Weather:

Weather Wobble

Jet Stream tornados

Siberian Freeze Weather Wobble

Wild weather , [2]

Wobble Clouds

Hurricane development

Violent Push

Weather & ocean currents

Europe Weather

Tides and Whirlpools:

Storm Clash whirlpools

Lurch of earth

Tides , [2]

Whirlpools

Wobble Sloshing

 


"We warned at the start of ZetaTalk, in 1995, that unpredictable weather extremes, switching about from drought to deluge, would occur and increase on a lineal basis up until the pole shift. Where this occurred steadily, it has only recently become undeniable. ZetaTalk, and only ZetaTalk, warned of these weather changes, at that early date. Our early warnings spoke to the issue of global heating from the core outward, hardly Global Warming, a surface or atmospheric issue, but caused by consternation in the core. Affected by the approach of Planet X, which was by then starting to zoom rapidly toward the inner solar system for its periodic passage, the core was churning, melting the permafrost and glaciers and riling up volcanoes. When the passage did not occur as expected in 2003 because Planet X had stalled in the inner solar system, we explained the increasing weather irregularities in the context of the global wobble that had ensued - weather wobbles where the Earth is suddenly forced under air masses, churning them. This evolved by 2005 into a looping jet stream, loops breaking away and turning like a tornado to affect the air masses underneath. Meanwhile, on Planet Earth, droughts had become more intractable and deluges positively frightening, temperature swings bringing snow in summer in the tropics and searing heat in Artic regions, with the violence of storms increasing in number and ferocity."

ZETATALK

 

From the ZetaTalk Chat Q&A for February 4, 2012:

 

The wobble seems to have changed, as the temperature in Europe suddenly plunged after being like an early Spring, Alaska has its coldest temps ever while the US and much of Canada is having an extremely mild winter. India went from fatal cold spell to balmy again. Has the Earth changed position vs a vs Planet X to cause this? [and from another] Bitter cold records broken in Alaska - all time coldest record nearly broken, but Murphy's Law intervenes [Jan 30] http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/01/30/bitter-cold-records-broken-in-alaska Jim River, AK closed in on the all time record coldest temperature of -80°F set in 1971, which is not only the Alaska all-time record, but the record for the entire United States. Unfortunately, it seems the battery died in the weather station just at the critical moment. While the continental USA has a mild winter and has set a number of high temperature records in the last week and pundits ponder whether they will be blaming the dreaded "global warming" for those temperatures, Alaska and Canada have been suffering through some of the coldest temperatures on record during the last week.

There has been no change in the wobble pattern, the wobble has merely become more severe. Nancy noted a Figure 8 format when the Earth wobble first became noticeable, in early 2005, after Planet X moved into the inner solar system at the end of 2003. The Figure 8 shifted along to the east a bit on the globe between 2005 and 2009, (the last time Nancy took its measure) as Planet X came closer to the Earth, encountering the magnetic N Pole with a violent push earlier in the day. But the pattern of the Figure 8 remained essentially the same. So what changed recently that the weather patterns became noticeably different in late January, 2012?

The N Pole is pushed away when it comes over the horizon, when the noon Sun is centered over the Pacific. This regularly puts Alaska under colder air, with less sunlight, and thus the historically low temps there this January, 2012 as the wobble has gotten stronger. But by the time the Sun is positioned over India, the N Pole has swung during the Figure 8 so the globe tilts, and this tilt is visible in the weather maps from Asia. The tilt has forced the globe under the hot air closer to the Equator, warming the land along a discernable tilt demarcation line.

The next loop of the Figure 8 swings the globe so that the N Pole moves in the other direction, putting the globe again at a tilt but this time in the other direction. This tilt is discernable in weather maps of Europe, again along a diagonal line. Depending upon air pressure and temperature differences, the weather on either side of this diagonal line may be suddenly warm or suddenly cold. The tilt and diagonal line lingers to affect much of the US and Canada, but the Figure 8 changes at this point to be an up and down motion, pulling the geographic N Pole south so the US is experiencing a warmer than expected winter under a stronger Sun. Then the cycle repeats, with the magnetic N Pole of Earth pushed violently away again as the Sun is positioned over the Pacific.

