Will the GOM have low,Moderate or High Tropical Activity?
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- cycloneye
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Will the GOM have low,Moderate or High Tropical Activity?
IMO the GOM will be in a moderate active way but I can't say at this time in what areas of the Gulf Coast there will be more landfalls because there is not a clear pattern that has set up yet.This poll is only for GOM activity how it will be in your estimation not about where the high risk will be but if anyone wants to say about where will tropical activity in the GOM will be more high you can say about it.
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cyclonaut
If a weak to moderate El Nino is present during the hurricane season as some have forecasted, in past analog years with El Nino's, the Gulf Coastal areas have had major hits. I believe someone(FloydBuster?) posted a thread on hurricanes during El Nino years and the Gulf areas have seen their share of major ones during these years.
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- HURAKAN
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On average, the tropical activity in the Gulf of Mexico is moderate, with some years very active and other the opposite. Since this year, because of all the meteorological factors now combining the season will be average or slightly above, I predict a moderate season will prevail in the Gulf of Mexico.
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kevin
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HurricaneBill
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- weatherwindow
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a couple of questions for the board and the archival minded
....is the GOM more or less sensitive to the impacts of an el nino than the MDR(tropical atlantic, caribbean)
.....and for the researchers(yes, you Bill), how does the average GOM season(GOM genesis only,not storms in transit from the atl and carib) compare in el nino and la nina years
. i am curious if a pattern exists in the GOM that may differ from the MDR.........thanks in advance, rich
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GOM formations by warm/cold/neutral episodes
Using the CPC definition
Warm and cold episodes based on a threshold of +/- 0.5oC for the Oceanic Niño Index (ONI) [3 month running mean of ERSST.v2 SST anomalies in the Niño 3.4 region (5oN-5oS, 120o-170oW)], based on the 1971-2000 base period. For historical purposes cold and warm episodes are defined when the threshold is met for a minimum of 5 consecutive over-lapping seasons.
tropical cyclone formation in the GOM - per the NHC tracks
WARM COLD NEUTRAL
1951 0 1950 3 1952 0
1957 5 1954 2 1953 1
1963 1 1955 1 1958 1
1965 0 1956 3 1959 5
1969 1 1964 1 1960 3
1972 0 1970 0 1961 1
1976 2 1971 1 1962 0
1977 2 1973 0 1966 1
1982 3 1974 1 1967 1
1986 2 1975 0 1968 1
1987 1 1983 1 1978 3
1991 0 1988 2 1979 2
1994 1 1995 2 1980 1
1997 1 1998 4 1981 0
2002 3 1999 2 1984 1
2004 1 1985 2
1989 2
1990 0
1992 0
1993 1
1996 1
2000 1
2001 3
2003 5
I don't really see a significant difference
Warm and cold episodes based on a threshold of +/- 0.5oC for the Oceanic Niño Index (ONI) [3 month running mean of ERSST.v2 SST anomalies in the Niño 3.4 region (5oN-5oS, 120o-170oW)], based on the 1971-2000 base period. For historical purposes cold and warm episodes are defined when the threshold is met for a minimum of 5 consecutive over-lapping seasons.
tropical cyclone formation in the GOM - per the NHC tracks
WARM COLD NEUTRAL
1951 0 1950 3 1952 0
1957 5 1954 2 1953 1
1963 1 1955 1 1958 1
1965 0 1956 3 1959 5
1969 1 1964 1 1960 3
1972 0 1970 0 1961 1
1976 2 1971 1 1962 0
1977 2 1973 0 1966 1
1982 3 1974 1 1967 1
1986 2 1975 0 1968 1
1987 1 1983 1 1978 3
1991 0 1988 2 1979 2
1994 1 1995 2 1980 1
1997 1 1998 4 1981 0
2002 3 1999 2 1984 1
2004 1 1985 2
1989 2
1990 0
1992 0
1993 1
1996 1
2000 1
2001 3
2003 5
I don't really see a significant difference
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- CaneCurious
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Active GOM Season
My husband and I actually had this conversation on the drive home from downtown New Orleans yesterday evening. We both think that 2005 is going to be an active GOM season and SE LA, New Orleans in particular, is going to have to stay on its toes.
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Anonymous
- frederic79
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Moderately active
While I don't think the Gulf will see four major storms, I feel there will be one or two somewhere on the coast from the Panhandle west. This depends, of course, on the location and strength of the Bermuda high come August. However, we all know it only takes one to severely impact a given area. I'm going out of limb to say - watch out New Orleans and surrounding areas. Betsy was 40 years ago and that's a long time. Odds are sooner or later your levies will be tested again, not to mention evacuation procedures. Nothing scientific, just odds and a hunch. I hope I'm wrong. Go Saints!
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- Yankeegirl
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Anonymous
- southerngale
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- BayouVenteux
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southerngale wrote:It would be impossible for a hurricane to ever make landfall in North Texas. Impossible.
Just a hunch, but I'm guessing Floydbuster is referring to what locals over your way call "southeast Texas", i.e. the area from around Houston/Galveston over to the Golden Triangle, perhaps?
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Andrew '92, Katrina '05, Gustav '08, Isaac '12, Ida '21...and countless other lesser landfalling storms whose names have been eclipsed by "The Big Ones".
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