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sci.geo.meteorology (Meteorology) (sci.geo.meteorology) For the discussion of meteorology and related topics. |
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#1
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![]() H2-PV NOW wrote: http://snipurl.com/no7h countdown timer: 76 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season. Get those blue tarps ready before they are all sold out. Now 73 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season Starts wiping out RED STATES. http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll...603160344/1020 Conditions favor hurricane blitz Atlantic Basin is likely to face 17 named storms, nine hurricanes with five at Category 3 or higher. It looks more and more like another nerve-racking hurricane season. Sea surface temperatures are above average, La Nina has returned and the Atlantic Basin remains in an "up" cycle for storms. Hurricane forecaster William Gray predicted an above-average season, with 17 named storms, nine of them hurricanes and five of those Category 3 or higher. He predicted at least one major hurricane would hit the United States. The numbers are likely to change as forecasters analyze updated data in the next few weeks. The National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration is expected to issue its 2006 Atlantic hurricane outlook on May 22. But some facts won't change. The Atlantic Basin -- the Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico -- is in a hurricane "up" cycle that began in 1995. The results were particularly pronounced the last two seasons, when 42 named storms formed in the Atlantic Basin. La Nina is expected to help sustain the drought in parts of the South and Southwest and bring additional rain to the Northwest and the Tennessee Valley area. Normally, crosswinds prevent many systems from strengthening into tropical storms. La Nina inhibits the formation of those storm-destroying crosswinds. |
#2
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H2-PV NOW wrote:
H2-PV NOW wrote: http://snipurl.com/no7h countdown timer: 76 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season. Get those blue tarps ready before they are all sold out. Now 73 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season Starts wiping out RED STATES. http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll...603160344/1020 Conditions favor hurricane blitz Atlantic Basin is likely to face 17 named storms, nine hurricanes with five at Category 3 or higher. We gonnna have a whole lotta hurricanes this year. It looks more and more like another nerve-racking hurricane season. Sea surface temperatures are above average, La Nina has returned and the Atlantic Basin remains in an "up" cycle for storms. Hurricane forecaster William Gray predicted an above-average season, The esteemed Dr. William Gray is a senile old ******* who doesn't even believe in global warming, much less even in global warming enhancement of hurricanes. His predictions are absolutely worthless pseudoscience. My prediction : we gonna have a whole lotta hurricances this year. http://cosmic.lifeform.org |
#3
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![]() H2-PV NOW wrote: H2-PV NOW wrote: http://snipurl.com/no7h countdown timer: 76 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season. It stated in April last year did it not? I wonder what was going on in early 1952 -circa January 11th-14th. |
#4
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Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote:
H2-PV NOW wrote: H2-PV NOW wrote: http://snipurl.com/no7h countdown timer: 76 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season. Get those blue tarps ready before they are all sold out. Now 73 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season Starts wiping out RED STATES. http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll...603160344/1020 Conditions favor hurricane blitz Atlantic Basin is likely to face 17 named storms, nine hurricanes with five at Category 3 or higher. We gonnna have a whole lotta hurricanes this year. Yes, La Nina circulation fertilizes hurricanes: http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea/elnino/fig1.html http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea/elnino/fig5.html Twelve years ago (1994), Landsea and Gray effectively predicted this return to high tropical cyclone activity in the Atlantic basin: "Since this conveyor belt slow down is likely to be a temporary multidecadal fluctuation and not judged to be a permanent feature, it is to be expected that this global oceanic circulation will again speed up in coming years with concomitant increase in Sahel rainfall and Atlantic intense hurricane activity. When this may occur is a matter of speculation. If the past can be used as a guide then these drought conditions should be expected to abate in the next few years. The Sahel has now experienced over a quarter century (1968 to 1993) of nearly continuous drought conditions. With that in mind it is to be expected that rainier years lie ahead in the future. While this may have the positive impact of increasing agricultural production in the countries of the Sahel, ironically it will have a potentially disastrous influence around the Caribbean Sea and along the U.S. East Coast. Intense hurricanes similar to Hurricane Andrew are likely to become more frequent. This is especially ominous when consideration is given to the large increase in United States and Caribbean coastal populations and property buildup since the last active hurricane period of the 1940s to 1960s." http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea...nal/index.html |
#5
