Showing posts with label Scott Brecht. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scott Brecht. Show all posts

Monday, December 9, 2013

http://www.grandforksherald.com/event/article/id/279898/

Southwest ND in blizzard warning

After a blast of arctic air sent wind chills at a reported 51 degrees below zero mark in Dickinson over the weekend, southwest North Dakota is bracing for blizzard conditions that are began descending on the area Monday morning and are expected to increase by the afternoon and create “near-whiteout conditions.”
By: Forum News Service,
After a blast of arctic air sent wind chills at a reported 51 degrees below zero mark in Dickinson over the weekend, southwest North Dakota is bracing for blizzard conditions that are began descending on the area Monday morning and are expected to increase by the afternoon and create “near-whiteout conditions.”

With light snow being blown about by increasing winds as of lunchtime Monday, Dickinson sat in the middle of a blizzard warning issued by the National Weather Service, which encompassed several southwestern counties, including Stark, Dunn, Bowman, Billings, Adams and Slope.

“In south-central Saskatchewan, we’ve got winds gusting to almost 50 mph with visibilities down to almost zero there,” said NWS meteorologist Bill Abeling early this afternoon. “That area of blowing snow will move through southwestern North Dakota late this afternoon. We’re looking at a scenario where winds will pick up quite strongly in that area around 2 p.m. and then continue through the evening hours.”

The North Dakota Department of Transportation sent out a release late Monday morning warning motorists across the state to be wary of compacted ice and black ice along roadways. The DOT urged drivers to refrain from using cruise control and to stay abreast of road conditions by dialing 511 for travel updates.

“We’re looking at near-whiteout conditions in southwest North Dakota today for a period of several hours,” Abeling said. “These will be ground blizzard conditions. We’re expecting things to diminish rapidly by late evening or before midnight. This is a rapidly moving system sweeping through the northern plains.”

The blizzard comes on the heels of a cold snap that began last Wednesday and sent temperatures well below zero and wind chills to dangerously cold levels.

At one point over the weekend, the wind chill in Dickinson was registered as 51 degrees below, according to the Associated Press. Abeling said records on wind chills are not kept by the NWS.


http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/10103751/super-bowl-xlviii-become-travesty-blizzard-lions-eagles-game-indication

Philly blizzard: Super Bowl preview?

