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| Hurricane Michael, October 2018 (Source: NOAA) |
NOAA scientists study hurricanes for months and sometimes years after the final advisory has been written on them. Tropical storms and hurricanes can provide lessons on forecasting and emergency preparedness. Occasionally, a hurricane’s intensity is updated after the fact to reflect the research done by NOAA.
2020: The 2020 season was one for the record books with 30 tropical storms in the Atlantic. Hurricane Iota was originally classified as only the second November Category 5 storm on record with peak sustained winds of 160 mph. However, meteorologists took a closer look at the accumulated data that winter and determined it was an upper echelon Category 4 storm at peak intensity, with its highest sustained winds of 155 mph (just below Category 5 status). That made 2020 the first season since 2015 that no Category 5 Atlantic hurricanes occurred.
2019: In the spring of 2019, NOAA determined Hurricane Michael was indeed a Category 5 hurricane at its time of landfall on the U.S. Gulf Coast in October 2018. Originally, it was thought to be an upper end Category 4 hurricane, just below Category 5 status with sustained winds of 155 mph. However, according to NOAA’s post-analysis Michael had sustained winds of 160 mph. While there is little tangible difference between these wind speeds in terms of damage, reclassifying Michael as Category 5 changed a host of historical records.
The upgraded Michael became only the fourth Category 5 hurricane to ever make landfall in the United States and the first since Andrew in 1992. The two other Category 5 hurricanes to make landfall are Camille (1969) and the unnamed Florida Keys 1935 hurricane. Overall, Category 5 hurricanes are exceedingly rare since they require ideal environmental conditions to develop.
2002: On the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Andrew, NOAA determined it was actually a Category 5 hurricane when it made landfall in south Florida. Originally, it was ranked as a Category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 145 mph during its Florida landfall on August 24, 1992. Years of post-analysis study led scientists to reclassify Hurricane Andrew as a Category 5 with sustained winds of 165 mph.
Andrew had the infamous distinction for more than a decade of being the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history. Although more recent hurricanes like Katrina, Harvey and Irma have each caused more damage than Andrew, it still ranks among the Top 10 costliest U.S. hurricanes.
Little did people realize it at the time, but Andrew occurred three short years before a more active cycle began in the tropical Atlantic. From the 1970s through the early 1990s, the tropical Atlantic was relatively quiet with below average tropical activity. However, there has been a series of active Atlantic seasons since 1995. That’s why listening to the latest forecasts from NOAA’s National Hurricane Center and your favorite local meteorologists is of critical importance.
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