Oklahoma Weather Lab
The University of Oklahoma | College of Atmospheric & Geographic Sciences | School of Meteorology
Currently in Norman: 45.1°F | Dpt: 44.1°F
Pres: 1014.96mb | Wind: 3 kts S (178°)
Data provided by the Oklahoma Mesonet
OK Extremes
T:66-34°F
W:22G28Kts
Sunday, November 22nd, 2009 10:30 GMT (4:30am CST)
HOOT Archives

Hoot Archives - Front Page Stories

You are at the HOOT Front Page Stories Archive, welcome.
HOOT recently began archiving their cover stories so people like you could read them whenever you want. With this new HOOT site, we are able to provide them to the world.

Click here to see the list of articles

Active Atlantic

Article from 03 Sept 2008

An infrared satellite image from Sept. 2, 2008, shows (from left to right) tropical systems Gustav, Hanna, Ike, and Josephine lined up across the Atlantic basin.
Some of our older (or more politically-inclined) readers may remember the 1952 US presidential election, in which republican Dwight. D. Eisenhower defeated democrat Adlai Stevenson to become the 34th president of the United States. Perhaps the most famous aspect of Eisenhower’s campaign was the slogan “We Like Ike”, a favorite refrain among his supporters. Now however, over 50 years later, residents of Florida and the southeast US coast most decidedly do not like Ike – Hurricane Ike that is. Ike is one of four tropical cyclones active in the Atlantic basin as of the beginning of September in what is proving to be a rather active 2008 Atlantic hurricane season.

So far during the 2008 season, 10 named tropical cyclones have formed in the Atlantic basin, of which 4 have become hurricanes, and 2 (Bertha and Gustav) have become major hurricanes. A hurricane is considered major if it attains sustained wind speeds in excess of 110 miles per hour, corresponding to category 3 or greater on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. According to NOAA, in an average season, the Atlantic basin will see around 11 named systems, 6 hurricanes, and 3 major hurricanes. Mid-season forecasts from CSU and NOAA call for an active season this year, with between 14 and 17 named systems predicted. Even though the season is far from over, we’ve already had our share of memorable storms – Gustav in particular.

Gustav began its life as a tropical wave crossing the Atlantic, developing into a tropical depression in the Caribbean Sea. Gustav strengthened into a tropical storm and later a category 1 hurricane as it moved northwest, making landfall in Haiti on Aug. 26th, triggering flooding and landslides that killed over 70 people and left thousands more homeless. Weakened by interaction with Haiti’s mountainous terrain, Gustav weakened to a tropical storm as it turned westward and crossed Jamaica, killing 11, causing heavy flooding, and severely damaging the nation’s banana crop. After crossing Jamaica, Gustav resumed a more northwesterly motion, taking it out into the warm waters of the northwest Caribbean.

Fed by very warm sea surface temperatures and low wind shear, two conditions ideal for tropical cyclone development, Gustav rapidly intensified into a major category 4 hurricane by Aug. 30th, bearing down on western Cuba. The heaviest damage in Cuba occurred on Isla de la Juventud (the Isle of Youth), which sustained a direct hit from category 4 Gustav’s eyewall. Amazingly, no fatalities were reported in Cuba, but the 342 km/h (212 mi/h) wind gust recorded in the Cuban town of Paso Real del San Diego was the highest ever recorded in the nation. Cuban officials called Gustav the worst hurricane to hit Cuba in 50 years.

Gustav’s story didn’t end there, as it continued into the Gulf of Mexico as a major hurricane, and forecast tracks brought it ashore just west of New Orleans, almost 3 years to the day after Hurricane Katrina devastated the same region. This time officials reacted swiftly, ordering evacuations days in advance, and using busses, trains, and even helicopters to evacuate residents from the New Orleans metro area. With all eyes upon it, Gustav made its final landfall along the central Louisiana coast early on Sept. 1st, with sustained winds of 115 mi/h. The system of levees protecting New Orleans and surrounding parishes held up against the 8-14 feet of storm surge that Gustav dragged ashore, and a major flooding disaster was averted. From there Gustav moved northwest, weakening to a remnant low as it continued inland, bringing flooding rains to much of Louisiana, Arkansas, and even eastern Oklahoma. Even here in central Oklahoma we’re feeling the effects of Gustav, in the form of clouds, rain, and below average temperatures.

Looking forward, we’re far from being out of the woods. Hurricane season lasts from June 1 until November 30, meaning there are still three more months ahead of us. However, for those of us along the Gulf Coast and in the Southern Great Plains, we may see a bit of a respite—many models forecast Hanna and Ike to turn north along the eastern seaboard in response to a ridge over the north Atlantic and trough expected to develop near the east coast.

Until winter comes and ushers in an end to the hurricane season, you can keep up to date with the latest in tropical weather at the website of the

National Hurricane Center.



Story is © Nate Snook, 2008
Title Date Author
A Cool, Wet End to Summer 15 Sept. 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
Can't Beat the Heat 12 Jul. 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
VORTEX 2: Chasing Down the Storm May 29, 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
The Dryline that Set the State Ablaze 14 April 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
Fire Down Under 06 Mar 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
A Story Of Sleet and Drought 06 Feb 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
A Winter Travel Parable 06 Jan 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
Winter in Oklahoma 02 December 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
The Weather and the Election 01 Nov 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Autumn Arrives 01 October 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Active Atlantic 03 Sept 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Clearing the Air for the Olympics 1 August 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
The Canals of… Cedar Rapids? 7 July 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
The Storms of May 2008 2 June 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
The First EF5 – Greensburg: One Year Later 05 May 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Meltdown 02 April 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Leap Year: Climate meets Astronomy meets Society 3 March 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Indecision 2008: Southern Plains Edition February 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Anatomy of an Ice Storm January 2008 Nate Snook, 2007
Winter starts when? December 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
The Perfect Firestorm November 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
Rainfall Record Ahead? October 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
Erin - An Unusual Tropical Storm September 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
A Slow Start to the NATL TC Season August 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
Tropical Depression Norman? July 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
Spring 2007 Among Wettest Ever in Central Oklahoma June 2007 Nate Snook, 2006
Wet Winter Ahead? Late 2006 Steve Irwin, 2006
Oklahoma: Can't Beat the Heat! August 2006 Kevin Goebbert, 2006
Oklahoma Gets Some Rain May 2006 Kevin Goebbert, 2006
© 2008 Oklahoma Weather Lab
http://hoot.metr.ou.edu
The University of Oklahoma, School of Meteorology