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Storm News
[Index][Aussie-Wx] |
Australian Weather Mailing List Archives: Thursday, 24 February 2000 |
From Subject
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001 Harald Richter [hrichter at enterprise.nssl.noaa Plains going off...
002 Harald Richter [hrichter at enterprise.nssl.noaa Plains went off ...
003 Andrew Boskell [a_boskell at yahoo.com] ASWA Photo Comp
004 Chas & Helen Osborn [hosborn at tassie.net.au] Pictures
005 "John Woodbridge" [jrw at pixelcom.net] Currently Driest place in QLD?
006 Ben Quinn [bodie at flatrate.net.au] Currently Driest place in QLD?
007 Blair Trewin [blair at met.Unimelb.EDU.AU] Currently Driest place in QLD?
008 Matt Smith [disarm at braenet.com.au] Dick Smith's Balloon Flight
009 "Dane Newman" [dpn at bigpond.com] Like Brisbane here
010 Blair Trewin [blair at met.Unimelb.EDU.AU] Lake Eyre - what sort of fill can we expect
011 Lindsay [writer at lisp.com.au] Lake Eyre - what sort of fill can we expect
012 Phil Bagust [paisley at cobweb.com.au] Lake Eyre - what sort of fill can we expect
013 Michael Scollay [michael.scollay at telstra.com. Mt. Kilomanjaro ice melting - was "Lake Eyre - what sort of
014 Blair Trewin [blair at met.Unimelb.EDU.AU] Run of warm nights in Melbourne
015 Michael Bath [mbath at ozemail.com.au] Dick Smith's Balloon Flight - the winner is...
016 "Matthew Piper" [mjpiper at ozemail.com.au] Thankyou
017 Jimmy Deguara [jdeguara at ihug.com.au] Thankyou
018 paulmoss at tpgi.com.au Thankyou
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
001
From: Harald Richter [hrichter at enterprise.nssl.noaa.gov]
Subject: Re: aus-wx: Plains going off...
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com (Australian Severe Weather Association)
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2000 11:40:58 -0600 (CST)
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Folks,
The 22:43 Z bow echo as seen from the Wichita Falls (FDR) radar
looked like an amazing wave-breaking event.
It seemed to evolve out of more supercellular-looking
convection near Wichita Falls earlier. There's
a spotter report of a brief tornado touchdown
near Vernon, TX. There was also a tornado warning
down near the Mexican/Texan border.
By the time the line of thunderstorms got
into the vicinity of Norman (my place of residence)
* it was dark
* the line had weakened as it had moved into
a rain-cooled low-level airmass that had seen
virtually no sun all day
* I was "expected" at home :(
Soooo: lightning at a rate of several flashes per minute,
20 seconds of icy peas and some moderate to heavy rain
- that was it from this event in Norman. BUT, keep in mind, it
is supposed to be winter in this part of the galaxy!
The current +36h forecast of the ETA model shows the next
upper-level system moving into the Plains by Thursday
evening (local time). Low levels are progged to
have a pleasantly moist airmass (Td = 15+ Celsius),
LIs around -5 and a nicely curved hodograph supporting
supercells. If that really pans out none of us (my lab
and this list) will get any work done ....
Cheers from a sunny Norman with gusty *southerly* winds,
Harald
P.S.: I am not sure how many "US weather" posts are
appropriate for this group - send me some feedback
*off line* if you wish.
--
---------------------------------------------
Harald Richter
National Severe Storms Laboratory
1313 Halley Circle
Norman, OK 73069
ph.: (405) 366-0430
fax: (405) 579-0808
email: hrichter at enterprise.nssl.noaa.gov
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002
From: Harald Richter [hrichter at enterprise.nssl.noaa.gov]
Subject: aus-wx: Plains went off ...
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com (Australian Severe Weather Association)
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2000 14:01:59 -0600 (CST)
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Good morning ASWA,
As an appendum, currently the Storm
Prediction Center has collected 5 tornado,
3 severe wind and 27 severe hail reports.
