Monday, September 30, 2013

Two Tropical storms into one in Mexico

http://www.weather.com/news/weather-hurricanes/two-tropical-storms-converge-mexico-20130914


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New Tropical Storm in Atlantic

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VERACRUZ, Mexico -- Two tropical systems were converging on Mexico's east and west coasts Saturday, sparking authorities to evacuate coastal residents and set up shelters while watching rising rivers.
Hurricane Ingrid was gathering strength off Mexico's Gulf Coast, with forecasters predicting further increases in speed. They said Ingrid would likely become a hurricane Saturday afternoon.
"Mexico will have to deal with not just one, but two, tropical entities," said weather.com meteorologist Chrissy Warrilow. "Ingrid will be lashing the eastern coast bringing as much as two feet of rain to areas already inundated by Tropical Storm Ferdinand and Tropical Depression 8."
Though Ingrid will likely make landfall in Mexico, the U.S. will still see some impact.
"U.S. cities including Brownsville and Corpus Christi by heavy rain and wind from Ingrid."
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Get Children Ready for a Hurricane

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A hurricane watch is in effect north of Cabo Rojo to La Pesca. A tropical storm warning is in effect from Coatzacoalcos to Cabo Rojo.
Manuel is expected to produce 10 to 15 inches of rain over parts of the Mexican states of Oaxaca and Guerrero, and life-threatening flash floods and mudslides are likely.
"Manuel will be moving into areas of Mexico with lots of mountainous features," said Warrilow. "Heavy rain, mudslides, and dangerous flash flooding are expected to occur.
Elsewhere, the remnants of Tropical Storm Humberto were swirling in the Atlantic, far from land. It was expected to regenerate in a couple of days, according to the Hurricane Center.
In Veracruz state off the Gulf Coast, state officials were evacuating communities in eight cities near the Tecolutla river where authorities reported higher-than-normal water levels.
State officials said they had also opened 12 shelters where they've directed some 1,000 people. Many have opted to stay with relatives and others.
A bridge collapsed near the northern Veracruz city of Misantla Friday, cutting off the area from the state capital. Thirteen people died when a landslide buried their homes in heavy rains spawned by Tropical Depression Fernand on Monday.
State officials imposed an orange alert, the highest possible, in parts of southern Veracruz.

unusual tornado found in Seattle



SEATTLE -- A rare tornado damaged industrial buildings south of Seattle as an early winter storm dumped record amounts of rain and knocked out power for thousands in the Pacific Northwest.
The tornado at 7:20 a.m. Monday hit the industrial area of Frederickson, tearing a hole in the roof of the Northwest Door factory, blowing out car windows at a nearby Boeing factory, and damaging a building where sections of a downtown Seattle tunnel project were being assembled.
A team from the Weather Service office in Seattle went to the scene and confirmed the tornado from eyewitness accounts, meteorologist Johnny Burg said.
There were no injuries.
The damage, including a jagged 40-by-40-foot hole in the roof at Northwest Door, stopped work at the factory that makes garage doors. About 100 workers evacuated.
"It looked from the inside like a wave going along. You could actually see the roof flexing," Northwest Door President Jeff Hohman said.
Work at the Boeing plant resumed while repairs were underway. There was no damage to parts or equipment, Boeing spokesman Doug Alder said.
The tornado blew out the windows of about two dozen cars in the Boeing parking lot. Several thousand employees work at the Frederickson site, which makes parts and sections for just about every Boeing airplane, including the vertical tails for the 777 and 787.
The tornado also ripped off one-third of the roof and destroyed a metal garage door at a tent-like structure in Frederickson where a company called EnCon is welding rebar cages for use in the tunnel project under downtown Seattle. Project manager Kasandra Paholsky said the damage forced work to halt but ultimately will not affect the schedule for digging the Highway 99 tunnel.
Washington may get a tornado or two every year, but they are usually small. One of the largest was an F3 in 1972 in Vancouver that killed six people.
Parts of the Northwest got more rain in a day or two over the weekend than typically falls in the entire month.
"We basically had conditions well off shore that were very reminiscent of late fall-early winter," said Dana Felton, meteorologist at the National Weather Service office in Seattle.
With Mondays' precipitation still to be added, it's been the wettest September on record in Olympia and the second-wettest in Seattle.
Nearly 8 inches fell in Olympia, topping a 1978 record and swamping the usual 1.7 inches that fall in that time, the National Weather Service said. Sea-Tac Airport's September total of 5.6 inches came second to a 1978 record, while downtown Portland saw 6.2 inches - the most since record-keeping began in 1872.
Puget Sound Energy had about 12,000 customers out of service late Sunday, the Bellevue-based utility reported. Seattle City Light reported it had about 3,200 customers out of service overnight. Portland General Electric had more than 90,000 customers out of power since the storm began.
The storm brought the first significant snow of the season to the mountains. Forecasters expected 6-to-12 inches by Tuesday morning in the Olympics and 10-to-20 inches in the Cascades.

