SST'S and Anomalies in Atlantic and Pacific
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- SouthFloridawx
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hello guys...so far i did some quick research and i found these animations!
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/current/crblrg_sstanom_2m.html
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/current/sst_50km_2m.html
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/current/crblrg_sstanom_2m.html
http://coralreefwatch.noaa.gov/satellite/current/sst_50km_2m.html
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- SouthFloridawx
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Go here https://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/PUBLIC/
Click on public access
Under Oceanography
Click on NCODA
from there you have the following options
Sea Surface Temp 152k 2209Z 27-Mar-2006
SST Anomaly 214k 2209Z 27-Mar-2006
SST Climatology 107k 2209Z 27-Mar-2006
NCODA Archive October 2004 To Present
Click on public access
Under Oceanography
Click on NCODA
from there you have the following options
Sea Surface Temp 152k 2209Z 27-Mar-2006
SST Anomaly 214k 2209Z 27-Mar-2006
SST Climatology 107k 2209Z 27-Mar-2006
NCODA Archive October 2004 To Present
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- cycloneye
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The graphics of the currents updated daily.

Last edited by cycloneye on Tue Mar 28, 2006 2:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Visit the Caribbean-Central America Weather Thread where you can find at first post web cams,radars
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here
- SouthFloridawx
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- SouthFloridawx
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- cycloneye
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Another impressive graphic.
SouthernFloridawx I can't find animation for the graphics.
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- Blown Away
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cycloneye wrote:Scorpion wrote:Time to write off hurricane season. I was looking forward to it too.
I would not say that at all.The important thing to watch is if by late April or early May the warm waters expand then yes el nino freshhold has been met.However fluctuations occur up and down so let's wait but I give some credit to the Aussies who did say 3 weeks ago that el nino would be around by the northern hemisphere summer.Let's see if they are right or the CPC predictions of neutral conditions are right.
First it was going to be a La Nina, then neutral, now possible El Nino! Last I heard was mild La Nina to neutral conditions.

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- webke
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Cycloneye,
I just was looking at the 3d graphics page from where you posted the above graphic, and I have a question. When you look at the western Atlantic graphics page for 15 degrees north to 45 degrees north what I saw totally surprised me. The deeper you look at the depths, the Atlantic is retaining more heat at the lower depths than the Gulf. I have been reading all the concern about the SST's in the gulf and my question is what impact if any could the deeper water temps have as we move closer toward the summer.
Thanks Ken
I just was looking at the 3d graphics page from where you posted the above graphic, and I have a question. When you look at the western Atlantic graphics page for 15 degrees north to 45 degrees north what I saw totally surprised me. The deeper you look at the depths, the Atlantic is retaining more heat at the lower depths than the Gulf. I have been reading all the concern about the SST's in the gulf and my question is what impact if any could the deeper water temps have as we move closer toward the summer.
Thanks Ken
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- Extremeweatherguy
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- cycloneye
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webke wrote:Cycloneye,
I just was looking at the 3d graphics page from where you posted the above graphic, and I have a question. When you look at the western Atlantic graphics page for 15 degrees north to 45 degrees north what I saw totally surprised me. The deeper you look at the depths, the Atlantic is retaining more heat at the lower depths than the Gulf. I have been reading all the concern about the SST's in the gulf and my question is what impact if any could the deeper water temps have as we move closer toward the summer.
Thanks Ken
The deep waters are the most to watch as the heat content is more deep than at the surface.The western Caribbean sea waters is the area in which the heat content is the most intense.
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Visit the Caribbean-Central America Weather Thread where you can find at first post web cams,radars
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