All 5 tornadoes were reported in Texas.
I also suspect some under-reporting from
sparsely-populated southern TX (near Del Rio).
Their storms looked very impressive on radar
triggering several tornado warnings last night.
Harald
--
---------------------------------------------
Harald Richter
National Severe Storms Laboratory
1313 Halley Circle
Norman, OK 73069
ph.: (405) 366-0430
fax: (405) 579-0808
email: hrichter at enterprise.nssl.noaa.gov
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003
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2000 13:27:49 -0800 (PST)
From: Andrew Boskell [a_boskell at yahoo.com]
Subject: Re: aus-wx: ASWA Photo Comp
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
Sender: aussie-weather-approval at world.std.com
Reply-To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
Greg,
No worries! Hopefully you have now received my
submission.
Andrew.
--- Greg Spencer wrote:
> Andrew,
>
> Sorry about that, with all the other things that
> I've had to do, I guess it
> got forgotten, Can you send the images to me again
> please
>
> Regards
>
> Greg Spencer
>
> Andrew Boskell wrote:
>
> > Greg,
> >
> > Why does it say to send the photo submissions to
> the
> > webmaster in the news letter instead of your
> address??
> > Perhaps that's why you don't have many
> photo's....I
> > had sent mine to the webmaster address as per the
> news
> > letter!
> >
> > Andrew.
> >
> > --- Greg Spencer wrote:
> > > Hi Everyone
> > >
> > > Only 4 more days until end end of submissions
> for
> > > next months photo
> > > competition. I dont have as many photos as I was
> > > expecting. Can people
> > > please get there photos to me as soon as
> possible so
> > > I can add them to
> > > the collection. Please send them to my email
> address
> > > and not the
> > > webmaster address as I wont get them if you do
> send
> > > them to the
> > > webmaster address.
> > >
> > > Regards
> > >
> > > Greg Spencer
> > > Assistant Webmaster
> > > Australian Severe Weather Association
> > > http://www.severeweather.asn.au
> > >
> > >
> > >
> >
>
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> > > message.
> > >
> > >
> >
>
-----------------------jacob at iinet.net.au------------------------------
> > >
> >
> > =====
> > Andrew Boskell
> >
> > "Some people are weather wise, others are
> otherwise!"
> > __________________________________________________
> > Do You Yahoo!?
> > Talk to your friends online with Yahoo! Messenger.
> > http://im.yahoo.com
> >
>
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> >
>
-----------------------jacob at iinet.net.au------------------------------
>
>
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-----------------------jacob at iinet.net.au------------------------------
>
=====
Andrew Boskell
"Some people are weather wise, others are otherwise!"
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Talk to your friends online with Yahoo! Messenger.
http://im.yahoo.com
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004
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 08:08:04 +1100
From: Chas & Helen Osborn [hosborn at tassie.net.au]
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To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
Subject: Re: aus-wx: Pictures
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Hello Anthony
20-40, 40-60's??
Chas
Strahan
Tasmania
Anthony Cornelius wrote:
> Hi all,
> Some showers sitting around the 20-40
> range sat on some of the ranges for most of the day too. While heading
> back on the SE Fwy, I encountered some 40-60's at around 12:10am,
> certainly something nice to drive through :)
>
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005
From: "John Woodbridge" [jrw at pixelcom.net]
To: [aussie-weather at world.std.com]
Subject: RE: aus-wx: Currently Driest place in QLD?
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 10:13:31 +1000
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Hi All,
Given the flooding rains in inland QLD and monsoonal downpours in tropical
QLD, I suspect that Mt. Crosby may be currently one of the driest places in
QLD, having received a total of just 32.8mm for February so far to 9:00am
this morning. This is roundabout one quarter of the Brisbane Feb Mean, and
less than one tenth the rainfall received here last Feb. Despite a heavy
cloud cover, the last few days only have yielded sub 1mm totals.
