Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Moscow hits 102°F; hottest day ever in Finland; 90L a long-range theat
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 01:54 GMT le 30 juillet 2010 +3
At 4pm local time today in Moscow, Russia, the temperature surpassed 100°F for the first time in recorded history. The high temperature of 100.8°F (37.8°C) recorded at the Moscow Observatory, the official weather location for Moscow, beat Moscow's previous record of 99.5°F (37.5°C), set just three days ago, on July 26. Prior to 2010, Moscow's hottest temperature of all-time was 36.6°C (98.2°F), set in August, 1920. Records in Moscow go back to 1879. Baltschug, another official downtown Moscow weather site, hit an astonishing 102.2°F (39.0°C) today. Finland also recorded its hottest temperature in its history today, when the mercury hit 99°F (37.2°C) at Joensuu. The old (undisputed) record was 95°F (35°C) at Jvaskyla on July 9, 1914. There is little relief in sight, as the latest forecast for Moscow predicts continued highs in the 90s for most of the coming week.

A remarkable year for extreme heat
Finland's new national heat record makes it the fourteenth country (or semi-independent territory) to break an all-time hottest temperature record this year. My source for extreme temperature records is Chris Burt, author of the book Extreme Weather. July in Moscow is easily going to smash the record for hottest month in Moscow's history. By my rough estimate, the temperature has been 18°F (10°C) above average this month. The record hottest July, in 1938, had temperatures 5.3°C above average. Given that the planet as a whole has seen record high temperatures the past four months in a row, it should not be a surprise to see unprecedented heat waves like the Russian heat wave. A record warm planet "loads the dice" in favor of regional heat waves more extreme than anything experienced in recorded history.


Figure 1. Russia's heat wave has contributed to a severe fire season this July. Fires on dry peat bogs east of Moscow are covering the city with smoke as this photo taken yesterday (July 28, 2010.) Tiny red dots indicate hot spots of high surface temperatures associated with fires, and multiple clusters of such dots appear east of Moscow. Dull gray smoke mixes with opaque white clouds east and northeast of the capital city. Air pollution levels in Moscow due to the smoke and smog are so high that residents have been warned to stay home rather than go in to work. Firefighters are battling 340 blazes across Russia covering 86,658 hectares (214,136 acres) amid a drought that led the government to declare weather-related emergencies in 23 crop-producing regions. Agriculture Minister Yelena Skrynnik said on July 23 that the drought had damaged 10.1 million hectares, or 32 percent of all land under cultivation, according to Bloomberg. Raging fires have destroyed hundreds of houses across Russia today and forced mass evacuations in the city of Voronezh, 300 miles southeast of Moscow, according to the Associated Press. Image credit: NASA's Aqua satellite.

Fourteen extreme national high temperature records have been set in 2010
This year now ranks in second place for the most number of countries that have set extreme heat records, according to a list supplied to me today by Chris Burt. The new list removes a number of old disputed records, resulting in the year 2007 surpassing 2010 as the year with the most extreme heat records--fifteen. Keep in mind that the matter of determining extreme records is very difficult, and it is often a judgment call as to whether an old record is reliable or not. The list of countries (225) includes islands that are not independent countries, such as Puerto Rico and Greenland. One-third (33%) of those heat records were set in the past ten years. Ten years have had extreme heat records set at five or more countries on Mr. Burt's list:

2007: 15 records
2010: 14 records
2003: 12 records
2005: 11 records
1998: 9 records
1983: 9 records
2009: 6 records
2000: 5 records
1999: 5 records
1987: 5 records

I highly recommend the book Extreme Weather by Chris Burt for those interested in weather records. I thank Mr. Burt and weather record researchers Maximiliano Herrera and Howard Rainford for their assistance identifying this year's new extreme temperature records. Here's a list of the fourteen nations that have set extreme heat records this year:

Finland recorded its hottest temperature on July 29, 2010, when the mercury hit 99°F (37.2°C) at Joensuu. The old (undisputed) record was 95°F (35°C) at Jvaskyla on July 9, 1914.

Qatar had its hottest temperature in history on July 14, 2010, when the mercury hit 50.4°C (122.7°F) at Doha Airport.

