WEEKLY OCEAN NEWS
20-24 August 2007
DataStreme Ocean will return for Fall 2007 with new Investigations files
starting during Preview Week, Monday, 27 August 2007. All the current online
website products will continue to be available throughout the summer break
period.
Ocean in the News:
- Eye on the tropics ---
- In the North Atlantic basin, Tropical Storm Erin, the fifth named
tropical cyclone (tropical storm or hurricane) of the 2007 Atlantic hurricane
season moved northwestward across the Gulf of Mexico from where it formed,
weakened and made landfall last Thursday morning along the lower Texas Gulf
Coast near Corpus Christi. This tropical storm, which was downgraded to a
tropical depression was accompanied by torrential rain, but relatively weak
winds and minor storm surge. An image obtained from sensors onboard shows
Tropical Depression Erin just before it made landfall. [NOAA
OSEI] Remnants of this tropical depression moved slowly to the northwest
and then north across the Texas Hill Country and then into Oklahoma.
[Editor's note: Radar imagery as of Sunday morning revealed a
continuation of the counterclockwise swirl of rain bands across Oklahoma,
marking the remnants of former Tropical Storm Erin. EJH] An image of
satellite estimated precipitation across south Texas for 10-17 August 2007 as
obtained from the Multi-satellite Precipitation Analysis that utilizes data
collected by the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite shows
between six and eight inches along the central Texas Gulf Coast due to Tropical
Storm Erin. [NASA
Earth Observatory] An image of Corpus Christi, TX and northern sections of
Padre Island, along with the adjacent bays and inlets made from the Satellite
images such as this view from the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and
Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) on NASAs Terra satellite shows the urban
development and croplands along a vulnerable section of the Texas Gulf Coast.
[NASA
Earth Observatory]
Tropical Storm Dean, which formed at the start of last week over the
eastern equatorial Atlantic moved slowly to the west-northwest and intensified
to became the first hurricane of the 2007 hurricane season as it reached the
Windward Islands. By the end of this past weekend, Hurricane Dean had
intensified to a Category 4 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale as it
traveled across the Caribbean Sea, brushing the island of Jamaica. [CNN] The
projected path of the hurricane was to the west-northwest, where it would make
landfall along the eastern coast of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. An image
obtained from NOAA's GOES-12 satellite at the end of last week shows as classic
pattern of clouds surrounding the central eye of Hurricane Dean. [NOAA
OSEI] An image obtained from data collected by the scatterometer instrument
on NASA's QuickSCAT satellite provides a visualization of the wind field
surrounding the central eye of Hurricane Dean with a counterclockwise
circulation as the system reached the Windward Islands. [NASA
Earth Observatory]
- In the Central North Pacific, the category-4 (on the Saffir-Simpson scale)
Hurricane Flossie continued to approach Hawaiian Islands, weakening to a
tropical storm and then to a tropical depression before dissipating by midweek.
Some strong winds and heavy rain were reported across the southern sections of
the Big Island of Hawaii. This tropical cyclone had originated in the eastern
Pacific over a week before and traveled to the Central North Pacific. A
satellite image by NOAA's GOES-11 satellite shows Hurricane Flossie as it began
to weaken southeast of the Big Island. [NOAA
OSEI] Several days earlier, an image of the hurricane was made by the MODIS
sensors on NASA's Aqua satellite. [NASA
Earth Observatory]
- In the Western North Pacific, Tropical Storm Sepat, the ninth named
tropical cyclone of 2007 in the western North Pacific, intensified to become a
supertyphoon (category 5 on the Saffir-Simpson Scale) as it curved and moved
toward the northwest crossing Taiwan. An image was obtained of the cloud mass
associated with Supertyphoon Sepat from the Japanese MTSAT-2 satellite. [NOAA
OSEI] An image produced from data collected by the scatterometer on the
QuikSCAT satellite shows the near-surface winds circulating in a
counterclockwise direction around this supertyphoon just before it made
landfall on Taiwan. [NASA
Earth Observatory]
- Monitoring sea surface temperatures in hurricane breeding areas --
Animations supplied by NASA from its Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer
- EOS (AMSR-E) instrument on the Aqua satellite shows a seasonal increase in
sea surface temperatures across the sections of the North Atlantic, the
Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico, conditions necessary for the formation
and maintenance of tropical cyclones, such as Hurricane Dean and Tropical Storm
Erin. An oceanographer with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory recently remarked
that the sea surface temperatures across the Atlantic were lower than during
the especially active 2004 and 2005 Atlantic hurricane seasons. [NASA]
- A NASA hurricane resource site unveiled -- The NASA Education Office
has unveiled its new
NASA's
Hurricane Resource Page 2007 website and video intended to be used by
teachers in the classroom. [NASA
Earth Observatory]
- No significant tsunami associated with major Peruvian earthquake --
A major magnitude 7.9 earthquake occurred off the Peruvian coast last Thursday,
causing more than 400 deaths and 1500 injuries, along with massive property
damage. Because this earthquake was offshore, tsunami warnings and watches were
issued by the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center for the Pacific coasts of Central
and South America; however, the tsunami generated was relatively small. [CNN]
An image depicting ocean depth from data compiled by the British Oceanographic
Data Centre and land elevation from data obtained from NASAs Shuttle
Radar Topography Mission (SRTM), show the locations of the earthquake's main
epicenter and aftershocks, along with the offshore Peru-Chile Trench. [NASA
Earth Observatory]
- Mapping the Arctic sea floor continues -- A four-week expedition
that involves NOAAs Office of Coast Survey, the University of New
Hampshires Joint Hydrographic Center and the National Science Foundation
will begin this week to map a section of the Arctic sea floor on the northern
Chukchi Cap. [NOAA
News]
- Summer Arctic ice shrinks to a record low area -- Researchers at the
University of Colorado at Boulder who have been monitoring Arctic sea ice since
the late 1970s are forecasting an extremely high probability that the extent of
the sea ice will reach a record low areal extent within the next month, based
upon rapid disintegration of the ice cover during July. [National
Snow and Ice Data Center]
- Lake Superior could reach record low levels this fall --
Hydrologists at NOAA's Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory are
indicating that their forecast models, which utilize current hydrological
conditions along with NOAA long-term climate outlooks, would suggest that the
level of Lake Superior could drop below previous record low levels in the
upcoming months of September and October. Several reasons have been advanced to
explain why the lake level is low including natural causes due to a lack of
precipitation, warmer winters, less ice cover and increased evaporation, as
well as anthropogenic causes that include increased dredging and water
diversion. [NOAA
News]
- Texans join research expedition to Amundsen Sea -- Researchers from
the University of Texas at San Antonio and a high school teacher from the Texas
Hill Country will join an international crew that will conduct a two-month
expedition to Antarctica's Amundsen Sea in a attempt to collect information on
the sea ice and its interaction with the local environment. [EurekAlert!]