Hurricane Manuel


Manuel formed on Sept. 13, 2013 and steadily moved northwestward before making its first landfall along the Pacific coast of Mexico on Sept. 15, 2013. Manuel was downgraded to a remnant low Sept. 16, 2013 after grinding across the rugged terrain of the states of Guerrero and Jalisco.
Throughout its time as a tropical storm and even as a remnant low, Manuel dumped enormous amounts of rainfall on the Mexican Riviera.
Over 14 inches of rain fell in Acapulco before the observation site stopped reporting. Severe flooding has claimed lives and cut off road access across the region.
Then, Manuel's remnants emerged over open water near the southern end of the Gulf of California. The system regained its circulation and strengthened into a hurricane on Sept. 18, 2013. Manuel made a second landfall the next day as a Category 1 hurricane.
Dozens of people were killed by Manuel in Mexico due to the flooding and mudslides it caused.

Severe Weather in Texas to Mississippi

http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/midweek-severe-weather-texas-to-miss/6401028 As a major storm swings out of the Southwest, there is the potential of violent thunderstorms sweeping from western Texas to the lower Mississippi Valley during the middle of the week. The setup has the potential to bring a significant severe weather outbreak, by way of a developing squall line. The most common characteristics of the severe thunderstorms will be damaging wind gusts, hail and blinding downpours. However, a few of the storms will bring the potential for a tornado. Tornadoes could occur during the early stages of the developing squall line or in isolated storms ahead of the squall line. The first isolated storms during the outbreak are likely to fire late Wednesday afternoon from parts of western Texas in the vicinity of I-27/Route 287. The storms will fire on the leading edge of clear-air wind gusts that can kick up dust in parts of New Mexico. The storms will then progress and increase in number farther east, along the I-20 corridor across central Texas to near the Red River area Wednesday night. The storms could impact areas from San Antonio to Dallas/Ft. Worth.

Severe storms, cold front expected Friday

http://www.kltv.com/story/23540487/severe-storms-cold-front-expected-friday LUBBOCK, TX (KCBD) - While the South Plains has enjoyed a work week full of refreshing morning temperatures and pleasant afternoons, changes are on the way. A strong storm system is moving into the central plains and will send a cold front into West Texas Friday. Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms are expected to develop along and ahead of this front by Friday afternoon. Western areas will be the first at risk by early afternoon, then the threat will slowly shift eastward through the evening. The entire South Plains stands a chance of seeing severe weather Friday evening. A few storms will be capable of producing localized flooding rainfall, severe wind gusts, and small hail - and while not a significant threat, an isolated tornado or two cannot be ruled out, especially north of Lubbock. Storms will stick around into Saturday morning, before slowly clearing out of the KCBD viewing area heading into Saturday afternoon. The last time West Texas saw widespread severe weather was back in early June. If you're headed to the fair, or any other outdoor activity, please stay tuned to the latest forecasts. Remind yourself of your severe weather safety plan, and make sure you have everything in order should severe weather strike. And as always, you can find the latest weather forecasts on air, or online, at www.kcbd.com and on our mobile apps. No pictures available on this website