Russia had its hottest temperature in history on July 11, when the mercury rose to 44.0°C (111.2°F) in Yashkul, Kalmykia Republic, in the European portion of Russia near the Kazakhstan border. The previous hottest temperature in Russia (not including the former Soviet republics) was the 43.8°C (110.8°F) reading measured at Alexander Gaj, Kalmykia Republic, on August 6, 1940. The remarkable heat in Russia this year has not been limited just to the European portion of the country--the Asian portion of Russia also recorded its hottest temperature in history this year, a 42.3°C (108.1°F) reading at Belogorsk, near the Amur River border with China. The previous record for the Asian portion of Russia was 41.7°C (107.1°F) at nearby Aksha on July 21, 2004.

Sudan recorded its hottest temperature in its history on June 25 when the mercury rose to 49.6°C (121.3°F) at Dongola. The previous record was 49.5°C (121.1°F) set in July 1987 in Aba Hamed.

Niger tied its record for hottest day in history on June 22, 2010, when the temperature reached 47.1°C (116.8°F) at Bilma. That record stood for just one day, as Bilma broke the record again on June 23, when the mercury topped out at 48.2°C (118.8°F). The previous record was 47.1°C on May 24, 1998, also at Bilma.

Saudi Arabia had its hottest temperature ever on June 22, 2010, with a reading of 52.0°C (125.6°F) in Jeddah, the second largest city in Saudi Arabia. The previous record was 51.7°C (125.1°F), at Abqaiq, date unknown. The record heat was accompanied by a sandstorm, which caused eight power plants to go offline, resulting in blackouts to several Saudi cities.

Chad had its hottest day in history on June 22, 2010, when the temperature reached 47.6°C (117.7°F) at Faya. The previous record was 47.4°C (117.3°F) at Faya on June 3 and June 9, 1961.

Kuwait recorded its hottest temperature in history on June 15 in Abdaly, according to the Kuwait Met office. The mercury hit 52.6°C (126.7°F). Kuwait's previous all-time hottest temperature was 51.9°C (125.4°F), on July 27,2007, at Abdaly. Temperatures reached 51°C (123.8°F) in the capital of Kuwait City on June 15, 2010.

Iraq had its hottest day in history on June 14, 2010, when the mercury hit 52.0°C (125.6°F) in Basra. Iraq's previous record was 51.7°C (125.1°F) set August 8, 1937, in Ash Shu'aybah.

Pakistan had its hottest temperature in history on May 26, when the mercury hit an astonishing 53.5°C (128.3°F) at the town of MohenjuDaro, according to the Pakistani Meteorological Department. While this temperature reading must be reviewed by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) for authenticity, not only is the 128.3°F reading the hottest temperature ever recorded in Pakistan, it is the hottest reliably measured temperature ever recorded on the continent of Asia.

Myanmar (Burma) had its hottest temperature in its recorded history on May 12, when the mercury hit 47°C (116.6°F) in Myinmu, according to the Myanmar Department of Meteorology and Hydrology. Myanmar's previous hottest temperature was 45.8°C (114.4°F) at Minbu, Magwe division on May 9, 1998. According to Chris Burt, author of the authoritative weather records book Extreme Weather, the 47°C measured this year is the hottest temperature in Southeast Asia history.

Ascention Island (St. Helena, a U.K. Territory) had its hottest temperature in history on March 25, 2010, when the mercury hit 34.9°C (94.8°C) at Georgetown. The previous record was 34.0°C (93.2°F) at Georgetown in April 2003, exact day unknown.

The Solomon Islands had their hottest temperature in history on February 1, 2010, when the mercury hit 36.1°C (97°F) at Lata Nendo (Ndeni). The previous record for Solomon Islands was 35.6°C (96.0°F) at Honaiara, date unknown.

Columbia had its hottest temperature in history on January 24, 2010, when Puerto Salgar hit 42.3°C (108°F). The previous record was 42.0°C (107.6°F) at El Salto in March 1988 (exact day unknown).

90L forms in far eastern Atlantic
NHC has designated an area of thunderstorms in the tropical Atlantic as Invest 90L (8.5 N, 30.0 W). Microwave remote sensing suggests there are some decent thunderstorms in 90L, as peak rain rates were around 1 - 2 inches per hour. According to CIMMS wind-shear analyses, 90L is under a moderate 10 - 15 knots of wind shear, and upper level winds over the disturbance are diverging, which creates a vacuum effect that will enhance updrafts and thunderstorm growth. The disturbance is tracking into a broad area of weak shear to the west and northwest. The steering currents for 90L are to the west-northwest, which will move it into this area of weaker shear. The disturbance is at 8°N latitude, which is too close to the Equator to leverage the Earth's spin very well to spin up. As 90L's west-northwest motion carries it farther from the Equator, the additional spin the disturbance gains from the Earth's rotation will aid development, particularly once 90L gets north of 10°N latitude.The Saharan Air Layer with its dust and dry air lurks just to the north of 90L, but the SHIPS model predicts 90L will remain far enough from the dry air over the next five days so that it will not interfere with development.


