Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Pakistan's Katrina; 94L could develop in Gulf of Mexico
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 3:23 PM GMT on August 10, 2010 +4
The monsoon season of 2010 continues to generate havoc in Asia, as lingering rains from the latest monsoon low continue to affect hard-hit Pakistan, China, and India. At least 702 are now reported dead and 1,042 are missing in China's Gansu province, due to torrential monsoon rains that triggered a deadly landslide and extreme flooding on Sunday. At least 137 died in floods and landslides in the neighboring Indian state of Kashmir over the weekend, with 500 people missing. Monsoon flooding and landslides have also killed at least 65 people in Afghanistan in the past two weeks. But no country has suffered more than Pakistan, where monsoon floods have destroyed huge portions of the nation's infrastructure and killed at least 1600 people. The number of people affected or needing assistance has been estimated to be as high as 13 million people--8% of the nation's population. The disaster is the worst natural disaster in Pakistan's history, and is rightfully being called "Pakistan's Katrina."


Figure 1. The heavy thunderstorms of a monsoon depression lie over northwestern Pakistan near Islamabad in this visible satellite image taken by NASA's MODIS instrument on July 29, 2010. Image credit: NASA.

Monsoons: a primer
In summer, the sun warms up land areas more strongly than ocean areas. This occurs because wind and ocean turbulence mix the ocean's absorbed heat into a "mixed layer" approximately 50 meters deep, whereas on land, the sun's heat penetrates at a slow rate to a limited depth. Furthermore, due to its molecular properties, water has the ability to absorb more heat than the solid materials that make up land. As a result of this summertime differential heating of land and ocean, a low pressure region featuring rising air develops over land areas. Moisture-laden ocean winds blow towards the low pressure region and are drawn upwards once over land. The rising air expands and cools, condensing its moisture into some of the heaviest rains on Earth--the monsoon. Monsoons operate via the same principle as the familiar summer afternoon sea breeze, but on a grand scale. Each summer, monsoons affect every continent on Earth except Antarctica, and are responsible for life-giving rains that sustain the lives of billions of people. In India, home for over 1.1 billion people, the monsoon provides 80% of the annual rainfall. However, monsoons have their dark side as well--hundreds of people in India and surrounding nations die in an average year in floods and landslides triggered by heavy monsoon rains. The most deadly flooding events usually come from monsoon depressions (also known as monsoon lows.) A monsoon depression is similar to (but larger than) a tropical depression. Both are spinning storms hundreds of kilometers in diameter with sustained winds of 50 - 55 kph (30 - 35 mph), nearly calm winds at their center, and generate very heavy rains. Each summer, approximately 6 - 7 monsoon depressions form over the Bay of Bengal and track westwards across India. Four monsoon depressions originated in the Bay of Bengal in the El Niño-weakened monsoon season of 2009. This year's first monsoon depression formed on July 24, crossed over India, and reached Pakistan on July 27. The rains increased in intensity over the next two days, peaking on July 29 and 30, when a low pressure system that moved across Pakistan from the west enhanced rainfall from the monsoon depression. Over the 3-day period July 28 - 30, torrential rains in excess of 8 inches (203 mm) fell in many regions of northwest Pakistan Rainfall amounts at two stations in the catchment basins of the Jhelum River and Indus River reached 19.49" (495 mm) for the month of July, and 7.56" (192 mm) fell in a single day, July 30, at Tarbela. A second monsoon depression arrived in Pakistan on August 3, and has brought additional heavy rains.

Are the this year's monsoon floods due to global warming?
No single weather event can be attributed to climate change, but a warming climate does load the dice in favor of heavier extreme precipitation events. This occurs because more water vapor can evaporate into a warmer atmosphere, increasing the chances of record heavy downpours. In a study published in Science in 2006, Goswami et al. found that the level of heavy rainfall activity in the monsoon over India had more than doubled in the 50 years since the 1950s, leading to an increased disaster potential from heavy flooding. Moderate and weak rain events decreased over the past 50 years, leaving the total amount of rain deposited by the monsoon roughly constant. The authors commented, "These findings are in tune with model projections and some observations that indicate an increase in heavy rain events and a decrease in weak events under global warming scenarios." We should expect to see an increased number of disastrous monsoon floods in coming decades if the climate continues to warm as expected. Since the population continues to increase at a rapid rate in the region, death tolls from monsoon flooding disasters are likely to climb dramatically in coming decades.

