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 Four Hurricanes In 5 Weeks
What, Exactly, Is Going On?
By Michael McCarthy
The Independent - UK
9-21-4
 

Is 2004 the Year of the Hurricane? It depends on
where you're considering it from. If you live in
the US you'll certainly think so, because the
state of Florida has been struck by three in a
month, and as America dominates the world's
media, the story has had huge attention right
around the globe. And now a fourth storm has
devastated parts of the Caribbean.
 
However, although to have three tempests of the
intensity of hurricanes Charley, Frances and Ivan
burst through one state in the space of four
weeks is certainly unusual, the fact that all
three made landfall so close together in time and
space may well be pure chance. Hurricanes sweep
the oceans every year. So here are some of the
questions that the 2004 hurricane season throws
up, with some of the answers:
 
What is a hurricane?
 
A hurricane is a tropical cyclone, an area of
intense low pressure in the tropics surrounded by
a violent rotating storm. It is called a
hurricane in the North Atlantic, the Northeast
Pacific east of the dateline, and the South
Pacific Ocean east of 160E; west of the dateline
it is called a typhoon, and in the Indian ocean,
a cyclone.
 
It becomes a hurricane officially if its wind
speeds reach 75mph, or force 12 on the Beaufort
scale; below that it is a tropical storm. Every
year, there are about 100 tropical storms and
about 50 of them reach hurricane strength. The
name comes from "Hurican", the Carib god of evil.
 
How is a hurricane formed?
 
Hurricanes need precise meteorological conditions
to form: the sea surface temperature needs to be
above 26.5C. They are powered by the heat energy
released by water vapour: the air above warm
tropical water rises quickly as it is heated by
the sea, and as it does so it rotates or spins,
creating an area of very low pressure, which
becomes the eye of the storm. Around the eye
winds grow with great velocity, generating
violent seas.
 
Why are its effects so severe?
 
First, hurricanes produce the highest wind
speeds, up to 200mph in the most extreme cases,
which only the strongest structures can
withstand. Second, they produce absolutely
enormous amounts of rain which can lead to
catastrophic flash floods. But third - and
sometimes most seriously - they produce a
phenomenon known as a storm surge. This is a huge
raising of the sea level, caused jointly by the
huge winds and the very low atmospheric pressure.
In the most extreme cases it can be as much as
25ft above normal.
 
The hurricane pushes this heightened sea along in
front of its path and when it hits the coastline,
especially the low-lying coasts, there can be
disastrous inundations, especially when the surge
combines with torrential rain.
 
Britain experienced something like this on 30
January 1953 when a violent gale combined with
very low pressure produced a storm surge in the
North Sea, which breached the sea defences of
Lincolnshire and East Anglia and drowned 307
people.
 
Once a hurricane reaches land, it tends to die
out fairly quickly as there is no more warm water
to supply heat. But out in the open ocean it can
last for a fortnight or more.
 
How are hurricanes graded?
 
Hurricanes are now measured between strengths 1
and 5 on the Saffir-Simpson scale, formulated in
1969 by Herbert Saffir, a consulting engineer,
and Dr Bob Simpson, the director of the US
National Hurricane Centre. The scale was devised
in the aftermath of Hurricane Camille in 1969,
the most violent storm ever to hit the
continental United States. Its categories run
like this:
 
Category one (minimal): winds 75 to 95mph, minor
flooding, slight structural damage, storm surge
up to 1.5 metres.
 
Category two (moderate): winds between 96 and
110mph, roof and tree damage, storm surge 1.8 to
2.4m.
 
Category three (extensive): winds between 111 and
130mph, houses damaged, severe flooding, storm
surge 2.7 to 3.7m
 
Category four (extreme): winds of between 131 and
155mph, major structural damage to houses and
some roofs destroyed, storm surge of between 4
and 5.5m.
 
Category five (catastrophic): winds above 155mph,
many buildings destroyed, smaller ones blown away
completely, severe inland flooding, storm surge
of more than 5.5m.
 
How do the 2004 hurricanes measure up?
 
The three storms that hit Florida this summer
were pretty bad, but not among the worst on
record: their intensity was actually feared to be
worse than it turned out to be. Frances was a
category two/three and did the least damage;
Charley was a three/four, and Ivan a category
four occasionally touching five.
 
But they did not compare in destruction with
Hurricane Andrew, the category four/five storm
that struck Florida in August 1992, which caused
$25bn (�14bn) worth of damage at today's prices,
or in sheer power with Hurricane Camille, which
struck Mississippi in 1969 leaving 256 dead, or
the Labour Day Hurricane of 1935 which hit the
Florida Keys, killing 423. These latter two
storms, full category fives, had winds that
approached 200mph and there has been nothing else
like them in the United States meteorological
record.
 