 

From the ZetaTalk Chat Q&A for April 6, 2013:

 

Would the Zetas be able to let us know what is causing the early break-up of the Arctic Ice, the ice seems to have taken on a swirling pattern at the same time, would this be wobble related? [and from another] http://www.vancouversun.com/news/national/Canada+Arctic+cracks+spec... The ice in Canada’s western Arctic ripped open in a massive “fracturing event” this spring that spread like a wave across 1,000 kilometres of the Beaufort Sea. Huge leads of water – some more than 500 kilometres long and as much as 70 kilometres across – opened up from Alaska to Canada’s Arctic islands as the massive ice sheet cracked as it was pushed around by strong winds and currents. It took just seven days for the fractures to progress across the entire area from west to east. [and from another] http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=80752&src=iot... A high-pressure weather system was parked over the region, producing warmer temperatures and winds that flowed in a southwesterly direction. That fueled the Beaufort Gyre, a wind-driven ocean current that flows clockwise. The gyre was the key force pulling pieces of ice west past Point Barrow, the northern nub of Alaska that protrudes into the Beaufort Sea.


The Figure 8 formed by the N Pole during the daily Earth wobble has shifted somewhat to the East, due to Planet X positioned more to the right of the Earth during its approach. This was anticipated, and well described in ZetaTalk, the Earth crowding to the left in the cup to escape the approach of Planet X, so the angle between these two planets would change slightly. This shift of the Figure 8 to the East is due to the push against the Earth’s magnetic N Pole occurring sooner each day than prior. Thus instead of occurring when the Sun is high over the Pacific, over New Zealand, it is now occurring when the Sun is high over Alaska. All the wobble points have shifted eastward accordingly.

This has brought a lingering Winter to the western US, and a changed sloshing pattern to the Arctic waters. Instead of Pacific waters being pushed through the Bering Straits into the Arctic when the polar push occurs, the wobble is swinging the Arctic to the right, and then later to the left, creating a circular motion in the waters trapped in the Arctic. Since the Earth rotates counterclockwise, the motion also takes this path. This is yet another piece of evidence that the establishment is hard pressed to explain. They are attempting to ascribe this to high pressure and wind, all of which are not new to the Arctic, but this circular early breakup of ice in the Arctic is new.

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Comment by Derrick Johnson on October 20, 2012 at 8:17am

Dust storm shuts down interstate in northern Okla.

 

TULSA, Okla. (AP) — A massive dust storm swirling reddish-brown clouds over northern Oklahoma triggered a multi-vehicle accident along a major interstate Thursday, forcing police to shut down part of the heavily traveled roadway amid near blackout conditions.

In a scene reminiscent of the Dust Bowl days, choking dust suspended on strong wind gusts shrouded Interstate 35, which links Dallas and Oklahoma City to Kansas City, Mo. Video from television station helicopters showed the four-lane highway virtually disappearing into billowing dust on the harsh landscape near Blackwell, plus dozens of vehicles scattered in the median and on the shoulders.

"I've never seen anything like this," said Jodi Palmer, a dispatcher with the Kay County Sheriff's Office. "In this area alone, the dirt is blowing because we've been in a drought. I think from the drought everything's so dry and the wind is high."

The highway patrol said the dust storm caused a multi-car accident, and local police said nearly three dozen cars and tractor-trailers were involved. Blackwell Police Chief Fred LeValley said nine people were injured, but there were no fatalities.

State transportation workers were called into to close the highway between U.S. 60 and Oklahoma 11, an 8-mile stretch of the cross-country roadway.

"We have very high winds and blowing dust causing a near blackout condition," Capt. James West of the Oklahoma Highway Patrol said Thursday afternoon. He said visibility was less than 10 feet.

