It is based on the analysed records of
storm events along Western Brittany coast (see Part I).
In a first part of our work, we examine the morphological impact and stratigraphic record of
storm events along Western Brittany rocky coasts, with a special focus on the southern coast of the Bay of Audierne, the most exposed coast of the region.
It is not officially here yet, but the increasing warmth across the tropical Pacific seems to be changing circulation to cause larger
storm events along the US Gulf Coast and Atlantic Seaboard.
Not exact matches
15 drops of product may be put in water bowl for each Cat / Kitten or Dog / Puppy who is home
along during
storm season or similar
events.
Or you might spy a
storm on the horizon while exploring, and then begin the slow wait for it to pop up in the
event deck, tensing with the knowledge that it's going to come
along and wreck your shelter.
It will display current
storms and their projected tracks,
along with damage from
events starting at the same location.
«The authors write that «the Mediterranean region is one of the world's most vulnerable areas with respect to global warming,»... they thus consider it to be extremely important to determine what impact further temperature increases might have on the storminess of the region... produced a high - resolution record of paleostorm
events along the French Mediterranean coast over the past 7000 years... from the sediment bed of Pierre Blanche Lagoon [near Montpellier, France]... nine French scientists, as they describe it, «recorded seven periods of increased
storm activity at 6300 - 6100, 5650 - 5400, 4400 - 4050, 3650 - 3200, 2800 - 2600, 1950 - 1400, and 400 - 50 cal yr BP,» the latter of which intervals they associate with the Little Ice Age.
Two recent
events contrast existing vulnerability to extreme
events: Hurricane Irene, which produced a broad swath of very heavy rain (greater than five inches in total and sometimes two to three inches per hour in some locations) from southern Maryland to northern Vermont from August 27 to 29, 2011; and Hurricane Sandy, which caused massive coastal damage from
storm surge and flooding
along the Northeast coast from October 28 to 30, 2012.
The key inference from our study [in Science released
along with the press release] of relevance here is that
storms like Katrina should not be regarded as a «once - in - a-lifetime»
event in the coming decades, but may become more frequent.
No single
event of course is «caused by» climate change; perhaps a tally of this type of larger
storm would be useful, though — do we expect an increase in «wedge tornados»
along with a decrease in hurricanes?