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Rediscovering Hurricanes: Everything you wanted to know about Hurricanes but was never told

Wayne Neely

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Color (8.5x11)9781434338914 £ 25.40  
About the Book

With Foreword by Herbert Saffir, Rediscovering Hurricanes is an entertaining and informative book on hurricanes. It is a book that offers a fascinating examination of Hurricanes and its impact on extensive areas of our planet. It also provides an introspective look at Hurricanes and how they have influenced regional and world history. For example, were it not for several hurricanes, Spanish would not be the official language of Cuba, French would not be the official language of Guadeloupe, Japan might have been part of China today were it not for a hurricane which destroyed the Mongol fleet poised to attack Japan. This book goes into great details and provides some very interesting and fascinating stories of the major hurricanes of the North Atlantic from 1495 to Present. It also includes several lists of notable Atlantic tropical cyclones and reasons for notability. It includes the major hurricanes but it also goes in-depth into some of the major historic hurricanes such as, The Great Hurricane of 1780, Katrina, Andrew, Mitch, Gilbert, Lake Okeechobee Hurricane,  the Great Galveston Hurricane of 1900 and many others. No book on hurricanes would be complete without two controversial topics, Global Warming and El Niño. Most hurricane authors over the years have mainly concentrated on the negative aspects of hurricanes without explaining the benefits of hurricanes. Well this book devotes a complete chapter on the benefits of hurricanes and why they are important to the earth’s dynamic and complex ecosystem. Finally, this book also features information on unusual weather facts like, the first flight into a hurricane was based on a bet and not a carefully planned flight, or the first weather radar was discovered by accident during the Second World War. If you are curious about hurricanes you definitely need to buy this book-you won’t be disappointed.


About the Author
Wayne Neely is a certified Meteorologist working at the Department of Meteorology in Nassau, Bahamas for the last 17 years-prior to that he majored in Geography at the College of The Bahamas in Nassau. He then attended The Caribbean Meteorological Institute in Barbados where he majored in weather forecasting. His love for hurricanes and the weather came about while growing up on the island of Andros-another island in The Bahamas where he grew up listening to his parents, grand parents and other older residents in the community talking about a major hurricane which occurred in 1929 and devastated The Bahamas...That peaked his interest in hurricanes and got him started on writing his first book called "The Great Bahamas Hurricane of 1929-Personal Recollections of the Greatest storm of the 20th Century in The Bahamas" and he then went onto write his second book called "The Major Hurricanes to Affect The Bahamas" and now this is his third book and the rest is history....Over the years Wayne has written several articles on hurricanes and other severe weather events for some of the major local and international newspapers and magazines.
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MAJOR ATLANTIC HURRICANES FROM 1495 T0 THE PRESENT DAY

Hurricanes played an important role during the European exploration and colonization of the Americas. New settlements were established, battles were lost and geography was changed by these monster storms. During the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, hurricanes posed some great and unique challenges for the colonists in the Caribbean, Central America and North America. These storms quickly became the most feared aspect of their physical environment, destroying staple and cash crops and provisions, leveling plantations, cities and towns, disrupting shipping and trade, and resulting in major economic losses for colonial residents and native inhabitants. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, hurricanes making landfall in the Caribbean and on the coast of North America may have gone unreported because of the dispersed character of colonial settlements in the region. By the eighteenth century, settlements were more uniformly distributed throughout the Caribbean and increased use of the sea-lanes provided a higher likelihood of storms being detected and reported. With the coming of the Europeans, written records, first in meticulous Spanish and then English, began but generally only of storms that sank ships or devastated colonial settlements were recorded. The quantitative record of Atlantic hurricanes began in 1851, and actually started to be reliable just before the turn of the 20th Century. The historical record of hurricane activity in this region before the late 1800’s is sadly deficient. There are a number of reasons why hurricanes moving through this region may not have been recorded in historical records because given the fact that the major islands in this region were not settled until early to mid 1600’s. First, prior to the early to mid 1600’s hurricanes that moved through the region were not recorded due to lack of permanent settlements. Second, a small percentage of North Atlantic hurricanes made landfall in the region only, so therefore they were not recorded. Third, unless these storms produced excessive damage and/or loss of life, they were unlikely to be recorded in historical manuals or documents. Fourth, during the early 1900s and earlier in the 1700’s and 1800’s Wars in Europe and America with impact on the Caribbean were nearly constant during the colonial period. News of these events often dominated newspaper reports and may have pre-empted reports of lesser scale weather events such as hurricanes in the region, especially with the minimal storms. Inaddition, colonial affiliations impacted the sharing of news. Poor relations between the British and the French resulted in trade restrictions between the two colonies, by extension; this would inhibit the delivery of news of weather catastrophes to colonies with different affiliations. Fifth, it was estimated that as much as fifty-four percent of the hurricanes and tropical storms in the North Atlantic Ocean failed to make landfall in the Caribbean so from a historical perspective, storms would only be documented if a ship encountered a hurricane while in transit, survived, and then reported the incident after making port. For example, in The Bahamas, between 1784 and 1837, ships’ Captains filed twenty-two reports of storm damages after making port in Nassau. Sixth, ship logs, newspaper records and weather dairies of plantation owners often reported these storms as ‘severe gales’ rather than hurricanes or tropical storms, so some of these storms might have gone unreported or under-reported. Finally, hurricanes that made their way through one island in the region after (or prior to) inflicting greater damage among those of other populated areas of the North Atlantic coast or the Caribbean, may have gone unreported in the face of the greater damage reports from these more populated areas. An accurate record of historical weather patterns is essential as scientists attempt to understand how contemporary weather patterns relate to the weather and climate of the past with a view of affecting the weather of the future. When choosing these storms, I took into consideration such obvious factors as the event's magnitude, historical significance, meteorological uniqueness (low barometric pressure, catastrophic storm surge and high winds), records they created or shattered, economic impact, and death toll when devising this list. Based on these factors these storms on the list have earned the title as the major North Atlantic storms.

The Hurricane of 1495--In 1495 Christopher Columbus encountered a hurricane near Hispaniola. The earliest hurricane report comes from Christopher Columbus, who encountered a tropical storm on one of his voyages to the New World. He later declared that “nothing but the service of God and the extension of the monarchy” would induce him to expose himself to such a danger from a storm again. Columbus and his crew were the first Europeans to experience a hurricane, and it is from his accounts that information about storms and the word itself entered European consciousness.<

Other Books By This Author
 
The Major Hurricanes To Affect The Bahamas