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Bekijk Volledige Versie : Wizdom: het oog van de storm een pentagram!



lennart
14-09-03, 20:48
http://www.ghcc.msfc.nasa.gov/GOES/GOES13452003255093J5V.jpg

De duivel komt thuis :D

Waterval
14-09-03, 20:49
Zeg me dat het een manipulatie is......

lennart
14-09-03, 20:50
Geplaatst door Waterval
Zeg me dat het een manipulatie is......

Komt direct van de nasa site.

http://www.ghcc.msfc.nasa.gov/GOES/GOES13452003255093J5V.jpg

Tomas
14-09-03, 20:53
:D

Fantastisch, hoe je hersenen je ogen helpen met het plaatsen in de juiste context...

barfly
14-09-03, 20:57
Onzin zo ziet de afvoer van m'n douche er ook uit als ik sta te douchen :D

Mafkees
14-09-03, 20:58
DAMN!

Dutchguy
14-09-03, 21:04
Hmmmm, pentagram met de punt naar boven is juist positief. Maar als die storm positief dan.... dan.... kom er niet meer uit.

Wizdom
14-09-03, 21:23
[QUOTE]Geplaatst door lennart
Komt direct van de nasa site.

http://www.ghcc.msfc.nasa.gov/GOES/GOES13452003255093J5V.jpg [/QUOTE

Isabel geadresseerd aan onze pentagram slaven...? :duim:

an3sdej
14-09-03, 21:30
Jammer dat zo'n storm zo vernietigend is, het is verder een prachtig meteorologisch verschijnsel. :roken:

Wizdom
15-09-03, 01:13
Geplaatst door lennart
http://www.ghcc.msfc.nasa.gov/GOES/GOES13452003255093J5V.jpg

De duivel komt thuis :D

Wat een MOOI groot ROOD SIGNAAL zeg voor de States. Dit is nog maar het begin... Als ze niet uit kijken gaat het nog vuur regenen daar op de Soevereine staat van de Masonic Society.

Mark
15-09-03, 06:57
Hmmm waarom zou de duivel deze satanisten straffen? Het zijn toch zijn vriendjes? Ik zou eerder verwachten dat God deze strom stuurt en waarom hanteert God een pentagram? wat een mysteries!

Gelukkig zijn die duivelse Zuid-Koreanen vorige week al door de duivel aangepakt.

Arvid
15-09-03, 15:23
Geplaatst door Mark
Hmmm waarom zou de duivel deze satanisten straffen? Het zijn toch zijn vriendjes? Ik zou eerder verwachten dat God deze strom stuurt en waarom hanteert God een pentagram? wat een mysteries!

Gelukkig zijn die duivelse Zuid-Koreanen vorige week al door de duivel aangepakt.

Zuid-Korea toen en nu Amerika
God is met Noord-Korea!! :lole:

http://edition.cnn.com/interactive/world/0304/gallery.nkorea.history/gal.6.jpg

:lole: :lole:

jaja
15-09-03, 15:48
Geplaatst door Arvid
Zuid-Korea toen en nu Amerika
God is met Noord-Korea!! :lole:



:lole: :lole: God is een atheist..??!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Wizdom
15-09-03, 16:09
Geplaatst door jaja
God is een atheist..??!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

U.S. East Coast prepares for Isabel
Monday, September 15, 2003 Posted: 11:00 AM EDT (1500 GMT)



This animated map shows Isabel's movement from 7:45 p.m. EDT Sunday to 4:45 a.m. Monday.

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A correct hurricane forecast can mean the difference between life and death. CNN's John Zarrella reports. (September 14)

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• Interactive: Safety Tips
• Flash animation: How hurricanes form
• Gallery: Top 10 worst hurricanes
• Map: Most hit areas in the U.S.
• Special report: Hurricane Season

HURRICANE ISABEL

At 5 a.m. Monday EDT
Latitude: 24.8 degrees north
Longitude: 69 degrees west
Position: 525 miles (845 kilometers) east of Nassau, Bahamas
Top sustained winds: Near 150 mph (240 kph)
Map: Projected path

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(CNN) -- Hurricane Isabel's winds have slowed slightly as the dangerous storm remains on a predicted path toward the U.S. East Coast, the National Hurricane Center said Monday.

