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Treczoks , in Hurricane Beryl is intensifying at an unprecedented rate. What to know.

The big question is: Will this thing die off in Yucatán, or march right across it, power up again, and hit Mexico? Like hurricane "Lee" did in 2023. How is the water temperature in the gulf at the moment?

PenisWenisGenius , in Hurricane Beryl is intensifying at an unprecedented rate. What to know.

One time like 15 years ago this huge hurricane came through. It fucked the coasts as usual but it went really far inland for some reason and fucked up the midwest too. I didn't have electricity in August for a week. No escape from the fucking heat, it was absolute torture. I'm fucking off to somewhere far away and cold for a week or two if this is going to happen again.

muse ,
@muse@fedia.io avatar

I remember that. We were without power in the middle of Ohio for a week. Shit was wild

0k_ ,

Ike?

CaptainKickass , in Hurricane Beryl is intensifying at an unprecedented rate. What to know.

Florida looks on in concern...

Telorand ,

I'll be surprised if Florida isn't wiped clean and mostly underwater in a decade.

cerement , in Dengue fever is surging worldwide. A hotter planet will make it worse
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cerement , in Dengue fever is surging worldwide. A hotter planet will make it worse
@cerement@slrpnk.net avatar

Aedes aegypti is a mosquito that can spread dengue fever, chikungunya, Zika fever, Mayaro and yellow fever viruses, and other disease agents”

muse , in Hurricane Beryl is intensifying at an unprecedented rate. What to know.
@muse@fedia.io avatar

Trump's got the sharpies ready

MelodiousFunk ,
@MelodiousFunk@slrpnk.net avatar

Orange One, you're our only hope...

phoenixz , in Dengue fever is surging worldwide. A hotter planet will make it worse

Paywalled

JoMiran , in Dengue fever is surging worldwide. A hotter planet will make it worse
@JoMiran@lemmy.ml avatar

I've had Dengue, twice. 2/10, would not recommend.

5C5C5C ,

I agree 2/10. The 2 points are because it was an interesting experience to be resurrected from the brink of death by the IV drip in the hospital. Also seeing my eyeballs full of blood was pretty metal.

JoMiran ,
@JoMiran@lemmy.ml avatar

I managed to avoid the hemorrhagic strain both times. Fuck that noise.

BaalInvoker ,

Hemorragic is not an strain. If you got 1 strain and get recontaminated with a second strain within 6 months, you'll be in a russian roullete of develop a hemorragic disease

JoMiran ,
@JoMiran@lemmy.ml avatar

They were one year apart. I used "strain" incorrectly when what I was trying to say is that I never got what we then called hemorrhagic dengue. This was back in the 80's and I have Thankfully never had to think about Dengue again...until now.

BaalInvoker , in Dengue fever is surging worldwide. A hotter planet will make it worse

As I said weeks ago: dengue will be a nightmare worldwide. My country, Brazil, has a great plan of action against dengue and 2024 was a disaster cause it was really worse this year.

Take a note: we have free and universal health care, our health system reaches the most remote places inside the country, we have a great vaccination plan, our population takes vaccines, we handle dengue every year very well.

BenchpressMuyDebil ,

Wasn't there a new generation vaccine for it released this yesr? Wouñd you say that it's helping?

OminousOrange , in Last Generation Activists tackled after rushing Rogers Centre field during Toronto Blue Jays game
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Too bad the TV broadcasts rarely show when anyone runs on to the field.

CaptainSpaceman , in Hurricane Beryl is intensifying at an unprecedented rate. What to know.

Non paywalled source?

xkbx ,

I, too, crave sauce without borders

silence7 OP Mod ,

No paywall, just registration. Use a throwaway email

snooggums ,
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Orbituary ,
@Orbituary@lemmy.world avatar

https://archive.ph/z4Ody

Do it yourself at archive.ph or archive.org.

ralakus ,

Hurricane Beryl becomes Category 4 storm on its way through Caribbean

Beryl exploded into a Category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 130 mph Sunday — the earliest a storm of that intensity has been recorded in the Atlantic — leading Caribbean islands to prepare for violent storms.

