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Old June 9th 07, 01:13 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Strange mist

This morning, as I satshivering in the haar, I noticed a light mist
drifting a foot or so above the soil of a ploughed field behind my
house.

In twenty years of weather watching I've never seen anything like it.
At first I thought it was dust being stirred up by the light SE wind,
or smoke, but it was a very local mist hugging the ground, drifting,
coming and going, on the wind, just above the bare earth.

Photographs are at:

http://web.mac.com/trevor.harley/iWe...st%20Roll.html

They were taken just before midday. Temperature was 16C, the haar had
lifted a bit and the sun was just starting to shine faintly through the
low-level clouds.

What's the physics I find it hard to believe the soil is cooling the air.

Trevor
Dismal Dundee


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Old June 9th 07, 01:35 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Strange mist

What's the physics I find it hard to believe the soil is cooling the air.

Trevor
Dismal Dundee


The dead will rise again !




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Old June 9th 07, 01:36 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Strange mist

On Jun 9, 1:13 pm, Trevor Harley wrote:
This morning, as I satshivering in the haar, I noticed a light mist
drifting a foot or so above the soil of a ploughed field behind my
house.

In twenty years of weather watching I've never seen anything like it.
At first I thought it was dust being stirred up by the light SE wind,
or smoke, but it was a very local mist hugging the ground, drifting,
coming and going, on the wind, just above the bare earth.

Photographs are at:

http://web.mac.com/trevor.harley/iWe...st%20Roll.html

They were taken just before midday. Temperature was 16C, the haar had
lifted a bit and the sun was just starting to shine faintly through the
low-level clouds.

What's the physics I find it hard to believe the soil is cooling the air.

Trevor
Dismal Dundee


It looks like Arctic Sea Smoke, also known as steam fog. The damp soil
has been heated sufficiently by the sunshine to
set up weak thermals of moist air which readily condense in the
relatively cool air just above the surface.

Dick

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Old June 9th 07, 03:49 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Strange mist

On Jun 9, 1:36 pm, Dick Lovett wrote:
On Jun 9, 1:13 pm, Trevor Harley wrote:



This morning, as I satshivering in the haar, I noticed a light mist
drifting a foot or so above the soil of a ploughed field behind my
house.


In twenty years of weather watching I've never seen anything like it.
At first I thought it was dust being stirred up by the light SE wind,
or smoke, but it was a very local mist hugging the ground, drifting,
coming and going, on the wind, just above the bare earth.


Photographs are at:


http://web.mac.com/trevor.harley/iWe...st%20Roll.html


They were taken just before midday. Temperature was 16C, the haar had
lifted a bit and the sun was just starting to shine faintly through the
low-level clouds.


What's the physics I find it hard to believe the soil is cooling the air.


It looks like Arctic Sea Smoke, also known as steam fog. The damp soil
has been heated sufficiently by the sunshine to
set up weak thermals of moist air which readily condense in the
relatively cool air just above the surface.


Something similar can sometimes be seen rising to just over hedge
height on occasion in the remains of the marshes around Beaumaris and
between Abegele and Kinmel Bay.

A fantastic sight. Not one that is overly particular to the time of
the year if I remember correctly.

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Old June 9th 07, 06:46 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Strange mist

In article .com,
dated Sat, 9 Jun 2007, Dick Lovett wrote
On Jun 9, 1:13 pm, Trevor Harley wrote:
This morning, as I satshivering in the haar, I noticed a light mist
drifting a foot or so above the soil of a ploughed field behind my
house.

In twenty years of weather watching I've never seen anything like it.
At first I thought it was dust being stirred up by the light SE wind,
or smoke, but it was a very local mist hugging the ground, drifting,
coming and going, on the wind, just above the bare earth.

Photographs are at:

http://web.mac.com/trevor.harley/iWe...st%20Roll.html

They were taken just before midday. Temperature was 16C, the haar had
lifted a bit and the sun was just starting to shine faintly through the
low-level clouds.

What's the physics I find it hard to believe the soil is cooling the air.

Trevor
Dismal Dundee


It looks like Arctic Sea Smoke, also known as steam fog. The damp soil
has been heated sufficiently by the sunshine to
set up weak thermals of moist air which readily condense in the
relatively cool air just above the surface.


I've seen it in, of all places, Eltham (and also in France). Very
spooky, but it disappears once the sun gets a little bit warmer. Did
yours?

--
Kate B

PS 'elvira' is spamtrapped - please reply to 'elviraspam' at cockaigne if you want
to reply personally


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Old June 9th 07, 08:10 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Strange mist

On 9 Jun, 13:36, Dick Lovett wrote:
On Jun 9, 1:13 pm, Trevor Harley wrote:





This morning, as I satshivering in the haar, I noticed a light mist
drifting a foot or so above the soil of a ploughed field behind my
house.


In twenty years of weather watching I've never seen anything like it.
At first I thought it was dust being stirred up by the light SE wind,
or smoke, but it was a very local mist hugging the ground, drifting,
coming and going, on the wind, just above the bare earth.


Photographs are at:


http://web.mac.com/trevor.harley/iWe...st%20Roll.html


They were taken just before midday. Temperature was 16C, the haar had
lifted a bit and the sun was just starting to shine faintly through the
low-level clouds.


What's the physics I find it hard to believe the soil is cooling the air.


Trevor
Dismal Dundee


It looks like Arctic Sea Smoke, also known as steam fog. The damp soil
has been heated sufficiently by the sunshine to
set up weak thermals of moist air which readily condense in the
relatively cool air just above the surface.

Dick- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


You can get it over flat sand, tyically just after low tide. The sun
heats the sand, and the cool breeze off the sea flowing just over it
causes a layer of steam. It can give a strange effect as you look
along the beach, lots of heads & no legs.

Graham
Penzance

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Old June 10th 07, 07:19 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Strange mist

On 2007-06-09 18:46:54 +0100, Kate Brown said:

I've seen it in, of all places, Eltham (and also in France). Very
spooky, but it disappears once the sun gets a little bit warmer. Did
yours?


Thanks everyone; Arctic sea smoke it goes down in diary as.

Yes, it only lingered about 20 minutes, and as soon as the sunshine
became a little less hazy (I'd put it that way rather than "warmer"),
it disappeared.

Back to the haar now, currently in the form of dense fog. Roll on a westerly...

Trevor
Near a dreek Dundee



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