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bluewave

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  1. We had a nice soaking here in the South Shore of Suffolk last night with 1.00 to 1.35. Parts of the Jersey Shore were 2.00+.So a continuation of the winter progressive pattern with the coast doing better than the interior. Station Number: NY-SF-49 Station Name: Sayville 1.0 SSE Observation Date 3/24/2022 7:00 AM Submitted 3/24/2022 7:07 AM Gauge Catch 1.30 in.
  2. The one thing about the 6”+ April events is that they followed cold winters or cold Marches. So they were a product of the cold winter or early spring patterns. April 2018 followed the cold March with record 30” of snow at ISP. April 2003 followed one of our coldest and snowiest winters of the last 20 years. April 1996 speaks for itself with the historic snowfall that year with a cold winter into spring. The all-time April best blizzard of 1982 followed the cold 81-82 winter. Data for April 6, 1982 through April 6, 1982 Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. State Name Station Type Total Snowfall NY ISLIP-LI MACARTHUR AP WBAN 16.0 NY PORT JERVIS COOP 15.1 NJ NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP WBAN 12.8 NY WESTCHESTER CO AP WBAN 12.0 NJ LODI COOP 11.5 NY SCARSDALE COOP 10.2 NJ PLAINFIELD COOP 10.1 CT STAMFORD 5 N COOP 10.0 CT DANBURY COOP 10.0 NJ MIDLAND PARK COOP 10.0 NY DOBBS FERRY-ARDSLEY COOP 9.7 NY NY CITY CENTRAL PARK WBAN 9.6 NY MINEOLA COOP 9.0 CT NEW HAVEN COOP 9.0 NY NY WESTERLEIGH STAT IS COOP 9.0 NY WESTBURY COOP 8.8 NY NEW YORK AVE V BROOKLYN COOP 8.8 NY NEW YORK LAUREL HILL COOP 8.5 NY LAGUARDIA AIRPORT WBAN 8.2 NY WEST POINT COOP 8.0 NY JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WBAN 8.0 Data for April 8, 1996 through April 10, 1996 Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. State Name Station Type Total Snowfall NY PATCHOGUE 2 N COOP 15.0 CT JEWETT CITY COOP 13.0 NY YORKTOWN HEIGHTS 1W COOP 12.0 CT MIDDLETOWN 4 W COOP 12.0 CT NORWICH PUBLIC UTILITY PLANT COOP 11.0 CT IGOR I SIKORSKY MEMORIAL AIRPORT WBAN 9.8 NY ISLIP-LI MACARTHUR AP WBAN 9.6 CT GROTON COOP 9.5 NJ CHARLOTTEBURG RESERVOIR COOP 9.0 CT DANBURY COOP 8.1 NY BRIDGEHAMPTON COOP 8.0 NY GREENPORT POWER HOUSE COOP 7.5 NY RIVERHEAD RESEARCH FARM COOP 7.0 CT MOUNT CARMEL COOP 6.0 NY MINEOLA 1 NE COOP 5.5 NY JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WBAN 4.0 Data for April 7, 2003 through April 8, 2003 Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. State Name Station Type Total Snowfall NY BRIDGEHAMPTON COOP 8.0 NJ HARRISON COOP 6.5 NY CENTERPORT COOP 6.4 NY OCEANSIDE COOP 6.1 NY LAGUARDIA AIRPORT WBAN 5.6 NY JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WBAN 5.4 NY BRONX COOP 5.3 NY