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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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There is a massive storm of some sort signalled in the timing of these seismic waves:
2016/07/04 at 09:25. 10.64 S. 164.97 E. Santa Cruz Islands region, 5.6Mb. and: 2016/07/06 at 01:01. 56.80 S. 142.13 E. Pacific-Antarctic Ridge, 5.9M. With 5.5 a gale force and 5.9 the equivalent of a strong gale (7M being a violent gale and 7.5 an F1 hurricane.) http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/guide/we...beaufort-scale Then I guess we are looking at what is a line-storm of magnificent proportions although it could well be a volcanic eruption instead. (Or one after the other again.) http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...Refresh+ View Now for goodness sake, this time around, if you can't understand me, tell me which words of the English language are most difficult for you and we will go through it together. (If you don't try belittling me like the last unlamented lot.) Meanwhile over in the Pacific there is a standing High and Low in the middle of the anticyclones between Mexico and Hawaii. It can't possibly be Agatha and Blas can it? http://www.tropicalstormrisk.com/ Catch it before they do: http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...area=G&model=G Weatherlawyer; he can't count but he can see! |
#2
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On Wednesday, 6 July 2016 14:47:28 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
There is a massive storm of some sort signalled in the timing of these seismic waves: 2016/07/04 at 09:25. 10.64 S. 164.97 E. Santa Cruz Islands region, 5.6Mb. and: 2016/07/06 at 01:01. 56.80 S. 142.13 E. Pacific-Antarctic Ridge, 5.9M. With 5.5 a gale force and 5.9 the equivalent of a strong gale (7M being a violent gale and 7.5 an F1 hurricane.) http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/guide/we...beaufort-scale Then I guess we are looking at what is a line-storm of magnificent proportions although it could well be a volcanic eruption instead. (Or one after the other again.) http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...Refresh+ View Now for goodness sake, this time around, if you can't understand me, tell me which words of the English language are most difficult for you and we will go through it together. (If you don't try belittling me like the last unlamented lot.) Meanwhile over in the Pacific there is a standing High and Low in the middle of the anticyclones between Mexico and Hawaii. It can't possibly be Agatha and Blas can it? http://www.tropicalstormrisk.com/ Catch it before they do: http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...area=G&model=G Weatherlawyer; he can't count but he can see! Anyone know how to save animations? Mageia KDE so only grown ups need answer. |
#3
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Watch out Monday to Thursday (and a bit or not as that case may be.)
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#4
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On Sunday, 10 July 2016 02:35:22 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
Watch out Monday to Thursday (and a bit or not as that case may be.) 2016/07/10 13:44. 15.07 S. 173.21 W. 5.8 M. Tonga Islands 2016/07/10 13:41. 15.02 S. 172.86 W. 6.0 M. Samoa Islands region Same place, virtually. Meanwhile 3 days and 3 hours later: 2016/07/07 10:12. 7.90 S. 126.76 E. 5.6 M. Banda Sea Nothing spectacular Latitude Longitude date/time Wind State 8.70 145.20 07/03/00Z 25 - TROPICAL DEPRESSION 9.20 145.00 07/03/20Z 35 - TROPICAL STORM 10.00 144.30 07/04/02Z 35 - TROPICAL STORM 10.90 143.00 07/03/18Z 45 - TROPICAL STORM 11.80 141.90 07/04/00Z 45 - TROPICAL STORM 12.70 140.80 07/04/06Z 45 - TROPICAL STORM 13.90 139.10 07/05/02Z 50 - TROPICAL STORM 15.20 137.60 07/05/08Z 60 - TROPICAL STORM 15.40 136.70 07/05/00Z 65 - TYPHOON-1 16.30 135.10 07/05/06Z 85 - TYPHOON-2 17.20 133.50 07/05/12Z 120 - TYPHOON-4 18.00 131.80 07/05/18Z 130 - SUPER TYPHOON-4 18.70 130.10 07/06/00Z 140 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 19.50 128.40 07/06/06Z 150 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 220.20 126.90 07/06/12Z 150 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 0.70 125.60 07/06/18Z 150 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 21.30 124.30 07/07/00Z 150 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 21.60 123.40 07/07/06Z 145 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 22.00 122.60 07/07/12Z 140 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 22.40 121.80 07/07/18Z 130 - SUPER TYPHOON-4 22.60 120.80 07/08/00Z 90 - TYPHOON-2 23.10 119.90 07/08/06Z 80 - TYPHOON-1 23.30 119.70 07/08/12Z 70 - TYPHOON-1 23.40 119.70 07/08/18Z 60 - TROPICAL STORM 24.40 119.00 07/09/00Z 45 - TROPICAL STORM 25.10 118.40 07/09/06Z 35 - TROPICAL STORM 26.10 117.50 07/09/18Z 25 - TROPICAL DEPRESSION 27.30 117.40 07/10/06Z 20 - TROPICAL DEPRESSION So where did it go ashore? |
#5