But.... Still 5 days to go in Feb and an awful lot of rain can fall in 5
days...
John.
>snip
>
>At least you are getting rain/showers, here in the Illawarra it is as dry
as
>the proverbial. The whole 0.6mm we had last night had me excited !
>
>Michael
>
>> Hi Everyone,
>>
>> I have uploaded some pictures taken today
>>
>> http://www.bsch.simplenet.com/pictures/assor/22-02-2000/22-02-200002.jpg
>> http://www.bsch.simplenet.com/pictures/assor/22-02-2000/22-02-200003.jpg
>>
>> Oh what i would do for a decent storm day.. i think it's getting close
>> to the point where we start looking forward to next season!
>> Ben Quinn
>> The Brisbane Storm Chasers Homepage (BSCH)
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006
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 10:45:17 +1100
From: Ben Quinn [bodie at flatrate.net.au]
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To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
Subject: Re: aus-wx: Currently Driest place in QLD?
Sender: aussie-weather-approval at world.std.com
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Hi John,
If it makes you feel any better i have only recorded 25mm of rain
(actually 50mm - but somone planted a great big bush next to my gauge
and it's not accurate at the moment - i estimate around 25mm)..
*sigh*
John Woodbridge wrote:
>
> Hi All,
>
> Given the flooding rains in inland QLD and monsoonal downpours in tropical
> QLD, I suspect that Mt. Crosby may be currently one of the driest places in
> QLD, having received a total of just 32.8mm for February so far to 9:00am
> this morning. This is roundabout one quarter of the Brisbane Feb Mean, and
> less than one tenth the rainfall received here last Feb. Despite a heavy
> cloud cover, the last few days only have yielded sub 1mm totals.
>
> But.... Still 5 days to go in Feb and an awful lot of rain can fall in 5
> days...
>
> John.
> >snip
> >
> >At least you are getting rain/showers, here in the Illawarra it is as dry
> as
> >the proverbial. The whole 0.6mm we had last night had me excited !
> >
> >Michael
> >
> >> Hi Everyone,
> >>
> >> I have uploaded some pictures taken today
> >>
> >> http://www.bsch.simplenet.com/pictures/assor/22-02-2000/22-02-200002.jpg
> >> http://www.bsch.simplenet.com/pictures/assor/22-02-2000/22-02-200003.jpg
> >>
> >> Oh what i would do for a decent storm day.. i think it's getting close
> >> to the point where we start looking forward to next season!
> >> Ben Quinn
>
> >> The Brisbane Storm Chasers Homepage (BSCH)
>
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> -----------------------jacob at iinet.net.au------------------------------
--
Ben Quinn
The Brisbane Storm Chasers Homepage (BSCH)
http://www.bsch.simplenet.com
The Australian Weather Pages Webring
http://www.bsch.simplenet.com/webring/index.htm
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007
From: Blair Trewin [blair at met.Unimelb.EDU.AU]
Subject: Re: aus-wx: Currently Driest place in QLD?
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 12:31:51 +1100 (EST)
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>
> Hi All,
>
> Given the flooding rains in inland QLD and monsoonal downpours in tropical
> QLD, I suspect that Mt. Crosby may be currently one of the driest places in
> QLD, having received a total of just 32.8mm for February so far to 9:00am
> this morning. This is roundabout one quarter of the Brisbane Feb Mean, and
> less than one tenth the rainfall received here last Feb. Despite a heavy
> cloud cover, the last few days only have yielded sub 1mm totals.
>
> But.... Still 5 days to go in Feb and an awful lot of rain can fall in 5
> days...
If you go to the Bureau's climate web site (www.bom.gov.au/climate),
then click 'Australian Maps/Rainfall Maps/Month To Date'), there
are maps of the rainfall to date for the month for Australia, each of
the states, and SE Australia (the SE Australia map is analysed using
a finer grid-scale than the others because of the greater station
density). There's also a 'Station Totals' option which lists the
total to date of all the real-time reporting stations.