The latest advisory, issued at 5 a.m. EDT, rated Isabel as a Category 4 hurricane, with maximum sustained winds of near 150 mph (240 km/h), 5 mph (8 km/h) slower than they were late Sunday.

"It's a little too early to know whether we're going to have a direct hit on the Eastern U.S., but it's increasingly likely that the area from the Mid-Atlantic to the Northeast will be affected by Isabel," said Ed Rappaport, the hurricane center's deputy director.

According to the hurricane center, the storm is about 820 miles (1,320 kilometers) south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, and about 525 miles (845 kilometers) east of Nassau, Bahamas.

Isabel was moving to the west-northwest near 10 mph (17 km/h), and forecasters said they expected it to turn gradually northwest during the next 24 hours.

U.S. Navy and Air Force commanders are considering whether to order hurricane evacuations for military ships and aircraft to safer inland bases and ocean areas outside the storm's path.

If plans are activated, hundreds of fighter jets, transport planes and helicopters would be sent to safer inland bases, and ships would be ordered to evacuate bases and sail to safety outside Isabel's projected path.

The hurricane has twice reached the Category 5 threshold of 156 mph (250 km/h), but forecasters said the storm likely would experience a gradual weakening before landfall. Category 5 is the most powerful hurricane rating on the Saffir-Simpson scale of strength.

If it does reach land, Isabel is expected to be a Category 3 hurricane, with winds from 111 mph to 130 mph (178 km/h to 208 km/h), center meteorologist Michelle Mainelli said.

Category 3 storms are capable of doing structural damage to homes and buildings and blowing down large trees. Low-lying escape routes are cut by rising water at least three hours before the eye of the hurricane hits.

But Rappaport said that minor fluctuations in strength would make little difference in Isabel's effects.

"Once you get to a Category 3 or higher, you can expect extensive damage and adding 5 mph or taking away 5 mph is not going to change that," he said. "This will be one of the strongest storms seen in the landfall area in the last several decades."

The hurricane center warned that large ocean swells and dangerous surf conditions were likely over parts of the Greater and Lesser Antilles, the Turks and Caicos Islands, and the Bahamas over the next several days. Those surf conditions also were predicted to affect the Southeastern U.S. coast.

The last Category 5 hurricane to strike the United States was Andrew in 1992.

Rappaport said the storm's strength -- and the relative inexperience in dealing with strong hurricanes -- could pose problems.

"We don't have many people who have gone through that," he said. "The people who went through Andrew went through Hugo, but we haven't had a major hurricane of this strength since those two hit the United States."

Hurricane Hugo came ashore as a Category 4 storm in South Carolina in September 1989, tracking well inward over western North Carolina and Virginia, through the Midwest and Great Lakes area and into Canada as it gradually diminished. In 1996, Fran, a Category 3 hurricane, made landfall in North Carolina.


Mark Twisdale carries a piece of plywood as he prepares his vacation home in Atlantic Beach, North Carolina, for Isabel's possible arrival.
National Hurricane Center Director Max Mayfield advised residents on the East Coast to take time to check their hurricane plans and know what to do should Isabel strike their communities.

Southeastern retailers reported that residents were stocking up on supplies, according to The Associated Press.

"They don't want to get caught with their pants down," Steve Myers, co-manager of a lumber store in Georgetown, South Carolina, told the AP. Despite higher plywood prices, Myers told the AP that prices are still "cheaper than a $300 window." (Full story)

Andrew -- which stands as the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history -- killed 43 people in Florida and Louisiana and caused $26.5 billion in damage, according to the National Weather Service.

Another Category 5 hurricane, Camille, hit the upper Gulf Coast in 1969, causing $1.4 billion in damage.

In 1998, Category 5 hurricane Mitch hit Central America, killing about 11,000 people, according to the AP.


