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Home » Myths and Facts

Atlantic Hurricane Season 2008 Withers on the Vine

2 November 2008 118 views One Comment

Watts Up With That?

The North Atlantic hurricane season has nearly come to an end. As November progresses, the chance of another storm developing becomes smaller. Climatology (last 60 years) tells us that roughly 4 in 10 years see a November storm formation including 4 in 2005 (Beta, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon), Hurricane Michelle (2001), Hurricane Lenny (1999), and Hurricane Kate (1985). Jeff Masters from the Weather Underground has an image of previous early-November storm tracks especially clustered in the Western Caribbean.

So, what has the 2008 season wrought in the North Atlantic and how well did the seasonal prognosticators fare?

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One Comment »

  • sunsettommy said:

    2005 massive Hurricane season is long in the past.The last 3 years have not been such a big deal.

    The quick to claim by AGW believing fanatics that AGW will make more and more deadly and more common Hurricanes.Have fizzled in the light of cold hard reality.While net atmospheric CO2 emission are still on the plus side.

    When will people take note of that simple fact?

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