Sentences with phrase «more recent hurricane»

Part I Re # 62 and # 61; Those issues relate back to the AMO's quite questionable role in Atlantic hurricane intensity / frequency and Landsea et al's oblique attack on the more recent hurricane intensity data in Science which Chuck Booth links to.

Not exact matches

After more than two years of consecutive monthly passenger growth, Baltimore - Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport saw a slight dip in September, which executive director Ricky Smith attributed to the recent hurricanes hitting Florida.
Since the 1976 - 1977 season — which ended with the Portland Trail Blazers» most recent championship — no NBA player has scored more points in their first three starts than Jeremy Lin a.k.a Linsanity a.k.a The Harvard Hurricane a.k.a. Super Lintendo.
But recent research, he adds, shows that the largest hurricanes — with the fastest winds — could become even more powerful CO2 - spawning dynamos as the planet heats up.
Landfalling typhoons have become more intense in the northwest Pacific while Hawaii has seen a string of hurricanes and tropical storms swing dangerously close to the island in recent years.
«The recent study suggests that the extreme rainfall component of Hurricane Harvey was made 15 % more intense due to climate change, which is broadly in agreement with the atmospheric theory that has been developed in this area.
Yet the effect of recent hurricanes... Read More
Hurricane Irma, which struck Florida in early September, is more likely to result in a wave of early stage delinquencies and defaults than Hurricane Harvey, which hit the Houston, Texas area in late August, recent research from Black Knight shows.
Sony issues Extension on PlayStation Plus for Hurricane Maria Victims Were you one of the unfortunate ones effected by the recent hurricane's in the South East... [RHurricane Maria Victims Were you one of the unfortunate ones effected by the recent hurricane's in the South East... [Rhurricane's in the South East... [Read More]
These images evoke the City's 1977 blackout as well as the more recent one caused by Hurricane Sandy.
According to the most recent evidence, there does not seem to be any sort of trend toward more hurricane activity and the signal for a possible increase in intensity is weak.
It depends on the signal - to - noise ratio, so for global temperature in recent decades 20 years has been about enough, for CO2 concentration 4 years is more than enough while for hurricane frequency 50 years is probably too short.
An important point in the article, I felt, was: «the very real and dangerous increases in recent Atlantic hurricane activity will no doubt continue to provide a heightened sense of purpose to research addressing how hurricane behavior might change in our changing climate...» so «give us more money!!!».
The more useful question to have asked is why was Sandy's storm surge double that of recent hurricanes, hurricanes that were far more intense but with similar sea levels?
The researchers noted how many extreme weather events had occurred in a respondent's region in the recent past, and examined whether such events affected opinions on relevant mitigation policies (such as whether they were more likely to support coastal building restrictions after a hurricane).
In recent years, especially after the movie, An Inconvenient Truth, it has been popular to predict that upcoming hurricane seasons would produce more and bigger storms.
In more recent history, Wilma dumped more than 62 inches of rain on Mexico in 2005 and Hurricane Mitch, blamed for killing more than 11,000 in Central America in 1998, soaked Nicaragua with more than 62 inches, according to records compiled by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecaster David Roth.»
Landsea, a hurricane expert, had said that recent hurricane activity had not been made more severe by «global warming.»
In a recent paper published in Nature Communications, using both observations and a coupled Earth system model (GFDL - ESM2G) with a more realistic simulation of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) structure, and thus reduced mean state biases in the North Atlantic, the authors show that the decline of the Atlantic major hurricane frequency during 2005 — 2015 is associated with a weakening of the AMOC directly observed from the RAPID program.
It also seemed plausible a few years ago, however, that climate change would lead to more hurricanes, and more recent research suggests otherwise.
There appear to have been more strong hurricanes and cyclones in recent decades, Category 3 and higher — such as Katrina.
If our polluting activities have nothing to do with the hurricanes than why France's President Francois Hollande during its recent visit in the Philippines called for more actions in order to stop climate change because he said that Typhoon Hagupit and Typhoon Hayan which devastated the region become that big and dangerous due to our polluting activities which brings the planet on the brink of disaster.
Furthermore, with the recent increases of late season hurricanes reaching the northeastern region of the United States, Irene in 2011 and Sandy's recent landfall in New Jersey on October 29, 2012 and the record breaking temperatures we are now seeing in the western United States where temperatures are reaching within a few degrees of the hottest recorded temperature on earth, 134 degrees Fahrenheit, are more evidence that the global climate is changing possibly due to global warming.
With respect to hurricane damages, the chief and as yet only discernible difference between recent and earlier decades is that «There are more people and more wealth in harm's way.»
In past decades, late October hurricanes were practically unheard of, but they are become more common in recent years, according to Masters.
(CNN) This year's Atlantic hurricane season could generate more activity than in recent years and possibly bring one to four major hurricanes, the federal government said.
In the letter, Clement also expressed deep concern for other victims of climate change impacts, such as the recent set of devastating hurricanes, more frequent and severe flooding, marine life die - offs as a result of warmer ocean temperatures, forests at risk from invasive insects, and so on.
We're being hit by more and more multi-billion dollar climate & weather disasters like hurricane Sandy, the recent Great Plains heat waves and (most likely) ongoing «unprecedented» flooding in Colorado — disasters pushed beyond their natural variability by the changing conditions of our new climate.
«This view is supported by more recent publications that find a significant relationship directly with human - induced climate change and the most intense hurricanes
And while that could, in part, be due to less cool freshwater entering the Gulf from the Mississippi River, National Hurricane Center meteorologist Eric Blake said it's more likely the result of relentless high temperatures in recent weeks along Louisiana's Gulf Coast.
There are those who theorize global warming will lead to more frequent El Ninos (and the evidence suggests El Ninos became more frequent in recent decades)-- and, hence, fewer Gulf and Atlantic hurricanes to worry about assuming everything else stays the same.
Our more recent late 21st century projections of hurricane activity continue to support the notion of increased intensity (~ 4 %) and near - storm rainfall rates (~ 10 to 15 %) for the Atlantic basin (Knutson et al. 2013) as well as for most other tropical cyclone basins (Knutson et al. 2015).
Based on recent research, Willoughby said, it is likely that «the strongest hurricanes will get stronger, because the oceanic heat source is stronger, but because of increased shear of the surrounding winds, the numbers will go down, and the locus of activity in the Atlantic is more likely to move to the open Atlantic from the Gulf [of Mexico].»
Whether hurricanes are intensifying in other regions is less clear, though other recent evidence suggests that the trend toward more intense hurricanes may extend globally.
However, recent observations of the rate and severity of physical and ecological responses to escalating radiative forcing — melting glaciers and ice sheets resulting in sea level rise and major changes in weather patterns, prolonged droughts, more frequent hurricanes and storms, and so on — are surprising even top climate experts, and raising awareness that, as a nation, we are dangerously unprepared for the inevitable consequences.
With various hurricanes taking the Atlantic coasts by storm in recent months, there are consequently more legal...
There's no question that the 2010 hurricane season will be one of the more active in recent memory.
Looking Back at Hurricane Season 2017 The Atlantic Hurricane Season officially ends on November 30th, making 2017 one of the more devastating years in recent history.
The Atlantic Hurricane Season officially ends on November 30th, making 2017 one of the more devastating years in recent history.
«However, we may see more volatility in the next few months as communities affected by the recent hurricanes experience construction delays and other economic disruptions.»
Having been told our first property was damaged by the recent hurricane we were immediately given a choice of more expensive rentals at no extra cost by Diane and Jennifer at Mermaid Cottages.
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