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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. |
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#1
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On 14 Apr, 06:28, Weatherlawyer wrote:
It may be the next 4 or 5 phases are similar: Apr*6 *09:37 This one is only fairly similar to the following: Apr14*12:29. Apr21 *18:20Apr28 *12:18 and May *6 *04:15 Which is the antithesis of the present spell. And in truth nothing like the preceding too, neither. The weather for the 14th, 21st and 28 have to be pretty much interwoven spells with similar problems recurring in different orders but all much the same. I'm not even going to try to suss out the one for 6th April. Which is a pity as it may house an answer to ...ah well never mind. Suffice to say that when a new spell takes over a severe earthquake is on the cards. But since this last spell was fully fraught with them... The TV presenters are foretelling cold cloudy winds. Perhaps they mean breezes? This should make the first one interesting: Feb 14 02:51 Feb 22 00:42 Compa Apr 6 09:37 Apr 14 12:29 http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phases2001.html |
#2
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I've a feeling there will be a few tornadoes n this spell.
Lots of 975's and a smattering of promised juxtaposition. |
#3
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On 14 Apr, 18:13, Weatherlawyer wrote:
I've a feeling there will be a few tornadoes n this spell. Lots of 975's and a smattering of promised juxtaposition. It's 2 am now and not a lot has happened since this one: 4.9 M. 2010/04/14. 12:37. -18.7. 167.3 Vanuatu. The salient point being the time is getting close to allowing a tropical storm to build or maybe a significant quake. A high 5 low 6 Magnitude at the moment. Allowing for the latency of the system, it has been 12 hours since a decent quake was posted. Of course, if it is a storm it does not necessarily have to occur on the tropics. And it might well be a tornado. Or a Low slipping into a front that might go underground in a day or more. About 15 hours lapse signifies a severe storm of hurricane values. Another 3 hours is equivalent to one more setting in the Saffir Simpson scale. But of course you all knew that didn't you children? |
#4
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On 15 Apr, 02:16, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On 14 Apr, 18:13, Weatherlawyer wrote: I've a feeling there will be a few tornadoes n this spell. Lots of 975's and a smattering of promised juxtaposition. It's 2 am now and not a lot has happened since this one: 4.9 M. 2010/04/14. 12:37. -18.7. 167.3 Vanuatu. The salient point being the time is getting close to allowing a tropical storm to build or maybe a significant quake. A high 5 low 6 Magnitude at the moment. Allowing for the latency of the system, it has been 12 hours since a decent quake was posted. Of course, if it is a storm it does not necessarily have to occur on the tropics. And it might well be a tornado. Or a Low slipping into a front that might go underground in a day or more. About 15 hours lapse signifies a severe storm of hurricane values. Another 3 hours is equivalent to one more setting in the Saffir Simpson scale. But of course you all knew that didn't you children? I was pondering how to gauge the power of volcanic output vis a vis its effect on the weather. There is no real basic datum as the whole concept of vulcanology is fraught with unknowns. However we know that when the random list of earthquakes over 4 mag (or was it 5?) has gaps in it of quite a few hours, something else is going on in or on the planet. This usually turns out to be a storm a tropical cyclone or a series of strong tornadoes. I suppose the obverse is true too in extremes, where the weather is concerned droughts are just as energy intensive. Meteorology has stipulated that the earth has an heat budget and suggests that the weather alone fills that bill. But of course the errors in Newtonian mechanics is corrected for them by Eindynamism. If the rest of the budget, inclusive of "t" in the space time continuum algorithms turns out to be what I have been banging on about for the last one or two decades, then part of the heat budget can be found by taking into account the value of the moon in geo-phenomena. Which brings us to the disappearing earthquakes phenomena. Where are the tropical storms to make up for that? Where are the tornadoes? Could it be that the volcanic activity earth-wide has sumped some of it off? The boost the Icelandic volcano went through has eased off today and the number of quakes over 4 has increased or closed up. Both the North Pacific and the North Atlantic have flaccid sea level pressures. Maybe that is true of the rest of the planet? Fly in the ointment #1: Volcanoes erupt all the time. But maybe the regulars are a part of the background for the rest of my datum settings? The rest of the story is a simple matter of algebra. |
#5
