Newsgroups: lter.ced
Path: LTERnet!news
From: Bruce Hayden <bph@amazon.evsc.virginia.edu>
Subject: CED 3.5 (MAY 1)
Message-ID: <1994May5.183328.13271@lternet.washington.edu>
Sender: news@lternet.washington.edu
Organization: Long Term Ecological Research
Date: Thu, 5 May 1994 18:02:52 GMT

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  Vol.3  No.5 ::::::::::: May Issue :::::::::::: May 1, 1994

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CED METADATA ---- CED is the Climate/Ecosystem Dynamics bulletin board of
the LTER network. In CED, you will find exchanges of ideas, information,
data,bibliographies,literature discussions, and a place to find experts within
the LTER community.  We are interested in both climate controls onecosystems 
and ecosystem controls on climate.  As this is an inter-disciplinary
activity,we hope to provide things that you might not come across in your
work atyour LTER site.

CED is a product of the LTER climate committee and contributions to CED for
general e-mail release may be sent to either David Greenland of Andrews
LTER [Greenlan@oregon.uoregon.edu] or to Bruce Hayden of the Virginia Coast
Reserve LTER [bph@envsci.evsc.virginia.edu].  We expect that the scope of
CED will evolve and reflect the interests of the contributors and users of
this service.  CED will be issued as the preparation work gets done
(usually monthly).  Back-issus of CED may be requested from Daniel Pommert 
[daniel@lternet.washington.edu] by the file name given in the masthead. 
Daniel can also add people to the CED mailing list.   

Feedback on CED from LTER scientists is welcome (non-$$$$ contributions
also welcome.)  For example, please forward citations of climate &
ecosystem publications on your site.  We are keeping a LTER wide
bibliographyon Climate/Ecosystem Dynamics that we pass on via E-mail. 


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In doing CED all these years now I have learned that the favorite, best
choice for a deadline for anything is the first of the month.  This month
it was the LTER Augmentation proposal, a Sustainable Biosphere Initiative
paper and student thesis defense activities.  So I am a few days late
again.  Next month I join a number of LTER types for a trip to Hungary to
do the international thing (May 23-29) so I may be tardy again next month. 
Thanks for your patience.

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For those who use Gopher or MOASIC to view CED, you can search all the
issues for key words of your choice and find which back issue contains the
desired item.  Every word in CED is included as a key word so don't search
for the following words "the", "and", "a" and other frequent words we all
use.  Plans are afoot to step into a MOSAIC CED hypertext version to
include first class graphics.  A MOSAIC-wise student will be on hand to
help out on this task this summer.  CED will still be sent out by e-mail
and will on GOPHER.  Before we do this we will do what we can to get you up
and running on MOSAIC.

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Paul, Ken, Pieter and Patricia Novelli, Masarie, Tans and Lang respectively
bring us news of remarkable changes in atmospheric carbon monoxide (Sci.
263:1587-1590).  Northern Hemisphere CO fell by 18% between June 1990 and
June 1993.  Southern Hemisphere CO fell by 21% over the same years.  These
numbers are based on 27 stations (71 N to 35 S) around the world and weekly
measurement intervals.  Here is what happened earlier.  From 1950s through
the 1980s CO increased an average 1% per year in the NH.  There was no
trend in the SH.  To understand these numbers we need to look at the way
the 1% per year (Northern Hemisphere) was determined.  The lack of a trend
in the Southern Hemisphere CO was based on one station at Cape Point, South
Africa.  Novelli et al. note that the year (1950-1951) values were based on
spectroscopic measurements.  They do not say how the 1980s values were
determined.  So the input from which +1% trend in CO is calculated is only
two points!  I bet they got a mighty fine correlation out of their SPSS
with that data.  Now with detailed station records in a place since 1988
and weekly measurements, we know a bit more about variations in atmospheric
CO.  There is a seasonal signal -- late winter/early spring maximum and
late summer/early fall minimum and reversed in the Southern Hemisphere.  CO
levels decrease from north to south.

