| Re: "Humans 'very likely' making earth warmer" is wrong In article <mil7s2lhurb2k7tasktf3c19pg6qondps0@4ax.com>, Joe Fischer wrote:
>On Fri, Bill Baka <bbaka@comcast.net> wrote:
>
>>Joe Fischer wrote:
>>> Tornados are possible almost anyplace (level
>>> ground usually though), and there is plenty of wind
>>> shear in California sometimes with the Satana Winds,
>>> but what is usually needed is hail conditions, and
>>> lots of precipitation and cold air aloft helps create
>>> that condition.
>>
>>They are possible but never any recorded damage in California until
>>recently.
>
> Are you sure? One thing that is not talked
>about is that record low temperatures are more
>common than record high temperatures, and there
>is probably a good reason for that.
> And just the right conditions of very cold air
>aloft and heavy precipitation may not coincide often,
>the tornados in Florida last night were pretty fierce.
Winter and early spring tornadoes in southern tier USA, as far west as
LA Basin and as far east as Florida, have always occurred. And they have
always upticked during El Nino. We are currently having an El Nino.
El Nino tends to make winter in the southern tier of the USA cooler and
stormier.
Also, Florida has the USA's worst "tornado alley" in terms of tornado
count per 10,000 square miles per year. The Plains "tornado alley" only
gets worse than that of Florida when considering size, duration and
strength of the tornadoes.
- Don Klipstein (don@misty.com) |