquakes in the region of 6 M., or greater
depends on there being tropical storms.
*******
22nd to 29th September: 05:04
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phase2001gmt.html


The Highs are high and so are the Lows. It will be interesting
to see how it goes.
http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Once again Britain is dividing two high pressure areas.(nearly 140
mb.) Whilst transecting them would be two not very low pressure
areas 997mb in the west and 1005 mb in the east.


The last weather spells we had like it we


30 Jan @ 05:03
7 Mar @ 17:14
14 Mar @ 10:46
18 Jun @ 17:30
10 Jul @ 04:35


The first one identical, pity about the solar declination.
30th Jan
Sun = 17 S. *Moon = .22 S.


7th Feb
Sun = 15 S. *Moon = 12 S.


22nd September
Sun = 00:00. *Moon = .27 N


29th September
Sun = 2 S. *Moon = 6 S


Hagupit is a Cat 2 Typhoon heading from NNW Philippines
towards Hong Kong and Hanoi.


And N America is divided into a flaccid low 995-ish mb in the
west and a fairly static high of.1024 mb in the east.


This dart board set the scene for most of the January spell:
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/sh...howPhoto&Photo...
957 mb.


Quakes for that period:
Day * * Magnitude
30 * * *6.2
30 * * *5.5
31 * * *5.8
01 * * *6.0
03 * * *5.9
03 * * *5.6
04 * * *6.3
05 * * *5.9
07 * * *5.8
07 * * *5.7
08 * * *6.9
09 * * *6.0
10 * * *6.6


Tropical Storms for that period:
Fame * *13S * * SWI * * 25 January * * *01 February * * 80 * * *60


Gula * *14S * * SWI * * 27 January * * *02 February * * 85 * * *85


Gene * *15P * * AUS * * 27 January * * *06 February * * 90 * * *85


Hondo * 16S * * SWI * * 04 February * * 24 February * * 125 * * 115


- * * * 17S * * AUS * * 07 February * * 10 February * * 40 * * *30


Ivan * *18S * * SWI * * 07 February * * 21 February * * 115 * * 100


Nicholas * * * *19S * * AUS * * 13 February * * 20 February * * 80 * * *80


Wow!


I was right wasn't I.


*******
Interesting that we are not suffering the slings and arrows of
outrageous weather but covered with a rather nice anticyclone, thanks
very.


And *Nordic one to boot!


Yet Hagupit must be wreaking havoc just off Hong Kong. At CAt 3 it
must be affecting this spell but not here.


Interesting!


Of course seeing as it is equinox and all that....


Last time I looked the system that was Ike is now stretched out over N
Russia. One Low centre is still in the position one was in yesterday.


I don't know if it is the same one.
What is interesting is the convolutions of the 1016 mb line.


All in all rather puzzling. So cast your beadies on this:


2.6 * *23rd * *01:19 * *ISLAND OF HAWAII
2.7 * *23rd * *00:01 * *UNIMAK ISLAND REGION


4.8 * *22nd * *23:34 * *REYKJANES RIDGE
2.6 * *22nd * *23:06 * *VIRGIN ISLANDS
2.5 * *22nd * *21:52 * *SOUTHERN ALASKA
2.8 * *22nd * *21:22 * *CENTRAL ALASKA
3.1 * *22nd * *20:32 * *CENTRAL ALASKA
5.4 * *22nd * *20:21 * *SOUTH OF FIJI


See anything interesting?


12 hours for the next quake from the one in Hawaii. And we still
haven't had one of 5 M., or more since the one near Fiji.


This will be interesting: http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


There is an admittedly not very low Low just to the west of the UK. It
is right on the Mid Atlantic Ridge, so likely to wait a while for the
High over the UK to elongate.


With the moon at tdc and the sun over the equator, things are as much
a mystery to me as anyone reading this stuff.


However, there are no low Lows in the North Atlantic so where it all
falls apart as thing go critical if indeed they do go that way,
remains to be seen.