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On Apr 16, 8:02*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On 15 Apr, 02:16, Weatherlawyer wrote: On 14 Apr, 18:13, Weatherlawyer wrote: I've a feeling there will be a few tornadoes n this spell. Lots of 975's and a smattering of promised juxtaposition. It's 2 am now and not a lot has happened since this one: 4.9 M. *2010/04/14. * * 12:37. *-18.7. *167.3 * Vanuatu. The salient point being the time is getting close to allowing a tropical storm to build or maybe a significant quake. A high 5 low 6 Magnitude at the moment. Allowing for the latency of the system, it has been 12 hours since a decent quake was posted. Of course, if it is a storm it does not necessarily have to occur on the tropics. And it might well be a tornado. Or a Low slipping into a front that might go underground in a day or more. About 15 hours lapse signifies a severe storm of hurricane values. Another 3 hours is equivalent to one more setting in the Saffir Simpson scale. But of course you all knew that didn't you children? I was pondering how to gauge the power of volcanic output vis a vis its effect on the weather. There is no real basic datum as the whole concept of vulcanology is fraught with unknowns. However we know that when the random list of earthquakes over 4 mag (or was it 5?) has gaps in it of quite a few hours, something else is going on in or on the planet. This usually turns out to be a storm a tropical cyclone or a series of strong tornadoes. I suppose the obverse is true too in extremes, where the weather is concerned droughts are just as energy *intensive. Meteorology has stipulated that the earth has an heat budget and suggests that the weather alone fills that bill. But of course the errors in Newtonian mechanics is corrected for them by Eindynamism. If the rest of the budget, inclusive of "t" in the space time continuum algorithms turns out to be what I have been banging on about for the last one or two decades, then part of the heat budget can be found by taking into account the value of the moon in geo-phenomena. Which brings us to the disappearing earthquakes phenomena. Where are the tropical storms to make up for that? Where are the tornadoes? Could it be that the volcanic activity earth-wide has sumped some of it off? The boost the Icelandic volcano went through has eased off today and the number of quakes over 4 has increased or closed up. Both the North Pacific and the North Atlantic have flaccid sea level pressures. Maybe that is true of the rest of the planet? Fly in the ointment #1: Volcanoes erupt all the time. But maybe the regulars are a part of the background for the rest of my datum settings? The rest of the story is a simple matter of algebra.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - There were 44 reports of tornadoes over the USA in the month of March. The frequency increases through the spring and there were hundreds, perhaps thousands of tornadoes last April in the USA and the number of tornadoes will have been well into 3 figures so far this month almost certainly. There have been about 100 earthquakes of Mag 5.0+ during this April and there will have been at least 500 and maybe up to 1000 (just from average figures - the actual figures are an estimate, there are too many to track) quakes of 4.0+ already this month, worldwide. You have *no idea* how many earthquakes of 4.0+ have been recorded and you have no idea how many have happened. You also have *no idea* how many tornadoes there have been, even in the USA. You have utterly failed to predict any major earthquake, ever and of course you missed the recent biggie in China. The data you are using is stupidly limited, as are your theories. Conclusion: you are a charlatan. |
#6
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On 16 Apr, 20:02, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On 15 Apr, 02:16, Weatherlawyer wrote: On 14 Apr, 18:13, Weatherlawyer wrote: I've a feeling there will be a few tornadoes n this spell. Lots of 975's and a smattering of promised juxtaposition. It's 2 am now and not a lot has happened since this one: 4.9 M. 2010/04/14. 12:37. -18.7. 167.3 Vanuatu. The salient point being the time is getting close to allowing a tropical storm to build or maybe a significant quake. A high 5 low 6 Magnitude at the moment. Allowing for the latency of the system, it has been 12 hours since a decent quake was posted. Of course, if it is a storm it does not necessarily have to occur on the tropics. And it might well be a tornado. Or a Low slipping into a front that might go underground in a day or more. About 15 hours lapse signifies a severe storm of hurricane values. Another 3 hours is equivalent to one more setting in the Saffir Simpson scale. But of course you all knew that didn't you children? I was pondering how to gauge the power of volcanic output vis a vis its effect on the weather. There is no real basic datum as the whole concept of vulcanology is fraught with unknowns. However we know that when the random list of earthquakes over 4 mag (or was it 5?) has gaps in it of quite a few hours, something else is going on in or on the planet. This usually turns out to be a storm a tropical cyclone or a series of strong tornadoes. I suppose the obverse is true too in extremes, where the weather is concerned droughts are just as energy intensive. Meteorology has stipulated that the earth has an heat budget and suggests that the weather alone fills that bill. But of course the errors in Newtonian mechanics is corrected for them by Eindynamism. If the rest of the budget, inclusive of "t" in the space time continuum algorithms turns out to be what I have been banging on about for the last one or two decades, then part of the heat budget can be found by taking into account the value of the moon in geo-phenomena. Which brings us to the disappearing earthquakes phenomena. Where are the tropical storms to make up for that? Where are the tornadoes? Could it be that the volcanic activity earth-wide has sumped some of it off? The boost the Icelandic volcano went through has eased off today and the number of quakes over 4 has increased or closed up. Both the North Pacific and the North Atlantic have flaccid sea level pressures. Maybe that is true of the rest of the planet? Fly in the ointment #1: Volcanoes erupt all the time. But maybe the regulars are a part of the background for the rest of my datum settings? The rest of the story is a simple matter of algebra. With the likely exception of this quake: 4.0 2010/04/16 15:44:29 which was among the shed load of Baja stuff, the gap between this Papuan: 4.7 2010/04/16 12:29:02 and this Chilean: 5.0 2010/04/16 22:38:26 saw the greatest activity in Iceland. |
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