Figure 2. IR Satellite Composite of 90L taken at 5:40 pm EDT.


Figure 3. Saharan Air Layer analysis courtesy of the University of Wisconsin CIMSS group.

Model Forecasts and Climatology
The latest 2pm EDT (18Z) runs of the GFDL and HWRF models show 90L developing into a hurricane 3 - 5 days from now. These models suggest that 90L will pass well northeast of the Lesser Antilles Islands. The 18Z GFS model develops 90L into a tropical storm about 7 days from now, and forecasts a track through the northern Lesser Antilles Islands 7 - 8 days from now. The 18Z NOGAPS and 12Z ECMWF models show little development of 90L. The GFDL and HWRF models are too aggressive developing 90L, and likely show too much of a northward motion due to excessive depth of the system they portray. The GFS solution, showing a more delayed development and possible threat to the Lesser Antilles Islands is probably more reasonable. Looking at climatology based on research done by Dr. Bob Hart at Florida State University,, 90L has a 36% chance of developing into a tropical cyclone by 2pm Saturday. NHC is putting these odds at 20%. Dr. Hart also has an experimental product showing that historically, about 30% of all tropical cyclones at 90L's current position eventually hit land as a hurricane. Of course, 90L is not yet a tropical cyclone, but these odds suggest that 90L has the potential to become a dangerous Cape Verdes-type hurricane that will affect land.

Next update
I'll have an update by 8pm Friday.

Jeff Masters (with lots of help from Rob Carver on the 90L portion of the post!)
Categories: Heat
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101. 7544 02:40 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
imo i believe 90l has a good shot to be the next td and agree the models are too far north and might go south on the next few runs
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102. Snowlover123 02:41 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting SLU:
Notice the weakening trend late in the forecast period.




Not all models show weakening, though.
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103. MiamiHurricanes09 02:41 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
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105. xcool 02:42 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
F4PHANTOM .he Pro Met ,not me sorry
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106. wunderkidcayman 02:43 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
new surface map is out 00z

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107. scott39 02:43 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting Levi32:


Well, for one thing the GFS seems to pull the ridge alignment trick a lot (because it likes the area of greatest upper divergence too much) and the ECMWF shows the 200mb ridge nearly perfectly aligned over the wave. I would bet that the GFS is wrong again, especially if this does develop east of the islands. If it waits too long to develop and doesn't do so until later, then alignment may be an issue, but if it develops before the islands I don't see upper conditions being a huge problem for it at this point.
Thanks,makes sense
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108. CaneWarning 02:44 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Okay, so now I'm confused. Dr. Carver says it's likely not to hit land, and then Dr. Masters says it might. LOL
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109. MiamiHurricanes09 02:44 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting wunderkidcayman:
new surface map is out 00z

A closed isobar, interesting.
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110. psuweathernewbie 02:44 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Seems we have a new invest. The central/western Caribbean Sea looks ominous, maybe slow development is possible.
111. xcool 02:44 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
i justing good info from storm2k.org


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112. mikatnight 02:44 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Off topic, but...

Scientists Find Evidence That Oil And Dispersant Mix Is Making Its Way Into The Foodchain

Dan Froomkin froomkin@huffingtonpost.com HuffPost Reporting
Scientists have found signs of an oil-and-dispersant mix under the shells of tiny blue crab larvae in the Gulf of Mexico, the first clear indication that the unprecedented use of dispersants in the BP oil spill has broken up the oil into toxic droplets so tiny that they can easily enter the foodchain.

Marine biologists started finding orange blobs under the translucent shells of crab larvae in May, and have continued to find them "in almost all" of the larvae they collect, all the way from Grand Isle, Louisiana, to Pensacola, Fla. -- more than 300 miles of coastline -- said Harriet Perry, a biologist with the University of Southern Mississippi's Gulf Coast Research Laboratory.

And now, a team of researchers from Tulane University using infrared spectrometry to determine the chemical makeup of the blobs has detected the signature for Corexit, the dispersant BP used so widely in the Deepwater Horizon

"It does appear that there is a Corexit sort of fingerprint in the blob samples that we ran," Erin Gray, a Tulane biologist, told the Huffington Post Thursday. Two independent tests are being run to confirm those findings, "so don't say that we're 100 percent sure yet," Gray said.

