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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsUnanswered questions about Hurricane Isaac
http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/comment.html?entrynum=2216<snip>
1. Did the passage of Hurricane Isaac stir up oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill? Isaac was the first hurricane to pass over the site of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. We know that large hurricanes are capable of creating currents in deep water at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico; Hurricane Ivan caused upwelling currents of 0.5 cm/s at a depth of about 500 meters. In an August 28 article in the Huffington Post, Nick Shay, professor of meteorology and physical oceanography at the University of Miami, said: "Winds will push water away from the center of a storm, which causes an upwelling as the ocean tries to adjust. It brings whatever is near the bottom up higher in the water column and currents can then push it towards the coast." Up to 1 million barrels of oil from the spill are estimated to still be present in the deep water sediment, on beaches, and in the marshes of Louisiana, and it is possible some of this oil will wash up on the Gulf Coast in coming months. The storm surge of Isaac also likely flushed out oil lodged in the coastal marshes of Louisiana, but it is unknown how much of a concern this might be.
2. What's the deal with these super-sized Category 1 and 2 hurricanes that have been hitting the U.S.? The past three landfalling hurricanes in the U.S.--Isaac (2012), Irene (2011), and Ike (2008)--have all been exceptionally large, among the top ten on record for horizontal extent of tropical storm-force winds. Each of these storms had an unusually low pressure characteristic of a storm one full Saffir-Simpson category stronger. Is this the new normal for U.S. hurricanes?
3. Did the new $14.5 billion upgrade to the New Orleans levee system cause worse flooding elsewhere? Whenever a new levee or flood control structure is created, you make someone else's flood problem worse, since the water has to go somewhere. Where did the water was stopped by the new $1.1 billion, 1.8 mile-long Lake Borgne flood barrier on the east side of New Orleans go? Did it flow south and contribute to the overtopping of the levees near Braithwaite? Or did it go north and contribute to the 36 hours of storm surge in excess of 5' observed along the Mississippi coast at Waveland? I posed this question to NHC's storm surge expert Jaime Rhome, and he said it was impossible to know without doing detailed storm surge modeling studies.
4. Can only hurricanes beginning with the letter "I" hit the U.S. now? Isaac (2012), Irene (2011), and Ike (2008) are the last three hurricanes to hit the U.S. It turns out that hurricanes that begin with the letter "I" and "C" have more names on the list of retired hurricanes than any other letter (nine each.) I'm thinking Isaac will get its name retired, letting storms beginning with "I" take over sole possession of first place on the retired storms list.
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Unanswered questions about Hurricane Isaac (Original Post)
malaise
Sep 2012
OP
I think the rather large storms weve been having lately are due to global warming
darkangel218
Sep 2012
#1
darkangel218
(13,985 posts)1. I think the rather large storms weve been having lately are due to global warming
malaise
(268,693 posts)2. Yep - Climate change is obvious to anyone who sees the data
The evidence is clear - let the Rmoney's keep on promoting ignorance.
lynne
(3,118 posts)3. Not sure so new, think it's just the nature of the storm -
- see Cat. 1 Hurricane Agnes, 1972, hit east coast. 128 died.
These slow moving storms have more time to suck up water and even more time to dump huge amounts of it on land, causing horrific flooding. A cat. 5 will give you wind damage and larger storm surge. The damage on a cat. 1 is mostly by the water it dumps since it's moving so slowly.