ChatterBank0 min ago
How Odd Is This ??
12 Answers
Sat in my office having a fag, window open and the air outside is warm very strange. Global warming, if so, bring in on.
Answers
It's not "Global Warming" or "Climate Change." It's something called weather. There is a large high pressure area seated over Spain, Portugal and North West Africa and two fairly deep "Lows", one over Iceland and another in mid-Atlantic between the Bay of Biscay and Newfoundland . In the northern hemisphere winds rotate anti- clockwise around the lows and...
18:19 Thu 30th Dec 2021
You won't freeze to death through global warming but you might drown instead, SK ;-)
https:/ /www.bl ackpool gazette .co.uk/ news/en vironme nt/fyld e-coast -at-ris k-from- serious -floodi ng-unle ss-glob al-warm ing-is- tackled -warns- report- 3341203
https:/
If it hadn't been cancelled this year, I'm sure that you would have been taking part on Saturday, wouldn't you?
https:/ /www.vi sitflee twood.i nfo/rec reation -entert ainment /events -featur ed/new- years-d ay-dip/
;-)
https:/
;-)
It's not "Global Warming" or "Climate Change."
It's something called weather. There is a large high pressure area seated over Spain, Portugal and North West Africa and two fairly deep "Lows", one over Iceland and another in mid-Atlantic between the Bay of Biscay and Newfoundland. In the northern hemisphere winds rotate anti-clockwise around the lows and clockwise wound high pressure areas. This means warm Atlantic air is being drawn up from the tropics over such areas as the Cape Verde islands, the Azores and the Canaries. Once this weather pattern breaks down, normal service will be resumed.
It's something called weather. There is a large high pressure area seated over Spain, Portugal and North West Africa and two fairly deep "Lows", one over Iceland and another in mid-Atlantic between the Bay of Biscay and Newfoundland. In the northern hemisphere winds rotate anti-clockwise around the lows and clockwise wound high pressure areas. This means warm Atlantic air is being drawn up from the tropics over such areas as the Cape Verde islands, the Azores and the Canaries. Once this weather pattern breaks down, normal service will be resumed.