References
Goswami, et al., 2006, " Increasing Trend of Extreme Rain Events Over India in a Warming Environment", Science, 1 December 2006:Vol. 314. no. 5804, pp. 1442 - 1445 DOI: 10.1126/science.1132027

Dave's Landslide blog has some great discussions of the flooding and destruction wrought by the terrible monsoon rains this year in Pakistan, India, Afghanistan, and China.

Donations urgently needed
The massive humanitarian crisis in Pakistan requires a huge response by the international community. Wunderblogger Dr. Ricky Rood, author of our Climate Change Blog, has a friend working in Pakistan who underscored the desperate situation there:

This is the worst natural disaster in the history of Pakistan in terms of number of people and area affected. Although not as many people have been killed as in the 2005 earthquake, we have already nearly 900,000 displaced persons thus far just in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Crops are destroyed; shops, hotels, and other business have simply been swept away in Swat, which had just this year been cleared of Taliban and was on the way to recovery; and districts closer to Peshawar and parts of Peshawar district are still, or perhaps again after yesterday/today, under water. After the immediate emergency response, it will be years of rebuilding to replace what has been lost and to start to develop again. I know you have the power to control the weather, so if you cold give us a week or two without more rain at least we could keep the helicopters flying and give people a chance to go to their homes, recover what might still be there, set up tents if we can get enough to them, and start to clean up."

She gave the following recommendations for charities that do work in the flood-ravaged zone, and are effective at getting aid to those who need it the most:

Doctors Without Borders

The International Red Cross

MERLIN medical relief charity

The mobile giving service mGive allows one to text the word "SWAT" to 50555. The text will result in a $10 donation to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) Pakistan Flood Relief Effort.

She mentioned that it is better to send money to the organizations doing the relief work than to try to organize shipments of goods.


Figure 2. Morning radar image of 94L from the Key West radar.

94L
A 1010 mb low pressure system (94L) near the Florida Keys is generating disorganized heavy thunderstorms over Florida and the adjacent waters, and could become a tropical or subtropical depression as early as Wednesday. Current Key West radar shows the rotation of the storm, but the thunderstorm activity has not yet organized into low-level spiral bands. A few areas in the Keys and extreme South Florida have seen 1 - 2 inches of rain thus far from 94L. Wind shear is currently a moderate 10 - 20 knots over 94L, and water temperatures are very warm, 30 - 31°C. Water vapor satellite imagery shows that 94L is forming beneath an upper-level low with plenty of dry air, and there is a substantial flow of dry, continental air wrapping into 94L. This dry air is retarding the development of 94L, and may force the storm to organize into a subtropical storm instead of a tropical storm. A subtropical storm typically has a large, cloud free center of circulation, with very heavy thunderstorm activity in a band removed at least 100 miles from the center. The difference between a subtropical storm and a tropical storm is not that important as far as the winds they can generate, but tropical storms generate more rain. There is no such thing as a subtropical hurricane. If a subtropical storm intensifies enough to have hurricane force winds, than it must have become fully tropical. It usually takes at least two days for a subtropical storm to make the transition to a tropical storm.

Forecast for 94L
The latest SHIPS model forecast predicts that wind shear will stay in the moderate range, 10 - 20 knots, over the Gulf of Mexico this week. The storm's main problem will be dry air, and I don't expect 94L to undergo rapid development. Most of the models bring 94L ashore over Louisiana by Thursday, though the GFDL model predicts 94L could stall off the coast and not make landfall until Friday. If 94L does make landfall Thursday, it is unlikely to be a hurricane, due to all the dry air aloft in the Gulf. However, the GFDL model is predicting that the 1-day delay in landfall to Friday will allow 94L enough time to grow fully tropical and intensify into a Category 1 hurricane. I think this solution is unlikely. Storms that get their start underneath a cold, dry, upper-level low very rarely attain hurricane strength in three days. A 40 - 50 mph tropical or subtropical storm at landfall Thursday or Friday is a much more reasonable forecast.

93L
A tropical wave (Invest 93) in the middle Atlantic Ocean is close to tropical depression status. The disturbance has a well-defined surface circulation, but only a limited amount of heavy thunderstorm activity, thanks to dry air and wind shear of 10 - 20 knots affecting it due to a large upper-level low pressure system to the west. Wind shear is expected to stay in the moderate range, 10 - 20 knots, over the next four days, which is low enough that 93L could become a tropical depression at any time during that period. NHC is giving 93L a 60% chance of developing into a tropical depression by Thursday morning. The GFS, GFDL, and HWRF models predict 93L will develop, and the GFDL forecasts that the storm will become a hurricane. A strong trough of low pressure moving across the central Atlantic is recurving 93L to the north, and the system should only be a concern to shipping interests. None of the reliable computer models are forecasting tropical cyclone development in the Atlantic over the next seven days, other than for 93L and 94L.