I suspect the phenomenon will bear fruit for future reference. Be that
as it may, the chances of catching a phase so squarely like this one
with such a powerful storm like that one fully on the only two
equinoxes of the year are few and far between.


There are 24 such spells. 48 if you count the half hours as unstable
versions. They repeat every 6 hours, more or less so getting a spell
to run from the start of an equinox is 1 in 3 years divided by 52 at
best. One in 24 divided by 365 at worst.


I am no mathematician and in truth I don't care. But that is the
difficulty outlined, for what it's worth.


*******


Presumably, as a storm sets to unwind the earthquakes start arriving.
Which may go some way to explaining the behaviour of the Lows in the N
Atlantic.


The incidence of small quakes off the West coast of North America has
once again increased. There was a lapse and subsequent disjuncture
with the fore-quakes off West Mexico but the smaller stuff further
north indicates the dissipation of one storm and maybe the arrival of
the next?


Or not, as the case may be?


What is interesting is the North Atlantic Lows are all not very low
except for one. And that one is the only one that appears mobile.


And not only is it mobile, it is heading due north and for reasons
unexplained, going through the Denmark Strait. Which course was the
one taken by all previous Lows recently.


Or was it? Do Lows expand and contract in the manner of Highs? If so;
how? And more importantly: Why?


The reason that Highs occur in the USA is that the Lows have to go
uphill to cross the place. Which might not exactly explain their
contra-rotations but ....


Then they drop back down to the plains and continue eastward.


Aha!!


Vorticity....
But is that how? Or why?


Shedding answers is housing questions!


At least I am on the right track -if a truth is told.


There has to be some shear to crystallise vorticity. Just not enough
to strip the outer skin.


Lo. lows gentle into that good night,
Old age turns their ravings at their closing grey;
And, rage not against the dying of the light.
Though meteorology at the end knows darkest light,
Because their world had forked no lightning, they
Low gentle into that good night.
Down to the last soliton dying from sight
The frail deeds might have danced in an English bay,
And rage, rage again; the howling of the night.
Wild thing that caught and rained, the sun in flight,
Now learn, too late, the grey has poured way,
And lowered, so gentle into that good night.
Grey low, near death, who sees with blinding sight?
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and slay,
What rage, what dying of the light.
And you, sad lurker, out there on the internet,
Curse me with inattention to anything I say.
Go ahead, gentle into that good night.
See if I give a toss.


http://www.cuckney.pwp.blueyonder.co...r/Dorridge.htm


Odd that such an extensive High, with 1032 over all of Britain, the
weather should be so cool and dull.

No prizes for guessing why seismicity has increased you know where,
though.


*******
So here we are with a silent mist, waiting for a summoning?

Considering the extent of that 1032 mb, things look decidedly choppy
in Scandinavia:
http://wmc.meteoinfo.ru/losev-forc. (Check out the children's
competition page there.)

Jangmi is now a 90 knot monster looking to be a Cat 3 at the next
warning bulletin, a Cat 4 this time tomorrow and a possible Cat 5 the
day after though this warnings says not:
http://www.hurricanezone.net/tcgraphics/wp1908.gif

This site says so:
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/...quakes_big.php
judging by what happens after Mexico in this spell:
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/.../10/255_20.php

At 34 knots Kyle in the North Atlantic is little more than a gale. But
then so were the two Asian Pacific hurricanes Hagupit and Jangmi, a
few days ago.

Saffir-Simpson Scale

Category One Hurricane: 64-82 knots,
74-95 mph,or 119-153 km/hr.

Category Two Hurricane: 83-95 knots;
96-110 mph, or 154-177 km/hr.

Category Three Hurricane: 96-113 knots;
111-130 mph, or 178-209 km/hr.

Category Four Hurricane: 114-135 knots;
131-155 mph, or 210-249 km/hr.

Category Five Hurricane:
Winds greater than 135 knots;
155 mph, or 249 km/hr.

http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/aboutsshs.shtml


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