Wall cloud near Houston

Severe weather made another appearance in southeastern Texas on Friday night, where at least one lowering wall cloud was reported with a cluster of dangerous storms. The storms originated west of Houston, near the Katy area, but moved into the suburbs and eventually the city in the late-evening. Hail, heavy rain and frequent lightning came with the multiple cells that roared through the area. Center Point Energy reported that there were more than 3,500 power outages in the wake of the storms. A live stream from a storm chase team showed a wall cloud moving toward the west side of Houston, Texas Friday night. "We've seen this rotating wall cloud," chaser Jacob Wycoff told meteorologists Jim Cantore and Kelly Cass during a live phone interview on The Weather Channel. "We've been following it for an hour and a half. It's close to the ground and lot of people are concerned," Wycoff reported at approximately 8:00 p.m. local time. Dan Reilly with the National Weather Service office in Houston said meteorologists at the office were watching Wycoff's live stream to get a good look at the storm. Friday's storms marked the second night in a row Texas came under a severe weather threat. A reported tornado hit the small town of Weimer, damaging the high school, a hospital, and throwing a train off the tracks. No pictures on this website, just a video. http://www.weather.com/news/texas-severe-20120511

Tropical Storm Wutip

Typhoon Wutip

Tropical storm Wutip lashed central Vietnam on Monday after sinking at least two Chinese fishing boats near the Paracel Islands, leaving 75 fishermen missing, officials said.
The storm uprooted trees, cut power lines and damaged more than 1,000 houses. There was no immediate word of injuries, flooding or major structural damage.
Vietnam's national weather center said Wutip had weakened from a typhoon to a tropical storm by the time it made landfall. It was packing sustained winds of 117 kilometers (73 miles) per hour. Wutip sank at least two Chinese fishing ships as it neared the coast near the Paracel Islands, leaving 75 fishermen missing. Wutip was the strongest typhoon to gather off Vietnam this season. The most powerful Asian storm this year was Typhoon Usagi, which caused at least 33 deaths in the Philippines and China earlier in September.

Hurricane Sandy, Texas is prepared

http://www.pegasusnews.com/news/2013/sep/26/texas-gulf-coast-inadequately-prepared-hurricanes/ HOUSTON — Five years after Hurricane Ike slammed into the Texas Gulf Coast, causing more than $30 billion in damage and killing at least 37 Texans, cities across the region have trumpeted their rebuilding efforts. But the tune was very different at Rice University’s Severe Storm Prediction, Education and Evacuation from Disasters Center this week, where experts gathered to discuss the area’s vulnerability to future storms. It hasn’t improved, they said, and may have even worsened in the last few years — partly the result of explosive growth in the Houston Ship Channel that experts fear is occurring without appropriate hurricane safeguards. During Hurricane Ike, more than 100,000 homes and businesses flooded, most of them on or near Galveston Island — a barrier of sorts for Houston, which experienced much less damage from the storm. But had Ike followed a slightly different path, Houston would’ve faced a different fate, said Clint Dawson, an engineering professor at the University of Texas at Austin. For communities on the coast, the biggest threat from large storms is the surge, the change in water level that can happen alarmingly quickly, and long before the storm makes landfall. That was the case with Ike, where, as Dawson recalled, “there was water in the streets, but no one knew a hurricane was approaching.” The dramatic growth of industry in the Houston Ship Channel, an economic engine for the state whose exports have exceeded even those of New York City, is one of the biggest causes for concern. Some researchers worry that a direct-hit hurricane would wreak havoc on the channel’s chemical and oil storage tanks, leading to spills and an environmental catastrophe.

Texas affected by Hurricane Sandy

http://www.myfoxaustin.com/story/19940864/effects-of-hurricane-sandy-being-felt-in-austin No pictures on this website, just a video. The effects of Hurricane Sandy are being felt half way across the country by travelers in Austin. What is considered a historic storm is causing a major shut down in the skies. Airlines cancelled flights up and down the east coast Sunday and Monday ahead of the storm's arrival. A flight tracking service says 7500 flights have been grounded because of Sandy which includes direct flights from Austin Bergstrom International Airport. Monday morning flights from Austin to the New York City area, Washington D.C. and Philadelphia are grounded. Friends Andrew Taylor and James Green spent the weekend at Comic Con. They were supposed to fly to Philadelphia Monday morning. The two could have made it to Atlanta but their connecting flight was cancelled. Like thousands of other travelers across the country they are at the mercy of Mother Nature. James Green says the worst part about all of this is the wait. "The waiting while we try to figure out what's going to happen and then waiting for that to happen and spending more money than we had anticipated in Austin," Green said. "My mom is already telling us we need to get in a car and drive because she doesn't think we'll get out but I'm going to cross my fingers," explained Taylor. Taylor and Green are scheduled to fly out Tuesday which is when the major carriers hope to resume flights if conditions allow. The best advice from airport officials is to check with your airline before you head to the airport. It could be a couple of days before the airlines can accommodate all of the stranded passengers. Read more: http://www.myfoxaustin.com/story/19940864/effects-of-hurricane-sandy-being-felt-in-austin#ixzz2gPXgE1HT