Moscow hits 99°F again today
Temperatures at Moscow's Domodedovo airport hit 37°C (99°F) today, the 28th day in row that temperatures have exceeded 30°C (86°F) in Moscow. The average high temperature for August 10 is 21°C (69°F). Moscow's high temperature have averaged 15°C (27°F) above average for the first ten days of August--a truly extraordinary anomaly. Smog and smoke from wildfires continued to blanket the city today, with the Russian Meteorological Agency reporting that pollution due to carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, ozone, and hydrocarbons exceeding the safe limit by factors of 1.2 - 2.2. Air pollution levels peaked at 6.5 times the safe level on Saturday. As I reported in yesterday's post, the heat wave has likely killed at least 15,000 people in Russia so far. There is some slight relief in sight--the latest forecast for Moscow calls for high temperatures of 31 - 33°C (88 - 91°F) Wednesday though Sunday--still 20°F above normal, but better than the 27°F above normal so far this month.

"Hurricane Haven" airing again this afternoon
Tune into another airing of my live Internet radio show, "Hurricane Haven", at 4pm EDT today. Listeners will be able to call in and ask questions. The call in number is 415-983-2634, or you can post a question in the comments area on my blog during the show. You can also email the questions to me today before the show: jmasters@wunderground.com. Be sure to include "Hurricane Haven question" in the subject line. Some topics I'll cover today on the show:

1) Invest 94 and 93
2) A look ahead at the coming two weeks
3) Status of La Niña

Today's show will be about 30 minutes, and you can tune in at http://www.wunderground.com/wxradio/wubroadcast.h tml. The show will be recorded and stored as a podcast.

Jeff Masters
Categories: Flood
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2451. doorman79 1:34 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
anyone else having problems with the CIMSS. Hasn't updated since 1800. tia
Member Since: August 11, 2010 Posts: 0 Comments: 895
2452. pottery 1:34 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting tacoman:
JLP CAPS MEAN IMPORTANCE YOU WANT PEOPLE TO KNOW HATS GOING TO HAPPEN...SORRY IF IT OFFENDS YOU..

If HATS happen, we are in Dire Straights for true........
Member Since: October 24, 2005 Posts: 0 Comments: 20703
2454. angiest 1:34 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Come on, why are people feeding stormtop?
Member Since: August 26, 2006 Posts: 16 Comments: 4757
2455. Orcasystems 1:34 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting tacoman:
JLP CAPS MEAN IMPORTANCE YOU WANT PEOPLE TO KNOW HATS GOING TO HAPPEN...SORRY IF IT OFFENDS YOU..


You should mellow out and FOCUS :)
Member Since: October 1, 2007 Posts: 77 Comments: 26077
2456. Tazmanian 1:34 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
this will be come a cat 1 hurricane
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2457. PanhandleChuck 1:34 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
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2458. wunderkidcayman 1:34 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
I see now we have TD 5 and we should have 95L soon and maybe 96L from PGI25L I will be back later in about 2-3 hours
Member Since: June 13, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 5385
2459. pottery 1:35 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting JLPR2:


that TW inland is making me go hmm


Looks very nice.

Impressive for sure...
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2461. will45 1:35 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
2452. pottery 9:34 PM EDT on August 10, 2010

LMAO
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2462. Chicklit 1:35 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
We have watched wave after wave after wave exit Africa this year and each time wonder, ' is this the one? '
Unfortunately, they carry potential for real damage.
Tick. Tock. Tick. Tock.
Waiting for the shoe to drop.
Member Since: July 11, 2006 Posts: 14 Comments: 10244
2463. Hurricanes101 1:35 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
Here's the CIMSS site: Link.

And here's the Naval Postgraduate School one: Link.


thanks
Member Since: March 10, 2010 Posts: 1 Comments: 6902
2464. MiamiHurricanes09 1:35 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting scott39:
How many hours until the ULL doesnt have any effect on TD5? Also, It looks very moist around TD5, why isnt the convection stronger around the center? Thanks
The ULL should be out of the picture by tomorrow morning. The environment evidently is moistening up because of the departure of the ULL. The convection wane can be attributed to the diurnal minimum.
Member Since: September 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
2465. angiest 1:35 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting msgambler:
So from what I'm reading they should move all warnings out of AL area. We may not even get more than a sprinkle out of this.