The stretch of closed roadway reopened Thursday evening after crews cleaned up debris and waited for winds to die down, Oklahoma Department of Transportation spokesman Cole Hackett said.

The area is just south of the Kansas state line in far northern Oklahoma. Interstate 35 runs from the Mexican border in south Texas to Duluth, Minn.

A red flag fire warning was in place for parts of northern Oklahoma on Thursday, as was a blowing dust advisory.

The National Weather Service forecast for the area said winds would subside to 20 mph or lower overnight but that gusts as high as 28 mph could continue. Calm winds were expected by Friday night.

The area has suffered through an extended drought and many farmers had recently loosened the soil while preparing for the winter wheat season.

"You have the perfect combination of extended drought in that area ... and we have the extremely strong winds," said Gary McManus, the Oklahoma associate state climatologist.

"Also, the timing is bad because a lot of those farm fields are bare. The soil is so dry, it's like powder. Basically what you have is a whole bunch of topsoil waiting for the wind to blow it away. It's no different from the 1930s than it is now."

Steve Austin, a Kay County commissioner, said visibility was terrible.

"It looked like a huge fog was over the city of Ponca City," he said. "We've had dust storms before, but I don't remember anything of this magnitude in years."

 http://news.yahoo.com/dust-storm-shuts-down-interstate-northern-okl...

Comment by Mark on October 19, 2012 at 5:44am

scientists warn the UK must plan for "periodic swings of drought conditions and flooding"

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-19995084

Comment by Sevan Makaracı on October 17, 2012 at 9:22am

RARE OCTOBER CYCLONE IN INDIAN OCEAN (OCT 15)


Tropical Cyclone Anais is estimated to have a maximum wind of 115 mph as of early this morning, which is equivalent to a category 3 hurricane in the Atlantic Ocean.
The southwestern Indian Ocean is prone to tropical cyclones but what makes Anais so rare is that it is occurring in October, which is early springtime in the southern Hemisphere.

The peak period for tropical events in this part of the world is normally during our winter months of January-March.

Anais is forecast to move southwest in the general direction of Madagascar for the next five days and weaken as it moves into cooler waters and unfavorable winds.

We rarely hear much about the southern Indian Ocean storms as the area has little land and the storms mostly stay at sea.

Occasionally Madagascar or the island nations of Mauritius and Reunion will take a hit, and more rarely a storm will reach mainland Africa.

Forecast responsibility for this region is through the French weather service, Meteo France, located in La Reunion to the east of Madagascar.

The countries in the Indian Ocean simply refer to these storms as Tropical Cyclones, regardless of intensity.

Tropical Cyclone Anais is the same thing as a hurricane in the Atlantic or typhoon in the western Pacific.

However, note that it rotates the opposite direction, clockwise, because it is in the southern Hemisphere.

To illustrate how unusual this event is, Anais is like having a Category 3 hurricane in the Caribbean in April.

Source

Comment by jorge namour on October 15, 2012 at 3:45am

14/10/2012
Two minitornades in Vendée near Marseille- FRANCE

The phenomenon is rare, took place in the early morning near La Roche-sur-Yon and in the afternoon at Plan de Campagne.

A hundred houses on the 435 that make up the town Vendée Saint-Hilaire-le-Vouhis has been affected to varying degrees by a large intensity of minitornade made ​​no victim Sunday morning. Whole sections of roof were blown off. Some trees also fell on the floor.

"It only lasted a few minutes, there was a lot of noise, rain and wind," testified residents with fire, reported the Agence France-Presse Isabelle Stern-Forestier, spokesman firefighters Vendée.

Public buildings, including a school, were affected, but also the church, "who lost an entire section of the roof," recounted Isabelle Forestier-Severe. No relocation request was made ​​for the time being. "People are shocked, especially the elderly, because of the magnitude of the noise," testified a resident.