Cold Front Brings Severe Weather,but Beneficial Rains to South Plains

LUBBOCK, TX (KCBD) -   On Friday afternoon, a dry-line ignited showers, and a few severe thunderstorms, across the northwestern South Plains. By early evening, storms had organized enough to produce severe wind gusts, large hail, and blinding rain.

A severe thunderstorm toppled several utility poles along Interstate 27, near the town of Happy, Texas. The same storm went on to produce a 69 mile per hour wind gust, measured by KCBD's own
David Drummond, and relayed to the National Weather Service.

Across the rest of the South Plains, scattered thunderstorms brought occasional lightning, gusty winds, and brief heavy rainfall to isolated areas, mainly west of Lubbock.

However, as the cold front approached West Texas early Saturday morning, a larger line of thunderstorms developed. This cluster of storms produced another round of frequent lightning, and localized heavy rain.

The town of Lamesa was hardest hit. Winds gusted to near 50 MPH and over 2 inches of rain accumulated before sunrise Saturday.

Behind this strong Fall cold front, the South Plains will enjoy clearing skies, gusty winds, and much cooler temperatures.

Tornado caps off weekend severe, record-breaking weather in western Washington

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Weather experts have confirmed a tornado touched down in Pierce County Monday morning near the Boeing plant in Frederickson.
 Photos posted on social media show cars damaged, trees down and the roof partly blown off at Northwest Door, a manufacturing plant. "We're seeing a swath of damage that is about a mile-and-a-half long," said Central Pierce Fire and Rescue Assistant Chief Ed Hrivnak.  Boeing is reporting damage at its production plant, including windows blown off of cars in the parking lot. Some train cars were blown over, according to reports sent to the National Weather Service. "We're still trying to get a handle on how much damage was done," said Boeing's Doug Alder. "We do know some car windows were blown out in the parking lot, trees, power lines are down in the area." No Boeing employees were hurt and operations have returned to normal. One building received slight damage and the company is asking employees to use caution as they arrive for work.  The NWS says the radar showed what appeared as a "garden variety thunderstorm," according to forecaster Johhny Berg. "But we did see a little bit of rotation inside of there." A team from the NWS office in Seattle went to the area "too see exactly what happened and then so we can get a better idea of what damage occurred and what rating to give it (the storm)," said Berg. A clerk at Canyon Road Gas and Deli heard the storm blow through. "All I heard was a big boom, the wind was blowing and it was raining like hell," he said. Central Pierce Fire and Rescue posted an image on Twitter of a commercial building in Frederickson in which portions of the roof were missing. Other images showed debris thrown across the road.Fire personnel and Boeing's Alder report no injuries from the severe weather that hit the area at about 7:20 a.m. The tornado follows a canceled high wind warning late Sunday night into early Monday. The NWS says winds on the coast Sunday hit 67 mph at Destruction Island, 51 mph at Hoquiam and 43 mph at Friday Harbor. The front moved east before dawn and blustery winds were forecast through the day in Eastern Washington.  Several areas in Western Washington found themselves without power. Puget Sound Energy reports occasional windy weather late Sunday evening created some scattered outages for PSE customers, primarily in Skagit, Kitsap and Thurston counties. At 10 a.m. Monday, PSE reported 4,000 scattered outages. Seattle City Light had no outages.  In Orting at 5:30 a.m. a weather system moving through the area disrupted a transmission line and knocked two substations offline and 7,000 additional customers lost power. Due to the power outages, the Orting School District canceled school for the day. Meanwhile, a flood warning is in effect for the Skokomish River near Potlatch in Mason County.  

