Please take our Survey
logo       

Choosing A Webhost:
A web hosting service is a type of Internet hosting service that allows individuals and organizations to provide their own website accessible via the World Wide Web. Web hosts are companies that provide space on a server they own for use by their clients as well as providing Internet connectivity, typically in a data center. Web hosts can also provide data center space and connectivity to the Internet for servers they do not own to be located in their data center, called colocation. more...

Sandstorm enroute to S.E. US: msg#00080

culture.autism

Subject: Sandstorm enroute to S.E. US

For friends in S.E. who are especially vulnerable to environmental allergens
& dust ... here is an alert:
[this is probably the strangest weather event I've ever heard of!] Read
that Franklin is spinning around rather disorganized today, but Gert is
kicking in. We send thoughts & hopes for safety of those in harm's way.

Desert sandstorm heads toward Florida
As if the heat weren't enough, a sand cloud drifting from Africa could
bother people with respiratory problems.
By CHRIS TISCH, Times Staff Writer
Published July 24, 2005

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
Floridians can't seem to catch a break when it comes to the weather.

Though Florida was spared the rains and winds from Tropical Storm Franklin,
warmth from the storm's core blasted the state Saturday, pushing heat-index
readings to dangerous levels.

On top of that, there's a sandstorm coming. Seriously.

Though forecasters think the sandstorm will do little more than dazzle up
the sunsets, it could tickle the throats of people with respiratory
problems. The cloud of dust, which is about the size of the continental
United States, originated in the Sahara Desert and could be over Florida
early this week.

[**** you read that correctly ... this sand "cloud" is the SIZE of the
CONTINENTAL U.S.] Am sort of awestruck.

"This is not going to be a tremendous event, but it will be kind of
interesting," said Jim Lushine, a severe weather expert with Miami's weather
bureau.

Scott Kelly, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Melbourne,
said Saturday that the cloud - which could dissipate - may not have much
effect on the rest of the country.

"Maybe South Texas or Mexico if that dust cloud keeps moving westward, but
nothing north of Florida, unless a weather system can dive southward and
pull that air northward," he said.

The dust outbreak starts when tropical waves lift sand from the Sahara a
couple miles into the sky, reducing it to even smaller particles. The dust
drifts west on a dry tropical wave.

If the dust is concentrated enough, the cloud could create some issues for
people with respiratory problems, said Ken Larson, a natural resource
specialist with the Broward County Environmental Protection Department.

"If somebody is subject to a respiratory condition, if they see hazy skies,
they might want to take a little more precaution, not participate in
strenuous activity and stay indoors," Larson said.

Some scientists think that dust clouds impede the formation of tropical
storms, which can eventually turn into hurricanes.

If that's the case, Florida may welcome more sandstorms to combat hurricanes
that have battered the state for the past year.

Florida has apparently dodged Tropical Storm Franklin, which on Saturday had
sustained winds of 70 mph; just below the 74 mph threshold to be classified
as a hurricane.

But the storm's furnace-like blasts of warm energy led to intense heat, high
humidity and oppressive heat-index readings across the state.

At 4 p.m., according to National Weather Service data, Panama City's heat
index was 111, when combining its 95-degree temperature with 58 percent
humidity. It felt like 110 in Pensacola, 107 degrees in Vero Beach and
Jacksonville, 104 in Miami Beach, and 100 in Tallahassee and Key West.

And forecasters warned the heat and humidity could be higher Sunday - also
increasing the dangers of exhaustion and other heat-related problems.

Tampa Bay's weather wasn't as affected by the storm's heat. The high at
Tampa International Airport Saturday was 91 and the heat index was 97, said
Tom Dougherty, a forecaster with the National Weather Service in Ruskin.

Dougherty said temperatures will be about the same today, though there is a
60 percent chance of thunderstorms this morning and a chance for more storms
in the afternoon.

Meanwhile, tropical storm warnings and watches were issued in Mexico for a
tropical depression that formed Saturday and could become Tropical Storm
Gert.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

http://www.sptimes.com/2005/07/24/Weather/Desert_sandstorm_head.shtml






<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Google Custom Search

Recently Viewed:
solaris.opensol...    editors.vim/200...    web.turbogears....    jakarta.ant.dev...    mathematics.max...    text.unicode.ge...    lang.ruby.core/...    xfce.announce/2...    network.centeri...    php.cvs.pear/20...    user-groups.lin...    kde.devel.quant...    file-systems.ar...    redhat.fedora.t...    apple.fink.auto...    gnome.orbit.gen...    qplus.devel/200...    culture.transpo...    video.dri.user/...    operators.nanog...   
Home | advertise | OSDir is an inevitable website. super tiny logo

Free Magazines

Cisco News
Receive a free quarterly e-newsletter with exclusive articles on how Cisco IT uses its own products and solutions to enable the business.
subscribe

Systems Management News, the newspaper for IT systems administration and data center managers! Each issue of Systems Management News is chock-full of news and analysis to help you understand what's happening in your field.
subscribe

The Enterprise Newsweekly eWeek is the essential technology information source for builders of e-business.
subscribe

Oracle Magazine Oracle Magazine contains technology strategy articles, sample code, tips, Oracle and partner news, how to articles for developers and DBAs, and more. Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) is the world's largest enterprise software company.
subscribe

Total Telecom Total Telecom is "The Economist of the communications industry".
subscribe

Navigation