Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

93L still disorganized; extreme heat wave hits the Middle East and Africa
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 2:05 PM GMT en Junio 24, 2010 +5
The amount and intensity of heavy thunderstorm activity associated with the tropical wave (Invest 93L) located a few hundred miles south of Jamaica has increased over the past 24 hours, but the storm remains very disorganized and is not a threat to develop into a tropical depression today. The storm has not brought heavy rains to Haiti, fortunately, but heavy rains are expected today across Jamaica, where flash flood warnings have been posted. Satellite loops show a very disorganized system, with no low-level spiral bands and limited upper-level outflow. There are no signs of a surface circulation visible on satellite imagery. Pressures at the ground station nearest to the storm (Kingston) are beginning to fall, as are pressures at buoy 42057 a few hundred miles west of the storm, a sign that 93L is more organized than yesterday. Water vapor satellite loops show that moist air surrounds 93L, and there is less dry air to the storm's southwest than there was yesterday. There is an upper-level high pressure system a few hundred miles west of 93L, and the clockwise flow air around this high is bringing upper-level winds out of the northwest of about 10 knots over 93L, contributing to the 10 knots of wind shear observed in this morning's wind shear analysis from the University of Wisconsin's CIMSS group. Sea Surface Temperatures are plenty warm, a record 29 - 30°C. The Madden-Julian oscillation (MJO) currently favors upward motion over the Caribbean, which will act to increase the chances of tropical storm formation this week. The main negative for 93L continues to be the lack of spin. Last night's pass of the ASCAT satellite showed little in the way of a wind shift associated with 93L, though the pass did not completely capture the storm. The University of Wisconsin 850 mb relative vorticity analysis is showing that spin at 850 mb (roughly 5,000 feet in altitude) has increased over the past two days. The Hurricane Hunters are on call to investigate 93L Friday afternoon. Today's flight was canceled, due to 93L's lack of development.


Figure 1. Morning visible satellite image of the central Caribbean disturbance 93L.

Track forecast for 93L
I expect that by tomorrow, 93L should be closer to being directly underneath the upper level high pressure system to its west, which would act to lower wind shear and provide more favorable upper-level outflow. NHC is giving 93L a 40% chance of developing into a tropical depression by Saturday morning, which is a reasonable forecast. Given the storm's current lack of spin and relatively modest amount of heavy thunderstorms, the earliest I'd expect 93L to become a tropical depression would be Friday afternoon, with Friday night or Saturday morning more likely. Interaction with land will be a problem for 93L, as it will likely move over Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula or Western Cuba on Saturday. Expect 93L to bring flooding rains of 3 - 6 inches to Jamaica and eastern Cuba today through Friday. These rains will spread to the Cayman Islands, northern Honduras, and central Cuba Friday through Saturday, and western Cuba, Belize, and Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on Saturday and Sunday. The current run of the SHIPS model has 93L slowing down late this week to a forward speed of just 7 knots (8 mph) from its current speed of about 10 mph, in response to a weakening in the steering currents. A trough of low pressure is expected to swing down over the Eastern U.S. on Monday. If this trough is strong enough and 93L develops significantly, the storm could get pulled northwards and make landfall along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast. This is the solution of the GFS, GFDL, and HWRF models. If 93L stays weak and/or the trough is not so strong, the storm would get pushed west-northwestwards across Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula and towards the Texas or Mexican coast south of Texas. This is the solution of the NOGAPS, ECMWF, and Canadian models. A likely landfall location is impossible to speculate on reliably at this point, and the storm could hit virtually anywhere along the Gulf of Mexico coast given the current uncertainty in its development. A key factor will be how far north the center of 93L eventually consolidates at.

Intensity forecast for 93L
The amount of wind shear in the Gulf of Mexico next week is highly uncertain. There is currently a band of high shear near 30 knots over the Gulf. The GFS model predicts that this band of high shear will lift northwards, keeping low wind shear over the Gulf next week. However, the ECMWF model keeps high shear entrenched over the Gulf of Mexico. I give 93L a 50% chance of eventually becoming Tropical Storm Alex, but the odds of it eventually becoming a hurricane have lessened to 10%. None of the computer models is calling for 93L to become a hurricane.

Elsewhere in the tropics
None of the reliable computer models is calling for tropical cyclone formation in the Atlantic over the next seven days.


Figure 2. Dust storm over Iraq on June 23, 2010. Image credit: NASA.

