uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old October 28th 09, 10:51 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,467
Default Tide tables?

Dear All,

Just wondering if anyone had any links that showed graphs of yearly
tide heights (both this year and historically) for locations on the UK
coastline?

Am intrigued by the storm surge event on the south coast on 24th
October 1999 - my parents have a little bolt-hole in Pevensey Bay that
was quite badly affected as strong winds coincided with the
equinoctial tides.

Cheers,
Richard

  #2   Report Post  
Old October 28th 09, 01:04 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Feb 2005
Posts: 6,777
Default Tide tables?

On Oct 28, 10:51*am, Richard Dixon wrote:
Dear All,

Just wondering if anyone had any links that showed graphs of yearly
tide heights (both this year and historically) for locations on the UK
coastline?

Am intrigued by the storm surge event on the south coast on 24th
October 1999 - my parents have a little bolt-hole in Pevensey Bay that
was quite badly affected as strong winds coincided with the
equinoctial tides.


What is this sweetheart? Considering joining the unwashed?

If you are willing to pay twice, the British taxpayer is funding Her
Madge's Admiralty with a service to all mankind. You will get better
service from Uncle Sam.

No Aah!



  #3   Report Post  
Old October 28th 09, 04:37 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,467
Default Tide tables?

On 28 Oct, 13:04, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Oct 28, 10:51*am, Richard Dixon wrote:

Dear All,


Just wondering if anyone had any links that showed graphs of yearly
tide heights (both this year and historically) for locations on the UK
coastline?


Am intrigued by the storm surge event on the south coast on 24th
October 1999 - my parents have a little bolt-hole in Pevensey Bay that
was quite badly affected as strong winds coincided with the
equinoctial tides.


What is this sweetheart? Considering joining the unwashed?

If you are willing to pay twice, the British taxpayer is funding Her
Madge's Admiralty with a service to all mankind. You will get better
service from Uncle Sam.

No Aah!


Thanks for the link.

Richard
  #4   Report Post  
Old October 28th 09, 07:13 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jul 2003
Posts: 735
Default Tide tables?

In article 2912635c-003c-4e04-87c9-bbe16d0f3106
@j4g2000yqe.googlegroups.com, says...
Just wondering if anyone had any links that showed graphs of yearly
tide heights (both this year and historically) for locations on the UK
coastline?

Am intrigued by the storm surge event on the south coast on 24th
October 1999 - my parents have a little bolt-hole in Pevensey Bay that
was quite badly affected as strong winds coincided with the
equinoctial tides.


From
www.bodc.ac.uk

Dover
Maximum observed October 1999 - 7.327 meters, however this was
recorded on the 26th. There was no data recorded for Dover from
02:00 23/10/99 to 14:00 25/10/99

Newhaven
Maximum observed October 1999 - 7.326 meters on the 24th, which
was also the highest value for all of 1999.

Registration is free for bodc.ac.uk and they have tide data
going back to 1930. However, If you just want the CSV for
Newhaven (or Dover) for 1999 I can email them to you.

--
Alan LeHun
  #5   Report Post  
Old October 28th 09, 11:43 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,467
Default Tide tables?

On 28 Oct, 19:13, Alan LeHun wrote:
In article 2912635c-003c-4e04-87c9-bbe16d0f3106
@j4g2000yqe.googlegroups.com, says...

Just wondering if anyone had any links that showed graphs of yearly
tide heights (both this year and historically) for locations on the UK
coastline?


Am intrigued by the storm surge event on the south coast on 24th
October 1999 - my parents have a little bolt-hole in Pevensey Bay that
was quite badly affected as strong winds coincided with the
equinoctial tides.


Fromwww.bodc.ac.uk

Dover
Maximum observed October 1999 - 7.327 meters, however this was
recorded on the 26th. There was no data recorded for Dover from
02:00 23/10/99 to 14:00 25/10/99

Newhaven
Maximum observed October 1999 - 7.326 meters on the 24th, which
was also the highest value for all of 1999.

Registration is free for bodc.ac.uk and they have tide data
going back to 1930. However, If you just want the CSV for
Newhaven (or Dover) for 1999 I can email them to you.


