- blaue_Fledermaus ( @blaue_Fledermaus@mstdn.io ) 4•7 days ago
Since it shows the global distribution, an interesting curiosity: some years ago there was the first and only recorded hurricane in the South Atlantic, named Catarina after it hit my state of Santa Catarina in Brazil.
Since “hurricanes don’t happen in the South Atlantic”, Brazilian meteorologists were sort of ignoring the threat until the USians started calling to warn.
- Avalokitesha ( @Avalokitesha@programming.dev ) English2•6 days ago
I was wondering about that, there’s a second band between Africa and Australia but nothing in the south Atlantic. What’s up with that?
- Midnitte ( @Midnitte@beehaw.org ) English3•7 days ago
Fun fact, the spin of a hurricane (or typhoon) is directed by the Coriolis effect - hurricanes in the northern hemisphere spin counterclockwise, while hurricans in the southern hemisphere spin clockwise.
- will_a113 ( @will_a113@lemmy.ml ) English3•7 days ago
I was under the impression that the number of hurricanes that made landfall had been increasing in recent decades, but the bottom chart suggests it’s about constant. Maybe it’s just the total number of storms then?
- will_a113 ( @will_a113@lemmy.ml ) English5•7 days ago
I came across this, which shows the actual trend line for hurricanes and tropical storms, including those that did not make landfall - https://www.gfdl.noaa.gov/historical-atlantic-hurricane-and-tropical-storm-records/
- Midnitte ( @Midnitte@beehaw.org ) English2•7 days ago
It might be more that the category of storms is increasing (due to warmer waters), which isn’t reflected in that chart
- Mr. Camel999 ( @MrCamel999@programming.dev ) English1•7 days ago
I was under the same impression, but it might just be that storms are getting more intense, and therefore we remember more of them in recent times.