Hi David,
I am trying to look through my threads where I suggested what I had chased was right moving:)
In my opinion, depending on the longitudinal position and I guess the time frame, it is most likely the cell moved from the southwest. But I cannot tell due to lack of orientation. If the rotation is as I have it, it was cyclonic - that is if there was storm scale rotation. The cell that is observed further north was a high based smaller cell that remained ahead of the main storm that approached. It may have interacted east of the road but I cannot confirm beyond this point. The cell structured was consistent with a left mvoing HP supercell or a squall line. The structure of the storm to me suggests that the main updraft was on the southern end of the shelf cloud and is where, as you see in the first few pictures in the sequence, where the shelf cloud begins.
As to storm longetivity, I cannot confirm this either. We have pathetic radar coverage, satellite imagery that we cannot decipher properly, and dust covered most of our view until the bases neared say about 10-20km distance from our location. Of course looking upwards the anvil was approaching for a lot longer and is why I never made any move.
I have not had time to look at the timelapse once again.
I know this is puzzling but a great discussion nevertheless.
Regards,
Jimmy Deguara
Last Edit: 10 January 2007, 11:27:14 AM by Jimmy Deguara