The decline in CO was found all 27 of Novelli stations and over all seasons
and on an annual basis, the decline was from -7.8 ppb to -1.5 ppb.  The
seasonal cycle has a big-time amplitude 45 ppb to 230 ppb so it is not easy
to see the trend with the naked eye when feasting on the data.  As a
climatologist I might whisper to self-respecting climatological colleagues:
"Hey, you don't really believe the 1% trend between 1950 and the 1980s do
you."  

Where does CO come from?  a) burning fossil fuels, b) biomass burning, c)
oxidation of CH4, d) oxidation of non-methane hydrocarbons (NMHC), e) all
of the above.  Answer: e!  Those NMHC are are my favorite biogenic
hydrocarbons: terpenes, hemiterpenes, aromatics, waxes etc.  It would
appear that our biosphere is deeply involved and is a driver in atmospheric
chemistry and climate. Each of the four source of CO amounts somewhere
between 400 and 1000 Tg (1 Tg = 10^12 g).  Where does CO end up? a)
reacting with OH to make CO2 and H. b) all of the above.  Answer: b! 
Pollution control efforts to reduce human CO production is given a passing
grade with a -0.9 ppb per year 1976 to 1990.  This would amount to a -1.7%
decline per year due to cleaning the human nest during the years of the
not-to-believed 1% increase per year.  

The authors suggest that Mt. Pinatubo may be involved.  First they say that
the 1% (2 data point) historical increase is real.  So what caused the
"sudden" decline?  Here is their Mt. Pinatubo metaphysics.  Pinatubo
decreased O3 in the stratosphere.  That let more UV down to the troposphere
where there would be more break-up of tropospheric O3 and an increase  in
OH which would use up and reduce tropospheric CO.  The sample size for this
explanation is N=1, e.g. one volcano. I am not convinced.  Three of the CO
data curves they all show pre-date Pinatubo and the decline in tropospheric
CO clearly began well before we had to get out of the Philllipines due to
the Pinatubo ash making a mess of our military bases.  Perhaps we can use
CO to predict volcanoes. Novelli also suggest that the "economic
contraction" in the former USSR may have reduced CO emissions and
contributed to the decline in CO in our atmosphere.  However, the declines
also predate New Years Day 1992 when the peoples republic fell on hard
times and Boris became an in and Gorby became an out.  

The take home message then is that for the period when our data is
adequate, CO has declined rapidly.  We don't know if the changes are within
natural variations or merit the usual dooms day approach.  It is hard when
we cut our teeth on the idea that the upward trend in CO is bad to find
that the trend is of the opposite sign.  Do we call that good.  Selling
goods to get research funds is not a growth industry.  

Science magazine reporter Richard Kerr reminds us that beginning in 1991
the greenhouse gases CO2, CH4, and N20 rates of increase sharply slowed or
stopped and input of oxygen "jumped."  CH4 is the one that has stopped
increasing!  There are guesses that the Russians have patched the leaks in
their gas pipelines now that markets rather than technocrats rule the
roost.  Kerr called the new CO trends indicate "improved vital signs." 
Richard values all this as good.  N20 (unpublished but leaked) slowed its
increase following Pinatubo.  It was only a few months ago that people who
said that volcanoes and halogen emissions might play a role in O3 and OH
chemistry were dubbed "not very green."  It is apparently OK to blame
volcanoes now.  For me this is all a lot of fun.

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     ***                      THE HAIR HOUSE                       ***
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My wife and I, on road trips, keep our eyes peeled to the signage (my
wife's term) come-ons for beauty shops (aka shoppes). The choice of
store-front names is sometimes worth remembering.  Near the Lynchburg,
Virginia airport there is the Hairport. There is no need to wait on a
runway when you need a trim if you are in Lynchburg.  Gary Larson advanced
one increment of his many increments of fame with his "Buck and Cut"
establishment that featured an electric bull instead of a barber's chair. 
My wife went to a "Hair Hut" for a  while.  Charlottesville's phone book
has Chateau Darlene, Che's Beauty Salon (I thought he was killed in
Bolivia), Country Cutting on 19 Deer Drive, the Crowning Touch, Grill's
Hair Styling (that's a hot place), Hair Graphics, Hair to Please, Imelda's 
Beauty Salon (perhaps you can get shoes there as well), and Mane Cut. 
Check your yellow pages for your local salons.