"The chemistry test is still not completely conclusive," said Tulane biology professor Caz Taylor, the team's leader. "But that seems the most likely thing."

With BP's well possibly capped for good, and the surface slick shrinking, some observers of the Gulf disaster are starting to let down their guard, with some journalists even asking: Where is the oil?

But the answer is clear: In part due to the1.8 million gallons of dispersant that BP used, a lot of the estimated 200 million or more gallons of oil that spewed out of the blown well remains under the surface of the Gulf in plumes of tiny toxic droplets. And it's short- and long-term effects could be profound.

Rest of story
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113. Ossqss 02:44 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Ummm, hottest day ever? How long back does that go with the same calibrated instrument? Ever is a long time!!!! Nothing about the current cold records ????? Just sayin, ...


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116. zoomiami 02:45 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting aquak9:
I like mischief. It's much better that "totally-hellbent-on-complete-human-annhilation"


lmao
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117. xcool 02:46 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
anticycloneCaribbean
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118. SouthDadeFish 02:46 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Yep new surface analysis shows a tropical wave just like they said they would.
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119. SLU 02:46 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting Snowlover123:


Not all models show weakening, though.


True and i'm not sure about the HWRF track either.
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120. Snowlover123 02:46 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting jasoniscoolman2010x:
MOVING MORE TO THE SOUTH AT 8PM I BET YOU AT 2AM U WILL SEE MOVE TO THE SOTH AGAIN.


There's no need to caps lock everything you say.
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121. xcool 02:47 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
your go see more models farsouth watch
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122. Snowlover123 02:47 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting SLU:


True and i'm not sure about the HWRF track either.


The GFDL is the most extreme, bringing this to major hurricane status. All we need is the 0z ECMWF to come out, and if that one doesn't show a strong tropical system, I'm gonna cry. ;'P
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123. hunkerdown 02:48 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting JFLORIDA:
97. DirtBand 2:39 AM GMT on July 30, 2010

I doubt you will be around much longer. But if you have one instance where I have lied or intentionally spread mis truth you should reference it in your post.
please visit bickerblog dot com
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125. CaneWarning 02:48 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting Ossqss:
Ummm, hottest day ever? How long back does that go with the same calibrated instrument? Ever is a long time!!!! Nothing about the current cold records ????? Just sayin, ...


Stop posting facts!
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126. GetReal 02:48 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Here is some records that Dr. Masters conveniently forgot to mention:


84 year old lowest daytime high temperature record broken at LAX, 98 year record tied at San Diego, plus a string of records at many other cities





Cold Record in the Antarctic
Minus 50.2 degrees Celsius.



Get all the information you can, and decide for yourself what the truth is about AGW... the truth is out there, you just have to look for yourself.
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127. Levi32 02:48 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
A post from earlier.....this is very cool!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Partly due to the two massive tropical waves that merged in the central Atlantic, a secondary ITCZ has formed west of 40W and is located all the way up along 14N. You do not see this every day.

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128. HaboobsRsweet 02:48 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Amazing...this new wave of forecasters tend to jump right to model solutions and model solutions that are totally unreliable right now. they are going to change so much in the next 3 days. All you got to do is look at how much moisture is out there, the synoptic pattern, and where is the steering ridge placement and you can come up with a better solution than the models right now.
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129. SavannahStorm 02:48 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
The models are not too far north, there is at least one trough, 2 in some models, that are forecast to erode the Bermuda/Azores High in the next week ahead of 90L, regardless of its intensity.
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132. Snowlover123 02:49 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting JFLORIDA:


Sure it does but if you would actually read the blog it says:


One-third (33%) of those heat records were set in the past ten years. Ten years have had extreme heat records set at five or more countries on Mr. Burt's list:



And instead of talking about regional weather, which by the way, Antarctica, and South America have seen Record Cold,
http://icecap.us/images/uploads/JUL17SA.gif

let's talk about the tropics! :D
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133. Levi32 02:49 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting GetReal:
Here is some records that Dr. Masters conveniently forgot to mention:


84 year old lowest daytime high temperature record broken at LAX, 98 year record tied at San Diego, plus a string of records at many other cities





Cold Record in the Antarctic
Minus 50.2 degrees Celsius.



