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Howard Brown
ParticipantMaurice White/Earth, Wind and Fire
https://www.rt.com/news/331387-japan-sakurajima-volcano-plant/
And why not ice:
http://www.thestatesman.com/mobi/photos/1534-30-lake-shikotsu-ice-festival-a-winter-wonderland.html
P.S. Mike, yes that was it, thank you – ‘H’
Howard Brown
ParticipantTerrific, MikeL, well done.
I hate to be pedantic (well, perhaps not) but I am sure it should be ‘asperitas’. I will e-mail CAS to see if a moderator can correct your post.
Howard Brown
ParticipantMy apologies – I use MikeL to avoid confusion with Mike but nevertheless have put my foot in it.
Howard Brown
ParticipantSo, you are re-writing the book here, MikeL: lenticularis asperitas light?
Howard Brown
ParticipantThis from Radio Biafra, oddly, though I heard it on BBC today.
OSLO Oslo’s main waste incinerator began the world’s first experiment to capture carbon dioxide from the fumes of burning rubbish on Monday, hoping to develop technology to enlist the world’s trash in slowing global warming.
Howard Brown
ParticipantLordi, Lordi quite a kickstart to #36, MikeL. Are you sure it was not dry ice up there?
I say kickstart – I suppose that was for old motorbikes, perhaps modern ones have a starter button. But you ride bikes and drive cars. Nice driving.
‘H’
Howard Brown
ParticipantArtistically (which I feel counts highly for you) a fine picture, I am sure. Technically, you have a good point there about the line holding, MikeL – how long a length was it? Perhaps the longer it was the slower the wind speed up there must have been?
On perspective: I see it as vertical wisps rising; or are the wisps just being blown out sideways? Or perhaps the line is falling? Trails never seem to rise which might imply rapid cooling hence no convection?
Hmm, much ?; or many ?s.
Howard Brown
ParticipantLight my fire – another mathematical one. A con?
Howard Brown
ParticipantI take your point, Graham; it was just that clouds might help…
Latest from Nasa:
http://climate.nasa.gov/news/2391/
I think the Met Office came out today too, Graham, if you can put your finger on that.
Howard Brown
ParticipantAndrew, my pleasure – delighted to hear from you again.
‘H’
Howard Brown
ParticipantFurther to ‘Upload an image to your Album’.
There is a missing step as Mike Lerch pointed out to me for Windows 7.
“2) Click on the ‘Album’ link and then ‘Upload Picture’ to choose the image to upload, selecting one of the options for who will be able to see it.”
In 2) you click on the red ‘Upload Picture’ then click on the boxed ‘Browse’ to choose your image to upload, under ‘Visibility’ selecting one of the options…. Now you should click on the boxed ‘Upload picture’ after the list of options and wait. For me the wait can be 30 seconds (the box at the very top of your window will be active) then the screen will change and tell you the upload was OK (or else reduce it in size to < 1.8mb before upload).
Howard Brown
ParticipantMikeL love the bluesy Cu. Come to think of it you choose not to show us much Cu?
Similar view as previous post, different day. Bluesy moon overseer:
Still not sure why picture size is smaller than previous…
Howard Brown
ParticipantThe good news (clouds are at the forefront of saving the planet)
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22429974-000-geoengineering-the-planet-first-experiments-take-shape/Howard Brown
ParticipantSo you must be a mathematician – first 1+1=3, now a locus. I deduce that from the curve – I wonder what the particular condition was.
Howard Brown
ParticipantMikeL the MarveL. Great clouds seem to bypass me and my pocket camera snaps; but they beat a path to your door and pose.
I guess your zombies are shot from below, but it immediately brought to my mind these ‘decaying altocumulus clouds’ (Hamblyn, Extraordinary Clouds, cover and p38) shot from above by airline pilot Jurgen Oste:
https://cloudappreciationsociety.org/cloud-photo/photographer/jurgen-oste/#p=1&i=1
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