WEEKLY OCEAN NEWS
19-23 August 2013
DataStreme Ocean will return for Fall 2013 with new Investigations files starting during Preview Week, Monday, 2 September 2013. All the current online website products will continue to be available throughout the summer break period.
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Items of Interest:
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- "My Climate & Me" website launched -- Earlier this month the United Kingdom's Meteorological Office launched a new web site called "My Climate & Me" that enables British citizens to put questions about weather and climate to leading experts using an online video magazine and roving reporter. The Met Office hopes that this site will help educate citizens about climate and its effects on our quality of life and allow for better understanding of climate change and its implications. [My Climate & Me]
Ocean in the News:
- Eye on the tropics -- Some tropical cyclone activity was found across tropical ocean basins last week:
- In the Atlantic
- In the eastern North Pacific
- In the western North Pacific
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- Review of global climate for July 2013 --Across the world's oceans, the July average global sea surface temperature was XXX°C (XXX°F) above the 20th century average of 16.4°C (61.5°F), making this the seventh warmest July on record. ...
[NOAA State of the climate]
- An All-Hazards Monitor -- This Web portal provides the user information from NOAA on current environmental events that may pose as hazards such as tropical weather, drought, floods, marine weather, tsunamis, rip currents, Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) and coral bleaching. [NOAAWatch]
- Earthweek -- Diary of the Planet [earthweek.com] Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Historical Events:
- 19 August 1559...First recorded U.S. hurricane drove five Spanish
ships ashore in Pensacola Harbor along the Florida coast. (Intellicast)
- 19 August 1788...A small but powerful hurricane inflicted great
havoc upon forests along a narrow track from Delaware Bay northeastward
across New Jersey along the coast to Maine. A similar storm track today
would cause extreme disaster in the now populated area. (David Ludlum)
- 19-20 August 1969...'Never say die' Camille, an exceptionally
strong hurricane that had weakened to a tropical depression as it
drifted slowly across the mid-Atlantic states, let loose a cloudburst in
Virginia resulting in flash floods and landslides that killed 151
persons and caused 140 million dollars damage. Massies Hill in Nelson
County, Virginia received an estimated 27 inches of rain in 24 hours.
This amount is an unofficial record for the state, while the official
24-hour maximum precipitation record is 14.28 inches at Williamsburg on
16 September 1999. It was said to rain so hard that birds drowned while
perched on tree branches. The James and York River basins in Virginia
were especially hard hit. (Intellicast) (David Ludlum) (NCDC) (Accord's
Weather Guide Calendar)
- 19 August 1991...Hurricane Bob slammed into New England with 90
mph sustained winds and gusts of 125 mph (at Block Island, RI) and 105
mph (at Newport, RI). It made landfall first at Newport, RI and then
final US landfall as a tropical storm at Rockland, ME. A storm surge of
15 feet occurred in Upper Buzzards Bay. Portland, ME had a 24-hour
record rainfall of 7.83 inches. Total damage exceeded $1.5 billion
dollars and 17 people were killed. This was the worst Hurricane in the
Northeast since Donna in 1960. (Intellicast) (Accord's Weather Guide
Calendar)
- 20 August 1886...The town of Indianola, TX was completely destroyed by a hurricane, and never rebuilt. (David Ludlum)
- 21 August 1997...High winds and torrential rains from one of the
worst typhoons to batter China in a decade caused the death of at least
140 at Zhejiang and Jiangsu. (The Weather Doctor)
- 22 August 1770...James Cook's expedition landed on the east coast of Australia. (Wikipedia)
- 22 August 1787...Inventor John Fitch demonstrated his steamboat on the Delaware River to delegates of the Continental Congress. Its top speed was 3 mph. These tests were completed years before Fulton built his steamboat. (Today in Science History)
- 22 August 1780...HMS Resolution, Captain James Cook's ship, returned to England; Cook had been killed on Hawaii during the voyage. (Wikipedia)
- 22 August 1962...The 506-ft long NS Savannah, the world's first civilian nuclear-powered ship, completed its maiden voyage from Yorktown, VA to Savannah, GA; the ship was named for the SS Savannah, the first steam-powered ship to cross the Atlantic in 1819. (Wikipedia) (Today in Science History)
- 22 August 1994...The USCG icebreaker Polar Sea and the CCCS Louis S. Ste Laurent became the first "North American surface ships" to reach the North Pole. (USCG Historian's Office)