Extreme heat wave sets all-time high temperature records in Africa and Middle East
A withering heat wave of unprecedented intensity and areal covered has smashed all-time high temperatures in five nations in the Middle East and Africa over the past week. Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Chad, Kuwait, and Niger all set new records for their hottest temperatures of all time, and two other Middle East nations came within a degree of their hottest temperatures ever. The heat was the most intense in Kuwait, which recorded its hottest temperature in history on June 15 in Abdaly, according to information I received from the Kuwait Met office. The mercury hit 52.6°C (126.7°F). Kuwait's previous all-time hottest temperature was 51.9°C (125.4°F), on July 27,2007, at Abdaly. Temperatures reached 51°C (123.8°F) in the capital of Kuwait City on June 15, 2010.

Iraq had its hottest day in history on June 14, 2010, when the mercury hit 52.0°C (125.6°F) in Basra. Iraq's previous record was 51.7°C (125.1°F) set August 8, 1937, in Ash Shu'aybah.

It was also incredibly hot in Saudi Arabia, which had its hottest temperature ever on Tuesday (June 22): 52.0°C (125.6°F), measured in Jeddah, the second largest city in Saudi Arabia. The previous record was 51.7°C (125.1°F), at Abqaiq, date unknown. The record heat was accompanied by a sandstorm, which caused eight power plants to go offline, resulting in blackouts to several Saudi cities.

In Africa, Chad had its hottest day in history on Tuesday (June 22), when the temperature reached 47.6°C (117.7°F) at Faya. The previous record was 47.4°C (117.3°F) at Faya on June 3 and June 9, 1961.

Niger tied its record for hottest day in history on Tuesday (June 22), when the temperature reached 47.1°C (116.8°F) at Bilma. That record stood for just one day, as Bilma broke the record again on Wednesday (June 23), when the mercury topped out at 48.2°C (118.8°F). The previous record was 47.1°C on May 24, 1998, also at Bilma.

Two other countries came within a degree of their all time hottest temperature on record during the heat wave. Bahrain had its hottest June temperature ever, 46.9°C, on June 20, missing the all-time record of 47.5°C (117.5°F), set July 14, 2000. Temperatures in Quatar reached 48.8°C (119.8°F) on June 20. Quatar's all-time record hottest temperature was 49.6°C (121.3°F) set on July 9, 2000.

According to Essa Ramadan, a Kuwaiti meteorologist from Civil Aviation, Matrabah, Kuwait smashed this record and had Asia's hottest temperature in history on June 15 this year, when the mercury hit 54.0°C (129.2°F). However, data from this station is notoriously bad, and each year bogus record highs have to be corrected, according to an email I received from weather record researcher Maximiliano Herrera. Asia's hottest temperature in history will very likely remain the 53.5°C (128.3°F) recorded at MohenjuDaro, Pakistan on May 26 this year.

Commentary
We've now had seven countries in Asia and Africa that have beaten their all-time hottest temperature record during the past two months. As I discussed in my blog about Pakistan's May 26 record, Southeast Asia also had its all-time hottest temperature in May, when the mercury hit 47°C (116.6°F) in Myinmu, Myanmar on May 12. All of these records are unofficial, and will need to be certified by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). According to Chris Burt, author of Extreme Weather, setting five national heat records in one month is not unprecedented--in August 2003, six countries (the UK, France, Portugal, Germany, Switzerland, and Liechtenstein) all broke their all-time heat records during that year's notorious summer heat wave. Fortunately, the residents of the countries affected by this week's heat wave are more adapted to extreme high temperatures, and we are not seeing the kind of death tolls experienced during the 2003 European heat wave (30,000 killed.) This week's heat wave in Africa and the Middle East is partially a consequence of the fact that Earth has now seen three straight months with its warmest temperatures on record, according to NOAA's National Climatic Data Center. It will be interesting to see if the demise of El Niño in May will keep June from becoming the globe's fourth straight warmest month on record.


Figure 3. Approximate oil spill location on June 23, 2010, and estimated by NOAA using visible satellite imagery from NASA's MODIS instrument, and Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery from polar-orbiting satellites. Image credit: NOAA Satellite Services Division.

Wind and ocean current forecast for the BP oil disaster
East to southeast winds of 5 - 15 knots will blow in the northern Gulf of Mexico today through Monday, according to the latest marine forecast from NOAA. The resulting weak ocean currents should push the oil to the west and northwest onto portions of the Louisiana and Alabama coasts, according to the latest trajectory forecasts from NOAA and the State of Louisiana. I would expect Mississippi to have its most serious threat of oil yet early next week as these winds continue. The longer range outlook is uncertain, and will depend upon what 93L does.