NEW YORK AVE V BROOKLYN COOP 5.3 NY SEA CLIFF COOP 5.0 NJ CRANFORD COOP 5.0 NY RIVERHEAD RESEARCH FARM COOP 4.5 NJ NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP WBAN 4.4 CT JEWETT CITY COOP 4.0 NY NY CITY CENTRAL PARK WBAN 4.0 Data for April 1, 2018 through April 3, 2018 Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. State Name Station Type Total Snowfall NJ CEDAR GROVE TWP 0.4 W CoCoRaHS 8.2 NJ WEST CALDWELL TWP 1.3 NE CoCoRaHS 7.5 CT NEW CANAAN 1.9 ENE CoCoRaHS 7.5 NJ TENAFLY 1.3 W CoCoRaHS 7.4 NJ LITTLE FALLS TWP 0.5 WNW CoCoRaHS 7.4 CT DARIEN 2.8 NW CoCoRaHS 7.3 CT STAMFORD 4.2 S CoCoRaHS 7.2 NJ HAWTHORNE 1.0 SSE CoCoRaHS 7.1 NY WADING RIVER 2.0 NW CoCoRaHS 7.1 NJ TETERBORO AIRPORT WBAN 7.0 NJ GLEN ROCK 0.7 SSE CoCoRaHS 7.0 NY GREENWOOD LAKE 3.0 SW CoCoRaHS 7.0 NY ARMONK 0.4 E CoCoRaHS 7.0 CT OAKDALE 2.6 WNW CoCoRaHS 7.0 NY CENTERPORT COOP 6.9 NJ KEARNY 1.7 NW CoCoRaHS 6.8 NJ HARRISON COOP 6.5 NJ OAKLAND 0.9 SSE CoCoRaHS 6.5 NJ HAWTHORNE 0.4 S CoCoRaHS 6.5 NY BRIGHTWATERS 0.7 NNW CoCoRaHS 6.5 CT MADISON CENTER 4.1 N CoCoRaHS 6.5 NY FISHERS ISLAND 0.5 NE CoCoRaHS 6.3 NJ CHARLOTTEBURG RESERVOIR COOP 6.2 CT MADISON CENTER 1.6 W CoCoRaHS 6.2 CT DANBURY COOP 6.1 CT NORWALK 2.9 NNW CoCoRaHS 6.1 CT SEYMOUR 1.5 NE CoCoRaHS 6.1 NJ NEW PROVIDENCE 0.8 ESE CoCoRaHS 6.0 NJ NORTH ARLINGTON 0.7 WNW CoCoRaHS 6.0 CT IGOR I SIKORSKY MEMORIAL AIRPORT WBAN 6.0 CT BRIDGEPORT-SUCCESS HILL COOP 6.0 CT SHELTON 1.3 W CoCoRaHS 6.0 CT RIDGEFIELD 1.9 SSE CoCoRaHS 6.0 NY ARMONK 0.3 SE CoCoRaHS 5.9 NJ WESTFIELD 0.6 NE CoCoRaHS 5.8 NJ CANOE BROOK COOP 5.7 NY WEST NYACK 1.3 WSW CoCoRaHS 5.7 CT MILFORD 1.8 E CoCoRaHS 5.7 CT MYSTIC 0.9 W CoCoRaHS 5.7 CT BETHEL 0.5 E CoCoRaHS 5.6 CT SOUTHBURY 2.0 NNE CoCoRaHS 5.6 CT NEW LONDON 1.0 NNW CoCoRaHS 5.6 NY LAGUARDIA AIRPORT WBAN 5.5 NY NY CITY CENTRAL PARK WBAN 5.5
  3. Yeah, the average date of the first 70° In Newark has moved up from March 29th in 1981 to February 27th in 2022. This allows the plants to bloom several weeks earlier than they used to. But the last freeze date has remained steady in late March.This time we may have two consecutive hard freezes Monday and Tuesday following several 70° days since late February. Numerous Cherry Blossoms are already in full bloom around the NYC area.
  4. The historic warmth in Antarctica was probably the most extreme global weather event this month.
  5. The Euro always had a brief Arctic outbreak from the 27th to the 29th. Then a warm up when the TPV lifts out later next week. It’s followed by a cool down in early April with lingering blocking. So our last best chance for snow this season looks to be around the 27th to 28th with possible snow squalls. The below average temperatures in early April currently don’t look cold enough for snow.