De laatste grote Hurricane "aanslag" was ook niet lang na de 1e golfoorlog. Dit moet wel deel 2 zijn want de 2e golfoorlog is ook niet zo lang geleden afgelopen.

jaja
15-09-03, 16:55
Geplaatst door Wizdom
...
De laatste grote Hurricane "aanslag" was ook niet lang na de 1e golfoorlog. Dit moet wel deel 2 zijn want de 2e golfoorlog is ook niet zo lang geleden afgelopen. wat zijn die moslims in Bangladesh slecht zeg, God straft ze jaarlijks met massieve overstromingen .. er verdrinken er jaarlijks grote aantallen ... Aardbevingen in Iran en Turkije zijn een duidelijk teken dat dat duivelse staten zijn ... :duizelig: :zwaai:
of te wel ... God heeft wel wat beters te doen ...

Wizdom
16-09-03, 12:25
Isabel eyes East Coast
Storm could cause 'extensive damage'
Tuesday, September 16, 2003 Posted: 5:22 AM EDT (0922 GMT)



A view of Hurricane Isabel from space taken from the international space station on Monday.

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Hurricane chasers show off their storm tracking vehicle.

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A correct hurricane forecast can be the difference between life and death.

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Only a handful of dangerous hurricanes have hit the U.S. mainland.

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• Interactive: Preparing for Isabel

CNN/Money: Isabel threatens U.S., insurers

CNN ACCESS: A big impact predicted

Red Cross: Donations needed

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• Interactive: Safety Tips
• Flash animation: How hurricanes form
• Gallery: Top 10 worst hurricanes
• Map: Most hit areas in the U.S.
• Special report: Hurricane Season

HURRICANE ISABEL
At 5 a.m. Tuesday EDT
Latitude: 26.6 degrees north
Longitude: 70.7 degrees west
Position: 660 miles (1,065 kph) south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina
Top sustained winds: Near 115mph (185 kph)
Map: Projected path

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(CNN) -- The forecast ferocity of Hurricane Isabel prompted Congress to consider leaving Washington early, spurred the U.S. military to deploy some of its ships and aircraft, and had residents from North Carolina to Maryland closely monitoring the latest weather reports.

"If Isabel stays close to our forecast track and if it does make landfall as a major hurricane, it has the potential for large loss of life if we don't take it seriously and prepare," National Hurricane Center Director Max Mayfield told CNN.

At 5 a.m. EDT, Isabel was about 660 miles (1,065 kilometers) south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. The storm was moving northwest at 7 mph (11 kph), a motion that was expected to continue over the next 24 hours.

Satellite imagery and reports from a hurricane hunter plane showed the storm had become less organized overnight Tuesday.

The Hurricane Center said the may issue a hurricane watch for portions of the mid-Atlantic coast later Tuesday.

The three-day forecast track shows Isabel's center striking North Carolina's Pamlico Sound -- about 45 miles north of Morehead City and 120 miles east of Raleigh -- at 2 p.m. EDT Thursday, then turning north, slightly inland of Chesapeake Bay.

Isabel's maximum sustained winds have decreased to near 115 mph (185 kph), with higher gusts, making it a solid Category 3 storm. That was slightly weaker than the system had been over the weekend, but Mayfield warned that the storm was still "very dangerous."

"I would expect to see extensive damage to a pretty large section of the country" if the hurricane sticks to the forecast track, Mayfield told CNN. "It's been a long time since we've had a hurricane on this track."

As the hurricane lumbers closer to shore, the American Red Cross is warning that its Disaster Relief Fund is empty. The relief organization says coastal residents can still depend on it to provide food, clothing, shelter and medication replacement. But unless donations start pouring in, the Red Cross won't be able to provide financial assistance to hurricane victims. (Full story)

With his state possibly in the bull's-eye for Isabel, Virginia Gov. Mark Warner declared a state of emergency Monday, warning of the potential for significant coastal and inland flooding, damaging winds and tornadoes throughout the state.

Leaders in the U.S. House and Senate considered shortening their work week because of the storm. Leadership aides on both sides of the aisle said they would likely work through Wednesday before taking off, but the final call would not be made before Tuesday, when forecasters have a clearer picture of Isabel's path.

Although the center of Isabel is forecast to hit North Carolina Thursday afternoon, Mayfield said, the first tropical storm-force winds could show up at the coast late Wednesday. Those winds extend outward as far as 205 miles (328 kilometers) from the center.

