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alt.talk.weather (General Weather Talk) (alt.talk.weather) A general forum for discussion of the weather.

Forecasting Earthquake locations.



 
 
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  #1  
Old December 31st 08, 02:49 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
Weatherlawyer
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,407
Default Forecasting Earthquake locations.

http://my.opera.com/Weatherlawyer/bl...23?cid=6695285

Just posted this on another blog. While writing it I realised how to
forecast earthquakes:

How far is this from the West N Atlantic?
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/...s/10/125_5.php

That stuff on the Atlantic weather chart that runs down from west of
Canada (E of Greenland) and turns west towards Britain and France, is
the stuff to look out for:

Twin lines of Occluded Fronts with what looks like cartoon mice
running along them.

Absolute certain earthquake forecasters, they are.

If you want to try and match them to past weather charts, there are a
few on he
http://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/ge...94039057253841

It's easy for me to use the charts as they were part of my growing up.
They appeared in the better newspapers every day and on the TV with
the news. (Sadly both the newspapers and the TV have stopped
publishing them for some strange reason. All except the "quality"
papers.)

There is no reason that you can't use the charts you grew up with if
you are familiar with them. They will be different of course but they
will react in similar ways to charts of the same area in similar
quakes in the past.

So all you have to do is to find similar runs of quakes. Not identical
ones of course, there is no such thing, but like currency they will
have similar features -if different signatures.

Like currency the charts are going to be totally different in
different countries.

Do you get my point?

Some charts are like five pound notes and some are more like ten pound
notes. And Chinese weather charts will resemble Atlantic charts, the
same way that Chinese currency will resemble pound notes.

But I'll bet you a tenner to a chart that they will have Occluded
Fronts in common. Parallel fronts in this case.

And they will be pointing to the same quakes.

Hey!

That's how to forecast them...

Wahey!!!

Your weather charts will be pointing to the same quakes that mine
will. So look where the 80 degrees places are the same for you and me.

Cracked another insoluble problem

Get it done!

Post some of your weather charts for the same time and date as mine.
  #2  
Old December 31st 08, 03:09 AM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
Skywise
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 130
Default Forecasting Earthquake locations.

Weatherlawyer wrote in news:0b046623-8ada-41d8-
:

Do you get my point?


No. It's too dull.

(sorry, couldn't resist)

Brian
--
http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism
Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html
Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html
Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes?
  #3  
Old December 31st 08, 10:39 PM posted to sci.geo.earthquakes,alt.talk.weather
Saint Isadore Patron Saint of the Internet
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 31
Default Forecasting Earthquake locations.

On Dec 30, 6:49*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
http://my.opera.com/Weatherlawyer/bl...23?cid=6695285

Just posted this on another blog. While writing it I realised how to
forecast earthquakes:

How far is this from the West N Atlantic?http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/...s/10/125_5.php

That stuff on the Atlantic weather chart that runs down from west of
Canada (E of Greenland) and turns west towards Britain and France, is
the stuff to look out for:

Twin lines of Occluded Fronts with what looks like cartoon mice
running along them.

Absolute certain earthquake forecasters, they are.

If you want to try and match them to past weather charts, there are a
few on hehttp://groups.msn.com/Weatherlore/ge...et_message&mvi...

It's easy for me to use the charts as they were part of my growing up.
They appeared in the better newspapers every day and on the TV with
the news. (Sadly both the newspapers and the TV have stopped
publishing them for some strange reason. All except the "quality"
papers.)

There is no reason that you can't use the charts you grew up with if
you are familiar with them. They will be different of course but they
will react in similar ways to charts of the same area in similar
quakes in the past.

So all you have to do is to find similar runs of quakes. Not identical
ones of course, there is no such thing, but like currency they will
have similar features -if different signatures.

Like currency the charts are going to be totally different in
different countries.

Do you get my point?

Some charts are like five pound notes and some are more like ten pound
notes. And Chinese weather charts will resemble Atlantic charts, the
same way that Chinese currency will resemble pound notes.

But I'll bet you a tenner to a chart that they will have Occluded
Fronts in common. Parallel fronts in this case.

And they will be pointing to the same quakes.

Hey!

That's how to forecast them...

Wahey!!!

Your weather charts will be pointing to the same quakes that mine
will. So look where the 80 degrees places are the same for you and me.

Cracked another insoluble problem

Get it done!

Post some of your weather charts for the same time and date as mine.


Then with that reasoning Mickey Mouse when he was involved with the
early TV weather patterns of Southern California - could have been
making
future mega-earthquake predictions for the entire West Pacific coast.


 




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