- A missing link to oceanic climate regulator found -- Australian
scientists associated with the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organisation claim that they have identified a "supergyre" in the
waters off Australia, a circulation regime that represents the deep ocean
pathway linking three ocean basins in the Southern Hemisphere that helps govern
global climate. [CSIRO]
- Call made for a Southern Ocean current monitoring network -- A
senior Australian science advisory recently called for the establishment of a
network of deep ocean moorings in the Southern Ocean that would measure ocean
currents in an effort to detect changes in ocean circulation that could
influence global climate. [CSIRO]
- Underwater robot probes Black Sea -- Marine scientists at the
University of Delaware are about to explore the waters of the Black Sea using a
novel autonomous underwater vehicle, called DOERRI (Delaware Oceanographic and
Environmental Research Remote Instrument). [University of
Delaware]
- More discoveries made along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge -- An
international research team was to reach Scotland after a 5-week scientific
expedition along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge onboard the Royal Research Ship
James Cook, where at least one new marine life species was discovered at
depths between 800 and 3500 meters. [EurekAlert!]
- A new invader found in the Gulf of Mexico -- The invasive Australian
spotted jellyfish has been sighted for the first time in the Gulf of Mexico
during this summer. [EurekAlert!]
- Pacific island nations facing freshwater shortages -- An
international team of researchers from Australia, several Pacific island
nations and France warn that the supply of freshwater from underground sources
on several of the Pacific islands has been diminished, affected by natural and
anthropogenic changes [EurekAlert!]
- Environmental pollution held responsible for a large number of deaths
-- A Cornell University researcher claims that approximately 40 percent of
the deaths around the world are caused by environmental degradation associated
with water, air and soil pollution. [Cornell
University News]
- Global and US Hazards/Climate Extremes -- A review and analysis of
the global impacts of various weather-related events, including drought, floods
and storms during the current month. [NCDC]
- Earthweek -- Diary of the Planet [earthweek.com] Requires
Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Historical Events:
- 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...Hurricane John while about 390 miles south of Hilo, HI was
found to have winds at 170 mph and pressure down to 920 mb, making it the
strongest hurricane ever in the Central Pacific. It was the third category 5
storm in this area in a month, unprecedented since records began. (Intellicast)
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 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 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)
- 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)
- 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)
- 26 August 1883...Krakatoa Volcano exploded in the East Indies. The
explosion was heard more than 2500 miles away, and every barograph around the
world recorded the passage of the air wave, up to seven times. Giant waves, 125
feet high and traveling 300 mph, devastated everything in their path, hurling
ashore coral blocks weighing up to 900 tons, and killing more than 36,000
persons. Volcanic ash was carried around the globe in thirteen days producing
blue and green suns in the tropics, and then vivid red sunsets in higher
latitudes. The temperature of the Earth was lowered one degree for the next two
years, finally recovering to normal by 1888. (David Ludlum)
- 26 August 1949...A hurricane made landfall at Delray Beach, FL. Winds
reached 153 mph at the Jupiter Lighthouse before the anemometer failed. The
hurricane caused $45 million damage to crops, and also caught the Georgia and
South Carolina coast resulting in another $2 million in damage. (David Ludlum)
- 26 August 1992...Hurricane Andrew made its second landfall along the
Louisiana coast near Burns Point, as a category 3 hurricane on the
Saffir-Simpson Scale. Morgan City recorded wind gusts of 108 mph. Hammond was
deluged with nearly a foot of rain. Total additional damage was estimated at
$1.8 billion. Andrew, which had made its initial US landfall in South Florida
on the 24th, was the most costly natural disaster in US history,
with total damage reaching up to $30 billion. Additionally, record hurricane
evacuation of 2.4 million people took place in Florida and Louisiana.
(Intellicast) (Accord's Weather Guide Calendar)
Return to DataStreme Ocean Website
Prepared by AMS DS Ocean Central Staff and Edward J. Hopkins, Ph.D., email
hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
ã Copyright, 2007, The American
Meteorological Society.