Milton strengthens to Category 5 hurricane

MicroWave@lemmy.world to News@lemmy.world – 705 points –
Milton strengthens to Category 5 hurricane
abcnews.go.com

Milton rapidly intensified to a Category 5 hurricane late Monday morning.

Within hours, Milton strengthened to a Category 2, then a Category 3, then a Category 4 and finally a Category 5.

Milton now ranks as the third-greatest 24-hour wind speed intensification for a hurricane in the Atlantic Basin. (Records are based on data since the satellite era began in the 1960s.)

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This graphic from The Weather Channel is terrifying.

Most tsunamis are less than 10 feet high

https://www.weather.gov/safety/tsunami-about

Cities can't be protected from this long-term.

Excuse me, is that feet???

Terrifyingly, yes it is.

Could be worse... at least it's not in Meters.

It is in meters and since that an elevation map of Florida, that is the better scenario.

Basically all the areas in purple and dark blue are low enough for the storm surge to flood them. If it was feet, then the blue-green will probably be underwater as well.

The question about ft came right below the elevation map, but it was a top-level comment on the OP and not a sub-comment about the elevation map.

Seems you were confused about this order of comments too but unfortunately you’ve taken downvotes for it.

SWEET! Surfs up!

To soon?

Jerry Pournelle and Larry Niven wrote a book called Lucifer's Hammer about a comet hitting the Earth. There's a part where all the surfers in the ocean off of L.A. know they're going to die, so they decide to ride the tsunami and get taken out one by one as they get smashed into buildings.

Unfortunately, at least from videos I've seen of the Indian Ocean tsunami and the Fukushima tsunami, tsunamis don't really "break" like good surfing waves and instead seem to act more like a large swell that keeps going instead of ebbing.

(A mega-tsunami from a comet impact might be so large it would act differently, though.)

I'll be honest, it's one of the least believable parts of a book which overall reads as quite plausible, but it's a fun chapter. Neither of the authors are/were scientists, so they were bound to get some things wrong. It was also written almost 50 years ago, so I'm guessing the science they did work with has been supplanted in a lot of ways since then.

That would make for a great scene in a disaster movie.

Honestly, the whole book would make a great miniseries. Probably too much for just one movie.

Too bad Larry Niven is and Jerry Pournelle was such right-wing assholes, because their published some great stuff.

One pancake to go!

I think I heard about the book you were talking about

No. There's always a bunch of surfers that go out for hurricane waves. I assume some have a death wish.

Holy fuck people. It says right in the image that it's in meters.

So not only lemmings can't read, a comment asking for info staring you in the face has 55 upvotes... and the wrong answer has 38.

snekerpimp was responding to FlyingSquid, not baldingpudenda.

Well, that's egg on my face. Thanks for the correction.

If it makes you feel better, it seems like you're not the only one who missed the thread indent 🤷‍♂️

Indents are hard to do well. Maybe impossible? Should be effortless to read but seems to never happen. Maybe just one of those things.

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Florida's elevation

That image is in meters, so it's bad, but not quite as bad at first glance.

I wasnt trying to deceive, but everything in pink and blue is gonna get fucked.

That's pretty bad... How is it so flat??

So hurricanes can pass across without losing too much energy.

It is all in the design.

I'm surprised DeSantis hasn't required that the storm surge be listed in meters to make it appear smaller and less of an issue.

Oh shit, those numbers are feet, not inches. That took me a moment. Fuuuuuck.

For those across the pond, 3658mm of rain (12')

Really sets it in seeing it in mm

Edit: See below comment, I completely misinterpreted the storm surge meaning

No that is storm surge.
So it's the hurricane pushes that much water onto the shore through force and can get that high of water above sea level.

So more akin to a slow tsunami where a hurricane pushes up to 3.6M of water up onto the land then it rains more on top of that. Storm surge is mostly the reason for the houses on pillars too.

He's coming for his red stapler. You stole it. Now it is time for revenge.

Milton could put strychnine in the guacamole.

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