Midwest to See Huge Temperature Drops, Thunderstorms and Possible Snow

Enjoy the mild temperatures and calm weather conditions right now if you live in the Midwest, because big changes are on the way to end the week.
(MAP: Current Temperatures)

Midwest Storm Setup

The culprit is a potent jet stream dip that will move across the northern Rockies and into the Plains. This will help to propel a strong frontal system through the Midwest Thursday through Saturday.
Impacts will range from huge temperatures drops to gusty winds, thunderstorms and perhaps even some snow.

Potential Late Week Storm Impacts

Background

Mild Tuesday

Mild Tuesday
Background

Much Cooler Friday

Much Cooler Friday
Impact #1: Huge Temperature Drops
The most certain impact from this frontal system will be the very large temperature drops. In some places, high temperatures will drop 25 or more degrees from the start to the end of the week.
Here's a few examples:
  • Denver and Rapid City, S.D.: After starting the week with temperatures in 60s, 70s and even low 80s, highs may not get out of the 40s and low 50s in these areas on Friday.
  • Minneapolis: Highs in the upper 70s to near 80 through Wednesday will plummet into the 50s by Saturday.
  • Kansas City: Highs in the low 80s through Thursday will crash into the 50s and 60s this weekend.
  • Chicago: Afternoon temperatures in the 70s and low 80s through Friday will be replaced by 60s this weekend.

http://www.weather.com/news/weather-forecast/midwest-cold-snow-thunderstorms-20130930

First Hurricane Brews After Silent First Half to the Atlantic Storm Season

By ANDREW C. REVKIN
This is a statistical portrait of the hurricane season in the Atlantic Ocean, in which the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows storm incidence, month to month, from 1851 to 2009. Red is major hurricanes, orange hurricanes of all strengths and pale yellow tropical storms.
NOAAThis is a statistical portrait of the hurricane season in the Atlantic Ocean, in which the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows storm incidence, month to month, from 1851 to 2009. Red is major hurricanes, orange hurricanes of all strengths and pale yellow tropical storms.


There’s been a lot of excellent analysis of the mysterious storm-free first half of this year’s hurricane season in the Atlantic Ocean and, more generally, tropical weather trends in the context of human-driven global warming. So rather than add to it, I’ll direct you to some highlights. This is how networked knowledge works.

[Updated, Sept. 11, 8:20 a.m.] First, the news. Brian McNoldy, who studies tropical storms at the University of Miami and now is part of the excellent Washington Post Capital Weather Gang blog, has reported that Hurricane Humberto has finally formed, coming within hours of matching the record set in 2002 for the latest date of first hurricane genesis in the Atlantic. As he notes, Humberto is not expected to persist very long.

The blogging meteorologist Jeff Masters has an excellent piece posted on the rarity of a hurricane-free first half to an Atlantic tropical storm season, with lots more on Humberto (which is nowhere near any land at the moment).

And, of course, the National Hurricane Center remains an essential guide if you live in a region at risk. I recommend its @NHC_Atlantic Twitter feed.

On the climate change context, Chris Mooney — drawing on skills honed since he wrote “Storm World” — filed an excellent overview at Mother Jones as part of the Climate Desk effort (see more of his coverage of hurricanes and climate change here). He writes about factors that might account for this season’s unpredicted calm, the latest (conflicting) studies on global warming and storminess and reminds readers that rising seas make any storm surge worse. Read the whole thing.

Finally, Bryan Walsh at Time posted “A Silent Hurricane Season Adds Fuel to a Debate Over Global Warming,” which echoes Mooney’s piece.

Arctic Melt Unnerves the Experts

By ANDREW C. REVKIN
Published: October 2, 2007


The Arctic ice cap shrank so much this summer that waves briefly lapped along two long-imagined Arctic shipping routes, the Northwest Passage over Canada and the Northern Sea Route over Russia.

 
Over all, the floating ice dwindled to an extent unparalleled in a century or more, by several estimates.

Now the six-month dark season has returned to the North Pole. In the deepening chill, new ice is already spreading over vast stretches of the Arctic Ocean. Astonished by the summer’s changes, scientists are studying the forces that exposed one million square miles of open water — six Californias — beyond the average since satellites started measurements in 1979.

At a recent gathering of sea-ice experts at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks, Hajo Eicken, a geophysicist, summarized it this way: “Our stock in trade seems to be going away.”

Scientists are also unnerved by the summer’s implications for the future, and their ability to predict it.