  6. The polar vortex crossing the area from Sunday into Monday may be our best shot at some snow squalls.
  7. I am not a big fan of using Central Park snowfall measurements later in the season. Many of the events are less than 1” at EWR, LGA, and JFK. Those are the ones that go as trace in NYC. We saw this with the late night snow on 4-15-14. There was no measurement in NYC right after the snow. So only the airports with full time observers recorded the light accumulations. NYC incorrectly went in as a trace. The list below has all the measurable snowfall events at Newark after March 25th since 1996. There were 8 years with measurable snow. Most of the events had a very cold upper low or TPV crossing the Great Lakes. Dates of Newark measurable snowfall after March 25th since 1996. 4-2-18 4-15-14 4-5-06 4-7-03 3-26-01 4-09-00 4-1-97 4-9-96 8 storm composite Data for April 15, 2014 through April 16, 2014 Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. State Name Station Type Total Snowfall NY CARMEL 4N COOP 2.4 NY BEACON 4.2 ESE CoCoRaHS 1.8 CT DANBURY COOP 1.8 CT BROOKFIELD 3.3 SSE CoCoRaHS 1.8 NY SOUTH SALEM 2.1 NW CoCoRaHS 1.1 NY COLD SPRING 8.1 NE CoCoRaHS 1.0 NY YORKTOWN HEIGHTS 1W COOP 1.0 NJ CEDAR GROVE TWP 0.4 W CoCoRaHS 0.7 CT SHELTON 1.3 W CoCoRaHS 0.6 NJ CRANFORD COOP 0.5 NJ HARRISON COOP 0.5 NY MIDDLE VILLAGE 0.5 SW CoCoRaHS 0.5 NY YORKTOWN HEIGHTS 0.6 SW CoCoRaHS 0.5 NJ NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP WBAN 0.4 NJ TENAFLY 1.3 W CoCoRaHS 0.4 NY LAGUARDIA AIRPORT WBAN 0.3 NJ KEARNY 1.7 NW CoCoRaHS 0.3 NJ NEW PROVIDENCE 0.8 ESE CoCoRaHS 0.3 NJ LITTLE FALLS TWP 0.5 WNW CoCoRaHS 0.3 NY WARWICK 3.2 WNW CoCoRaHS 0.3 CT PROSPECT 1.9 ENE CoCoRaHS 0.3 NJ WESTFIELD 0.6 NE CoCoRaHS 0.2 NJ KENILWORTH 0.8 SSE CoCoRaHS 0.2 NJ CEDAR GROVE TWP 0.9 NE CoCoRaHS 0.2 NY RONKONKOMA 1.4 WSW CoCoRaHS 0.2 NY ISLIP-LI MACARTHUR AP WBAN 0.2 NY BAITING HOLLOW COOP 0.2 NJ WEST CALDWELL TWP 1.3 NE CoCoRaHS 0.1 NJ SADDLE BROOK TWP 0.6 E CoCoRaHS 0.1 NJ NORTH HALEDON 0.6 N CoCoRaHS 0.1 NJ HAWTHORNE 1.0 SSE CoCoRaHS 0.1 NY CORNWALL ON HUDSON 0.6 NNW CoCoRaHS 0.1 NY JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WBAN 0.1 CT IGOR I SIKORSKY MEMORIAL AIRPORT WBAN 0.1 CT BRIDGEPORT-SUCCESS HILL COOP 0.1 NY NY CITY CENTRAL PARK WBAN T
  8. Yeah, some early blooms around the area with the 9th warmest March through the 22nd. Time Series Summary for NY CITY CENTRAL PARK, NY Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. Rank Ending Date Mean Avg Temperature Mar 1 to Mar 22 Missing Count 1 2012-03-22 51.2 0 2 2010-03-22 48.6 0 3 2020-03-22 48.5 0 4 1921-03-22 48.2 0 5 2016-03-22 47.6 0 6 1903-03-22 47.5 0 7 1946-03-22 47.4 0 8 1945-03-22 47.1 0 9 2022-03-22 46.8 0 10 1990-03-22 46.4 0 - 1977-03-22 46.4 0
  9. In our warmer climate, models usually back off Arctic outbreaks in the 6-10 day forecast. This time they are actually increasing the cold as we get closer. The polar vortex passes right over the area as the blocking is becoming more intense than earlier forecasts. Models all have lows on the 28th in the 20s and highs only in the 30s. The average split for NYC on 3-28 is 54/39.