So what does all this have to do with climate?  Well consider the recent
book review  in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 
(Tornado! 84 Minutes, 94 Lives by J. M. O'Toole, 1993 in paperback by the
publisher DATABOOKS). In the book there is the story of the "Hair House". 
The Hair House Tornado began in Petersham, the current home town of David
Foster and a stones throw from the Harvard Forest LTER site, then made its
way to Worcester where it crafted the Hair House.  This Tornado, in
Worcester, is known as the Worcester Tornado (7 June 1953).  O'Toole
writes, "A house in the path of the tornado was bombarded by stalks of
grass and straw carried by the wind.  Its velocity drove the stalks and
stems into the clapboard siding of the house in such quantity that it would
be called the 'hair house'."  A mother and her child were lifted and
transported 400 feet.  And you thought it would be hard to get a gopher
turtle into the air to make a turtle-in-a-hailstone.  Four riders in an car
decided to ride out the storm.  Seventy five yards in flight after a
Harrier style take-off, and they ended up on a house roof.  A bit of
hospitalization and they were off to their next great adventure.  

A Worcester neurosurgeon, called to autopsy duty at the morgue, reported
that one tornado victim had lost his "entire intracranial contents."  He
goes on to note that there there must have been a "tremendous suction to
remove the cranial contents."  Speaking of sucking sounds try this one on. 
Nature 125:728-729 (1930) "Whirlwind sucks up carp and pike."  The
waterspout in question happened on May 15, 1586 at Kestrzan in Bohemia. 
This whirlwind carried the water of two ponds into the air and with all the
carp and pike that they contained. File this one under core area:
disturbance and fish dispersal.  

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Local newspapers are always a source of weather and climate fun and
amusement. From Enid, OK we have a reports of a proposed Tornado Buster.  I
will use capital letters to indicate that this is a one of a kind thing, a
proper noun.  The Tornado Buster is the creation of one Gary C. Smith of
somewhere in and Arizona and also Las Vegas.  His reason for inventing the
Tornado Buster is that "I just don't like tornadoes tearing things up." 

To avoid falling into the ranks of a famous former VP and having to give up
my PI-ship, I checked my Webster.  Tornadoes is preferred over Tornados as
is volcanoes over volcanos.  Tomatoes and Potatoes is it. Do not leave out
the e.  However, Hobos is preferred over Hoboes and Solos over Soloes but
Hoboes and Soloes are OK.  For the musically inclined it is altos and
bassos, sans the e. If you discover Webster's rule-of-thumb let me know.  I
am going to gin-up my memory cells and try to keep it straight. My version
of Microsoft Word took os or oes for everything but solos.  It rejected
soloes.  Microsoft should never go on the campaign trail.

The Tornado Buster is a 150-pound bomb that will be flown into a twister
with a remote-control helicopter.  He has the helicopter already.  He
claims that detonation of the bomb inside a tornado will snuff it out. 
Robert Maddox of the national Severe Storms Laboratory is taking a "total
hands off" approach to Mr. Smith's idea.  Who said a good beaurocarat was
hard to find? Smith worries that tornadoes send "ozone-eating" CFC into the
upper atmosphere and that puts us all at risk.  So he plans to include a
cleansing agent "similar to Clorox 2" in his bomb.  Sounds like he will use
a peroxide bombshell to do the job.  The bomb will also have "incendiary"
properties and will cause the tornado to catch fire and burn itself out in
a few seconds.  Local government officials note that they would "take a
long hard look at it before we make any decisions."  

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Between 1873 and 1950 there were 15,234 tornadoes recorded in the lower 48.
 On a annual sum basis, there was a 4X increase in tornado reports over the
77 years.  The U. S. epicenter of tornado frequency moved eastward over the
period of record.  For the 134 tornadoes which had their direction of
rotation recorded, the number of clockwise (anticyclonic) spinning
tornadoes has fallen (36% to 8%)  in favor of counter-clockwise (cyclonic)
rotating systems.  By chance alone, the probability of finding these
results is only 0.0075. 