Complicating the picture, the striking Arctic change was as much a result of ice moving as melting, many say. A new study, led by Son Nghiem at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and appearing this week in Geophysical Research Letters, used satellites and buoys to show that winds since 2000 had pushed huge amounts of thick old ice out of the Arctic basin past Greenland. The thin floes that formed on the resulting open water melted quicker or could be shuffled together by winds and similarly expelled, the authors said.

The pace of change has far exceeded what had been estimated by almost all the simulations used to envision how the Arctic will respond to rising concentrations of greenhouse gases linked to global warming. But that disconnect can cut two ways. Are the models overly conservative? Or are they missing natural influences that can cause wide swings in ice and temperature, thereby dwarfing the slow background warming?

The world is paying more attention than ever.

Russia, Canada and Denmark, prompted in part by years of warming and the ice retreat this year, ratcheted up rhetoric and actions aimed at securing sea routes and seabed resources.

Proponents of cuts in greenhouse gases cited the meltdown as proof that human activities are propelling a slide toward climate calamity.

Arctic experts say things are not that simple. More than a dozen experts said in interviews that the extreme summer ice retreat had revealed at least as much about what remains unknown in the Arctic as what is clear. Still, many of those scientists said they were becoming convinced that the system is heading toward a new, more watery state, and that human-caused global warming is playing a significant role.

For one thing, experts are having trouble finding any records from Russia, Alaska or elsewhere pointing to such a widespread Arctic ice retreat in recent times, adding credence to the idea that humans may have tipped the balance. Many scientists say the last substantial warming in the region, peaking in the 1930s, mainly affected areas near Greenland and Scandinavia.

Some scientists who have long doubted that a human influence could be clearly discerned in the Arctic’s changing climate now agree that the trend is hard to ascribe to anything else.

“We used to argue that a lot of the variability up to the late 1990s was induced by changes in the winds, natural changes not obviously related to global warming,” said John Michael Wallace, a scientist at the University of Washington. “But changes in the last few years make you have to question that. I’m much more open to the idea that we might have passed a point where it’s becoming essentially irreversible.”

Experts say the ice retreat is likely to be even bigger next summer because this winter’s freeze is starting from such a huge ice deficit. At least one researcher, Wieslaw Maslowski of the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif., projects a blue Arctic Ocean in summers by 2013.

In essence, Arctic waters may be behaving more like those around Antarctica, where a broad fringe of sea ice builds each austral winter and nearly disappears in the summer. (Reflecting the different geography and dynamics at the two poles, there has been a slight increase in sea-ice area around Antarctica in recent decades.)

While open Arctic waters could be a boon for shipping, fishing and oil exploration, an annual seesawing between ice and no ice could be a particularly harsh jolt to polar bears.

Many Arctic researchers warned that it was still far too soon to start sending container ships over the top of the world. “Natural variations could turn around and counteract the greenhouse-gas-forced change, perhaps stabilizing the ice for a bit,” said Marika Holland, of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo.

But, she added, that will not last. “Eventually the natural variations would again reinforce the human-driven change, perhaps leading to even more rapid retreat,” Dr. Holland said. “So I wouldn’t sign any shipping contracts for the next 5 to 10 years, but maybe the next 20 to 30.”

While experts debate details, many agree that the vanishing act of the sea ice this year was probably caused by superimposed forces including heat-trapping clouds and water vapor in the air, as well as the ocean-heating influence of unusually sunny skies in June and July. Other important factors were warm winds flowing from Siberia around a high-pressure system parked over the ocean. The winds not only would have melted thin ice but also pushed floes offshore where currents and winds could push them out of the Arctic Ocean.

But another factor was probably involved, one with roots going back to about 1989. At that time, a periodic flip in winds and pressure patterns over the Arctic Ocean, called the Arctic Oscillation, settled into a phase that tended to stop ice from drifting in a gyre for years, so it could thicken, and instead carried it out to the North Atlantic.

The new NASA study of expelled old ice builds on previous measurements showing that the proportion of thick, durable floes that were at least 10 years old dropped to 2 percent this spring from 80 percent in the spring of 1987, said Ignatius G. Rigor, an ice expert at the University of Washington and an author of the new NASA-led study.