Get all the information you can, and decide for yourself what the truth is about AGW... the truth is out there, you just have to look for yourself.


I have a friend visiting south California and she's been seeing temperatures colder than they are right now up here in Alaska! Such things are, of course, ignored by most.
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134. hunkerdown 02:50 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting HaboobsRsweet:
Amazing...this new wave of forecasters tend to jump right to model solutions and model solutions that are totally unreliable right now. they are going to change so much in the next 3 days. All you got to do is look at how much moisture is out there, the sypotic pattern, and where is the steering ridge placement and you can come up with a better solution than the models right now.
that would take some intelligence and understanding as opposed to regurgitation...
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135. xcool 02:50 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
F4PHANTOM .he work in tx..
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136. Levi32 02:51 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting bappit:

Good point. If people are going to wish cast, they should be polite about it.


Now I wishcast?.....go watch my videos on Bonnie lol. Sigh.
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137. Ossqss 02:51 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting CaneWarning:


Stop posting facts!



Sorry about that :)
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138. MiamiHurricanes09 02:52 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Poster: wxman57
Credentials: Moderator-Pro Met

I think this one may have a fair shot at developing. I notice that convection is on the decrease over the past 6 hours or so, though. If you look at a WV loop you can see why. Earlier today, it was near the southeast side of a weak upper-level low center. But as the day progressed, it moved past the axis of the low center and out of the more favorable lift environment. The key over the next 24 hours is whether or not convection redevelops, perhaps with the addition of more energy from the east as some models suggest.

Could be a NE Caribbean threat around next Wednesday and a southeast U.S. threat the following weekend. Models do indicate a slowing of its forward speed near the Bahamas. Lots of uncertainty that far out.
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139. xcool 02:52 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
poor Levi32
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140. stillwaiting 02:52 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
I'm stunned,flabbergasted,lol,no one's mentioned the aoi that could be the next invest,imo,down south of jamaica!!!
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141. CyclonicVoyage 02:52 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting SLU:
Notice the weakening trend of the HWRF late in the forecast period. It might be running 90L into some shear.



From Dr. Masters and my belief is that it will be nowhere near where the GFDL & HWRF show it at the current runs.

The GFDL and HWRF models are too aggressive developing 90L, and likely show too much of a northward motion due to excessive depth of the system they portray. The GFS solution, showing a more delayed development and possible threat to the Lesser Antilles Islands is probably more reasonable.
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142. SavannahStorm 02:52 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting GetReal:
Here is some records that Dr. Masters conveniently forgot to mention:


84 year old lowest daytime high temperature record broken at LAX, 98 year record tied at San Diego, plus a string of records at many other cities





Cold Record in the Antarctic
Minus 50.2 degrees Celsius.



Get all the information you can, and decide for yourself what the truth is about AGW... the truth is out there, you just have to look for yourself.


I agree that there is a disparity between reporting of high/low records.

In the wintertime both record high and lows are widely reported, but in the summertime, only record highs make the news, even though there are just as many record lows occurring. Cherry picking at its finest.
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143. xcool 02:52 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
MiamiHurricanes09 thanks .i was just about postit
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144. scott39 02:52 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Not that I dont love Hurricanes, but nobody anywhere needs a hurricane to hit and knock out power for long during the first part of August!!!! We unfourtunately would be dealing with more deaths after---- Due to HEAT!
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145. GetReal 02:52 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting CaneWarning:


Stop posting facts!



I agree those facts always get in the way of a good AGW theory!!!
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146. help4u 02:53 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
AMEN!!!Apocalypse-induced Misanthropic environmental nervousness!!!
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147. HaboobsRsweet 02:53 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting hunkerdown:
that would take some intelligence and understanding as opposed to regurgitation...

haha that is true. I would love to come to the blog one day and see just one page of posts about the tropics that does not talk about one single model but that will never happen.
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148. xcool 02:53 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
omg not gw omg not gw
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149. Snowlover123 02:53 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Has 91L formed?
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150. CaneWarning 02:54 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
Quoting SavannahStorm:


I agree that there is a disparity between reporting of high/low records.

In the wintertime both record high and lows are widely reported, but in the summertime, only record highs make the news, even though there are just as many record lows occurring. Cherry picking at its finest.


Reporting record highs furthers an agenda, while reporting record lows...doesn't.
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151. xcool 02:54 GMT le 30 juillet 2010    
wxman57
Moderator-Pro Met he nailed Bonnie
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About JeffMasters
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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