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Al Bedo wrote:
Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote: H2-PV NOW wrote: H2-PV NOW wrote: http://snipurl.com/no7h countdown timer: 76 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season. Get those blue tarps ready before they are all sold out. Now 73 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season Starts wiping out RED STATES. http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll...603160344/1020 Conditions favor hurricane blitz Atlantic Basin is likely to face 17 named storms, nine hurricanes with five at Category 3 or higher. We gonnna have a whole lotta hurricanes this year. Yes, La Nina circulation fertilizes hurricanes: http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea/elnino/fig1.html http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea/elnino/fig5.html Chris Landsea is a lying sack of **** and so are you. Global warming enhanced sea surface temperatures feed hurricanes. Twelve years ago (1994), Landsea and Gray effectively predicted this return to high tropical cyclone activity in the Atlantic basin: So a lying sack of **** quotes more lying sacks of ****. God Bless America! http://cosmic.lifeform.org |
#6
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"Thomas Lee Elifritz" wrote in message
... Al Bedo wrote: Thomas Lee Elifritz wrote: H2-PV NOW wrote: H2-PV NOW wrote: http://snipurl.com/no7h countdown timer: 76 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season. Get those blue tarps ready before they are all sold out. Now 73 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season Starts wiping out RED STATES. http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll...603160344/1020 Conditions favor hurricane blitz Atlantic Basin is likely to face 17 named storms, nine hurricanes with five at Category 3 or higher. We gonnna have a whole lotta hurricanes this year. Yes, La Nina circulation fertilizes hurricanes: http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea/elnino/fig1.html http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea/elnino/fig5.html Chris Landsea is a lying sack of **** and so are you. Global warming enhanced sea surface temperatures feed hurricanes. Twelve years ago (1994), Landsea and Gray effectively predicted this return to high tropical cyclone activity in the Atlantic basin: So a lying sack of **** quotes more lying sacks of ****. God Bless America! http://cosmic.lifeform.org The problrm with the deniers is that they never stake out one clear position that can be refuted scientifically. In other words, they don't support actual scientific theories. If their positions were scientific theories, then they would be able to be proven false. It's like saying you believe in the flying spaghetti monster. Prove the FSM isn't the one that created the earth, and that is causing global warming! ![]() |
#7
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![]() Weatherlawyer wrote: H2-PV NOW wrote: H2-PV NOW wrote: http://snipurl.com/no7h countdown timer: 76 days to 2006 Atlantic Hurricane Season. It stated in April last year did it not? I wonder what was going on in early 1952 -circa January 11th-14th. From 1939-1945 every drop of oil was pumped as fast as technology allowed and then burned immediately. Vast battles were waged over oil supplies, and people in South America ran coal reformers to make town gas to operate their trucks, showing how desperate it was. Every coal field was mined to make steel and aluminum 24 hours per day and to make ammonia for explosives. The natural sinks clogged. By 1950 the payback started, the worst decade every in recorded history up until the 1990s. Here is the activity record for the Atlantic graphed by HURDAT: http://snipurl.com/nuac Increasing Frequency, Increasing Intensity of dangerous storms in recent times. Scroll down http://ecosyn.us/1/1/08.JPG Click the pictures for enlargements. We see the buildup ramp up by 1945, but not peak from the clogged CO2 sinks until 1950-1951 then gradually taper off over 20 years to some resemblence to weather patterns of the previous 100 years. But it never truely ever returned to the milder climates of yesteryears, did it? http://ecosyn.us/1/1/01.JPG http://ecosyn.us/1/1/02.JPG http://ecosyn.us/1/1/03.JPG "...When we strip away four least significant strong hurricanes there are only two sequences of ten years which have four strong hurricanes left on the chart. The recent decade shows the frequency of occurance of strong hurricanes equal to 99 years on the left side. This is 9.9 times the frequency of this number of strong storms per decade, compared to the first 99 yesteryears. ..." You had the audacity to post your lies on the same day that Australia is hit by Cyclone Larry as strong as Katrina at its worst, 175 mph winds. And Cyclone Wati is on the same track following set to hit the same place in a few more days. |
#8
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#9
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![]() H2-PV NOW wrote: You had the audacity to post your lies on the same day that Australia is hit by Cyclone Larry as strong as Katrina at its worst, 175 mph winds. And Cyclone Wati is on the same track following set to hit the same place in a few more days. I had the audacity to post lies? You phrenetic, jumped up little spalpeen. Your missive is emotional tripe. None of it has a fundamental understanding of chemistry. Then you blatantly massage facts: "...When we strip away four least significant strong hurricanes there are only two sequences of ten years which have four strong hurricanes left on the chart. You are a cheeky little boy. Go to the back of the classroom. And be quiet about it! |
#10
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