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On Sunday, 10 July 2016 18:46:07 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Sunday, 10 July 2016 02:35:22 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote: Watch out Monday to Thursday (and a bit or not as that case may be.) 2016/07/10 13:44. 15.07 S. 173.21 W. 5.8 M. Tonga Islands 2016/07/10 13:41. 15.02 S. 172.86 W. 6.0 M. Samoa Islands region Same place, virtually. Meanwhile 3 days and 3 hours later: 2016/07/07 10:12. 7.90 S. 126.76 E. 5.6 M. Banda Sea Nothing spectacular Latitude Longitude date/time Wind State 8.70 145.20 07/03/00Z 25 - TROPICAL DEPRESSION 9.20 145.00 07/03/20Z 35 - TROPICAL STORM 10.00 144.30 07/04/02Z 35 - TROPICAL STORM 10.90 143.00 07/03/18Z 45 - TROPICAL STORM 11.80 141.90 07/04/00Z 45 - TROPICAL STORM 12.70 140.80 07/04/06Z 45 - TROPICAL STORM 13.90 139.10 07/05/02Z 50 - TROPICAL STORM 15.20 137.60 07/05/08Z 60 - TROPICAL STORM 15.40 136.70 07/05/00Z 65 - TYPHOON-1 16.30 135.10 07/05/06Z 85 - TYPHOON-2 17.20 133.50 07/05/12Z 120 - TYPHOON-4 18.00 131.80 07/05/18Z 130 - SUPER TYPHOON-4 18.70 130.10 07/06/00Z 140 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 19.50 128.40 07/06/06Z 150 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 220.20 126.90 07/06/12Z 150 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 0.70 125.60 07/06/18Z 150 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 21.30 124.30 07/07/00Z 150 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 21.60 123.40 07/07/06Z 145 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 22.00 122.60 07/07/12Z 140 - SUPER TYPHOON-5 22.40 121.80 07/07/18Z 130 - SUPER TYPHOON-4 22.60 120.80 07/08/00Z 90 - TYPHOON-2 23.10 119.90 07/08/06Z 80 - TYPHOON-1 23.30 119.70 07/08/12Z 70 - TYPHOON-1 23.40 119.70 07/08/18Z 60 - TROPICAL STORM 24.40 119.00 07/09/00Z 45 - TROPICAL STORM 25.10 118.40 07/09/06Z 35 - TROPICAL STORM 26.10 117.50 07/09/18Z 25 - TROPICAL DEPRESSION 27.30 117.40 07/10/06Z 20 - TROPICAL DEPRESSION So where did it go ashore? http://weather.unisys.com/hurricane/...2016/track.gif Falling fast soon past https://www.corbettreport.com/the-poetry-of-f-r-scott/ |
#6
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On Sunday, July 10, 2016 at 2:35:22 AM UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
Watch out Monday to Thursday (and a bit or not as that case may be.) And it is now Friday. And there was no major storm, even though you gave yourself the whole surface of the globe and a time period of 4 full days. Just how wrong is it possible to be? 1/15 correct - and you were very generously given the 1. Cracking system W. 😂😂😂😂 |
#7
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On 15/07/2016 16:42, Dawlish wrote:
On Sunday, July 10, 2016 at 2:35:22 AM UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote: Watch out Monday to Thursday (and a bit or not as that case may be.) And it is now Friday. And there was no major storm, even though you gave yourself the whole surface of the globe and a time period of 4 full days. Just how wrong is it possible to be? 1/15 correct - and you were very generously given the 1. Cracking system W. 😂😂😂😂 I know, he's almost as bad as you ![]() -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl Snow videos: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3QvmL4UWBmHFMKWiwYm_gg |
#8
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On Friday, July 15, 2016 at 5:53:57 PM UTC+1, Col wrote:
On 15/07/2016 16:42, Dawlish wrote: On Sunday, July 10, 2016 at 2:35:22 AM UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote: Watch out Monday to Thursday (and a bit or not as that case may be.) And it is now Friday. And there was no major storm, even though you gave yourself the whole surface of the globe and a time period of 4 full days. Just how wrong is it possible to be? 1/15 correct - and you were very generously given the 1. Cracking system W. 😂😂😂😂 I know, he's almost as bad as you ![]() -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl Snow videos: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3QvmL4UWBmHFMKWiwYm_gg 8] This idiot thinks he can forecast tectonic events via atmospheric pressure changes. Mad. His success percentage, from the filtered gobbledygook, is pathetic. |
#9
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On Wednesday, 6 July 2016 14:47:28 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
There is a massive storm of some sort signalled in the timing of these seismic waves: 2016/07/04 at 09:25. 10.64 S. 164.97 E. Santa Cruz Islands region, 5.6Mb. and: 2016/07/06 at 01:01. 56.80 S. 142.13 E. Pacific-Antarctic Ridge, 5.9M. With 5.5 a gale force and 5.9 the equivalent of a strong gale (7M being a violent gale and 7.5 an F1 hurricane.) http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/guide/we...beaufort-scale Then I guess we are looking at what is a line-storm of magnificent proportions although it could well be a volcanic eruption instead. (Or one after the other again.) http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...Refresh+ View Now for goodness sake, this time around, if you can't understand me, tell me which words of the English language are most difficult for you and we will go through it together. (If you don't try belittling me like the last unlamented lot.) Meanwhile over in the Pacific there is a standing High and Low in the middle of the anticyclones between Mexico and Hawaii. It can't possibly be Agatha and Blas can it? http://www.tropicalstormrisk.com/ Catch it before they do: http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...area=G&model=G Weatherlawyer; he can't count but he can see! And now For the Atlantic: https://www.skywarnforum.com/threads...12/#post-86346 We don't need no edoocashun We don't want no col controls Reaching Stoooooopiiid 'cross a chasm Watching wet sheep score own goals All in all they both have very little brtween their ears All in all they both have huge dags on their rears |
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