Resources for the BP oil disaster
Map of oil spill location from the NOAA Satellite Services Division
My post, What a hurricane would do the Deepwater Horizon oil spill
My post on the Southwest Florida "Forbidden Zone" where surface oil will rarely go
My post on what oil might do to a hurricane
NOAA's interactive mapping tool to overlay wind and ocean current forecasts, oil locations, etc.
Gulf Oil Blog from the UGA Department of Marine Sciences
Oil Spill Academic Task Force
University of South Florida Ocean Circulation Group oil spill forecasts
ROFFS Deepwater Horizon page
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery from the University of Miami

Jeff Masters
Categories: Heat Hurricane
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3401. xcool 7:18 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
dity 93l on fire
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3402. CJC111 7:18 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
highndry1, it may be a bust but it's far too early to tell. Unfortunately, with the conditions that we have, we may not see a storm until mid July and then get 10 of them over the next month. The number of storms this year doesn't concern me as much as the perfect condtions for the perfect storm. Low shear and record SST readings means we need bo be on alert. Wait and see what happens. The tropics are kind of like the stock market. Move your mutual funds every 3 days and you go bankrupt. Be patient and see what happens. One thing that science can tell us is that conditions are right but we still have to wait and see what happens.
3403. GetReal 7:19 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Member Since: Julio 4, 2005 Posts: 204 Comments: 8196
3404. uplater 7:19 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Another Chilly DMAX

3405. drg0dOwnCountry 7:22 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Member Since: Septiembre 22, 2005 Posts: 11 Comments: 1924
3406. CJC111 7:22 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
The models kind of remind me of driving in a country where you drive on the left side of the road. Sometimes you don't know if you should go left or right or in which lane.
3407. xcool 7:23 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    





hmmm
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3408. CJC111 7:26 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
With that track, they have to expect it to be getting stronger
3409. emguy 7:27 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
The overall evolving weather pattern is becoming a classic for a June storm in Florida. With that I tirn you to two satellite loop links...the Water Vapor and the shortwave. First, on the water vapor. a cutoff low is forming west of Florida around SW Florida and the Keys. The cutoff low is retrograding westward. A classic sign that will A.) assist in outflow, then B.) become established west of 95W and shut out the western half of the Gulf. Some hint of this evolution can also be seen in the future track of Daniel on the Pacific side, which will come to a halt and possible even move east a bit in 4-5 days due to a breakdown in steering from this ULL. Now, in the mean time, a view of the Shortwave shows a break forming in the ridge over the eastern Gulf. Your hint to observe this in this satellite loop is to observe the flow of clouds east of Florida and over the Bahamas. Earlier today, all was east to west from there through the gulf. No more. The Upper Level low is enhancing this matter. Down the road a trough will approach and weather patterns will evolve east. This disturbance, 93L, by all accounts is an eastern gulf issue and will need to be wathched in Florida. Model wise, some individuals are fans of the BAMS suite. I have been one of them. However, the Bam Deep model is furthest South and the Bam Shallow is further north. Makes no sense in this setup or any other. Also, the Nogaps and UKMet models have lagged behind in forecasting for quite some time and they are not handling this well either. I think Pensacola east should keep an eye out on old 93L. Very classic June - Florida scenario synoptically speaking.

Water Vapor Loop
Shortwave Loop
Member Since: Mayo 21, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 569
3410. CJC111 7:28 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Or am I reading that wrong? (I have terrible eyesight)
3412. TampaWeatherBuff 7:30 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Quoting CJC111:
TampaWeatherBuff, that much rain might give you tomato soup


I much prefer cream of mushroom. Any chance of that?
Member Since: Octubre 19, 2005 Posts: 14 Comments: 182
3413. xcool 7:30 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
btwntx08 .yeah
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3415. CJC111 7:31 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Do they expect a change in the steering or do they expect it to be pulled by the trough? If pulled, it would have to be a stronger storm, doesn't it?
3416. TampaWeatherBuff 7:33 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Quoting GetReal:


It seems 93L wants to go on a vacation. In Nicaragua.
Member Since: Octubre 19, 2005 Posts: 14 Comments: 182
3418. xcool 7:35 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
poor at handling ON MODELS & Slow development
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3419. CJC111 7:36 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
TampaWeatherBuff, that much rain could be good for fungal growth so the cream of mushroom may be a possibility.
3420. xcool 7:38 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
HPC final

.TROPICAL WAVE IN THE WESTERN CARIBBEAN...