You're in the cone (I think) and to the right of landfall. Nothing wrong with a warning.
Member Since: August 26, 2006 Posts: 16 Comments: 4757
2467. pottery 1:35 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting Orcasystems:


You should mellow out and FOCUS :)

heheheheh
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2469. Tazmanian 1:37 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting tacoman:
chicklit the pressure has dropped 5 mb in the last 12 hours...you figure it out the ull is gone its not hampering danielle anymorw ...sst 88-90 degrees...i have people we went through enough chicklit they deserve to know whats going on and thats what im doing...



yep no more ULL
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2470. Hurricanes101 1:38 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting Tazmanian:



yep no more ULL


the ULL is not gone, it is to the NW of TD 5 and moving quickly to the west, in the end the impacts of the ULL will be less tomorrow than they are now and it should overall not have a huge impact on the system
Member Since: March 10, 2010 Posts: 1 Comments: 6902
2471. jlp09550 1:38 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
You can't really say where it's going just yet based on the NHC track. They are quite uncertain of the motion right now:

.SITUATION OVERVIEW...
TROPICAL DEPRESSION FIVE HAS A VERY BROAD CENTER. THE MOTION OF
THIS SYSTEM REMAINS UNCERTAIN AT THIS TIME.


That's from the tropical storm warning for my area.
Member Since: February 21, 2008 Posts: 1 Comments: 340
2472. MechEngMet 1:38 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting Chicklit:
Tacoman, Chill. This is the reality as of 8 o'clock:
...SPECIAL FEATURES...
THE BROAD SURFACE LOW IN THE SE GULF OF MEXICO WAS UPGRADED TO TROPICAL DEPRESSION FIVE AS OF 2330 UTC. T.D. FIVE IS CENTERED NEAR 26.0N 84.1W OR ABOUT 225 NM SSE OF APALACHICOLA FLORIDA AND ABOUT 325 NM SE OF THE MOUTH OF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER MOVING NW AT 5 KT. ESTIMATED CENTRAL PRESSURE IS 1007 MB.
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WIND SPEED IS 30 KT WITH GUSTS TO 40 KT. CLUSTERS OF SCATTERED SHOWERS/ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS COVER A BROAD AREA E OF 91W OVER THE FLORIDA...CUBA...AND THE N YUCATAN PENINSULA.



IMHO that deserves to be posted again.
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2473. scott39 1:38 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
The ULL should be out of the picture by tomorrow morning. The environment evidently is moistening up because of the departure of the ULL. The convection wane can be attributed to the diurnal minimum.
Thanks
Member Since: June 13, 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 6207
2474. ShenValleyFlyFish 1:39 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting Chicklit:
The only ones who get to post in caps IMO is the NHC.
And that is a hold over from days of telegraph and ticker-tape. Don't know why they don't re-format. Would be a lot more legible.
Member Since: September 9, 2007 Posts: 36 Comments: 4684
2477. Tazmanian 1:40 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting Hurricanes101:


the ULL is not gone, it is to the NW of TD 5 and moving quickly to the west, in the end the impacts of the ULL will be less tomorrow than they are now and it should overall not have a huge impact on the system



ok
Member Since: May 21, 2006 Posts: 5088 Comments: 111320
2479. pottery 1:40 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting tacoman:
chicklit the pressure has dropped 5 mb in the last 12 hours...you figure it out the ull is gone its not hampering danielle anymorw ...sst 88-90 degrees...i have people we went through enough chicklit they deserve to know whats going on and thats what im doing...

Pressure is at 1007 now, Taco. It was 1007 here this afternoon........
Not seeing a bad storm out of this.
Your shouting is what turns people off.
Show some more reasons for your forecast, and folks might take them more seriously.
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2480. angiest 1:40 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting ShenValleyFlyFish:
And that is a hold over from days of telegraph and ticker-tape. Don't know why they don't re-format. Would be a lot more legible.