(Because these are based on real-time daily reports, if a station
isn't reporting, it can take a while for the system to catch up with
it - this explains the occasional 'bullseyes' where there is a region
with a station that isn't reporting and is being registered as zero).
Anyway, the driest area of Queensland this month seems to be the area
immediately inland from Brisbane, with many stations in the 10-20mm
range. The lowest totals from stations I don't suspect of under-
reporting are 9.4mm at Texas and 10.6 at Boonah. There's also an area
of low rainfall in the far south-west. I'm highly sceptical of the 0.4
at Diamantina Lakes, but the 15.2 at Birdsville seems real.
Blair Trewin
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008
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Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 13:47:43 +1100
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
From: Matt Smith [disarm at braenet.com.au]
Subject: aus-wx: Dick Smith's Balloon Flight
Sender: aussie-weather-approval at world.std.com
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Well he made it! This from the Australian Geographic Website
INCREDIBLE JOURNEY OVER
WORLD-FIRST BALLOON CROSSING OF THE
TASMAN A PERFECT TOUCHDOWN
Current as of 1:10 pm, AESST, Thursday 24/2/00: After 55
hours
and 12 minutes in the air, Dick and John have gently put
down
their balloon on a beach at Woody Head on the NSW mid-north
coast. The balloon is surrounded by media and well-wishers.
Dick has paid tribute to "the Bureau of Meteorology for
incredibly
accurate predictions for the whole of the journey
allowing us to
make the crossing in record time. It would not have been
possible without them".
The successful landing took place at Ten Mile Beach just
17 km
north of Iluka. To make a safe landing, Dick and John
needed a
large flat landing with no obstacles such as power lines or
buildings. The deserted beach they are at was ideal.
I guess the BoM will be happy with some good publicity.
Matt Smith
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009
From: "Dane Newman" [dpn at bigpond.com]
To: [aussie-weather at world.std.com]
Subject: aus-wx: Like Brisbane here
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 14:10:32 +1100
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Very humid here in Melbourne with dew points near 20
across most of Victoria. At the moment(2.10pm) it is 28c in Melbourne Dew pt
19c. Dane.
010
From: Blair Trewin [blair at met.Unimelb.EDU.AU]
Subject: Re: aus-wx: Lake Eyre - what sort of fill can we expect
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 14:27:31 +1100 (EST)
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>
> >Not being an expert on this field I wonder what Lake Eyre will look over the
> >coming months. There has been considerable rain in catchments, and many of
> >the flood peaks coming down through SW Queensland will not be losing much to
> >soil soak ( as in the past ) as the entire course has had rain.
> >
> >Any projected comparisons to previous fills ?
> >
> >Will coastal Australia be knee deep in Pelicans in a couple of years -
> >Pelican numbers tend to increase dramatically over coastal Australia when
> >Lake Eyre starts to dry. It was very noticeable here at Lake Illawarra.
> >
> >Michael Thompson
> >http://thunder.simplenet.com
>
> As someone with a lay interest, I'd say maybe a filling on par with 1989?
> That year the north lake almost filled after the south lake filled and
> overflowed for the first time in recorded history. Obviously that won't
> happen this time [not enough rain in the southern Flinders Ranges
> catchments], but I don't think we're looking at a 'great filling' a la
> 1974. Even if the whole lake doesn't fill however, the southern bays will,
> and it will be a spectacular sight for anyone camping in that area.....
>
> A 1 in 10 year fill I'd say.
I'd concur with this - on the assumption of average rainfall (i.e. not
much) over the coming months. If there is further substantial rain
then the fill could be more substantial.
One would expect the fill to be less than 1974: the heaviest rains
in the catchment have been more localised than in 1974 (virtually
all of Queensland, except for parts of the Darling Downs, got more than
200mm in January 1974, whereas only 10-15% of the state has done so
this month), and, as far as I know, only one major inland river (the
Thomson) looks like exceeding its 1974 flood level. 1974 also saw
heavy rain (and increased cloud cover, which would have minimised
evaporation losses) later on closer to Lake Eyre, especially in
February and April.