Are hurricanes getting worse or more frequent?
 
Although global warming is confidently expected
to produce more violent storms, scientists cannot
yet prove a link between current hurricane rates
and climate change. There does not seem to have
been an increase in the number of category five
hurricanes world-wide. This year appears to be
more active than 2003 and 2002 but less active
than the four years before that.
 
Why and how are hurricanes named?
 
All tropical cyclones are named, to provide ease
of communication between forecasters and the
general public about forecasts, watches, and
warnings. Since the storms can often be
long-lasting and more than one can be occurring
in the same region at the same time, names can
reduce the confusion about which storm is being
described. Before the 20th century, especially in
the Caribbean, hurricanes were sometimes named
after the saint's day on which they struck land.
During the Second World War, US Navy
meteorologists gave them the female names of
wives and loved ones, but by 1950 a formal naming
strategy was in place for North Atlantic
cyclones, based on the phonetic alphabet of the
time (Able, Baker, Charlie and so on.)
 
In 1953 the US Weather Bureau decided to switch
to female first names, and with the agreement of
the World Meteorological Association, included
male first names in the list in 1979.
 
Each meteorological region of the world now has
an agreed list of names. The letters Q, U, X, Y,
and Z are not used because few names begin with
these letters. Quite a few hurricane names -
including Andrew, Betsy, Bob, Camille, Hugo and
Hilda - have been officially retired because the
storms concerned caused damage on a scale
unlikely to be repeated. About 50 names have been
retired: a country can request retirement.
 
The Year of the Hurricane
 
Hurricane Charley: 'The wrecking ball'
 
Hurricane Charley struck Florida on its eastern
Gulf coast on Saturday 14 August after two
million people had been evacuated from the Tampa
area. Forecasters had estimated that this was
where it would hit first, but in fact it made
landfall 100 miles further south and then cut a
diagonal swath of destruction 30 miles wide right
across the state. In total, 27 people were
killed. The category four storm, described by a
rescue worker as "a wrecking ball that swung in
at 145mph", cut the power to 900,000 Florida
homes and severely damaged about 40,000
buildings, especially in the Orlando area.
Reconstruction and rehousing programmes have been
slow, because of subsequent hurricane alerts and
evacuations.
 
Estimated cost of damage: $7-8bn.
 
Hurricane Frances: 'The size of Texas'
 
Hurricane Frances hit Florida on its other side,
the eastern Atlantic coast, three weeks after
Charley, on Saturday 4 September, blowing ashore
about 30 miles north of West Palm Beach. Twice as
big as Charley in area (as big as the state of
Texas), even more people fled from Frances - 2.4
million, the biggest evacuation in Florida's
history. Frances was the worst storm ever to hit
the Kennedy Space Centre at Cape Canaveral, left,
which suffered superficial damage. In the event,
its winds lessened in strength and the eventual
category three storm was much less destructive of
life and property, although four million people
were left without power. No one died.
 
Estimated cost of damage: much less than Charley,
but still between $2bn and $4bn.
 
Hurricane Ivan: The most powerful
 
To date, Hurricane Ivan has been the most
powerful of the 2004 hurricanes and was billed as
the worst to hit the Caribbean for 10 years. At
times a category five storm with 150mph winds,
Ivan caused at least 70 deaths in a "10-day tour"
of the Caribbean islands before striking the
continental United States. It burst upon an
unprepared St George's, capital of Grenada, on
Tuesday 7 September, leaving 34 dead and
destroying most of the town's buildings. It then
went on to devastate parts of Jamaica before
hitting the Cayman islands on 11 September. It
eventually hit the Alabama coast and the Florida
panhandle last Thursday and has caused a total of
49 deaths in five US states.
 
Estimated cost of damage: still too early to
assess.
 
Tropical Storm Jeanne: The biggest killer
 
Not as turbulently powerful as the other
hurricanes, Tropical Storm Jeanne has been the
cause of the highest number of casualties. It
first struck Hispaniola - the island containing
the Dominican Republic in the east, and Haiti in
the west, at the weekend, killing more than a
dozen people. Disastrous floods, fuelled by
torrential rain, killed another 250 or more in
Haiti according to the latest United Nations
estimate; many in the northern city of Gonaives.
However, the extensive deforestation in Haiti is
believed to have made the flooding much worse and
scores of people are still missing after their
houses were swept away. Jeanne has now moved off
north-east of the Bahamas, and is unlikely to hit
the US.
 
Estimated cost of damage: still too early to
assess.
 
�2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd. All rights
reserved
 
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/environment/story.jsp?story=563983


http://rense.com/general57/fourhurricanesin5.htm




        
                
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