XLVIII might be fun to watch in snow, but integrity of game could be threatened

Originally Published: December 8, 2013
By Ashley Fox | ESPN.com
PHILADELPHIA – This was fun. Despite a weather forecast that called for a mere dusting, the Detroit Lions and Philadelphia Eagles played in a surprise blizzard Sunday. Snow started falling about 90 minutes before kickoff, and it didn't relent until early in the fourth quarter.
The field was covered before kickoff. The grounds crew could not keep up. They shoveled the yard lines and goal lines at every opportunity during the game but opted not to plow at halftime. There was just too much snow and not enough time or places to put it. The storm won. In all, eight inches fell in Lincoln Financial Field during the Eagles' 34-20 win.
Imagine football in a snow globe.
It was a beautiful, iconic afternoon that no one who attended will forget. It just wasn't the way a Super Bowl should be decided.
But that's exactly what might happen.
Want to see what a Super Bowl in a blizzard would look like? Look no further than the Lions-Eagles matchup. This game was a preview of how Super Bowl XLVIII could look at MetLife Stadium in North Jersey, thanks to the National Football League's insistence on holding its signature event outdoors in cold weather for the first time.
Detroit fumbled the ball seven times, five on botched center-to-quarterback exchanges and four in the first quarter alone. Neither team attempted a field goal. It was touchdown or bust. Both teams went for two every time they scored a touchdown. After drawing a penalty on a two-point conversion, the Lions attempted a longer PAT, only to watch the Eagles block David Akers' kick.
[+] EnlargeBryce Brown
Elsa/Getty ImagesEight inches of snow in Philadelphia made for great images, but not necessarily great football product.
As they figured out what strategy to employ given the conditions, the Eagles finished the first quarter with minus-2 yards of offense. "God forbid we continue to do that, that was going to be a long day for us," Philadelphia coach Chip Kelly said. The Eagles entered Week 14 with the league's third-ranked offense but had only 90 yards by halftime and no third-down conversions.
Defensive backs could not stay with receivers on post routes or fades. It was so difficult to cover receivers running in deep snow that Eagles cornerback Cary Williams advised Kelly to go back to throwing deep in the second half. Kelly listened. And it worked.
Trailing 14-0 in the third quarter, Eagles quarterback Nick Foles hit wide receiver Riley Cooper with a 44-yard pass that finally got Philadelphia's offense moving. DeSean Jacksoncaught a 19-yard Foles pass on the next play to pull the Eagles within 14-6.
"It was almost like that kind of got us going, got our confidence back a little bit," Kelly said. "And then we got rolling there."
LeSean McCoy broke the Eagles' single-game rushing record by gaining 217 yards on 29 carries, but he needed to get through only a defense line essentially playing on ice skates and into the open field to score. McCoy scored on runs of 40 and 57 yards, both in the fourth quarter.
"They warned us it could be bad," McCoy said, "but not this bad."
It was, as Philadelphia rookie offensive linemanLane Johnson said, "like cows on ice."
That's not the way football is supposed to be played. If it were, the season would open on Nov. 1 and go through the end of March.
It was certainly fascinating to see so much snow and players having to adjust. At halftime, players from both teams experimented with various shoes in an attempt to get better footing. It didn't matter. The snow fell steadily until early in the fourth quarter, when it slowed but never really stopped. In all, there were eight inches on the ground, with only the yard lines remotely clear.
Ball handling, as Eagles offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur said, was "at a premium." It is why Philadelphia put Foles under center and utilized inside runs.
Linemen loved the game because it was decided in the trenches, but neither team resembled its normal self. Detroit had been stout against the run, yet gave up 299 rushing yards. The Eagles had been prolific throwing the ball, yet Foles completed only 11 passes.
[+] EnlargeMatthew Stafford
AP Photo/Matt RourkeMatthew Stafford completed just 10 of his 25 passes and averaged 5.9 yards per attempt in driving snow.
Imagine if you worked the entire season to build your team's identity and then had to completely adjust because of a snowstorm in the biggest game?
That shouldn't happen. Severe weather should not be an issue. Rain is one thing, and that is bad enough. But a blizzard, in which teams can't kick field goals because the footing is so poor and offensive skill position players have a distinct advantage because defenders can't run and cut the way they normally do? That shouldn't be a concern.
Yet it could be on Feb. 2 at the Meadowlands, if the Farmer's Almanac is right. Its prediction for Feb. 1-3: "Intense storm, heavy rain, snow, strong winds. This could seriously impact Super Bowl XLVIII on Feb. 2."
If there is a blizzard on the night of Feb. 2, it could turn out to be either the coolest game ever or a farce. Opinion would be divided, as it was between the teams that played Sunday in Philadelphia. It was a lot easier to enjoy the conditions if you were on the winning side.
Eagles center Jason Kelce had the best suggestion for what he'd like to see happen on Super Bowl Sunday.
"Hopefully it doesn't snow that bad," Kelce said. "But a little trickle down, that would set the mood off pretty well."
The NFL can only hope that is the worst thing that happens.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

African Dust Contributing To Calm Hurricane Season

October 23, 2013

Tampa Tribune (Fla.)