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     ***                 HEBDOMADALITY IN TORNADOES                ***
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There is a strong weekly (hebdomadal) periodicity in tornado reports.  The
number of tornadoes reported on Saturdays is less than the daily average by
7.1 standard deviations.  Not a shabby outlier for your average data set. 
The chance of this by chance alone is less <10^-9.  Hebdomadality is seen
in 75% of the years and  77% of the lower 48 states had Saturday tornadoes
less common than the mean (p <10^-4)  In 19 states, Saturday was the day of
tornado minimum in the week (p <1.5 x 10^-5).  12 of the 21 coastal states
showed the Saturday minimum and 19 of the 21 were below the average
frequency for any old day of the week.!  Goings-on in coastal states are
different from the interior at the p<0.04 level.  The mother-state of our
LTER network (Washington) had 24 tornadoes in the period of record.  None
has ever occurred on Saturday or Sunday (p ~ 2.2 x 10^-4).

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Meteorologists have gone through gut-wrenching searches for periodicities
in weather data.  In most of the 20th century the people who did such work
were called "cycle hunters".  Name calling is now out of fashion in America
else a special interests group will block your driveway.  A few weather
periodicity searchers still hide in the bushes.  At seven days, we do have
an often cited quasi-periodicity called the synoptic cycle.  The synoptic
cycle is about the length of time it takes for weather systems to get from
the West coast to the East coast.  It is thought of as just the right time
for a continental scale process. 

[An aside: 3500 miles in transit from Network Office to the VCR in 7 days =
500 miles per day = 20.8 miles per hour.  Average USofA wind speeds are ~
10 to 12 mph.  So pressure systems move faster than the air they contain! 
The movement of pressure does not follow the movement of mass.]

The best paper on the hebdomadal synoptic cycle is Namias, J. 1966. A
weekly periodicity in eastern U. S. precipitation and its relation to
hemispheric circulation. Tellus XVII(4):731-744.  
_________________________________________________
RAINFALL BY DAY (Dec. 1, 1964 to Feb. 15, 1965)         
averaged for 39 stations from Key West, FL to Harris-
burg, PA and Evansville, IN to Cape Hatteras, NC.
_________________________________________________
0         1           2         3   INCHES 

X X X X X X X X X X X X     Sunday
X X                         Monday
X X                         Tuesday
X X                         Wednesday
X X X                       Thursday
X X X X X X X X X X X       Friday
X X X X X X X X X X X X X   Saturday
_________________________________________________

In winter, in most years, this seven day cycle is evident.  My secretary in
the 1970s (I go without now.) used to watch this cycle and report to me "It
is Tuesday this year."  "We are in our 9th week of rain on Tuesday."  It
doesn't happen on the same day every year and in some years it is not 7
days but as much as 10 days but still like clockwork.  If our
work-a-day-world calendar was a 10 day one rather than a 7 days, we might
also be come aware of years with the longer cycle.  My longest,
every-seven-days of the same weather type, is 13 weeks.  This regularily
does come to an end and a new repetitiveness of the weather sets in.  In
summer, based on my study of storm passages of the east coast the preferred
length of the quasi-periodicity (I am not a cycle hunter!) is a
hard-to-notice 8 days and not the same day each year.  So that is the
difference with the hebdomadalness of the tornadoes.  In tornadoes it
happens on the same day of the week in almost every year!

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     ***                   HUMAN HEBDOMADALNESS                    ***
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I have looked long and hard and have yet to find a natural, aka non-human,
cause of a periodicity that falls on the same day of the week, week after
week after week, year after year after year.  So, do members of our
species, in our inadvertent ways, cause this same-day-of-the-week weekly
periodicity in Tornadoes???  [Notice how gender-reference-free I said
that.] Who could think such a dumb thing?  John D. Isaacs, J. W. Stork,
David B. Goldstein and Gerald L. Wick that's who!  Who would publish such
an outlandish theory?  Nature that's who!  [Vol. 253:254-255.] The Nature
paper was 20.5 column inches long.  The firestorm by kibitzers in the
Matters Arising section of the April 1, 1976 [260:457-461] issue was 92.5
inches long! One needs only to go to Citation Index to find that John D.
Isaacs has a citation record as long as your arm and in the best journals. 
Now, he may have the good fortune of having a bit of a "halo" effect in
getting his tornado paper past the Nature reviewers but pass it did,
firestorm there was, and it has been quiet ever since.  No citations of
Isaac et al. since Vol. 253.