Without the thick ice, which can endure months of nonstop summer sunshine, more dark open water and thin ice absorbed solar energy, adding to melting and delaying the winter freeze.

The thinner fresh-formed ice was also more vulnerable to melting from heat held near the ocean surface by clouds and water vapor. This may be where the rising influence of humans on the global climate system could be exerting the biggest regional influence, said Jennifer A. Francis of Rutgers University.

Other Arctic experts, including Dr. Maslowski in Monterey and Igor V. Polyakov at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, also see a role in rising flows of warm water entering the Arctic Ocean through the Bering Strait between Alaska and Russia, and in deep currents running north from the Atlantic Ocean near Scandinavia.

A host of Arctic scientists say it is too soon to know if the global greenhouse effect has already tipped the system to a condition in which sea ice in summers will be routinely limited to a few clotted passageways in northern Canada.

But at the university in Fairbanks — where signs of northern warming include sinkholes from thawing permafrost around its Arctic research center — Dr. Eicken and other experts are having a hard time conceiving a situation that could reverse the trends.

“The Arctic may have another ace up her sleeve to help the ice grow back,” Dr. Eicken said. “But from all we can tell right now, the means for that are quite limited.”

Tropical Storm Jerry unlikely to affect land

Tropical Storm Jerry forecastTropical Storm Jerry formed in the middle of the Atlantic on Monday morning, but it's not forecast to make landfall anywhere.
The tenth tropical cyclone of the season is ahead of the climatological norm; a J-named storm typically doesn't arrive until Oct. 19. Still, the season has been relatively quiet compared to what forecasters had expected earlier this year.
Jerry is about 1,200 miles from Bermuda, and isn't forecast to get much closer to North America anytime soon. The storm's forecast cone has it spinning around in the middle of the ocean for the next several days, a "slow and erratic motion," according to the National Hurricane Center.
The storm had maximum winds of 40 mph, just about the bare minimum for tropical cyclone status. It could strengthen slightly in the coming days, forecasters said


Waterspouts from over Lake Michigan

Updated: September 13, 2013 2:49AM
 
Winthrop Harbor Police officers were among those capturing images twfunnel clouds churning south early afternoon. Though waterspouts remained over open

Downtown workers and school children in Waukegan scrambled for cover Thursday, Sept. 12, as waterspouts formed over Lake Michigan and ran down the shoreline from Kenosha County.
Winthrop Harbor Police officers were among those capturing images of twin funnel clouds churning south early in the afternoon. Though the waterspouts remained over open water and never touched land, tornado sirens sounded around 1:45 p.m. in Waukegan.
Employees and visitors at the 10-story Lake County Building were locked down in safe areas after the waterspouts were sighted. County board members and other employees were advised to take cover in the basement until the emergency was lifted at about 2:20 p.m.
Students in Waukegan Public Schools were directed to hallways and safe areas, according to District 60 spokesman Nicholas Alajakis.
Alajakis added that two automated phone messages were placed to students’ homes — one informing parents and guardians about the safety procedures, and another letting them know when the danger had passed.

How Fire Tornadoes Form


The inferno spun off smoke twisters, and a fire tornado formed. (Flickr/Mulling it Over)
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If you've been to the beach on a summer afternoon, you may have seen a waterspout, generally weak tornadoes forming over a body of water.  
Did you know wildfires can also create their own tornadoes?
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The Science Behind Fire Tornadoes

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  • The Science Behind Fire TornadoesThe Science Behind Fire Tornadoes
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  • How to Make a Fire TornadoHow to Make a Fire Tornado
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  • Keeping your home safe from a wildfireKeeping your home safe from a wildfire
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"Firewhirls" turn and burn. They are rapidly spinning vortices that form when air superheated by an intense wildfire rises rapidly, consolidating low-level spin from winds converging into the fire like a spinning ice skater, pulling its arms inward.
The typical firewhirl can grow to about 100 feet tall, but is very narrow, on the order of a couple of feet wide.
These fire vortices are likely more common than you think. Given the proliferation of cameras,smartphones and social media, we're seeing more documentation of this phenomenon recently.
A firewhirl formed in a wildfire in Summit County, Utah this week.  In September 2012, cameraman Chris Tangey filmed this incredible firewhirl in Australia. Another was captured on video in Brazil in 2010.
You may have seen what appears to be a growing thunderhead above an intense wildfire. Like any other cloud, this so-called pyrocumulus cloud is produced when rising air eventually condenses its water vapor into cloud droplets. It just so happens the hot, rising air is provided by a wildfire.
If the growing pyrocumulus cloud provides a strong enough updraft, an existing firewhirl can grow much larger, resembling a conventional tornado.
A study released in late 2012 documented the process of "pyro-tornadogenesis" for the first time in the January 2003 Canberra, Australia wildfires.
This fire tornado, roughly one-third of a mile wide, produced at least EF2 damage on the Enhanced-Fujita scale, including blowing off roofs of homes.  