  10. It’s a new hybrid AMO pattern that we have seen since the super El Niño in 15-16. Record SSTs off the East Coast with a cold pool near Greenland. The 1995-2015 +AMO featured warm SSTs across the whole Atlantic Basin. The 1970s to early 1990s -AMO had cold departures across the entire Atlantic Basin. Current hybrid AMO with record SSTs off East Coast since 2016 1995 to 2015 +AMO 1974 to 1994 -AMO pattern
  11. If we can drop below 25° like the models are indicating, then the chances go up for highs staying in the 30s. NYC only made it to 39° last April 2nd. Newark had a record low max of 40° with a record low of 28°. But it’s easier for Newark to set record lows since it isn’t competing with the late 1800s like Central Park. NYC 4/2 35 in 1911 36 in 1899 39 in 2021+ EWR 4/2 28 in 2021 28 in 1964 30 in 1954 4/2 40 in 2021 43 in 1993 43 in 1965+
  12. One of the riddles of our warming climate is that the last spring freeze has remained constant since 1981 while the first 70° day has moved up a month. So we are getting more frequent spring freezes after early blooms. Someone should probably do a study on why the last freeze date hasn’t moved up a month earlier also. Wonder if it’s related to changes in the stratosphere leading to late season blocking intervals? Newark first 70° day of year 1981….March 29th 2021…March 1st Newark last freeze 1981….March 31st 2021….April 2nd
  13. Lows in the 20s and highs in the 30s will feel cold early next week after how warm it has been recently.
  14. This looks like one of those rare times when the warmest temperature between March 1st and 20th is higher than March 21st to April 4th. All the guidance shifted to more blocking from late March into early April. So the early spring much above to record warmth pattern will be on hiatus for a while. EPS March 21 to 28 March 28 to April 4th
  15. The 0z EPS shifted to more blocking in early April from the warmer look it had a few days ago. The Scandinavian Ridge just set a new record for both March and April. So we may have to be patient for spring to make a return following the colder end of March.
  16. Looks like an active storm pattern to close out the month as closed lows roll underneath the blocking.
  17. Large increase in Northeast rainfall and snowfall extremes as the SSTs rapidly warm and water vapor rises. https://phys.org/news/2018-07-extreme-precipitation-northeast.html From Maine to West Virginia, the Northeast has seen a larger increase in extreme precipitation than anywhere else in the U.S. Prior research found that these heavy rain and snow events, defined as a day with about two inches of precipitation or more, have been 53 percent higher in the Northeast since 1996. A Dartmouth study finds that hurricanes and tropical storms are the primary cause of this increase, followed by thunderstorms along fronts and extratropical cyclones like Nor'easters. The findings are published in the Journal of Geophysical Research. Our study provides insight into what types of extreme storms are changing and why. We found that hurricanes were responsible for nearly half of the increase in extreme rainfall across the Northeast. A warmer Atlantic Ocean and more water vapor in the atmosphere are fueling these storms, causing them to drop more rain over the Northeast," explains Jonathan M. Winter, an assistant professor of geography at Dartmouth and co-author of the study. "Other research has demonstrated that these two conditions have been enhanced in our warmer world," added Huanping Huang, a graduate student in earth sciences at Dartmouth and the study's lead author. The findings demonstrate that 88 percent of the extreme precipitation increase after 1996 was caused by large storms in Feb., March, June, July, Sept. and Oct. Hurricanes and tropical storms, also known as "tropical cyclones," accounted for nearly half, or 48 percent, of the increase in extreme rainfall. After 1996, the Northeast experienced almost four times more extreme rainfall events from hurricanes and tropical storms than from 1979-1995. Severe thunderstorms along "fronts," especially intense downpours along cold fronts, accounted for 25 percent of the increase in extreme precipitation. Nor'easters and other "extratropical cyclones," which are storms that form outside of the tropics, accounted for 15 percent of the increase in extreme precipitation. Other research has found that the causes of more frequent extreme precipitation events in this study—increased ocean temperatures, more water vapor in the atmosphere, and a wavier jet stream—are associated with a warmer world. These results build on the team's earlier research by examining what caused the increase in heavier or extreme precipitation beginning in 1996. The researchers analyzed precipitationdata from 1979 to 2016 across the Northeast— Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Mass., Conn., R.I., N.J., N.Y., Pa., Md., DC, Del., and W.Va. in conjunction with data pertaining to daily weather maps and oceanic and atmospheric fields. https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/wefo/29/6/waf-d-14-00056_1.xml Abstract On 8–9 February 2013, the northeastern United States experienced a historic winter weather event ranking among the top five worst blizzards in the region. Heavy snowfall and blizzard conditions occurred from northern New Jersey, inland to New York, and northward through Maine. Storm-total snow accumulations of 