Throughout the department of Vendée, firefighters made ​​more than 300 interventions
Sunday morning.
Météo-France and Meteo Consult bulletins were published Saturday in vigilance department in the Pays de la Loire, due to expected heavy rains and flood risk. Alerts were lifted during the day on Sunday for this area. Against by the Centre region, Météo-France warned that departments of Indre-et-Loire, Loir-et-Cher and Loiret remain vigilant.

At the same time, we learned that another minitornade blew Sunday afternoon on the commercial area of ​​Plan de Campagne, near Marseille, making a couple of minor injuries and causing widespread damage. At around 16:15, the tornado swept for 10 minutes some 20 hectares where are implanted numerous commercial brands. e sky was "very dark, there was a lot of wind, rain and flying objects many trees, pieces of wood, newspaper, cardboard packaging", told Agence France-Presse employee of a sign appliances.

VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=LR-43nKu8tU

Traduced by google
http://www.lefigaro.fr/actualite-france/2012/10/14/01016-20121014AR...
http://www.2012un-nouveau-paradigme.com/article-une-tornade-s-abat-...

Comment by Andrey Eroshin on October 14, 2012 at 3:58pm
Comment by Sevan Makaracı on October 11, 2012 at 11:11am

RARE OCTOBER SNOW ACCROSS SOUTH AUSTRALIA (OCT 11)

Rare at any time, there has been October snow across some southern areas of South Australia.

The weather bureau in Adelaide said the last reports of snowfall in the Adelaide and neighbouring Mount Lofty Ranges region in October were a century ago.

Locals at Hallett in the mid-north of the state, around Crafers, Mount Lofty, Lobethal and Belair in the Adelaide hills, Sevenhill in the Clare Valley and Mount Remarkable in the lower Flinders Ranges have been surprised by snowfalls.

Farmers in the agricultural areas have welcomed rainfall that has boosted their crop prospects.

Some grain growers say the falls have come too late for them, but crops in later districts will get the benefits.

The highest measured falls in the state have included 34mm at Kuitpo in the Mount Lofty Ranges, 27 millimetres at Wilmington in the upper north and 26mm at Melrose.

There have been 21mm at Clare in the mid-north, 19mm at Riverton, 17mm at Auburn, 8mm at Lameroo in the Murray Mallee and 11mm at Keith in the south-east.

Adelaide has had about 18mm.

A maximum wind gust of 91 kilometres per hour was recorded at Edithburg on lower Yorke Peninsula.

Emergency volunteers have been called to dozens of incidents since the rough weather first hit Adelaide late on Wednesday.

Many of the problems were with fallen trees.

At suburban Brighton, a car was crushed when a large shopping centre sign fell in high winds.

Raelene Zanker, from Booleroo Centre, said she had lived in the region for half a century and not seen snow so late in the season.

"Going back I think it was in the '70s some time we had lots and lots of snow, but we haven't had anything like that for years now and we've never seen snow in October before, well not since I've been here anyway," she said.

The October freeze saw Mount Lofty's minimum temperature hit 0.4 degrees Celsius this morning. It got as low at 0.6 at Naracoorte and 1.1 at Mount Crawford.

Senior forecaster Tom Boeck confirmed the rarity of the weather conditions.

"In springtime we do get some quite significant shifts in the weather in terms of temperature, but I must admit it's quite unusual to be getting a snow event in October," he said.

Source

Comment by Howard on October 8, 2012 at 3:53am

First Week in October Brings Record Cold and Snowfall Across U.S. (Oct 7) -

With 74 record lows set on Oct 6 - as low as minus 5 degrees F (-21 C) in Wyoming and over a foot of snow in Minnesota, the unrelenting heat and drought of this year's summer has abruptly moved into winter within the first several days of October.

Source

Comment by Howard on October 3, 2012 at 5:01am

Driest August & September in Vancouver BC on Record

Only eight mm of rain fell over those months this year, breaking the previous record set in 1907 of 9 mm of precipitation in August and September.

