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SPC Hand Analysis Example
Despite the powerful computers, there is no substitute for drawing
weather maps by hand for making a forecaster take the time to
thoroughly understand the ongoing weather situation.
And without knowing the intricate details of what's happening now,
a forecast can suffer.
So SPC forecasters routinely draw -- by hand -- surface and upper
air features on printed maps, many times per day.
This is a piece of a surface map containing lows and warm fronts
(bright red), highs and cold fronts (blue), outflow boundaries
(purple dash-dot), pressure troughs and isobars (dark gray),
isotherms and warm spots for temperature (dark red), isodrosotherms
and moist spots for dew point (green), a dryline (dark brown),
and finally, snapshots of wind flow called streamlines (tan).
It may look like a jumbled mess, bad food or abstract art; but to
a severe storms meteorologist, it is stuffed with useful information.
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