Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog |
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| Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 12:17 GMT le 04 juillet 2010 | +2 |

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Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.
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AL 96 2010070512 BEST 0 211N 857W 25 1009 DB
With this data as input:
AL 96 201007051145 DVTS 1740N 8290W SAB 1010 ///// DT=1.5 BO CBND MET=1.0 PT=1.0 FTBO DT PA=50 NMI
AL 96 201007051145 DVTS 1810N 8320W TAFB 1015 ///// DT = 1.0 BASED ON 0.2 BANDING. NLINEMET= 1.0 PAT=
AL 96 201007051200 ANAL 1775N 8365W CIRA 201007050025
That is a big relocation. At 06z it was at 17.3N-83.3W.
I agree I don't see a center there either...
Originally LATCUR = 17.3N LONCUR = 83.3W
Now
AL 96 2010070506 BEST 0 205N 853W 25 1010 DB
AL 96 2010070512 BEST 0 211N 857W 25 1009 DB
God, let's hope not. Maybe it'll fizzle out.
Maybe that Yucatan bouy plunge lastnight was legit and they are tracking the area of lowest pressure.
Just my thought.
But leaning towards "that ain't right"...
LOL...true...a survivor.
Latest 8 AM (12) Jul 05 80 (27) 77 (25) 29.84 (1010) Calm
7 AM (11) Jul 05 77 (25) 73 (23) 29.82 (1009) Calm
6 AM (10) Jul 05 77 (25) 73 (23) 29.82 (1009) Calm
5 AM (9) No Data
4 AM (8) Jul 05 77 (25) 73 (23) 29.83 (1010) Calm
3 AM (7) Jul 05 77 (25) 75 (24) 29.85 (1010) Calm
Wind at that bouy is now out of the south which would make sense with a system moving over it towards the NW/NNW.
AOI
AOI
AOI
AOI
Pleased to see what a mess 96L is this morning. A little dry air, a little shear, competing areas of low pressure...doesn't take much to make me happy.
Let me enjoy my little nirvana for a while, ok?
Mentioning an "eye" ought to still the blog a bit...LOL
An interesting observation though.
No, the COC is far to the north of the convection on the coast of Honduras. Land interaction isn't what happened.
1015 UTC...
...SPECIAL FEATURE...
AT 0900 UTC...A TROPICAL WAVE IS ANALYZED OVER THE W CARIBBEAN
ALONG 83W/84W FROM CUBA W OF THE CAYMAN ISLANDS TO W PANAMA
MOVING NW NEAR 15 KT. CLUSTERS OF SCATTERED MODERATE/STRONG
CONVECTION ARE FROM 14N-22N BETWEEN 78W-86W WITH SCATTERED
SHOWERS/ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS S OF 14N TO INLAND OVER PANAMA
AND COSTA RICA W OF 76W TO THE COAST OF NICARAGUA. WHILE THE
WAVE HAS BECOME LESS ORGANIZED OVERNIGHT...CONDITIONS STILL
REMAIN CONDUCIVE FOR SOME POTENTIAL DEVELOPMENT. REGARDLESS OF
DEVELOPMENT...LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL AND GUSTY WINDS ARE
POSSIBLE OVER THE CAYMAN ISLANDS...YUCATAN PENINSULA...AND WRN
CUBA OVER THE NEXT DAY OR TWO.
A little further review- nothing really ramped up over night. Nothing looks better than yesterday. A'course, 95L's proximity to land has got to be throwing ya'll into a tizzy over there.
Good morning.
I am beginning to believe that no one really knows where the low is with 96L. I have seen coordinates that have literally been all over the map in the NW Caribbean. Either the low is jumping around or tracking it has been sporadic.
At 21.1N and 85.7W I see no spin.
96L ain't dead by no means, sara. Just glad it looks pathetic this morning. Will take each morning like that with a smile.
That's a WNW movement from it's current position.
BP oil spill 'increases arsenic in ocean' British scientists say
THE BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is increasing the level of arsenic in the ocean, British scientists have revealed.
Imperial College London researchers published a study which found oil stops the oceans natural filtering process of arsenic.
The arsenic then gets magnified up the food chain, as fish eat small amounts of the deadly poison and may eventually impact humans, researchers said.
Professor Mark Sephton said arsenic, which is found in seawater, was normally filtered out of the ocean when it combined with sediment on the sea floor.
But oil spills stop the normal process because the oil combines with sediment and it leads to an accumulation of arsenic in the water over time," he said.
"Arsenic only needs to be a 10th of a part per billion to cause problems.
He added: Our study is a timely reminder that oil spills could create a toxic ticking time bomb, which could threaten the fabric of the marine ecosystem in the future.
Prof Sephton said comprehensive mapping of arsenic levels around the world was needed. The maps would allow authorities to consider banning oil drilling in areas with dangerous levels of arsenic.
The findings were published this month in the journal Water Research.
BPs Deepwater Horizon rig has been spilling between 35,000 and 60,000 barrels of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico each day since it exploded on 22 April.
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