The 1907 record was set in Steveston, where weather data dates back to 1896.

Records have been kept in Vancouver since 1937.

The record for the month of August alone was set in 1986, when there was zero recorded rainfall.

There was 3 mm of rain this August.

For September, the record is 0.3 mm, set in 1975. This year, 5 mm of rain was recorded at Vancouver International Airport.

It’s expected the dry conditions will stick around — there’s still no rain in this week’s forecast.

Comment by Howard on October 3, 2012 at 3:35am

Tropical Storm Nadine, which formed in the north-central Atlantic 3 weeks ago (on Sept 11) is breaking records as one of the longest lasting tropical storms on record as it continues to loop in circles.

Source

Tropical Storm Nadine Still Alive, 3 Weeks Later -

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20121002/ARTICLE/121009926

Nadine seemed destined to be forgotten as just another tropical storm that fizzled out at sea. Now, still churning loop-de-loops in the Atlantic Ocean, Nadine is making history as one of the longest-lasting tropical storms ever.

At about the same latitude as North Carolina, Nadine has been been a named storm for 20 days. If it lasts another week, Tropical Storm Nadine would break the record for longevity.

But even if it dies out, Nadine is already going down in the record books. Only seven tropical systems have remained at tropical depression strength or greater for longer than Nadine, according to National Hurricane Center records.

The storm that beats them all was the San Ciriaco Hurricane of 1899 — a record set before aircraft and satellites provided fine details of a storm's lifespan.

While the people in the Azores — a Portuguese island chain 970 miles west of Lisbon — are tiring of Nadine's persistence nearby, forecasters are marveling. The storm was making its third pass at the island on Tuesday, prompting the Portuguese government to issue a tropical storm watch.

"You usually don't see a tropical storm stick around at 35 degrees northern latitude for very long," said Mark Paquette, a meteorologist with Accuweather.com.

Nadine formed on Set. 11 in the north-central Atlantic, the last system spawned so far this year.

Since 1960, when satellites began capturing imagery of tropical systems, only four storms have outlived Nadine.

But Nadine, still producing 65 mph sustained winds on Tuesday, isn't finished yet. It was forecast to remain at tropical storm strength through Thursday.

If it does, Nadine will beat Inez of 1966, which lasted 20.25 days, and tie Kyle of 2002, which lasted 22 days.

Tropical Storm Ginger of 1971 lasted 27 days; the 1899 storm lasted 27.75. It is unlikely that Nadine will survive that long. A frontal system is forecast to push Nadine out of its bizarre loop later this week.

Nadine grew slowly into a hurricane last month on a mostly northward course, east of Bermuda. Instead of dying, like many storms that climb into northern latitudes, Nadine kept going.

By the time Nadine reached hurricane strength it was traveling nearly due east toward Europe. It weakened into a tropical storm on Sept. 16 and then wandered southwest of the Azores until falling apart on Sept. 21.

Less than two days later, Nadine re-strengthened into a tropical storm. It regained hurricane status on Sept. 28 before dropping to tropical storm strength on Monday, southwest of the Azores. On Tuesday, the National Hurricane Center predicted it would head straight toward the islands.

Nadine's unusual loop pattern is the result of a lack of steering flow from the jet stream, Paquette said. The storm is essentially caught in an eddy, circling and maintaining its strength from warm water, moisture and lack of competing winds.

Comment by lonne rey on September 28, 2012 at 10:01am

Extreme Storm Takes Brazil From 108 to -30 and Snow!

The MetSul blog this week (translated) tells a harrowing tale of extreme heat in Brazil, followed by severe storms with hail and flooding as a powerful Spring storm system (one of the most intense ever) moved through between September 15 and 17. The temperature at Antonina, Parana, Brazil spiked to 108° F (42.1 C) before the storm hit, breaking not only winter, but summer heat records for Southern Brazil.

Source

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