- 23 August 1540...The French explorer Jacques Cartier landed near Quebec in his voyage to Canada. (Wikipedia)
- 23 August 1889...The first wireless message from a ship to the shore "Sherman is sighted", was received in the US. The US Lightship No. 70, San Francisco, announced the arrival of the U.S. Army troopship Sherman to the crowd assembled at the Cliff House. Reporters from the San Francisco Call relayed this information to a city awaiting the return of its hometown regiment from the battlefields of the Spanish-American War. The lightship, miles out at sea in deep fog, relayed this message via wireless telegraphy (later known as radio) through the fog to the Cliff House. This was the first 19th-century working use of wireless telegraphy outside of England. The method was still primitive, using sparks to emit intermittent radio waves and code messages. (Wikipedia) (Today in Science History)
- 23 August 1933...The Chesapeake-Potomac hurricane made landfall over Nag's Head, NC and moved over Norfolk, VA, Chesapeake Bay and Washington, DC. Winds gusted to 88 mph at Norfolk, VA. A tide seven feet above normal flooded businesses in Norfolk, and damage in Maryland was estimated at $17 million. Sixty percent of Atlantic City, NJ was flooded as was 10 square miles of southwest Philadelphia, PA. Forty seven people were killed and damage was estimated at $47 million (in depression-era dollars) (David Ludlum) (Intellicast)
- 23-24 August 1992...Hurricane Andrew on its way to Florida with winds of 150 mph, struck northern Eleuthera Island in the Bahamas. The storm surge reached 23 feet. Total damage on the islands topped $250 million. At about 5 AM on the 24th, Andrew made landfall near Homestead, FL with a central pressure of 922 mb (27.22 in.). Fowey Rocks coastal marine buoy recorded maximum sustained winds of 141 mph and a peak gust of 169 mph and the National Hurricane Center in Coral Gables had sustained winds of 115 mph with a peak gust of 164 mph. A record storm surge of 16.7 feet occurred in Biscayne Bay. Homestead AFB was practically wiped out. More than 120,000 homes were damaged or destroyed, leaving 250,000 homeless. Forty-one people died and property damage exceeded $25 billion, making Andrew by far the most costly hurricane in U.S. history. Andrew was the third most intense hurricane to strike the mainland behind Camille (1969) and the Labor Day Hurricane (1935) (Intellicast)
- 23-24 August 1998...Almost 18 inches of rain deluged Del Rio, TX between 8 AM on the 23rd and 6 AM on the 24th because of stalled remnants of Tropical Storm Charley. Violent flash flooding from San Felipe Creek left residential lots swept bare of homes, with asphalt streets gone. Nine people were killed and 150 injured. (Accord's Weather Guide Calendar)
- 24-29 August 1785...Hurricane ravaged the Eastern Caribbean Sea from St. Croix, Virgin Islands to Cuba during the last week of August. Over 142 people were reported dead from the storm's impact. (The Weather Doctor)
- 24 August 1912...The US Congress gave effect to the convention between United States, Great Britain, Japan and Russia prohibiting taking of fur seals and sea otters in the North Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea by authorizing the President "to cause a guard or patrol to be maintained in the waters frequented by the seal herd or herds of seal otter." (USCG Historian's Office)
- 24 August 1988...A tropical depression drenched the Cabo Rojo area of southwestern Puerto Rico with up to ten inches of rain. San Juan received 5.35 inches of rain. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
- 25 August 1885...A severe hurricane struck South Carolina causing $1.3 million damage at Charleston. (David Ludlum)
- 25 August 1927...The August Gale, a hurricane, raged across the East Coast, crossing the Cabot Strait between Nova Scotia and Newfoundland during the early morning hours. Hundreds of small boats in Newfoundland ports are among the storm's victims. (The Weather Doctor)
- 25 August-7 September 1979...Hurricane David crossed the island of Dominica on the 29th, with winds to 145 mph. Roseau, the capital, was devastated. Fifty-six people were killed on Dominica and 60,000 of the island's 80,000 residents were made homeless. About three-quarters of the coconut and banana crop were destroyed. The central pressure in David fell to 924 mb (27.28 in.) on the 30th as it moved south of Puerto Rico. At that time, highest sustained winds reached 173 mph. On the 31st, winds of 150 mph from Hurricane David brought over $1 billion in damage to Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, killing over 1200. (The Weather Doctor) (Accord's Weather Guide Calendar)
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