Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog |
|
| Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 15:24 GMT le 02 février 2008 | +1 |
| Permalink | A A A |
|
|
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.
|
Tropical Blogs
Tropical Weather Stickers®
Page: 1 | 2 — Blog Index
http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=zmw:85305.1.99999
Link
Later I found out roof is closed so weather won't matter...
Your last statement about drier than normal south of I80/Tahoe, I thought it has been very wet through out California, LA basin, San Diego, go a little east, AZ, NM...
My overall point of my initial post was to point out there is a lot of coldness going on.
And the question about this being caused by la nina, ok, sure, let's say it is...what caused la nina...? since is a cooling of the equatorial waters of the Pacific...folds into my initial post about the sun being quiet (less output=more cold)
03/02/2008
KIGALI (AFP) - A strong earthquake shook the African Great Lakes region on Sunday, killing at least 34 people in Rwanda and six in the Democratic Republic of Congo, according to officials and hospital sources.
Houses crumbled and deep cracks spread up the walls of buildings in the centre of Bukavu in DR Congo, near the epicentre of the quake which measured 6.0 on the open-ended Richter scale.
People ran out of churches packed for Sunday mass as the walls shook.
"According to the figures I have at the moment, 34 people are dead," said Rwandan local government minister Protais Musoni on Sunday afternoon.
The quake struck at 0735 GMT some 20 kilometres (12 miles) north of the DR Congo town of Bukavu.
Across the border to the east, Radio Rwanda said 10 people were killed "straight away when a church collapsed" in the Rusizi district of Western Province and 13 others died in Rusizi and Nyamesheke districts.
Local authorities in the DR Congo said six people had died in the Sud-Kivu region, according to UN-sponsored Okapi radio.
Provincial health officer Manou Burole said 55 people had been wounded there.
Several dozen injured were admitted to the city's general hospital and at least 12 casualties to the Panzi hospital, medical sources said.
Radio Rwanda said 250 wounded were transported to various regional hospitals, and a witness in Rusizi district said public buses were used to transport the casualties.
Rwandan minister Musoni said that the provincial governor was on site and that the police and army were helping with rescue operations.
"Rescue operations are continuing to try to pull people out of the ruins of their houses," he said.
In the DR Congo town of Kabare, north of Bukavu, the walls of a church collapsed on the congregation during the mass, injuring 37, including five seriously, priest Leon Shamavu told AFP by telephone.
A first shock, which lasted around 15 seconds, was followed by two lesser aftershocks, residents of DR Congo and Rusizi said.
"People are panicking so much they're afraid to return home. They're afraid of being surprised by aftershocks and prefer to stay outside," a Rusizi resident told AFP.
The quake was also strongly felt in neighbouring Burundi, south of Rwanda, Francois Lukaya, a scientist at the Goma observatory in North Kivu told AFP.
All Burundian hydroelectric dams stopped, causing a half-hour power cut, a water authority official said.
The quake also shook the Burundian capital, Bujumbura, around 120 kilometres south of its epicentre.
"I felt a very strong shock shake my house. The walls shook really hard," a resident told AFP.
It was one of the "biggest earthquakes ever recorded in the Kivu region," Lukaya told AFP.
MODIS TERRA high resolution image of the center of Gene at 2208 UTC 3 FEB 2008.
http://img221.imageshack.us/img221/3172/eyeofgenemr5.png
12.5 km resolution quikscat
Floyd bing the fact for no apparent reason, turned from hitting Florida, strait into me. (Yes i know why it turned, but this scared me into beyond scared.)
Feb. isn't looking quite as wet but we'll see!
Hope everybody had a great weekend.
How are all our peeps down there?
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/recenteqsww/Quakes/prp0803501.php
(Sorry...the "Link" button is not functioning for me today. It's worth a cut and paste.)
Usually I say,
If the groundhog sees his shadow we'll have six more weeks of winter
if not, it's just another month and a half. Ha!
But ONE more week? That would be unprecedented here in Vermont.
Candlemas is not only a holiday that was observed in England,
it is still observed by several denominations today.
It was when a lot of people made their last batch of candles for the winter.
So they needed some idea of how hard to work that day! Ha!
I still hand-dip candles each year on Candlemas.
(A tradition we started while studying the American Revolution, home schooling.)
They make great Valentines or Easter gifts.
One more week? Can't wrap my mind around that. Nosirree.
Do you have a celebration and call it Marmot Day?
Take care. ♥
Yeah, that is a rather, er, playful term, isn't it? LOL!
We would truly miss the sugar maples.
And with the level of unexplained bat deaths this year,
the mosquito population would explode.
EEK!
I want my sub-zeros back!!
The current La Nina is still quite strong (certainly the strongest we've seen in years). It is also notable for the odd distrbution of SST anomalies, especially over the western half of the Pacific. That 1988 vs. 2008 map is very telling--the range of strong negative anomalies is actually quite staggering when one sees them over the entire basin. Because, as you mentioned, cold ENSO events (La Ninas) store heat in the deeper reaches of the ocean, the upswing of the thermodynamic pendulum has the potential to be extremely impressive (imagine those negative SST anomalies translating into positive anomalies of a similar magnitude over a similar area. Wow.) If we do get an El Nino of that magnitude, well, let's just say that it would be an interesting 18 months to come...
I'll have a new seasonal forecast up on Weather West at some point in the next 2 weeks, and it'll consider the influence of the ongoing La Nina regime...
Link
Viewing: 51 - 76
Page: 1 | 2 — Blog Index