September Snow In Lapland; Another Polar Blast To Slam Southern Africa; October Snow For The Aussie Alps; The Return Of The Sausages; + Autumnal Cracks In Earth’s Magnetic Field
September Snow In Lapland; Another Polar Blast To Slam Southern Africa; October Snow For The Aussie Alps; The Return Of The Sausages; + Autumnal Cracks In Earth’s Magnetic Field
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8 Thoughts to “September Snow In Lapland; Another Polar Blast To Slam Southern Africa; October Snow For The Aussie Alps; The Return Of The Sausages; + Autumnal Cracks In Earth’s Magnetic Field”
Lernt something new today…Fall Auroras.
Now what I am yearning to find out what will Winter be like in Metcalfe County KY America…but I have learned over my 68 years on Earth that the answer is…HELL I DONT KNOW!😁😎🤣🤣🤣
Ben Davidson reminds folks of it both seasons and also on Space Weather.com during both so it’s been regular seasonal net traffic for me more than ten years. The 22 year polarity cycle of the Sun also has a lot to do with it on how the Earth reacts. Sun’s poles flip every eleven years so it alternates pos/neg, 22 year full rotation. And then Mercury in retrograde has a lot to do with the solar activity but it looses two weeks a year so it’s always a different week of the season. This years in early Aug was too early for hurricane season. If it was now the hurricanes might be bigger and more. Always different combos, Mercury going opposite side of the Sun now. https://soho.nascom.nasa.gov/data/realtime/c3/512/ https://soho.nascom.nasa.gov/data/LATEST/current_c3.gif https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mA8TTjbeiyY
Cap said:
“According to the Finnish Meteorological Institute’s criteria, for flakes to be officially recognized as the ‘first snow,’ there must be at least one centimeter measured on the ground at a weather station BY 9 AM. Kilpisjärvi comfortably met this threshold.”
Why 9AM? If it continues snowing during the day, would this not count?
The FMI officially measures snow depth at 8:00 or 9:00 AM each day. “Snowfall occurring later in the day might not count as the first snow unless it persists and is still measurable during the next morning’s observation.”
Lernt something new today…Fall Auroras.
Now what I am yearning to find out what will Winter be like in Metcalfe County KY America…but I have learned over my 68 years on Earth that the answer is…HELL I DONT KNOW!😁😎🤣🤣🤣
Both equinoxes, Spring and Fall. Also make more prone to quakes and volcanos and cyclones/hurricanes/typhoons
. That’s what happened to Japan in 2011, a small solar flare caused the quake which caused the tsunami which caused Fukushima which shut all nuke power which made them buy more oil/ng/coal which meant they went broke and are a failed State. Worst debt/GDP because Spring equinox. Weak mag shield makes it worser. What percent weaker is it now from just 2011? From 1960? Add that percent to the volatility of the equinoxes. They feel X amount stronger depending on location.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_T%C5%8Dhoku_earthquake_and_tsunami
https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/?extent=-83.02622,-286.875&extent=77.91567,47.8125&range=month
http://www.solen.info/solar/images/electronfluence.png
Thanks did not know that!!!
Ben Davidson reminds folks of it both seasons and also on Space Weather.com during both so it’s been regular seasonal net traffic for me more than ten years. The 22 year polarity cycle of the Sun also has a lot to do with it on how the Earth reacts. Sun’s poles flip every eleven years so it alternates pos/neg, 22 year full rotation. And then Mercury in retrograde has a lot to do with the solar activity but it looses two weeks a year so it’s always a different week of the season. This years in early Aug was too early for hurricane season. If it was now the hurricanes might be bigger and more. Always different combos, Mercury going opposite side of the Sun now.
https://soho.nascom.nasa.gov/data/realtime/c3/512/
https://soho.nascom.nasa.gov/data/LATEST/current_c3.gif
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mA8TTjbeiyY
Cap said:
“According to the Finnish Meteorological Institute’s criteria, for flakes to be officially recognized as the ‘first snow,’ there must be at least one centimeter measured on the ground at a weather station BY 9 AM. Kilpisjärvi comfortably met this threshold.”
Why 9AM? If it continues snowing during the day, would this not count?
The FMI officially measures snow depth at 8:00 or 9:00 AM each day. “Snowfall occurring later in the day might not count as the first snow unless it persists and is still measurable during the next morning’s observation.”
–Not my rules 😉
Measuring at 9AM is certainly more convenient than being there at midnight, at the close-of-day.
They probably count that as the end of the Meteorological Day so ..