Does Beehive speed up simply because Giantess does not pour water down the slope and into the Indicator? Or does it speed up for some other, deeper hydrologic reason? We might compare Plume's response to see if both do the same thing. Jeff Cross From: geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu [mailto:geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu] On Behalf Of Ralph Taylor Sent: Saturday, June 07, 2008 5:20 PM To: 'Geyser Observation Reports' Subject: RE: [Geysers] Beehive 5/10/08 Oops. I meant in the aftermath of Giantess. Ralph ________________________________ From: geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu [mailto:geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu] On Behalf Of Ralph Taylor Sent: Friday, June 06, 2008 10:10 PM To: 'Geyser Observation Reports' Subject: RE: [Geysers] Beehive 5/10/08 Another late chiming in, sorry. The interval was 9h50m, not uncommon in the aftermath of Beehive. See the GOSA website for the intervals thru 24 May. Ralph Taylor ________________________________ From: geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu [mailto:geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu] On Behalf Of TSBryan at aol.com Sent: Sunday, May 11, 2008 4:52 PM To: geysers at lists.wallawalla.edu Subject: Re: [Geysers] Beehive 5/10/08 In a message dated 5/11/2008 5:32:23 PM Mountain Daylight Time, lcandnellie at united.net writes: I was surprised to see Beehive 2040 ns. I believe that is just under 10 hour interval. I thought Scott Bryan would be interested in case he didn't see it. You all know I've been saying that these 20+ intervals were possible/probably doubles. Yay. Thanks for the info. Scott ________________________________ Wondering what's for Dinner Tonight? Get new twists on family favorites at AOL Food<http://food.aol.com/dinner-tonight?NCID=aolfod00030000000001>. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: </geyser-list/attachments/20080608/c0dbe48f/attachment.html>