(The heavy rain in the southern NT shouldn't have much impact on Lake
Eyre - to the best of my knowledge, rivers like the Finke and Palmer
die in the Simpson Desert without ever reaching Lake Eyre - the
major remote catchments for Lake Eyre are the Diamantina and Cooper
systems).
1989 was a bit of an unusual one in that the filling was driven by
what was happening in the immediate vicinity of Lake Eyre - rainfall
for the 6 months to May 1989 was exceptionally high in much of
northern SA, but near average in most of the Queensland catchments.
The 2000 event is much more (at present) one of the 1974 type, if not
yet its magnitude.
Blair Trewin
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011
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 08:17:21 -0800
From: Lindsay [writer at lisp.com.au]
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win16; I)
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
Subject: Re: aus-wx: Lake Eyre - what sort of fill can we expect
Sender: aussie-weather-approval at world.std.com
Reply-To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
Good question, I second that enquiry. Also, does anyone have any
information on the melting of glacial ice on Mount Kilimanjaro or any
good links to it? After some of the global warming discussions we've
had, it prompted me to enquire about this, one of my favourite
mountains. I know there has been some considerable melting up there.
It's a fascinating mountain as it is very high but much more accessible
for the average person, compared to most high mountains.
Lindsay Pearce
Michael Thompson wrote:
>
> Not being an expert on this field I wonder what Lake Eyre will look over the
> coming months. There has been considerable rain in catchments, and many of
> the flood peaks coming down through SW Queensland will not be losing much to
> soil soak ( as in the past ) as the entire course has had rain.
>
> Any projected comparisons to previous fills ?
>
> Will coastal Australia be knee deep in Pelicans in a couple of years -
> Pelican numbers tend to increase dramatically over coastal Australia when
> Lake Eyre starts to dry. It was very noticeable here at Lake Illawarra.
>
> Michael Thompson
> http://thunder.simplenet.com
>
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> -----------------------jacob at iinet.net.au------------------------------
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012
X-Sender: paisley at mail.cobweb.com.au
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 15:12:01 +0930
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
From: Phil Bagust [paisley at cobweb.com.au]
Subject: Re: aus-wx: Lake Eyre - what sort of fill can we expect
Sender: aussie-weather-approval at world.std.com
Reply-To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
>Good question, I second that enquiry. Also, does anyone have any
>information on the melting of glacial ice on Mount Kilimanjaro or any
>good links to it? After some of the global warming discussions we've
>had, it prompted me to enquire about this, one of my favourite
>mountains. I know there has been some considerable melting up there.
>It's a fascinating mountain as it is very high but much more accessible
>for the average person, compared to most high mountains.
>
>Lindsay Pearce
Not sure about Kilimanjaro, but i'm pretty sure that equatorial glaciers
are amongst the most sensitive of all - their existance is aways a
sensitive balance of precipitation, mostly wet snow near 0deg, and melting.
The CSIRO [I think] did a survey of the Equatorial glaciers of West Irian
in the early 70's and even then they were much reduced from the 1930's
[this book may be in some libraries - it has some great shots of the
glaciers taken by aviators in the 1930's that look more like New Zealand
than the equator!]
Mt Kenya in Africa has also suffered extensive glacier retreat this century
and in fact has lost some glaciers completely.
Finally, the second lower peak of Kilimanjaro [Mawenzi? sp?] has also lost
its glacier in the last century.
Try a university library. I know one book at the Barr Smith at Adelaide
uni that has a wonderful collection of photographs of Kilimanjaro going
back over a century that demonstrate glacier retreat very clearly [I think
they conclude the retreat has as much to do woth declining precipitation as
it has with global warming] Can you telnet to the library, or look up it's
web page? A few carefully chosen search terms would surely hit
something....