Enlarge
TAMPA -- Wind shears, water vapor and temperature, El Nino and La Nina all play a role in the formation of hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean.
This year, the Sahara Desert appears to have played a part as well.
The vast desert that stretches across North Africa spat out a massive plume of dust in a June wind storm that blew particles over the eastern Atlantic Ocean, blanketing the cauldron where tropical storms and hurricanes bubble up.
Some scientists and meteorologists credit the dust particles and the drying effect they create with impeding the formation of tropical cyclones and creating one of the calmest Atlantic hurricane seasons in decades. The season is mostly over, but only two hurricanes have formed, both of them minor.
Exactly why forecasters were so dramatically wrong -- most of the major hurricane prognosticators predicted an above-average season -- is the subject of much speculation in the hurricane-predicting community.
Part of the mystery is that sand from the Sahara blowing over the Atlantic is far from unusual. The pattern traditionally grows stronger in the early summer and into July, said Jason Dunion, a hurricane research analyst who works for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration`s Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory in Miami.
But this year`s June plume was exceptional, he said, and that translated into unusually dry air in the part of the Atlantic that is the main breeding ground for hurricanes. Such levels of dryness have not been since the mid-1980s, he said.
Whether that inhibits the formation of hurricanes, he said, well, "That`s the million-dollar question."
Could it be that the amount of dust in the air keeps hurricanes from forming?
Perhaps, Dunion said, but the theory needs more study. The one scientific certainty, he said, was the amount of Saharan dust in the air over the region where storms are born during the peak of the season.
"One of the essential ingredients to get hurricanes going is moisture in the air, particularly in the middle areas of the atmosphere."
Moisture, combined with other factors, he said, "gets hurricanes bubbling and brewing. Drying that air out too much stifles development."
Another scientific certainty: The number of hurricanes in the Atlantic so far this year is way, way below normal.
Hurricane Humberto formed early in September in the Atlantic and petered out in open water. Hurricane Ingrid formed in the Caribbean and made landfall along the northeastern coast of Mexico a month ago. The season, which ends on Nov. 30, is on the downswing, having passed its peak in September. November averages only about one named storm every two years, forecasters say.
Besides the two hurricanes this year, there were 10 named tropical storms. Meteorologists say the number of tropical storms is about average, but where they formed is unusual.
Five of the 10 storms formed in the Caribbean. Typically, particularly early in the season, most tropical cyclones are born in the eastern Atlantic.
But this year, there`s been a dearth of hurricanes swirling along Hurricane Alley, that stretch of open water between West Africa and the Caribbean.
Forecasters in May predicted a 70 percent chance of an above normal season and just a 5 percent chance of a below-normal season, said Dennis Feltgen, spokesman for the National Hurricane Center in Miami. As many as 19 named storms were predicted, with up to nine becoming hurricanes. Three of those would become major -- Category 3 or higher -- hurricanes, they said.
So far this year: zero major hurricanes.
If the season ends without a major hurricane, it will mark the first time that has happened since 1994.
There are several theories cited for the lack of hurricanes, Feltgen said; the Saharan dust factor is just one.
There is also the Bermuda High, an area of high pressure along the eastern seaboard that has steered dry air into the tropics and over the hurricane birthing grounds. That, coupled with the dry air associated with the African dust, likely contributed to the lack of storms, he said.
Feltgen was reluctant to credit the Sahara as the only reason hurricanes have failed to form this year.
"There was some Saharan dust," he said, "but it doesn`t cover 100 percent of the tropical season. If a lot of dust happens to be in an area where hurricanes are forming, that could be one of several factors."
Someday, he said, Saharan dust may be factored in when meteorologists make hurricane season predictions.
Scientists are just beginning to study the relationship between Saharan dust over the Atlantic and the formation of tropical cyclones, said Joseph Prospero, a professor of marine and atmospheric chemistry at the University of Miami`s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science.
"That is a very active topic of discussion," he said. "The outbreaks of African dust have a clearly detectable impact. Increased dust in the air means reduced sunlight on the ocean surface, lower temperature and reduced water vapor emission, all of which play a role in tropical cyclones."
He said the presence of a hot, dry layer of dusty air at an elevated altitude diminishes atmospheric conditions that lead to tropical cyclone formation.
But, he noted, "There are many other factors linked to these dust events that could suppress tropical cyclone development. In short, this is a very active area of research today."
Copyright Tampa Tribune (FL) 2013
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Story Image: File photo of an intense dust storm moving off the west Africa coast. (NASA)
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