The Oz Round Table boards > The Round Table

The Australian weather & fire thread (winds, floods, bushfires, warnings, news)

<< < (39/39)

*smee*:
May all people who deliberatley light bushfires
be sentenced to having their genitallia doused
With petrol and set alight

*smee*:

--- Quote from: *r3830* on February 28, 2010, 01:03:03 AM ---TSUNAMI Alert current - East Coast Australia - from 0800am, Sunday Morning.  Resulting from Chilean earthquake. (8.8) Tsunami confirmed as generated.

B.O.M (www.bom.gov.au)

--- End quote ---


Yeah well theyve had another quake

*smee*:

--- Quote from: *smee* on September 23, 2009, 10:49:02 PM ---global warming !


Oh and El Nino .... he hasn't been blamed for anything for a while

--- End quote ---

I heard on the news today that El Nino is going to be visiting Australia again soon
and he is going to be angrier than he has been for 65 years
So we are in for extreme weather

For heavens sake now they are calling it Godzilla El Nino  :roflmao:

These meatheadorology people will come up with all sorts of crap
to justify their 6 figure salaries
http://www.smh.com.au/environment/weather/great-godzilla-of-an-el-nino-likely-to-linger-well-into-2016-agencies-say-20150813-giywva.html

*CountessA*:
:link:

El Niño strengthens but a warm Indian Ocean

Issued on 1 September 2015 | Product Code IDCKGEWW00


--- Quote ---The 2015 El Niño is now the strongest El Niño since 1997–98. The tropical Pacific Ocean and atmosphere are fully coupled, with sea surface temperatures well above El Niño thresholds, consistently weak trade winds, and a strongly negative Southern Oscillation Index. Weekly tropical Pacific Ocean temperature anomalies (i.e. difference from normal) in the central Pacific are now at their highest values since 1997–98, though still remain more than half a degree below the peak observed during 1997–98.

Most international climate models surveyed by the Bureau of Meteorology indicate the tropical Pacific will continue to warm, with the largest anomalies occurring later in the year. Typically, El Niño peaks during the late austral spring or early summer, and weakens during late summer to autumn. The 2015 event has, so far, been following a normal El Niño life cycle.

While the Indian Ocean as a whole has been at near-record temperatures, the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) index has been at or above +0.4 °C for the past four weeks. To be considered a positive event, the IOD would need to remain at or above +0.4 °C through September. Three of the five international models surveyed by the Bureau of Meteorology indicate a positive IOD event is likely during spring.

El Niño is usually associated with below-average winter–spring rainfall over eastern Australia, and a positive IOD typically reinforces this pattern over central and southeast Australia. However, sea surface temperatures to the north of Australia and more broadly across the Indian Ocean basin, also affect Australia's climate and are likely to be moderating the influence of these two climate drivers in some locations.
--- End quote ---

*smee*:
Yes ...its all a load of poppycock , buncome , piffle , bulltwange
rubbish , spit , bollocks , fibs , rhubarb , a figment of the BOMs imagination and phoenominumnumnumnumnumnumn theyve created to try and pull the wool over the eyes of the guilible general public .... Bit like the millenium bug and global warming
Hyped up balderdash

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[*] Previous page

Go to full version