Phil 'Paisley' Bagust
paisley at cobweb.com.au
http://www.chariot.net.au/~paisley2
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Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 16:06:12 +1100
013
From: Michael Scollay [michael.scollay at telstra.com.au]
Organization: Telstra Strategy & Research
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To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
Subject: aus-wx: Mt. Kilomanjaro ice melting - was "Lake Eyre - what sort of fill can we
expect"
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Lindsay wrote on Thu, 24 Feb 2000 08:17:21 -0800:
>
> Good question, I second that enquiry. Also, does anyone have any
> information on the melting of glacial ice on Mount Kilimanjaro or any
> good links to it? After some of the global warming discussions we've
> had, it prompted me to enquire about this, one of my favourite
> mountains. I know there has been some considerable melting up there.
> It's a fascinating mountain as it is very high but much more accessible
> for the average person, compared to most high mountains.
[snip Lake Eyre stuff]
During my visit and climb to the highest point of this
"dormant" volcano during 1991 (Uhuru Pt. 5895m), I met
some scientists trudging en-route from the crater who
where studying whether the ice melting on this mountain
was due to a hotter mountain rather than a hotter planet
and/or reduced precipitation per se. They could not make
up their minds one way or another for sure as the data
they carried was yet to be properly analysed but quote:
"There is some evidence of minor activity in the crater
that would contribute to the loss of the ice-cap but we
also think that there has been a more substantial drop
in the amount ofprecipitation over the last 20 years but
this is only anecdotal evidence from visual
observations".
The same has been said of the loss of ice from Mt.Kenya
(which my wife and I also climbed in 1991) but this
dormant volcano is in a more direct line-of-fire of the
dryer-than-usual air masses that venture south from
continually drought-affected Sudan, Ethiopia and Somalia
to the NW, N & NE respectively. The region around Lake
Turkana in NNW Kenya was incredibly dry when we visited
and according to local tribes, the lake itself had
dropped some 3m in living memory. This is a combination
of both the widening rift valley in that region and a
net reduction of precipitation in the catchment areas
around (mainly to the south and the north is dryer).
My studies of SOI trends, with the exception of the
recent +ve SOI's puts -ve SOI's some 20% more prevalent
after 1980 to end-1999 than in the 20 years to 1980. In
Australia and in this region of Africa, there is a
tendency for dryer-warmer-than-ususal conditions.
I think our "smoking gun" that is melting ice on Mt.
Kenya and Mt.Kilomanjaro is mainly a medium-term
dryer-warmer climate change for Mt.Kenya and a
combination of both minor vulcanism and climate-change
for Mt.Kilomanjaro. The latter is much higher (5895m)
meaning that temperature is probably less of an ice-
melting factor than a net reduction in precipitation
overall. When you visit this mountain, what strikes
you is the complete absence of ice in many regions
then sheer ice-cliffs to a bit of ice-cap in somewhat
random areas of the crater, some on the crater rim,
others in the valley. Ironically, most ice is found on
the western edge of the crater floor that is about 400m
lower than the crater rim and highest point to the south.
As for links...I havn't trolled the search engines yet...
All things considered equal in this global warming
discussion, one needs to consider everything else
first...
Michael Scollay mailto:michael.scollay at telstra.com.au
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-----------------------jacob at iinet.net.au------------------------------
014
From: Blair Trewin [blair at met.Unimelb.EDU.AU]
Subject: aus-wx: Run of warm nights in Melbourne
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com (Aussie Weather)
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 16:37:12 +1100 (EST)
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Melbourne has had its eighth consecutive minimum of 19 degrees or
warmer. This equals the record set 25 January-1 February 1974 and
26 February-5 March 1983.
Minima of 20 or 21 are forecast for the next two nights, so the
record should be broken.
It has reached 29.4 today (and still rising). Assuming a top of 30
the mean so far would be 30.9. Given the forecast for the next four
days, the February record of 30.2 should be broken comfortably. The
all-months record of 31.0 looks unlikely, unless perhaps the
Saturday change is delayed long enough to get a mid-30s day on
Saturday as well as Friday. The most likely value is in the 30.4-30.7
range.
