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Old December 8th 03, 03:34 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 547dm thickness

I thought this may be of interest to a few people. A 1000-500mb thickness
of 5466m today at 12z at Watnall, with a surface temperature of 1.6C

http://weather.uwyo.edu/cgi-bin/soun... ham%2FWatnall

(Excuse the linewrap, both tinyurl and makeashorterlink seem to be down)

Joe


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Old December 8th 03, 03:53 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 547dm thickness

On Mon, 8 Dec 2003 15:34:21 -0000, Joe Hunt wrote in


I thought this may be of interest to a few people. A 1000-500mb thickness
of 5466m today at 12z at Watnall, with a surface temperature of 1.6C

http://weather.uwyo.edu/cgi-bin/soun... ham%2FWatnall


That shows, yet again, the power of subsiding air in causing warming.
After falling to -1.1C at 594m, it rises to +7.2C at 1152m - one of those
days when mountain tops are a good deal warmer than nearby valleys.

(Excuse the linewrap, both tinyurl and makeashorterlink seem to be down)


No problems with line wrap in the version of OE you use Joe. That was
fixed by MS back in the spring with one of their updates.

--
Mike Coleraine posted to uk.sci.weather 08/12/2003 15:53:17 UTC
My aurora images here http://www.mtullett.plus.com/29a-oct and
http://www.mtullett.plus.com/20-nov/
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Old December 8th 03, 05:21 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
JPG JPG is offline
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Default 547dm thickness

On Mon, 8 Dec 2003 15:53:17 +0000, Mike Tullett
wrote:

On Mon, 8 Dec 2003 15:34:21 -0000, Joe Hunt wrote in


I thought this may be of interest to a few people. A 1000-500mb thickness
of 5466m today at 12z at Watnall, with a surface temperature of 1.6C

http://weather.uwyo.edu/cgi-bin/soun... ham%2FWatnall


That shows, yet again, the power of subsiding air in causing warming.
After falling to -1.1C at 594m, it rises to +7.2C at 1152m - one of those
days when mountain tops are a good deal warmer than nearby valleys.

(Excuse the linewrap, both tinyurl and makeashorterlink seem to be down)


No problems with line wrap in the version of OE you use Joe. That was
fixed by MS back in the spring with one of their updates.


OT observation:

Micro$oft sending out updates or "Service Packs" for their software is like Ford
sending you sparking plugs or headlamps for your car after you have had it for a
year.

JPG

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Old December 8th 03, 05:31 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default [OT} 547dm thickness (was: 547dm thickness)

On Mon, 08 Dec 2003 17:21:18 +0000, JPG wrote in


No problems with line wrap in the version of OE you use Joe. That was
fixed by MS back in the spring with one of their updates.


OT observation:

Micro$oft sending out updates or "Service Packs" for their software is like Ford
sending you sparking plugs or headlamps for your car after you have had it for a
year.


True - MS never send updates (the current round of viruses may have kidded
people they do), but it is vital those running any version of Windows go
here on a regular basis to find and install the latest updates. Without
the October critical update, those running XP without a firewall can have a
virus installed without them knowing - until the PC keeps rebooting.

http://v4.windowsupdate.microsoft.com/

To keep up to date with general security, this page is also of use.

http://www.microsoft.com/security/

--
Mike Coleraine posted to uk.sci.weather 08/12/2003 17:31:12 UTC
My aurora images here http://www.mtullett.plus.com/29a-oct and
http://www.mtullett.plus.com/20-nov/


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Old December 8th 03, 11:59 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default [OT} 547dm thickness (was: 547dm thickness)


"Mike Tullett" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 08 Dec 2003 17:21:18 +0000, JPG wrote in


To keep up to date with general security, this page is also of use.

http://www.microsoft.com/security/


Hi Mike,

Never seen that link before, mind you, never seen Microsoft and Security
mentioned in the same sentance ;-)

From a Reading coder for Whistler (go figure....),

A




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