首页
登录
职称英语
Forecasters sensed the 2004 hurricane season would be very active, but even s
Forecasters sensed the 2004 hurricane season would be very active, but even s
游客
2023-12-15
19
管理
问题
Forecasters sensed the 2004 hurricane season would be very active, but even storm veterans have been surprised by the past 30 days. Last month marked the first time since the beginning of postwar hurricane reconnaissance flights that August generated three major hurricanes in the Atlantic. If the current forecast track for hurricane Ivan holds, it will be the third hurricane to strike Florida in a month.
Yet for all its fury, this season’s burst of activity falls well within the bounds of past experience. What’s surprising, say experts, is that the US and Florida haven’t seen more major storms make landfall over the past few decades.
Despite the damage wrought by Charley and Frances, "we’ve been very fortunate," says William Gray, a tropical-meteorology specialist at Colorado State University who pioneered seasonal hurricane forecasting. He notes that since 1995, only 1 out of 7 major hurricanes spawned in the Atlantic have made landfall in the US, compared with the 100-year average of 1 in 3. The Florida peninsula alone saw 14 major hurricanes between 1926 and 1965. Since 1966, only three major storms have struck-Andrew, Charley, and Frances.
Now forecasters have their eyes on Ivan, which has devastated Grenada and Jamaica and at press time was bearing down on the Cayman Islands and Cuba with sustained winds near 155 miles an hour. Ivan has been blamed for 56 deaths in the Caribbean basin and, according to Red Cross estimates, 60,000 people on Grenada-two-thirds of the island’s population-are homeless and 34 people have died. On Jamaica, where an estimated 500,000 people ignored warnings to evacuate, at least 11 were killed.
Several factors have converged to make this hurricane season one for the record books, researchers say.
For one thing, long-term cycles affecting the ocean and atmosphere are at play. Known as the Atlantic multidecadal signal, "these atmospheric conditions and warmer ocean temperatures can turn up for decades at a time," says Gerald Bell, a meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Climate Prediction Center in Camp Springs, Md. Currently, long-term patterns favor hurricane seasons that yield more tropical storms and hurricanes than normal. Conditions are similar to those that held sway from the mid-1920s to the mid-1960s, another period of above-normal tropical cyclone activity.
Within those periods, he adds, storm activity season to season is affected by features such as El Nino episodes. Their long-range reach can generate wind patterns over the Atlantic that suppress the formation of hurricanes.
Forecasters see a weak E1 Nino beginning to build in the eastern tropical Pacific. But they add that it’s unlikely to have much of an effect on this year’s hurricane season. And if it remains weak, it could have little effect on next year’s season.
In forecasting monthly activity for August, Dr. Gray says he and his colleagues missed unusually warm sea-surface temperatures in the eastern Atlantic, where hurricanes and tropical storms are born.
The team forecast above-average activity for the month, "but we could not have anticipated the unusually high amount of storm activity that occurred," he notes. August yielded eight named storms.
With the Atlantic basin in the midst of a long-term active phase for hurricanes, "undoubtedly [over] the next 20 years, we’re likely to see much more damage than during the last 20 years," Gray says.
The reason: While hurricane activity is more or less readjusting to its long-term averages after a period of relative quiet, more people are placing themselves, their houses, yachts, and office high-rises in storm paths when they move to hurricane- prone states and their geologically fragile shorelines. In 1926, a hurricane struck Florida that-if it were to happen today-would cause $100 billion in damage, notes Roger Pielke Jr., with the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
While no one advocates preventing people from moving to Florida or the Carolinas, the prospect of more growth in hurricane-prone areas puts the onus on residents to become familiar with preparing for hurricanes, on communities for enforcing building codes aimed at reducing damage, and on federal researchers to continue improvements in forecasting. [br] "Press time" in paragraph 4 means______.
选项
A、the moment when a magazine or other publication goes to press
B、the situation requiring quick or immediate action or attention
C、emergency
D、time that applies pressure to the islands and Cuba
答案
A
解析
第四段中“press time”的意思是。意思是“截稿时间”。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3275672.html
相关试题推荐
Forecasterssensedthe2004hurricaneseasonwouldbeveryactive,butevens
Forecasterssensedthe2004hurricaneseasonwouldbeveryactive,butevens
Forecasterssensedthe2004hurricaneseasonwouldbeveryactive,butevens
Forecasterssensedthe2004hurricaneseasonwouldbeveryactive,butevens
GeneralChiarellisaidthat164active-dutyArmy,NationalGuard,andReservetr
TogetherwithHurricaneElida,therehavebeen______stormsinthisseason.[or
Whichprogrammeisseasonfinaletop-ratedprime-timedrama?[br][originaltext
Whichprogrammeisseasonfinaletop-ratedprime-timedrama?[originaltext]O
Whenwillprobablybetheearliesttimeforthere-openingoftheNBAseason?[o
We’vecomealongwaywithcomputersalready.Theinteractivechildren’stoy
随机试题
RealWorld&RealLearning
Acarmainlyconsists______abody,anengine,andfourwheels.A、withB、ofC、in
Accordingtothepassage,theInternationalWomen’sDayison______.[br]Howm
[originaltext]Vitaminsareessentialtolife.Todaytherearemanykindsof
依次填入横线处最恰当的是( )。 从一穷二白、百废待兴的落后面貌,到欣欣向荣
某公司最近引入了全面质量管理(TQM)系统,在这种新的环境下,首席审计官面临着决
为了消除隧道的黑洞或黑框现象,必须在隧道入口使路面()。A.亮度达到必要的水平
建设单位在领取开工证之后,应当在几个月内开工? A.3B.6C.9D
个别企业生产商品劳动时间的延长意味着()。A.商品价值量的减少 B.商品价值
下列关于船舶吨税的征收管理表述中,正确的有()。A.应税船舶在吨税执照期限
最新回复
(
0
)