Weather of all kinds and effects on health

I was reminded of this thread when reading: Black Death and Abrupt Earth Changes in the 14th century (a free pdf book and which is a fascinating read) (https://abruptearthchanges.files.wordpress.com/2017/05/black-death-and-abrupt-earth-changes-in-the-14th-century-pdf.pdf) recommended here: The Ice Age Cometh! Forget Global Warming!.

The author refers to ions and their effect on health, in particular positive ions when brought down on winds from mountains during hot and dry conditions:


9.2.1 Natural changes affecting human behavior
Can electrical and meteorological perturbations in the Earth’s environment drive masses of
people collectively crazy?
Even in todays celestially relatively quiet days, common meteorological phenomena, are
known to affect people’s mental health and irritability. However, such weather phenomena
are not observed to cause widespread severe mental illness or psychoses as described
during the first halve of the 14 th century and other instances of upheaval. One would need to
multiply the effects on our energetic environment, e.g. ionization of air, influence of
electromagnetic long waves (very low frequency, VLF) or charged particles from space.

In “normal” conditions of recent decades, local downward winds on the leeward side of
mountain ranges are often called “Foehn, locally also known as Mistral, sirocco, harmattan,
chinook, sukavei: they have a strong influence,
wherever they blow, lives and even laws are
arranged around them”. (sirocco in the Adriatic Sea, often used to be associated with
outbreaks of epidemics of typhus and the like). in Southern California, the Santa Ana Winds
have similar effects.


Marion Diamond, a retired historian, recounts that in the French Provence, the Mistral (a
strong northerly wind blowing from the Alps) is said to have been a mitigating factor in legal
cases in the past. “If the Mistral blew for 9 days, then a murder committed on the 9 th day was
treated as a crime of passion, not as a cold blooded murder.” 239

W. Lechner et al of the Innsbruck University Clinic of Gynecology describe how the ‘Föhn’ as
a warm, dry descending wind on the leeward side of mountain ranges, allegedly affects
various medical phenomena.
“A correlation was found with the occurrence of thrombosis,
lung embolism, heart attack, and other conditions.
Further, Föhn is also made responsible for
an increase in criminality and suicidal tendencies.“
240

“In the study, the observed birth rates in Föhn regions was found to be 10 % higher during
Föhn days. Among the proposed reasons are changes in air pressure, changes in
ionization balance, increase presence of exotic gasses (nitric oxides, radium
emanation) as well as the influence of electromagnetic long waves (very low
frequency, VLF)”.
At least 30% of the German population is weather sensitive.
241

According to a 1981 study, researchers believe they have documented some psychological
effects of positive ions. The experiments were described by Dr. Jonathan M. Charry of
Rockefeller University and Dr. Frank B.W. Hawkinshire 5 th of N.Y.U. in an issue of the
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. The apparent effects of positive ions included
increased tension and irritability as well as a slowing of reaction times.


“Much of the early research on this subject was conducted in Israel, where the sharav has a
marked effect. It has been reported that 30 percent of the population becomes ill with
migraine, nausea, vomiting, irritability, dimness of vision, respiratory symptoms and
other effects.


The symptoms are said to appear a day or two before heat and dryness become severe, but
when air blowing in from the desert is already laden with positive ions.”
242





239
Historians are Past Caring https://learnearnandreturn.wordpress.com/2014/05/17/and_they_call_the_wind/
Lechner W. et al;; 1981: University Clinic of Gynecology, Innsbruck Austria.,
241
Zimmer, Dieter E;; 1990.: „Der Mensch und sein Wetter“ (ZEIT magazin,)
242
New York Times, WALTER SULLIVAN October 6, 1981
http://www.nytimes.com/1981/10/06/science/ions-­created-­by-­winds-­may-­prompt-­changes-­in-­emotional-­states.html
 
itellsya said:
I was reminded of this thread when reading: Black Death and Abrupt Earth Changes in the 14th century (a free pdf book and which is a fascinating read) (https://abruptearthchanges.files.wordpress.com/2017/05/black-death-and-abrupt-earth-changes-in-the-14th-century-pdf.pdf) recommended here: The Ice Age Cometh! Forget Global Warming!.

The author refers to ions and their effect on health, in particular positive ions when brought down on winds from mountains during hot and dry conditions:


[...see above]

Speaking of Foehn winds (and other naming), we get them here often enough, and in winter they are called our Chinook winds aka the Snow Eating winds after shedding moister before hitting the prairies. From the Weather Doctor it cites: http://www.islandnet.com/~see/weather/elements/chinook.htm

They flow off the mountain ridges, rushing winds that are very hot and very dry. Along the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains, they have been called "Snow Eaters" but today are more commonly known by their native American name: Chinook.

Such hot and dry winds descending mountain slopes are found around the world. Since they were first studied in the Alps, they are generically known by their local Alpine name: the Fohn winds (or Foehn, or more correctly Föhn winds). Fohn winds flow off mountain ridges, usually in the lee of the prevailing wind direction. In Libya, their local name is ghibli, while in Java they're called the koembang. From off the Andes, they blow as the puelche, or on the Argentinian pampas as the zonda. In North America, they have had several local names including the Santa Ana winds of California, but most of us know them as the chinook of the western Prairies and Plains regions.

