SPLASH: Mexican Hail Storm Not Unprecedentened- Not "climate change"

SPLASH: Mexican Hail Storm Not Unprecedentened- Not "climate change" - Hallo friendsDARMO NEWS TODAY, In the article you read this time with the title SPLASH: Mexican Hail Storm Not Unprecedentened- Not "climate change", We have prepared this article for you to read and retrieve information therein. Hopefully the contents of postings Article culture, Article economy, Article health, Article healthy tips, Article news, Article politics, Article sports, We write this you can understand. Alright, good read.

Title : SPLASH: Mexican Hail Storm Not Unprecedentened- Not "climate change"
link : SPLASH: Mexican Hail Storm Not Unprecedentened- Not "climate change"

Read too


SPLASH: Mexican Hail Storm Not Unprecedentened- Not "climate change"

 I did see some startling images, from Gudalajara,  over the week end. The spin was "climate change".  It seemed to me that what happened was actually a cold meets warm, clash of the titan weather systems, wrestling match. So, it was interesting to come across the article linked below and an image of previous massive hailstorms. Uncommon, but not unheard of.

The Mexico hailstorm was uncommon and enormous but not something new
 
 https://ift.tt/2Xoop3P

It was neither unprecedented nor some freak manifestation of climate change.

"It was a mighty hailstorm that hammered Guadalajara Sunday morning, but the amount of reported hail was probably inflated, it wasn’t unprecedented and this wasn’t some new breed of tempest brought about by climate change.
Similar hailstorms have happened before and contributions from climate change, if any, are very uncertain and difficult to discern — at least right now.
To understand what happened in Guadalajra, let’s start with the basics. Hail is common in the warm season months and forms in vigorous thunderstorms that have intense zones of rising air, known as updrafts. These updrafts loft a tremendous amount of water vapor high into the sky, where the vapor condenses, freezes into ice and forms hail.
" Hail, more common in the warm season months."

 That explains why all the times we've had hail it's been in the summer! 


After forming, the hail falls toward the ground, but, if the updrafts are strong enough, the ice is hurled back up into the cloud where more liquid water freezes onto it and the hailstone expands. This process continues until the hail gets so heavy the updraft can no longer lift it, and it crashes to the ground.
Hailstones thus build from the inside out. Cut one in half, and it looks like an onion.
There are different types of hailstorms.
There’s the common pea- to penny-sized barrage that lasts for a few minutes.
In areas more prone to towering, rotating thunderstorms, like the Great Plains, hail may fall over smaller areas, but the stones are much larger, ranging from golf ball to softball size.
Then there is a bizarre type of hail event, sometimes termed a “SPLASH” event — “storms producing large amounts of small hail.”
Aerial views in the aftermath of these SPLASH events often reveal a spectacular, bone-white swath of accumulated ice, contrasting sharply against the otherwise green landscape. It’s as if the cloud disgorged a literal torrent of small ice grains, a “thump” not unlike a massive, localized snowfall. Snow removal equipment can be required to clear it.
The pictures and descriptions of the Guadalajara storm seem to fit the bill of a typical SPLASH event.
SPLASH events occur in different regions of the United States, and according to a scientific study by Matthew Kumjian at Penn State, there is no explanation why one storm may produce extremely large hail, and another storm generates extremely large amounts of small hail.

Storms Producing Large Accumulations of Small Hail- 2018

"Satellite views of Sunday’s storm show a couple of lone thunderstorm clusters in the vicinity of Guadalajara. These most likely contained multiple “feeder” cells that repeatedly circulated pockets of small ice embryos into updraft portion of thunderstorms where hail initiates."

Location, location, location: Gudalajara is located at a higher elevation at the base of mountains... which means ice and water would head downwards..


 "Hail is somewhat unusual in southern areas during the summer because the distance between the freezing layer in the cloud and the hot land surface is large so the ice can melt before reaching the ground. But, because Guadalajara sits near the mountains at an elevation over 5,000 feet, this distance is reduced and hail is more common."
2014 Mexico was hit by massive hail  
"The dramatic piles of hail shown in the pictures and videos probably reflect “banking” of ice by flowing water. Rain water coursing through streets and alleys likely piled up the ice, which floats on the water, into massive accumulations along and around ground obstacles such as vehicles and buildings.
Rather than dumping six feet of hail in one place, “these enormous #hail drifts are almost certainly the result of an urban flash flood during hail-producing thunderstorm, which washed huge volumes of hail ice from around city into culverts & low-lying areas,” tweeted Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California Los Angeles."
Such events have happened before — even right in Mexico. In August 2014, we reported on “two to three feet of hail” that piled up in Mexico City during a torrential storm. “[P]arts of the low latitude city appear transformed into a winter wonderland in the dog days of August,” we wrote."
Texas Panhandle chest high hail in 2012


Chest high hail in Texas
"In April 2012, we showcased “chest-high hail” in the Texas Panhandle after storms erupted over the region:
After Sunday’s hail event in Guadalajara, Jalisco Gov. Enrique Alfaro remarked to the AFP, “Then we ask ourselves if climate change is real. These are never-before-seen natural phenomenons. It’s incredible.”
Enrique Alfaro makes false statements.

"But any link to climate change is currently a stretch."
 No solid evidence linking "climate change" to increased hail. Just wild speculation.
"In an essay posted last month, meteorologist Paul Douglas concluded “there isn’t solid evidence that hail has increased due to climate change” after interviewing four experts on the matter. There’s simply neither sufficient data to support an increase nor a strong theoretical foundation to expect one."


Thus Article SPLASH: Mexican Hail Storm Not Unprecedentened- Not "climate change"

That's an article SPLASH: Mexican Hail Storm Not Unprecedentened- Not "climate change" This time, hopefully can give benefits to all of you. well, see you in posting other articles.

You are now reading the article SPLASH: Mexican Hail Storm Not Unprecedentened- Not "climate change" with the link address https://darmonewst.blogspot.com/2019/07/splash-mexican-hail-storm-not.html

Subscribe to receive free email updates:

0 Response to "SPLASH: Mexican Hail Storm Not Unprecedentened- Not "climate change""

Post a Comment