30–61 cm were common, with maximum accumulations up to 102 cm and snowfall rates exceeding 15 cm h−1. Dual-polarization radar measurements collected for this winter event provide valuable insights into storm microphysical processes. In this study, polarimetric data from the Weather Surveillance Radar-1988 Doppler (WSR-88D) in Upton, New York (KOKX), are investigated alongside thermodynamic analyses from the 13-km Rapid Refresh model and surface precipitation type observations from both Meteorological Phenomena Identification Near the Ground (mPING) and the National Weather Service (NWS) Forecast Office in Upton, New York, for interpretation of polarimetric signatures. The storm exhibited unique polarimetric signatures, some of which have never before been documented for a winter system. Reflectivity values were unusually large, reaching magnitudes >50 dBZ in shallow regions of heavy wet snow near the surface. The 0°C transition line was exceptionally distinct in the polarimetric imagery, providing detail that was often unmatched by the numerical model output. Other features include differential attenuation of magnitudes typical of melting hail, depolarization streaks that provide evidence of electrification, nonuniform beamfilling, a “snow flare” signature, and localized downward excursions of the melting-layer bright band collocated with observed transitions in surface precipitation types. In agreement with previous studies, widespread elevated depositional growth layers, located at temperatures near the model-predicted −15°C isotherm, appear to be correlated with increased snowfall and large reflectivity factors ZH near the surface.
  18. We need a SW to W flow for our local area to reach 100°. This usually requires the ridge axis to build westward toward the Great Lakes. But the ridge axis during recent summers has been elongated to the east of New England. So we get more onshore flow and higher humidity instead of more 100° days. Our most extreme daily heat record in recent years occurred during February 2018. The SE Ridge built to record heights over the region for the entire cold season. This was associated with the 500 mb heights increase as outlined in the presentation at the start of the thread. It was the first time that our area experienced 80° record heat in February. https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/summer-february-80-massachusetts-78-nyc Astonishing summer-like heat cooked the Eastern U.S. on Wednesday, smashing all-time records for February warmth in cities in at least ten states, from Georgia to Maine. At least 24 cities recorded their hottest February temperature on record on Wednesday, including New York City (78°), Hartford, CT (74°) and Concord, NH (74°). According to Weather Underground weather historian Christopher C. Burt, February 20 - 21 marked the most extraordinary heat event to ever affect the Northeastern quadrant of the U.S. during the month of February, since official records began in the late 1800s. He catalogued the following eight states that tied or beat all-time February state heat records over the past two days, noting that in the case of Maine and Vermont, “It is simply amazing to beat a state temperature record by some 8°F!”:Pennsylvania: 83° at Capitol City (ties old record for the state)New York: 79° at La Guardia Airport (old state record 78°)Vermont: 77° at Bennington (old state record 68°)New Hampshire: 77° at Manchester and Danbury (old state record 72°)Maine: 77° at Wells (old state record 69°)New Jersey: 83° at Teterboro (old state record 80°)Massachusetts: 80° at Fitchburg (old state record 73°)Ohio: 80° at Cincinnati Lunken Airport (ties old record for the state)
  19. During recent summers, the high has set up east of New England instead of near Bermuda like in the old days. So this allowed Hartford to record more 90° days than around NYC in 2020. Burlington, Vermont was also able to record their first 80° minimum temperature in 2018. Time Series Summary for Hartford Area, CT (ThreadEx) - Jan through Dec Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. Rank Year Number of Days Max Temperature >= 90 Missing Count 1 2020 39 0 2 1983 38 0 3 2002 35 0 4 2010 34 0 - 1965 34 0 5 2018 32 0 - 1966 32 0 6 2016 31 0 - 1991 31 0 7 1988 30 0 - 1973 30 0 Time Series Summary for LAGUARDIA AIRPORT, NY - Jan through Dec Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. Rank Year Number of Days Max Temperature >= 90 Missing Count 1 2010 48 0 2 2018 38 0 3 2002 35 0 4 2020 34 0 - 1991 34 0 5 2016 32 0 6 1983 31 0 7 2005 30 0 - 1953 30 0 Time Series Summary for NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP, NJ - Jan through Dec Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. Rank Year Number of Days Max Temperature >= 90 Missing Count 1 2010 54 0 2 1993 49 0 3 1988 43 0 4 2021 41 0 - 2002 41 0 - 1991 41 0 5 2016 40 0 - 1983 40 0 - 1959 40 0 6 1994 39 0 - 1944 39 0 7 2005 37 0 - 1987 37 0 8 2018 36 0 - 1949 36 0 9 2015 35 0
  20. As the subtropical ridge expanded northward to the Canadian Maritimes, the flow became more S to SSE. So this has allowed the record high dew points to move into the region during recent summers. At times the result was higher actual temperatures into New England than around NYC Metro. This was due to a more SW flow into those areas. But both our area and New England have experienced the warmest and most humid summers on record summers since 2010.
