Quote from: Sundowner on Yesterday at 07:09:44 PM
Is it so very hard to not see the increase in frequency and severity of "natural" events and not discern a logical pattern? headscratch
Extrapolate into the future what the outcomes will be if the current trends continue and/or increase.
But is there an increase in frequency or severity of natural events? Or is it that the cycle is so long that history does not record far enough into the past? Or is it that there really isn't an increase in frequency or severity? Perhaps it is all a function of a media that needs ever increasing calamity to satisfy present day sensationalism. Or perhaps a certain subset of folks with their own agenda needs there to be an increase to validate them, so the tend to forget that there used to be things like super volcanoes etc.
Just saying...
Work with the best available data. Stating that there may be more unknown data is a flimsy (at best) method to support a position.
This bit of free research is all I give away for today...
Regards,
SunLate April tornado outbreak sets new record, Weather Service says(CNN) -- At least 178 tornadoes were part of the severe weather that raked the Midwest and South April 27-28, making it the largest recorded tornado outbreak in U.S. history, the National Weather Service said Wednesday.
The number of twisters surpassed the previous record of 148 tornadoes in the April 3-4, 1974, outbreak, the Weather Service said.
The April 27-28 outbreak caused 327 deaths, making it the third deadliest tornado outbreak in U.S. history, behind outbreaks in 1925 and 1932, with 747 deaths and 332 deaths respectively.
http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/05/04/tornado.record/index.html?hpt=SbinFlood Unease Builds South Along the Mississippi......Memphis, where the Mississippi was at 43.8 feet Tuesday, could see a near-record crest of 48 feet on May 11, just inches lower than the record of 48.7 feet in 1937.
Forecasters say the river could break records in Mississippi set during catastrophic floods in 1927 and a decade later. Gov. Haley Barbour started warning people last week to take precautions if they live in flood-prone areas near the river, comparing the swell of water moving downriver to a pig moving through a python.
With tornados and the threat of rivers gone wild, "we're making a lot of unfortunate history here in Mississippi in April and May," said Jeff Rent, a Mississippi Emergency Management Agency spokesman........
Read more:
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/05/04/flood-unease-builds-south-mississippi/#ixzz1LR6mbnpiJapan earthquake becomes fifth-strongest since 1900The strongest quake occurred in Chile in 1960 and measured magnitude 9.5. The devastating quake in Japan supplants the 2010 Chile quake, which at 8.8 was fifth-strongest. The deadliest quake in history is believed to have been an 8.0 temblor in Shaanxi, China, in 1556, in which 830,000 are believed to have died.
March 11, 2011|By Michael Muskal | Los Angeles Times
When the earth shook off the coast of Japan on Friday, the magnitude 8.9 quake became the fifth strongest since 1900.
According to records kept by the U.S. Geological Survey's Earthquake Information Center, the largest quake remains the one in Chile in 1960 that measured 9.5. That was followed by the 1964 quake in Prince William Sound, Alaska, at 9.2; the 2004 quake off of Sumatra, at 9.1; and the 1952 quake in Kamchatka, a peninsula in eastern Russia near the Bering Sea, at 9.0......
http://articles.latimes.com/2011/mar/11/news/la-pn-worst-earthquakes-in-history-20110311