PREFERENCE: ABOUT MIDWAY BETWEEN THE GFS/ECMWF BY 12Z MON

MODEL SPREAD REMAINS VERY LARGE WITH THIS PARTICULAR SYSTEM...WITH
THE NAM/CANADIAN TRENDING SLOWER/WEAKER BUT CONTINUING TO
REPRESENT THE FAST/DEEP SIDE OF THE DETERMINISTIC GUIDANCE...WHILE
THE GFS/GEFS MEAN ARE CLOSEST TO THE MODEL CONSENSUS...AND THE
PARALLEL GFS/ECMWF/ECMWF ENSEMBLE MEAN NEAR THE SLOW EDGE OF THE
GUIDANCE. GIVEN TRENDS AND THAT THE SYSTEM REMAINS POORLY
ORGANIZED...THE PREFERENCE IS FOR A SOLUTION WITHIN THE SLOW/WEAK
HALVES OF THE GUIDANCE.
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3422. TampaWeatherBuff 7:39 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Quoting CJC111:
TampaWeatherBuff, that much rain could be good for fungal growth so the cream of mushroom may be a possibility.


Fungal growth can happen in a teenager's tennis shoe. I'm looking for Campell's-quality cyclonic action.
Member Since: Octubre 19, 2005 Posts: 14 Comments: 182
3424. CJC111 7:41 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
The problem is that it depends on it sustaining itself which it should have done already. Think I'll have to get some sleep and see what it looks like in a few hours. If it comes together tomorrow it may be more of a U.S. threat. Night all and take care.
3425. xcool 7:41 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    


Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3426. xcool 7:44 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
btwntx08 :0
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3428. TampaWeatherBuff 7:52 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Quoting btwntx08:

93L firing off big convection


If you had any idea what convection is, you'd be on your knees worshiping the Goddess Celia right now. That you are in awe of 93L tells me you have no spirit.
Member Since: Octubre 19, 2005 Posts: 14 Comments: 182
3430. xcool 7:54 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
WT__
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3431. emguy 7:55 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
That is the caveat. If this does not develop, it will induce moisture into the Upper level low that will be in the Western Gulf. An otherwise unfavorable envoronment with no opportunity for development. HPC is siding with open wave feature entrained into ULL in their forecast. If this gets up to 40-50 around the tip of the Yucatan, this will remain an eastern Gulf system, headed for the Panhandle or east. It just is what it is. The evolution is there, has happenned time and time again, definate classic pattern for sure. Bottom line: no hurricane in western gulf. With proper dynamics, possible tropical storm/hurricane to Florida.
Member Since: Mayo 21, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 569
3433. TampaWeatherBuff 7:57 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Quoting emguy:
With proper dynamics, possible tropical storm/hurricane to Florida.


My money is on an asteroid.
Member Since: Octubre 19, 2005 Posts: 14 Comments: 182
3434. xcool 7:58 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
LOL YOU SEE HERE
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3438. xcool 8:03 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
ANYWAY FROM TX TO MS
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3439. drg0dOwnCountry 8:04 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
We Are All Trapped in a Global Oil Slick

Has our crude awakening begun, at last? It's not just the pelicans of Louisiana that are flapping and flailing in an oil slick -- it's all of us. We live permanently doused in petrol. Every time we move further than our feet can carry us, or eat food we didn't grow, or go shopping, we burn more barrels. Petrol pours off each of us like an invisible sweat. The 20th century was propelled into the stratosphere on a great gushing geyser of oil, and in the adrenaline-frenzy, nobody wanted to ask where it was coming from, or what it would cost us in the end.

But in this decade, the true costs of oil -- the ones that have been steadily accumulating since 1901, when it began to spurt from a hilltop in Texas -- have begun to finally distract our gaze from the speed-dial. They silently dominate almost every long-term question we face.

Extracting oil from the ground has almost always been disastrous for the people who live nearby. The only thing that is unusual about this morphing of "Drill, Baby, Drill" into "Spill, Baby, Spill" is that, this time, the world noticed the victims. From the Niger Delta to Azerbaijan, the world is littered with places poisoned by the petroleum industry.

To pluck one random example, Ecuador's oil pipeline -- fueling California -- is located above ground, next to roads. It leaks constantly. The oil companies have to pump water into the Amazonian oil fields in order to extract it, which leaves behind a toxic soup of mercury, benzene and chromium 6. For decades, they simply pumped it into the local rivers, causing an epidemic of cancers and severely deformed babies. A US court calculated that the unpaid liabilities for destroying so many lives total more than $27bn. Who has heard of it?