Many thanks, Alan - that's enough for me.

Cheers,
Richard


  #6   Report Post  
Old October 29th 09, 10:53 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 4,411
Default Tide tables?

On Oct 28, 4:37*pm, Richard Dixon wrote:
On 28 Oct, 13:04, Weatherlawyer wrote:





On Oct 28, 10:51*am, Richard Dixon wrote:


Dear All,


Just wondering if anyone had any links that showed graphs of yearly
tide heights (both this year and historically) for locations on the UK
coastline?


Am intrigued by the storm surge event on the south coast on 24th
October 1999 - my parents have a little bolt-hole in Pevensey Bay that
was quite badly affected as strong winds coincided with the
equinoctial tides.


What is this sweetheart? Considering joining the unwashed?


If you are willing to pay twice, the British taxpayer is funding Her
Madge's Admiralty with a service to all mankind. You will get better
service from Uncle Sam.


No Aah!


Thanks for the link.


Do not mention IT.
Here is more stuff of nonesense:

http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/dat...20Constituents
http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/har...cons_defs.html

That last one is to this:
Harmonic Constituents Name Definitions
M2 - Principal lunar semidiurnal constituent
S2 - Principal solar semidiurnal constituent
N2 - Larger lunar elliptic semidiurnal constituent
K1 - Lunar diurnal constituent
M4 - Shallow water overtides of principal lunar constituent
O1 - Lunar diurnal constituent
M6 - Shallow water overtides of principal lunar constituent
MK3 - Shallow water terdiurnal
S4 - Shallow water overtides of principal solar constituent
MN4 - Shallow water quarter diurnal constituent
NU2 - Larger lunar evectional constituent
S6 - Shallow water overtides of principal solar constituent
MU2 - Variational constituent
2N2 - Lunar elliptical semidiurnal second-order constituent
OO1 - Lunar diurnal
LAM2 - Smaller lunar evectional constituent
S1 - Solar diurnal constituent
M1 - Smaller lunar elliptic diurnal constituent
J1 - Smaller lunar elliptic diurnal constituent
MM - Lunar monthly constituent
SSA - Solar semiannual constituent
SA - Solar annual constituent
MSF - Lunisolar synodic fortnightly constituent
MF - Lunisolar fortnightly constituent
RHO - Larger lunar evectional diurnal constituent
Q1 - Larger lunar elliptic diurnal constituent
T2 - Larger solar elliptic constituent
R2 - Smaller solar elliptic constituent
2Q1 - Larger elliptic diurnal
P1 - Solar diurnal constituent
2SM2 - Shallow water semidiurnal constituent
M3 - Lunar terdiurnal constituent
L2 - Smaller lunar elliptic semidiurnal constituent
2MK3 - Shallow water terdiurnal constituent
K2 - Lunisolar semidiurnal constituent
M8 - Shallow water eighth diurnal constituent
MS4 - Shallow water quarter diurnal constituent

None of which means much without the nouse to determine what is going
on.

I have a feeling it is a deep sea seiche that causes a disturbance,
perhaps centring a plop up or splosh of some sort at the amphidromic
points.

If there are two such points one each side of Britain, it would
explain the system.

I was thinking that diurnal heating might have something to do with it
but that would be too regular obviously and distributed evenly across
the day, varying very noticeably with the seasons.

Besides, heat in sea surface is caried off too quickly.

Though a seiche between Cuba and the Mid Atlantic Ridge would explain
the low ranges in the gulf and the rotation of surface currents
through that region.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphidromic_point





Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
The Tide is Nigh Paul Hyett uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) 20 September 5th 06 06:41 PM
The Tide is Nigh R2 uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) 0 August 30th 06 07:05 PM
Tabony Tables and Rainfall Return Periods. mark sci.geo.meteorology (Meteorology) 0 December 25th 05 12:11 PM
Global Climate Record Data? Not graph but data tables? [email protected] uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) 3 December 12th 05 09:34 PM
Hygrometric tables Paul Hyett uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) 2 August 13th 03 06:41 AM


All times are GMT. The time now is 07:46 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 Weather Banter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Weather"

 

Copyright © 2017