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[email protected] March 1st 05 06:26 AM

Tsunami affect on mag variation
 
Hello
I know the recent Tsunami caused a considerable variation in the tidal
fluctuations around the world - well in my part anyway, but I have also
been told that after the big wobble caused by the Tsunami the magnetic
north pole has taken a quantum knock.

Does anybody know the facts of this story.

[email protected] March 1st 05 07:16 PM

One degree or less change, according to an Italian astronamer. Know
nothing about tidal change(s) and/or locations.


Bob March 6th 05 09:45 PM

How would an astronomer know the change in the magnetic poles?

Terry Spragg March 7th 05 05:05 PM

Bob wrote:
How would an astronomer know the change in the magnetic poles?


His compass, with deviation previously known, would no longer point
anywhere close to where he wanted to view stars.

tk


Me March 7th 05 06:55 PM

In article , Bob wrote:

How would an astronomer know the change in the magnetic poles?


Astronomers know everthing, just ask them........


Me who actually has asked a few.........

Jeff March 7th 05 10:16 PM

wrote:
One degree or less change, according to an Italian astronamer. Know
nothing about tidal change(s) and/or locations.


I can't believe the global change could be remotely near 1 degree.

Here's more than anyone needs to know on the topic:
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/seg/geomag/geomag.shtml

Dag Stenberg March 8th 05 06:59 PM

Jeff wrote:
wrote:
One degree or less change, according to an Italian astronamer. Know
nothing about tidal change(s) and/or locations.


I can't believe the global change could be remotely near 1 degree.


One degree latitude is 60 miles, which may mean a lot if you are in a
narrow channel...

Dag Stenberg

Jeff March 8th 05 10:47 PM

Dag Stenberg wrote:
Jeff wrote:

wrote:

One degree or less change, according to an Italian astronamer. Know
nothing about tidal change(s) and/or locations.


I can't believe the global change could be remotely near 1 degree.



One degree latitude is 60 miles, which may mean a lot if you are in a
narrow channel...

Dag Stenberg

As I said, I can't believe its remotely near that amount. And we're
talking about variation, not latitude. Actually, the variation
locally could change a lot, since local anomalies can get large, and
if the bottom shifted, the anomalies could shift with it. However,
for the global variation to change, the magnetic poles would have to
shift dramatically, and that hasn't been observed, AFAIK. The normal
annual shift of the poles is roughly 10 miles a year, which is a
variation shift of about one minute in many locations.


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