Hurricanes “extract heat energy from the ocean to convert it to the power of wind, and
. . . the warmer the ocean is, the stronger a hurricane can get,
. . . if all other conditions that it needs to exist are present,
. . . so scientists are confident, that as we continue to heat up the oceans,
. . . we’re going to see more of these high-end perfect storms.”
We just lived through the hottest summer in recorded history,
. . . and possibly the hottest in “thousands of years.”
10-6-2016 Source: Climate Change: Hurricanes Hottest summer in recorded history
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2
Climate Change: Hurricanes
Started by eds, Oct 06 2016 03:42 AM
3 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 06 October 2016 - 03:42 AM
#2
Posted 15 October 2016 - 02:43 PM
Large hurricanes for sure but the flooding we have seen in recent months across America should be the
wake up call to deniers.
More moisture in the atmosphere=more rain=more floods.
In recent days; the northeast is getting slammed hard with high winds and torrential rains.
Even Oregon had a tornado the other day. Rare.
Geezed Louise; is anyone listening?
wake up call to deniers.
More moisture in the atmosphere=more rain=more floods.
In recent days; the northeast is getting slammed hard with high winds and torrential rains.
Even Oregon had a tornado the other day. Rare.
Geezed Louise; is anyone listening?
#3
Posted 08 December 2016 - 05:06 AM
As the climate continues to warm, the frequency of intense hurricanes in the North Atlantic is projected to rise while the overall number of hurricanes globally is expected to either decline or remain unchanged.
#4
Posted 10 December 2016 - 08:00 PM
SheforACT, on 08 December 2016 - 05:06 AM, said:
As the climate continues to warm, the frequency of intense hurricanes in the North Atlantic is projected to rise while the overall number of hurricanes globally is expected to either decline or remain unchanged.
Cause if it's your opinion; you're wrong.
Hurricane intensity will increase. Period.
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