The fohn-wind family consists of winds that are warm and dry because their air has been warmed by compression as they flow over the mountain ranges and then down the leeward slopes. To describe to you how they typically form, I'll use the Canadian (Alberta) chinook as my example.

From a global perspective, the prevailing wind regime, the Prevailing Westerlies — or just the Westerlies — blow across southern Canada from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic shore. We first pick them up approaching the Pacific coastline where in crossing the northern Pacific waters during the winter, they have picked up heat and moisture from the underlying ocean surface.

When these relatively warm and very moist winds make landfall, they encounter the coastal mountain ranges of British Columbia, they are forced to rise over the mountain barrier on their trek eastward. As the flowing air mass rises toward the summit ridges, it cools until it eventually reaches its saturation temperature. At this time, its water vapour burden condenses into liquid water, first forming clouds, then precipitation. Much of that liquid, or frozen, water will eventually fall as prodigious amounts of rain or snow on the Coastal Ranges, watering the lush temperature rainforests for which the region is famous.

Although the airmass cools by expansion as it rises over the mountains, it gains back a great deal of heat when its water vapour converts to liquid water — the latent heat of condensation which amounts to about 2.5 kilojoules or 597 calories per gram of water. (Additional heat — the latent heat of fusion — is released should the liquid water freeze to ice within the airmass.) By the time the airmass has traversed all of British Columbia's ranges, most of its water content has been lost through precipitation; however, a good portion of that released latent heat still remains in the airmass.

When the airflow descends from the high ridges of the last mountain barrier, the Rockies, onto Alberta's high plains, it warms through the compression of the air, like the air in a bicycle pump when the plunger is pushed down. The airmass warms by about 9.8 Celsius degrees per 1000 metres of descent (5.4 Fahrenheit degrees per 1000 feet).

Since many of the ridge lines in the Rockies are 3000 metres (10,000 feet) above sea-level and the Alberta plain is around 1000 metres (3300 ft), the air will warm by nearly 20 Celsius degrees (36 Fahrenheit degrees) in its descent. The air parcel is also very dry since it lost most of its initial moisture content crossing the mountains while gaining very little new moisture during its journey. This warm descending air is the chinook.

The most impressive chinook winds blowing off the Rockies can reach speeds of between 65 and 95 km/h (40-60 mph) with gusts exceeding 160 km/h (100 mph). When blowing at those speeds, the chinook can tip railcars off the tracks and blow semi-trailer units off the road.

Impressive as the chinook is as a wind, the temperature changes it brings can be astonishing, often as much as 20-25 Celsius degrees (36-45 F degrees) in an hour. The greatest chinook temperature jump ever recorded occurred on January 22, 1943, when a chinook shot the temperature in Spearfish, South Dakota, from a chilling minus 4oF (-20oC) at 7:30 AM to 47oF (8.3oC) just two minutes later! And, in Pincher Creek, Alberta, a chinook jacked the temperature 21 Celsius degrees (37.8 F degrees) in four minutes on January 6, 1966.

No wonder, the chinook has the reputation its name "Snow Eater" engenders. The deadly-to-snow combination of high temperature and dry air rushing by at high speeds can literally remove a foot (30 cm) of snow in a few hours. And it may not just melt the snow but evaporate it as well, often all in one single process called sublimation, without leaving a liquid pool behind. The very dry air soaks up the liquid like a sponge, replenishing some of the water vapour lost in the mountain traverses.

When, on February 25, 1986, a chinook descended on Lethbridge, Alberta with winds gusting to 166 km/h (104 mph), it fully removed a snow pack of 107 cm (42 inches) in depth in eight hours. Lethbridge was left with substantial wind damage and new lakes standing in the surrounding fields and pastures.

Chinook winds may last from only a few hours to a few days, sometimes even persisting for several weeks. They can be welcome visitors during the winter, giving a respite to residents of the cold Prairies. But in other seasons, the searing dry winds can dessicate vegetation, raise soil into dust storms, and rapidly increase the danger of grass and forest fires.

For many living under the chinook influence, its winds bring debilitating physical effects ranging from sleeplessness to anxiety and severe migraine headaches.

Recent studies also suggest that Chinook winds rolling off the mountains can damage aircraft at cruising altitudes by generating turbulence powerful enough to rip an engine from a jet.

The fire menace of fohn-type winds brings much worry in many areas particularly in the summer and autumn seasons. In the Canadian Prairies, concerns heighten over grass fire potential during dry periods. Similar worries arise each year between October and February for residents of Southern California. During this period, when the Santa Ana winds — a chinook cousin — blow, the dry chaparral country becomes a tinder box needing only a spark to touch off devastating wildfires.

I'll leave you with a small table with some of the poetic names given locally to fohn winds around the world.

Autan from France
Bohorok from Sumatra
Chinook from North American Rockies
Föhn from European Alpine regions
Ghibli from Libya
Koembang from Java
Maloja from Switzerland
Puelche from the Andes
Reshabar from the Caucasus Mountains
Santa Ana from Southern California
Warm Braw from New Guinea
Yama Oroshi from Japan
Zonda from Argentina
 
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