  21. The EPS has our next big warm up during the first week of April.
  22. The best we have done during the last week of March since the snowier era began in 2003 has been a trace. Time Series Summary for NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP, NJ Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. Ending Date Total Snowfall Mar 25 to Mar 31 Missing Count 2021-03-31 0.0 0 2020-03-31 0.0 0 2019-03-31 0.0 0 2018-03-31 T 0 2017-03-31 0.0 0 2016-03-31 0.0 0 2015-03-31 T 0 2014-03-31 T 0 2013-03-31 T 0 2012-03-31 0.0 0 2011-03-31 0.0 0 2010-03-31 0.0 0 2009-03-31 0.0 0 2008-03-31 0.0 0 2007-03-31 0.0 0 2006-03-31 0.0 0 2005-03-31 0.0 0 2004-03-31 0.0 0 2003-03-31 T 0
  23. Doesn’t look like there will be any 80° days this March. So we won’t be able to make it 3 in a row. This will only be the 2nd March since 2010 to have the monthly maximum temperature during the first week. Warmest March temperatures and date since 2010 Newark 3-7-22…...76° 3-26-21….84° 3-20-20…80° 3-15-19….77° 3-30-18...62° 3-1-17…….73° 3-9-16……82° 3-26-15….64° 3-11-14…..67° 3-30-13….61° 3-22-12….79° 3-18-11…..80° 3-20-10….75°
  24. While the blocking pattern coming up doesn’t look like the strongest we have seen this time of year, it’s enough for the backdoor boundary to stall near our area in late March. Less warm temperatures after today than we have been experiencing. Then a slow moving storm system next week under the block. We’ll have to see if NYC can get the last freeze of the season around the 29th which has been the 15 year average. Frost/Freeze Summary for NY CITY CENTRAL PARK, NY Each section contains date and year of occurrence, value on that date. Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. Year Last Value First Value Season Length Minimum 03-01 (2020) 10-31 (2020) 215 Mean 03-29 11-19 235 Maximum 04-16 (2014) 12-10 (2011) 257 2021 04-03 (2021) 32 11-23 (2021) 32 233 2020 03-01 (2020) 25 10-31 (2020) 32 243 2019 03-18 (2019) 32 11-08 (2019) 29 234 2018 04-09 (2018) 32 11-14 (2018) 32 218 2017 03-23 (2017) 23 11-10 (2017) 25 231 2016 04-10 (2016) 31 12-09 (2016) 29 242 2015 04-01 (2015) 32 11-24 (2015) 32 236 2014 04-16 (2014) 31 11-18 (2014) 24 215 2013 03-23 (2013) 32 11-12 (2013) 31 233 2012 03-27 (2012) 30 11-06 (2012) 31 223 2011 03-29 (2011) 31 12-10 (2011) 32 255 2010 03-27 (2010) 29 12-04 (2010) 32 251 2009 03-24 (2009) 27 12-07 (2009) 32 257 2008 03-30 (2008) 28 11-18 (2008) 29 232 2007 04-09 (2007) 32 11-11 (2007) 31 215
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