How to interpret atmospheric soundings
Also known as the temperature trace, skewT chart, or Aerological diagram, this is a comprehensive snapshot of the atmosphere which a forecaster will look at all day long when analysing the airmass. They are very useful for soaring pilots, and show you winds, potential for cloud, depth of cloud, and height of thermals. This is a short introduction, you could really go in depth and talk for hours about different ways to use this chart. Most of the footage taken today (2 November 2020) in Brisbane, with some additional time lapse from earlier in the year.

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Climate effects on Paragliding

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Lecture 1: How to identify and name clouds (introduction to weather)

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What a Thermal looks like by Brett Janaway

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THIS is how to navigate in a forest – correctly

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How to read a Skew-T Chart - for Soaring Pilots

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How do CLOUDS and THERMALS really work?

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Definitive Guide to Skew-Ts and Hodographs - Part 1 - Components of a Skew-T

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Basic Weather Theory | PPGS

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How To Predict The Weather By Looking At The Clouds

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A Skew-T log (p) intro for pilots

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ATONS Aids to Navigation incl lateral, cardinal, lighthouse, COLREGS and IALA region A and region B

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The Complete Guide to Reading Skew-Ts: Instability, Wind Shear, More

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The Weather Video: A Study of Thermals, Winds, and Micrometeorology

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What The Super El Niño Will Do To Our Planet in 2026

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How Pressure Systems Work (Day Skipper - Meteorology)

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Finding the Centre of a Thermal - Paragliding Game intro! - BANDARRA

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Skew-T Diagram Basics

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How to Read Weather Charts to Forecast Tornadoes - For Beginners (Pt. 1)

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How to Read Skew-T Log-p Charts - For Beginners

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