Hurricane Center May Run Out of Names
Before the
2005 hurricane season is done, you might read about
Hurricane Alpha.
Each year, 21
common names are reserved for Atlantic Basin hurricanes,
with the
list arranged alphabetically and skipping certain
letters. Rita is the 17th named storm in the Atlantic Basin
this year. There are only four left.
So what will
officials do after tropical storm Wilma develops, assuming
it does?
We go to the
Greek alphabet," said Frank Lepore, spokesman for the
National Hurricane Center.
This gives the
World Meteorological Organization (WMO), the United Nations
agency responsible for choosing hurricane names, 24 more
names to work with, from Alpha to Omega, and including such
names as Omicron and Upsilon.
Could happen
This season
started out as the
busiest ever, with 4 named storms by July 5. It never
really let up.
"The
August update to Atlantic hurricane season outlook
called for 18 to 21, so I would hope it doesn't go any
higher than that, but it's a possibility," Lepore said.
The naming of
Hurricanes has a long and interesting history. For many
centuries, hurricanes in the West Indies were named after
particular Catholic saint's days on which they occurred.
Hurricane "San Felipe" struck Puerto Rico on September 13,
1876. When another hurricane struck Puerto Rico on the same
day more than fifty years later, it was christianed "San
Felipe the second."
Later,
latitude-longitude positions were used, but this method
quickly proved cumbersome.
Military
weather forecasters began giving women's names to
significant storms during WWII, then in 1950 the WMO agreed
to an alphabetical naming system, using the military's radio
code. The first named Atlantic hurricane was Able in 1950.
Name change
Officials soon
realized the naming convention would cause problems in the
history books if more than one powerful Hurricane Able made
landfall. So, in 1953 the organization adopted a rotating
series of women's names, planning to retire names of
significant storms.
Feminists
urged the WMO to add men's names, which was done in 1979.
The boy-girl-boy-girl naming convention evolved to include
French and Spanish names in the Atlantic system, reflecting
the languages of the nations affected by Carribean
hurricanes.
The
twenty-one
names reserved each year (the letters q, u, x, y and z are
not used) are recycled every six years, minus those retired
(such as Hugo and Andrew and, you can bet,
Katrina). When a name is retired, the WMO chooses a new
name to replace it.
The year with
the most documented tropical storms was 1933, when there
were 21 in the Atlantic Basin, but this was before
hurricanes were routinely named. Activity is known to wax
and wane in cycles that last decades. But some studies have
suggested that
global warming may be causing increases in hurricane
intensity and frequency. Many scientists are skeptical.
Hurricane
season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30.
http://www.livescience.com/forcesofnature/050919_hurricane_names.html