We had that discussion a couple of months ago or so. Something about the WMO still wanting weather advisories to go out that way since some places may still use that old tech.
Member Since: August 26, 2006 Posts: 16 Comments: 4757
2481. MiamiHurricanes09 1:40 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting Hurricanes101:


the ULL is not gone, it is to the NW of TD 5 and moving quickly to the west, in the end the impacts of the ULL will be less tomorrow than they are now and it should overall not have a huge impact on the system
Yeah the ULL will be helping and not helping the system tomorrow. There will likely be some dry air entrainment on the westward quadrant, however it will also ventilate the system.
Member Since: September 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
2482. Chicklit 1:41 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
TD5 will generate a lot of spin and may very well amount to a relatively minimal Tropical Storm. We've seen it happen before.
But we all know what this season can do. Just watchin and waitin and hopin we don't get hurt too bad.
Member Since: July 11, 2006 Posts: 14 Comments: 10244
2483. MechEngMet 1:41 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting pottery:

If HATS happen, we are in Dire Straights for true........


...raining 'hats' and dogs? ??
Member Since: April 13, 2010 Posts: 0 Comments: 353
2484. Abacosurf 1:41 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
Link.


look at 180 hrs....lol
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2485. Kat3sNoBreeze 1:41 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting earthlydragonfly:
Here is a shot I got from TD5 last night

Cool I just realized it was put in the approvers Choice category on this site. WoooHoooo






GREAT shot! Love it...thanks for sharing! :)
Member Since: August 23, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 26
2486. extreme236 1:41 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting tacoman:
chicklit the pressure has dropped 5 mb in the last 12 hours...you figure it out the ull is gone its not hampering danielle anymorw ...sst 88-90 degrees...i have people we went through enough chicklit they deserve to know whats going on and thats what im doing...


hurrkat/stormkat/stormtop why wouldn't you still have the same username if you weren't a troll?
Member Since: August 2, 2007 Posts: 19 Comments: 19234
2487. Chicklit 1:42 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting tacoman:
chicklit the pressure has dropped 5 mb in the last 12 hours...you figure it out the ull is gone its not hampering danielle anymorw ...sst 88-90 degrees...i have people we went through enough chicklit they deserve to know whats going on and thats what im doing...

And that's a good thing, Tacoman.
Losing the caps helps :)
And it's still TD5 (not Danielle).
Puhleese leave the drama to Hollywood.
Member Since: July 11, 2006 Posts: 14 Comments: 10244
2489. pottery 1:42 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting CaicosRetiredSailor:
YOU WANT PEOPLE TO KNOW HATS GOING TO HAPPEN...


Brilliant!!!
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2490. MiamiHurricanes09 1:43 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting extreme236:


hurrkat/stormkat/stormtop why wouldn't you still have the same username if you weren't a troll?
You forget debbykat. LOL!
Member Since: September 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
2491. Ossqss 1:43 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Click to animate







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2492. muddertracker 1:44 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Do bunny ears count as a hat?
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2493. sailingallover 1:44 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting Hurricanes101:
where can I find the tropical wave tracking that everyone has been talking about lately

were 93L and the area east of the Islands one tropical wave at one point or were they always separate?

YES it was mentioned in several TWD's
here is one that talks about it
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/archive/text/TWDAT/TWDAT.201008082357.txt
Member Since: September 1, 2009 Posts: 23 Comments: 982
2494. nrtiwlnvragn 1:44 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Anyone got a link to the GFDL?
Not moe.met.fsu.edu GFDL not updating on that site.
Not coaps.fsu.edu/maue That site does not show surface winds, only 900mb (3,000 ft).
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2495. alaina1085 1:45 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Thanks for the synopsis Storm. Makes alot of sense.
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2496. KATRINABILOXIGIRL 1:45 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Quoting StormW:
TROPICAL DEPRESSION FIVE SYNOPSIS AUG. 10, 2010 ISSUED 9:30 P.M.
Thank you Storm. Very thoroughly informative as usual. Keeping a close eye since this may hinder the delivery of the mail...They don't let us out in over 40 mph winds....
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2497. Patrap 1:45 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 370 Comments: 111244
2498. Joanie38 1:45 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Back ....does anyone have the latest model runs for TD5? Our local mets here in SWLA doesn't seem to concerned with this system at all....What are yalls thoughts on this?? AND....TIA!! :)
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2499. Patrap 1:46 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
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2501. nyhurricaneboy 1:47 AM GMT on August 11, 2010    
Trolls in the chat again; Tanner is still in the Shaun and Tim Chat. I tried getting him on the case, but he won't respond. Please help! =(
Member Since: August 19, 2008 Posts: 104 Comments: 503

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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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