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Decades of Big Storms May Be on Way. Eliot Kleinberg.

by Kleinberg, Eliiot; Kleinberg, Eliot; SIRS Publishing, Inc.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: SIRS Enduring Issues 2002Article 17Science. Publisher: Palm Beach Post, 2001; New York Times, 2001ISSN: 1522-3264;.Subject(s): Climatic changes | Hurricanes | Hurricanes -- Forecasting | Meteorology -- Research | Paleotempestology | Sediments (Geology) | FloridaDDC classification: 050 Summary: DECADES OF BIG STORMS MAY BE ON WAY -- "Warmer water between Africa and Panama and weaker winds high in the atmosphere mean Florida and the eastern United States can expect more and stronger hurricanes for decades to come, researchers said Thursday [July 19, 2001]." (THE PALM BEACH POST) This article explains why hurricane activity is expected to increase in the years ahead.Summary: U.S. AND CARIBBEAN FACE ERA OF MORE, AND BIG, HURRICANES -- "The Atlantic Seaboard and the Caribbean face 10 to 40 years of stronger and more frequent hurricanes, a new analysis of weather data shows." (THE NEW YORK TIMES) This article examines the latest data on the ocean atmosphere which indicates increased hurricane activity in the future.Summary: EXPERTS UNEARTH A STORMY PAST -- "Scientists study cores of salt marsh deposits to reconstruct the history of intense hurricanes that strike the coast." (THE NEW YORK TIMES) -- This article explains how geologists study marsh deposits to learn of past hurricanes and describes how this may help predict future storms.
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SIRS SCI2 17 (Browse shelf) Available

This MARC record contains three articles.

Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2002.

Originally Published: Decades of Big Storms May Be on Way, July 20, 2001; pp. 1A+.

Originally Published: U.S. and Caribbean Face Era of More, and Big, Hurricanes, July 20, 2001; pp. A1+.

Originally Published: Experts Unearth a Stormy Past, July 24, 2001; pp. D1-D2.

DECADES OF BIG STORMS MAY BE ON WAY -- "Warmer water between Africa and Panama and weaker winds high in the atmosphere mean Florida and the eastern United States can expect more and stronger hurricanes for decades to come, researchers said Thursday [July 19, 2001]." (THE PALM BEACH POST) This article explains why hurricane activity is expected to increase in the years ahead.

U.S. AND CARIBBEAN FACE ERA OF MORE, AND BIG, HURRICANES -- "The Atlantic Seaboard and the Caribbean face 10 to 40 years of stronger and more frequent hurricanes, a new analysis of weather data shows." (THE NEW YORK TIMES) This article examines the latest data on the ocean atmosphere which indicates increased hurricane activity in the future.

EXPERTS UNEARTH A STORMY PAST -- "Scientists study cores of salt marsh deposits to reconstruct the history of intense hurricanes that strike the coast." (THE NEW YORK TIMES) -- This article explains how geologists study marsh deposits to learn of past hurricanes and describes how this may help predict future storms.

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