Big Oil is occasionally, fleetingly honest about how it works. Sadad al-Husseini was vice president for exploration and production at Saudi Aramco, and he said of the industry:

If your tanker is old and you ought to retire it, you keep it working. If you have an offshore platform that is beyond the boundaries of a certain country and you can dump chemicals into the sea, you do. If you have to abandon a facility that is a pollutant, you abandon it without cleaning it up. If you've hired people and you can work them in unhealthy environments where you've got sulphur dioxide, you do it. All these are ways in which you say, it's not my problem. It's not my cost.



The people who say we shouldn't worry about global warming because we'll find a way to adapt further down the line should look again at the Gulf. The most powerful country on earth can't stop a single leaking pipe. How will they -- or the rest -- deal with rapidly rising sea levels, the drying up of agricultural land, and super-charged hurricanes?

full article here HP
Member Since: Septiembre 22, 2005 Posts: 11 Comments: 1924
3440. drj27 8:05 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
its coming to the panhandle i hope not
Member Since: Agosto 25, 2006 Posts: 0 Comments: 98
3441. xcool 8:06 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    


Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3442. TampaWeatherBuff 8:07 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Quoting drg0dOwnCountry:
We Are All Trapped in a Global Oil Slick

Has our crude awakening begun, at last? It's not just the pelicans of Louisiana that are flapping and flailing in an oil slick -- it's all of us. We live permanently doused in petrol. Every time we move further than our feet can carry us, or eat food we didn't grow, or go shopping, we burn more barrels. Petrol pours off each of us like an invisible sweat. The 20th century was propelled into the stratosphere on a great gushing geyser of oil, and in the adrenaline-frenzy, nobody wanted to ask where it was coming from, or what it would cost us in the end.

But in this decade, the true costs of oil -- the ones that have been steadily accumulating since 1901, when it began to spurt from a hilltop in Texas -- have begun to finally distract our gaze from the speed-dial. They silently dominate almost every long-term question we face.

Extracting oil from the ground has almost always been disastrous for the people who live nearby. The only thing that is unusual about this morphing of "Drill, Baby, Drill" into "Spill, Baby, Spill" is that, this time, the world noticed the victims. From the Niger Delta to Azerbaijan, the world is littered with places poisoned by the petroleum industry.

To pluck one random example, Ecuador's oil pipeline -- fueling California -- is located above ground, next to roads. It leaks constantly. The oil companies have to pump water into the Amazonian oil fields in order to extract it, which leaves behind a toxic soup of mercury, benzene and chromium 6. For decades, they simply pumped it into the local rivers, causing an epidemic of cancers and severely deformed babies. A US court calculated that the unpaid liabilities for destroying so many lives total more than $27bn. Who has heard of it?

Big Oil is occasionally, fleetingly honest about how it works. Sadad al-Husseini was vice president for exploration and production at Saudi Aramco, and he said of the industry:

If your tanker is old and you ought to retire it, you keep it working. If you have an offshore platform that is beyond the boundaries of a certain country and you can dump chemicals into the sea, you do. If you have to abandon a facility that is a pollutant, you abandon it without cleaning it up. If you've hired people and you can work them in unhealthy environments where you've got sulphur dioxide, you do it. All these are ways in which you say, it's not my problem. It's not my cost.



The people who say we shouldn't worry about global warming because we'll find a way to adapt further down the line should look again at the Gulf. The most powerful country on earth can't stop a single leaking pipe. How will they -- or the rest -- deal with rapidly rising sea levels, the drying up of agricultural land, and super-charged hurricanes?

full article here HP


Egads, not another crazed sex poodle?!

If you want insight, seek ye wisdom.
Member Since: Octubre 19, 2005 Posts: 14 Comments: 182
3443. IKE 8:09 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
Quoting TampaWeatherBuff:


If you had any idea what convection is, you'd be on your knees worshiping the Goddess Celia right now. That you are in awe of 93L tells me you have no spirit.


He's been wishcasting it to his front door for days. I say let him have his wish.
Member Since: Junio 9, 2005 Posts: 23 Comments: 37044
3445. xcool 8:11 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
WHO wishcasting ?
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3447. xcool 8:14 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
OH BOY
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3449. xcool 8:19 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
btwntx08 oh really
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501
3450. xcool 8:20 AM GMT en Junio 25, 2010    
very deep convection
Member Since: Septiembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501

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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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