Off-Topic: I do not take you seriously.
(Eastern Lake Specific)
1 messages
Updated 2/16/2011
Lakes Online Forum
84,121 messages
Updated 11/23/2024 7:08:55 AM
Lakes Online Forum
5,204 messages
Updated 9/14/2024 10:10:50 AM
(Eastern Lake Specific)
1 messages
Updated 2/16/2011
Lakes Online Forum
4,172 messages
Updated 9/9/2024 5:04:44 PM
Lakes Online Forum
4,262 messages
Updated 11/6/2024 6:43:09 PM
Lakes Online Forum
2,979 messages
Updated 6/26/2024 5:03:03 AM
Lakes Online Forum
98 messages
Updated 4/15/2024 1:00:58 AM
|
|
|
|
Name:
|
phil
-
|
Subject:
|
I do not take you seriously.
|
Date:
|
10/11/2024 8:55:50 AM (updated 10/11/2024 8:56:21 AM)
|
|
The 2004 hurricane season was unprecedented for the time. There were a total of five storms that would impact Florida in just six weeks. In fact, two of the four, Frances and Jeanne, made landfall just 2 miles apart with only three weeks between them.
- Fastest intensification from a tropical depression to a Category 5 hurricane (1-minute sustained surface winds) – 48 hours 55 minutes
Milton 2024 – 35 mph (55 km/h) to 160 mph (280 km/h) – from 1500 UTC October 5 to 1555 UTC October 7[70]
- Fastest intensification from a tropical storm to a Category 5 hurricane (1-minute sustained surface winds) – 24 hours
Wilma 2005 – 70 mph (110 km/h) to 175 mph (275 km/h) – from 0600 UTC October 18 to 0600 UTC October 19[11]
If the above is true - and storms are getting worse and more frequent - Why Do these dates 20 years ago worse then this season?
Something everyone I would hope should understand - storms in the Gulf form faster and stronger due to warmer waters then the Atlantic.
We are at a peak in hurricane season, not because of global warming, but because through history we see more storms this time of year more often then others.
|
|