The mean minimum is up to 17.8 now - likely to be the second-highest
on record (after February 1997).
Blair Trewin
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015
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Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 19:59:57 +1100
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
From: Michael Bath [mbath at ozemail.com.au]
Subject: Re: aus-wx: Dick Smith's Balloon Flight - the winner is...
Cc: halden at one.net.au
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Hi all,
Halden's daughter Kirryn managed to win the prize!
Using the AVN site and Halden's skills she picked:
29 deg 26 min S 153 deg 22 min E and 50 hours flight time
and the actual landing was at:
29 deg 19 min S 153 deg 21 min E and 55 hours flight time.
regards, Michael
At 13:47 24/02/2000 +1100, you wrote:
>Well he made it! This from the Australian Geographic Website
>
>INCREDIBLE JOURNEY OVER
>
> WORLD-FIRST BALLOON CROSSING OF THE
> TASMAN A PERFECT TOUCHDOWN
>
> Current as of 1:10 pm, AESST, Thursday 24/2/00: After 55
>hours
> and 12 minutes in the air, Dick and John have gently put
>down
[snip]
==================================================================
Michael Bath mailto:mbath at ozemail.com.au
Wollongbar NSW 2477 http://australiansevereweather.simplenet.com/
Australia http://www.lightningphotography.com/
Secretary ASWA Inc. http://www.severeweather.asn.au/
==================================================================
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016
From: "Matthew Piper" [mjpiper at ozemail.com.au]
To: "Aussie Weather" [aussie-weather at world.std.com]
Subject: aus-wx: Thankyou
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 20:30:16 +1100
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Hi Everyone,
I would like to extend a big heartfelt thankyou to
all who attended last nights dinner. It was certainly a great night and I
enjoyed it immensely along with everyone else. It made me proud to be an
ASWA member and to know so many great people with similar interests. May there
be many more such occasions in the future.
Matthew Piper
017
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Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 22:57:56 +1100
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
From: Jimmy Deguara [jdeguara at ihug.com.au]
Subject: Re: aus-wx: Thankyou
Sender: aussie-weather-approval at world.std.com
Reply-To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
I also thoroughly enjoyed the discussion and catching up with Paul Mossman.
Jimmy Deguara
At 20:30 24/02/00 +1100, you wrote:
>Hi Everyone,
>
>I would like to extend a big heartfelt thankyou to all who attended last
>nights dinner. It was certainly a great night and I enjoyed it immensely
>along with everyone else. It made me proud to be an ASWA member and to
>know so many great people with similar interests. May there be many more
>such occasions in the future.
>
>Matthew Piper
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018
From: paulmoss at tpgi.com.au
To: aussie-weather at world.std.com
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 21:38:25 +0930
Subject: Re: aus-wx: Thankyou
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Times New RomanI echo the same sentinents Matthew. What an excellent job you
did organising it!
Thankyou to all who showed -it was the best night! I tell you that
I was a little disillushioned with ASWA prior to this
meeting/dinner - but I aint now!! What an excellent President &
Tresurer & General committee members we have! Next time you
wanna think negative thoughts - just remember the people behind
the scenes!
What a great bunch of guys / lady - and hey Mario - hope you
went ok! .....(wink wink)
PS - Matthew / Mario how I told you it was peltin down in
Darwin - we had 84mm til 9am this morning! & It started
about 10.30pm Darwin time!
On 24 Feb 00, at 20:30, Matthew Piper wrote:
ArialHi Everyone,Times New Roman
ArialI would like to extend a big heartfelt thankyou to all who attended
last nights dinner. It was certainly a great night and I enjoyedit
immensely along with everyone else. It made me proud to be an
ASWA member and to know so many great people with similar
interests. May there be many more such occasions in the future.Times New Roman
ArialMatthew PiperTimes New Roman
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| Document: 000224.htm
Updated: 05 March 2000 |
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