"We could very well have a hurricane watch issued sometime even tomorrow morning, and then the warning will follow probably tomorrow evening," Mayfield said.

Large ocean swells and dangerous surf conditions are being seen along parts of the U.S. mid-Atlantic coastline.

North Carolina residents prepare for storm
Residents of Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina, about 110 miles southwest of Pamlico Sound, were boarding up their windows Monday afternoon, and boat owners were moving their boats inland, CNN correspondent Jeff Flock reported.

"They really understand that this is a massive storm," Flock said.

In Manteo, North Carolina, Burwell Evans of Ace Hardware said business was up 25 percent Monday, with customers buying such items as batteries, flashlights and kerosene lamps. He said they are "selling batteries like crazy. ... Anything that goes with emergencies."

Evans, 80, has lived in the area for 53 years. He said he has been through many hurricanes and will not leave.

He also said he will not board his home or business. He noted that some businesses in the area are taping windows.


Windows are taped in a Virginia flower shop in preparation for a possible strike by Hurricane Isabel.
The U.S. Navy Atlantic Fleet has ordered its ships in the Norfolk, Virginia, area to deploy. The order to move about 40 ships and submarines and dozens of aircraft came late Monday afternoon, and the first ships will steam out early Tuesday, according to Navy officials.

There are about 70 warships currently in the immediate mid-Atlantic area. Forty of the ships in the Norfolk area are in a "ready" condition that would allow them to deploy on short notice; the remaining 24 are in maintenance or dry-dock, and will either be tied down or moved to designated inlet points to ride out the storm, Navy officials said.

In the first movement of military assets out of the storm's projected path, 21 F-15E aircraft are scheduled to fly from their home at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base in North Carolina to Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma on Tuesday.

Hundreds more Navy and Air Force fighter jets, transport planes and helicopters from Air Force bases at Langley, Virginia.; Charleston and Shaw, South Carolina; and Pope, North Carolina; could be ordered to evacuate to bases inland.

Plans for Air Force One, which is based at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland, had not been completed.

Andrews has already declared "Hurricane Condition Four," which means 50 mph winds are anticipated in the next 72 hours. Military sources say the Air Force must decide whether to put Air Force One in a secure hangar facility or send it inland to a safer spot.

Billions lost to previous big storms
Category 3 storms are capable of substantial destruction on land. Small homes and buildings could suffer structural damage, large trees could be blown down and coastal flooding is possible. Terrain lower than 5 feet above sea level could be flooded eight miles or more inland.

Ed Rappaport, the deputy director of the NHC, said Isabel "will be one of the strongest storms seen in the landfall area in the last several decades."

Meteorologist Michelle Mainelli said no hurricane stronger than a Category 3 has scored a direct hit north of North Carolina in recorded history, though some have skirted the Atlantic coast.

Three of the four costliest storms in U.S. history made landfall in the Carolinas.

Hurricane Andrew, the Category 5 storm that slammed southern Florida in 1992, was the costliest, killing 58 people and causing $26.5 billion in damage. It crossed the Gulf of Mexico and was still a Category 3 storm when it hit Louisiana.

Hurricane Hugo came ashore as a Category 4 storm in South Carolina in September 1989, devastating Charleston, ripping through Charlotte, North Carolina, and then tracking well inward over western Virginia, through the Midwest and Great Lakes area and into Canada as it diminished.

It was the second-costliest hurricane in U.S. history, causing $7 billion in damage and killing 60 people.

Hurricane Floyd, a Category 2 by the time it came ashore in South Carolina in 1999, was the third-costliest hurricane, at $4.5 billion in damages.

Thousands of buildings -- most of them homes -- were razed after severe flooding from North Carolina to New Jersey. The deaths of 47 people were attributed to the storm.

Hurricane Fran, a Category 3 storm, made landfall in North Carolina in 1996, causing $3.2 billion in damage. More than 30 people died in the storm, which left some areas without power for more than two weeks. Severe flooding was reported north into New Jersey, and deaths were attributed to the storm as far north as Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

CNN Pentagon correspondent Barbara Starr contributed to this article.

Mark
16-09-03, 12:37
Wat een afgrijselijke layout hebben die CNN berichten :(