Uh-Oh
This bit of news won't make Maryland sleep easy this summer:
If any of these storms are anything like Isabel, Hazel, or the Great Hurricane of 1938, we can all be in trouble.
"The Northeast is staring down the barrel of a gun," said Joe Bastardi, Chief Forecaster of the AccuWeather.com Hurricane Center. "The Northeast coast is long overdue for a powerful hurricane, and with the weather patterns and hydrology we're seeing in the oceans, the likelihood of a major hurricane making landfall in the Northeast is not a question of if but when."Well, given that some people are dealing with the aftereffects of Isabel, there are a lot of people who are not going to be thrilled by this acknowledgement. This neat chart explains it all.
AccuWeather.com Hurricane Center research meteorologists have identified weather cycles that indicate which U.S. coastal areas are most susceptible to landfalls. "If you examine past weather cycles that have occurred in the Atlantic, you will see patterns of storms," added Ken Reeves, Expert Senior Meteorologist and Director of Forecasting Operations at AccuWeather.com. "Determination of where we are in the cycle has enabled AccuWeather.com meteorologists to accurately predict hurricane activity in Florida in 2004 and along the Gulf Coast last year. There are indications that the Northeast will experience a hurricane larger and more powerful than anything that region has seen in a long time."
If any of these storms are anything like Isabel, Hazel, or the Great Hurricane of 1938, we can all be in trouble.
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