You may be interested to observe the anal retention (twice over) in this view of St.Mary’s Avenue, Gedling.
- The first is in the spelling of the street, as in the signpost at left foreground. Notice the full-stop after the “ST” & the apostrophe within “Mary’s”. The street to the south runs parallel to St.Mary’s & is called “St.Michael’s” (same stop & apostrophe). Excellent. I’m with Lynne Truss on this.
- The second is the weather being anal retentive, due to the presence of an inversion layer.
Chris Fawkes, the weather forecaster on PM, BBC Radio 4 (56:16), spoke of a weather balloon launched today at Nottingham (where I live) which measured the base of the inversion at only 100m from the ground. This inversion is pretty much country-wide and is responsible for some foul air, particularly in the cities.
An inversion layer is a layer of warm air above a ground-layer of colder air; that can be a local effect, a district-wide affair or country-wide (and the latter seems to occur regularly in Britain every 10-or-so years). Fog is a classic consequence of an inversion layer, as is foul air, particularly in cities.
Warm air rises, but any smoke from a fire on the ground will stop at the bottom of an inversion layer. I just once was lucky enough to observe this whilst driving my car southwards on the M1. It was icy-cold but perfectly clear & early morning. An isolated house close to the other side of the motorway had smoke coming from it’s chimney (a wood and/or coal fire), but the column of smoke stopped just a few metres above the top of the stack, and then descended towards the ground. When I spotted it, the house was surrounded by a perfect sphere of smoke; an astonishing sight.
It was the combination of a district- (or country-) -wide inversion layer + millions of coal fires that led to the smog that killed thousands of city inhabitants & ultimately to the passing of the 1956 Clean Air Act in Britain.
Interesting or what?
Coda: A big shout-out to Nominatim
Nominatim is the search-engine used within OpenStreetMap to find streets, etc.. I used it just now to add the links for St.Mary’s Avenue, Gedling + St.Michael’s Avenue, Gedling. Full-stops & apostrophes can be a real bug-bear for text-searches. No problem for Nominatim; it found both streets first time, no issues at all. Hoo-yah!
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