Friday, August 19, 2005
Record Year for Tropical Storms
"Wacky weather caused by global warming continues. Consistent with predictions that this would be a stormy summer, July has set a record for the number of tropical storms spawned in the Atlantic. It was also the second hottest July on record, and a month that saw some of the greatest extremes of drought and flooding ever recorded. The Indian city of Mumbai experienced a massive 37-inch rainfall in July, while the US Pacific Northwest, the Midwest, Spain, Portugal, and parts of France, China and Australia experienced some of the worst drought conditions ever recorded."
"Wacky weather caused by global warming continues. Consistent with predictions that this would be a stormy summer, July has set a record for the number of tropical storms spawned in the Atlantic. It was also the second hottest July on record, and a month that saw some of the greatest extremes of drought and flooding ever recorded. The Indian city of Mumbai experienced a massive 37-inch rainfall in July, while the US Pacific Northwest, the Midwest, Spain, Portugal, and parts of France, China and Australia experienced some of the worst drought conditions ever recorded."
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2 comments:
Dear Alien,
One day hot. Next day not. Cold. Realy quick. Like a vengeance. Like a vendetta. Like a sign. Writ large, in a language you used to speak. Like Alzheimer's or worse. Like now. A cleansing after a fire.
One day hot. Next day not.
When the weather knows more about Man than Man. Find yourself nowhere near a bank machine.
dearalien.blogspot.com
WMB--
No problem ;-) I'll try to get the time of my birth, for whatever it's worth. Maybe with some imagination we can use it to derive a theory of quantum gravity!
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