Tropical Storm Jerry forming in Atlantic

Tropical Depression Eleven strengthened into Tropical Storm Jerry late Monday morning in the central Atlantic Ocean.
Little change in strength is expected into midweek as Jerry meanders in the central Atlantic well away from land.
By late in the week, Jerry should eventually turn northeastward and accelerate.
Jerry, the tenth named storm of the season, is no threat to the United States or any other land areas.
Below we have maps with additional information on Jerry.

Projected Path

The latest forecast path and wind speeds from the National Hurricane Center.



Background

Storm Information

Storm Information

Current Information

So, where exactly is the cyclone's center located now? If you're plotting the storm along with us, click on the "Current Information" map below to get the latitude/longitude coordinates, distance away from the nearest land location, maximum sustained winds and central pressure (measured in millibars).  

Background

Satellite

Satellite

Satellite

How does the system look on satellite imagery. Click on "infrared" satellite imagery, to see how "cold" the cloud tops are. Brighter orange and red shadings concentrated near the center of circulation signify a healthy tropical cyclone.


Sunday, September 29, 2013

Montana's Toxic Tourist Trap

Close your eyes and picture Montana. What do you see? Snow-capped peaks? Sprawling green valleys? Untamed wildlife? What about a 1,780 foot-deep pit filled with more than 40-billion-gallons of rusty-hued toxic water?
If the latter option strikes you as odd, then you've never visited Butte, Mont. proud home to 34,000 people and the Berkeley Pit — one of the most toxic places on Earth.
For just $2 you can mosey your way up to an observation deck and take in the scene: Crooked terraces crudely etched into the face of the Earth spiral down the rim of the expanse for more than a mile in all directions, gradually sloping into a stagnant pool of water with a sheen the color of a fine cabernet.

The water gains its distinctive hue from the high concentration of chemicals and minerals lurking below. Manganese and iron team up to form the deep red hue at the surface, but plunge further into the depths and the surge in arsenic, aluminum, cadmium and zinc might make the water seem downright chameleonic; at deeper points in the pit's lake the water gradually shifts to a color akin to that of Mountain Dew, Slate reports. 
No one fishes at Berkeley Pit because no fish can survive there. No birds scoot along the water's edge, no vegetation sprouts in, or around, the pit. In 1995, a flock of 342 snow geese decided to roost in the pit's lake for the night. By sunrise they were all dead, their insides charred from the corrosive water, according to Atlas Obscura.

http://www.weather.com/news/science/environment/berkeley-pit-montana-toxic-20130920

Hundreds of Lives Saved by Cleaner Air

More than 800 lives are saved every year because New York City’s air is the cleanest it’s been in half a century, Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced yesterday at a news conference during Climate Week NYC. Following the statement, Bloomberg spoke at The Weather Company’s special Climate Conversation event.
“You’ve got to make saving people’s lives a priority,” Bloomberg said during the news conference, noting that when it comes to the health of the city’s residents, he considers bettering the air second only to the campaign around smoking cessation. “Our objective was to give New York the cleanest air of any big American city,” he added during the Climate Conversation. “We jumped from seventh to third in just three years’ time.”
Part of that success came from getting 2,700 of the biggest-polluting buildings to switch the type of heating fuel they burn, from a pair of oils that emit significant amounts of dangerous pollutants to cleaner fuels. That’s more than one-quarter of the 10,000 buildings targeted, with 2,500 more actively pursuing conversions.



http://www.weather.com/news/science/environment/hundreds-lives-saved-cleaner-air-new-york-city-mayor-bloomberg-says-20130927