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Post by nautonnier on May 23, 2019 10:39:53 GMT
This I believe is close to the last day of Spring Starting to get a little worrying?
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Post by Ratty on May 23, 2019 13:05:33 GMT
Starting to get a little worrying? Not only the USA and And? Link dead?
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Post by acidohm on May 23, 2019 18:07:07 GMT
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Post by phydeaux2363 on May 23, 2019 20:05:03 GMT
Is Astromet's forecast beginning to verify?
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Post by acidohm on May 23, 2019 20:09:37 GMT
Is Astromet's forecast beginning to verify? [br0] Looks like it so far.... Enso maybe will go nino sooner then hes stated tho?
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Post by walnut on May 23, 2019 22:24:11 GMT
Flood sirens along the Arkansas River here in Tulsa are going off. Never heard that before. Parts of this county have had over 20 inches over the last 30 days. We have areas nearby that have been swampy since since summer.
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Post by nautonnier on May 23, 2019 23:41:25 GMT
deleted tweets Replaced one...
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Post by missouriboy on May 25, 2019 3:30:18 GMT
Looks like the atmosphere is really "condensing". I suppose that this is all just coincidental with what is currently a one historically low solar cycle event. Are multiple low cycles cumulative? Solar cycle 20 (last 1-cycle low) showed an uptick in geomagnetic activity in its waning months. No such thing happening in SC24, which is even lower than SC12 (see chart below listings). Flash floods submerged 90 percent of Iran, displaced 500 000 peopleOne of the worst affected provinces was Golestan, which received approximately 70% of its annual rainfall in 24 hours, something that had not been seen in over 300 years. watchers.news/2019/05/24/flash-floods-submerged-90-percent-of-iran-displaced-500-000-people/Mississippi River above flood stage for 137 days
As of May 21, 2019, the Mississippi River at Natchez, MS has been above the flood stage of 14.63 m (48 feet) for 137 consecutive days. This is well longer than any time since 1927 when the previous record of 77 days was set. watchers.news/2019/05/22/mississippi-river-above-flood-stage-for-137-days/Floods leave 600 000 ha (1.5 million acres) of crops damaged or destroyed, ArgentinaIn a recently released report, the National Institute of Agricultural Technology estimated there are 600 000 ha (1 480 000 acres) of crops affected by heavy rain and flooded roads, which interrupted the harvest of soy, corn and alfalfa crops. In some areas, crops were under 40 cm (15.7 inches) of water, so owners decided to abandon them. watchers.news/2019/05/19/floods-crop-loss-argentina/From the same category
High risk of excessive rainfall across Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Iowa, and Illinois, U.S. Heavy rain hits Oman, claiming at least 6 lives Rare may storm hits Southern California with heavy rain, hail and snow Severe floods kill 5, leave crop damage and thousands homeless, Tanzania Biggest late May snow in Denver since 1975, Colorado Arkansas River approaching historic highs, at least 7 killed as severe storms march through central U.S. Violent tornadoes hit Missouri, extensive damage reported, at least 3 deaths and 20 injured At least 16 killed as severe floods hit Paraguay Extremely heavy rain hits Yakushima Island, Japan - 420 mm (16.5 inches) in 12 hours
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Post by walnut on May 25, 2019 3:46:21 GMT
Southbound Hwy 69 near the Arkansas River in Oklahoma was closed today. That's a pretty major truck route, from the North down to Houston. I saw several businesses with a couple of feet of water inside. One place, Wheeler Metals, about 20 acres of steel products, was really inundated. Cheap, rusty steel will soon be available. wheelermetals.com/
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Post by missouriboy on May 25, 2019 4:10:16 GMT
Three more days of "incoming".
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Post by walnut on May 25, 2019 4:35:40 GMT
What do you make of all this? The trend towards weakening solar cycles is certainly "an inconvenient truth", isn't it? Looks like the atmosphere is really "condensing". I suppose that this is all just coincidental with what is currently a one historically low solar cycle event. Are multiple low cycles cumulative? Solar cycle 20 (last 1-cycle low) showed an uptick in geomagnetic activity in its waning months. No such thing happening in SC24, which is even lower than SC12 (see chart below listings). Flash floods submerged 90 percent of Iran, displaced 500 000 peopleOne of the worst affected provinces was Golestan, which received approximately 70% of its annual rainfall in 24 hours, something that had not been seen in over 300 years. watchers.news/2019/05/24/flash-floods-submerged-90-percent-of-iran-displaced-500-000-people/Mississippi River above flood stage for 137 days
As of May 21, 2019, the Mississippi River at Natchez, MS has been above the flood stage of 14.63 m (48 feet) for 137 consecutive days. This is well longer than any time since 1927 when the previous record of 77 days was set. watchers.news/2019/05/22/mississippi-river-above-flood-stage-for-137-days/Floods leave 600 000 ha (1.5 million acres) of crops damaged or destroyed, ArgentinaIn a recently released report, the National Institute of Agricultural Technology estimated there are 600 000 ha (1 480 000 acres) of crops affected by heavy rain and flooded roads, which interrupted the harvest of soy, corn and alfalfa crops. In some areas, crops were under 40 cm (15.7 inches) of water, so owners decided to abandon them. watchers.news/2019/05/19/floods-crop-loss-argentina/From the same category
High risk of excessive rainfall across Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Iowa, and Illinois, U.S. Heavy rain hits Oman, claiming at least 6 lives Rare may storm hits Southern California with heavy rain, hail and snow Severe floods kill 5, leave crop damage and thousands homeless, Tanzania Biggest late May snow in Denver since 1975, Colorado Arkansas River approaching historic highs, at least 7 killed as severe storms march through central U.S. Violent tornadoes hit Missouri, extensive damage reported, at least 3 deaths and 20 injured At least 16 killed as severe floods hit Paraguay Extremely heavy rain hits Yakushima Island, Japan - 420 mm (16.5 inches) in 12 hours
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Post by nautonnier on May 25, 2019 9:29:43 GMT
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Post by Ratty on May 25, 2019 12:51:24 GMT
I took a crash course in German so I could understand. Do you know Herr Google, Naut?
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Post by nautonnier on May 25, 2019 15:21:12 GMT
I took a crash course in German so I could understand. Do you know Herr Google, Naut? No I don't but he seems to know a lot about me...
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Post by missouriboy on May 25, 2019 20:03:15 GMT
What do you make of all this? The trend towards weakening solar cycles is certainly "an inconvenient truth", isn't it?I put more faith in the Big Glow Plug than I do in the TINY CO2 Fairy and her scumbag handlers. Of course, the Big Glow Plug is accumulating a following of timeshare salesmen as well. We shall see. A couple of years like present could put a sizeable dent in the ol food surplus. Good for some farmers. Down right deadly for places like Egypt. China might have to cave to our tariffs and terms if they want to eat. Cooling oceans must(?) by definition result in a cooling troposphere, which should hold less water(?). Is that warmer period surplus partially what is flooding us now? (See Joe's chart below) How much water (liquid) does a return to the 1970s or the 1880s amount to? There must be some type of equilibrium maintained? Flood on the down side followed by drought (for some areas) when a lower atmos. moisture equilibrium is reached? Perhaps NOA AH could tell us. Looks like the atmosphere is really "condensing". I suppose that this is all just coincidental with what is currently a one historically low solar cycle event. Are multiple low cycles cumulative? Solar cycle 20 (last 1-cycle low) showed an uptick in geomagnetic activity in its waning months. No such thing happening in SC24, which is even lower than SC12 (see chart below listings).
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