Clearly, it was not the observations of changes in tornado climate that
provoked the heated response but the cause of it all proposed by Isaacs and
friends.  I can see Kevin Costner starring in it now.  "Build interstates
with median strips and tornados will come."  "For they have sown the wind,
and they shall reap the whirlwind..." Hosea 8:7.  In the U. S. during the
ramping up of the cold war, Ike started to built the Interstate System to
be able to move those tanks around with the greatest of ease.  It was a
smash hit and the four-lane-with-median-strip highway is now an American
standard.  And with our choice of driving on the right, the whizzing by of
cars in an outbound-inbound, north-south, and east-west, we impart a
cyclonic spin to the air!  In Isaac's day there were ~2 x 10^6 cars and 6 x
10^5 trucks whizzing by each other 20 meters apart at any average moment
and all this is increasing  year by year!  The cyclonic vorticity (spin)
added to the atmosphere in one week, Isaacs said, is larger than the
coriolis vorticity of our Earth and 10^5 to 10^6 times as large as the
vorticity in a single tornado.

Edwin Kessler of the National Severe Storms Laboratory in Norman, Oklahoma
attributed the observations about tornados to faulty reporting of tornadoes
(the-data-must-be-bad argument) or changes in the radiation budget due to
less factory pollution on weekends (the-blame-it-on-pollution argument). 
Others showed that while vorticity between the traffic streams would be
produced, there would be no net vorticity produced at all or almost none. 
Monash University scientist M. J. Manton suggested that if Isaacs would
combine the auto-made vorticity with the convection due to heated road
surfaces he could get is vorticity up into the troposphere where it might
just might make a contribution to tornadoes.  D. K. Lilly of NCAR said you
need to consider angular momentum not vorticity but that the angular
momentum was the second radial moment of its vorticity but the effect, he
said, would still be so small as to be unimportant.  Darkow [Atmospheric
Science at U. of Missouri] said take a good look at press clippings (the
reporting venue for tornadoes).  More people, more sightings, more press!
and .... Daily and weekly papers often don't publish on Sundays so the
reporters don't work on Saturdays and Tornadoes that must of happened don't
get reported.  

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Issacs et al. agreed that there would be a zero net vorticity but the
torque applied to the solid earth had to be compensated for by a cyclonic
torque added to the molecules of the air. They suggest you take a bowl of
water and impart to the water using your fingers, hands or sticks opposite
linear paths through the water (in a row boat this would be opposite
strokes on the oars and the boat rotates).  They note that the vorticity in
the bowl will be a net zero vorticity with just as much clockwise as
counter-clockwise spinning molecules but nonetheless a vortex does form. 
When all the data from press clippings were removed from the full data set,
the weekly periodicity was even stronger not weaker as suggested by Karkow.
 Issacs also notes that there is no weekly periodicity in thunderstorms but
there is in tornadoes.  

Lets be British.  Drive on the left and even things out for a little while.
  Bring back our endangered anticyclonic tornadoes.  To do this, we could
change it all at once (everybody switch sides of the road at 12:01 am) and
even do it on the anniversary date of the first day that the first LTER
site got its money from NSF.  Or, we could have the number of drivers who
switch sides of the road be proportional to the amount of funding currently
coming from NSF to the sites as a collective and complete the process when
all the sites are fully augmented.

Why in Hertford, Hereford, and Hampshire, hurricane hardly ever happen. All
hurricanes rotate cyclonic and our firends the Brits drive on the right,
make anticyclonic vorticity and add anticyclonic torque to the air and
well, you can take it from there.

Later