The National Hurricane Center said Beryl could pose “life-threatening” problems in the Lesser Antilles, an island chain on the eastern side of the Caribbean Sea. Hurricane warnings have been issued for Barbados, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadine Islands, Grenada and Tobago, while a tropical storm warning covers Martinique.

“All preparations should be rushed to completion today,” the Hurricane Center posted at 11 a.m. Sunday. Forecasters expect Beryl to move across the Caribbean and toward the northwestern region of the sea, affecting the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica and the Cayman Islands.

Researchers have been warning for months that the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season could be one for the record books, and now it is.

What to know about Beryl’s location and islands’ preparations

As of 1:45 p.m. Eastern time, Beryl was about 300 miles east-southeast of Barbados and was moving due west at 21 mph.

St. Lucian Prime Minister Philip J. Pierre said on Facebook that emergency service officials declared a national shutdown for the country of about 170,000 people starting at 8:30 p.m. local time Sunday.

“We need to be together and support each other as we prepare but hope and pray we are spared,” he said in a video message.

The St. Vincent and the Grenadines Meteorological Service on Sunday issued a flash-flood warning to its 100,000 residents.

At midday Sunday, Michael Tiller was looking at blue skies and calm, clear blue water from the patio of a rented vacation home in Barbados.

“You can’t really tell there’s a hurricane coming,” the Michigan resident said. “It’s a really beautiful day out here.”

Tiller plans to hunker down as soon as the winds pick up. The property managers of the home he is sharing with his family for the week came in earlier Sunday and boarded up the windows and glass doors.

He was surprised, however, that they didn’t take away the patio furniture or provide him with any other instructions.

To stay up to date and keep his family safe, Tiller is following weather updates online from a Barbados-based meteorologist, Sabu Best, who provides updates every three hours.

The family is bracing for strong winds and power outages, but Tiller isn’t too concerned.

“I’m calm and not particularly worried,” he said. “There will be adversity, but in the grander scheme of things it will be fine for us.” The family is planning to return to the United States on Wednesday.

How fast the storm strengthened

Beryl went from a tropical storm to a Category 3 hurricane in 36 hours; it intensified by 75 mph during that time frame. According to Sam Lillo, a researcher at DTN Weather, that level of rapid intensification has never happened in June and has happened only twice in July.

On Sunday morning, it reached Category 4 intensity.

What makes this so unusual

There is no precedent for a storm to intensify this quickly, nor reach this strength, in this part of the ocean during the month of June. Records date to 1851.

While flukes happen, there is a firm link between rapid intensification (the strengthening of hurricanes) and human-induced climate change. Ocean waters are running 3 or 4 degrees above average, reminiscent of August rather than June. In some cases, records are being set. It’s unsurprising that the atmosphere is responding accordingly.

Before now, the Atlantic has only ever seen two major hurricanes during June — Audrey in 1957 and Alma in 1966. “Major” hurricanes are those rated as Category 3 or higher. Both Audrey and Alma occurred in the Gulf of Mexico as early-season “homegrown” storms. The Atlantic’s Main Development Region, located between northern South America and Africa, was always believed to be inhospitable to major hurricanes during the month of June — until now.

In addition to extremely warm ocean waters, relaxed upper-level winds played a crucial role in its development. If high-altitude winds are too harsh, they can tear apart a fledgling storm. Winds are ordinarily hostile during June, but not this year.

The juxtaposition of low pressure to the northwest and a high to the north and east helped evacuate air away from Beryl in a narrow filament, “venting” it and helping it to intensify more quickly. (Imagine placing a fan at the top of a chimney — the more air you blow out the top, the more the flames will grow as air rushes in to fuel the fire at the bottom.)

Where Beryl could go next

Beryl will slam the Lesser Antilles on Monday, probably the Windward Islands, with winds of 130 mph or more. Because its strongest winds are concentrated in the center, the specific track of the storm’s eye will determine its exact impacts.

The National Hurricane Center is also expecting a storm surge of 6 to 9 feet, as well as 3 to 6 inches of rain.

High pressure to the north will act as a force field over the central Atlantic, preventing Beryl from escaping out to sea. That’s why Beryl will continue moving west.

By Tuesday, Beryl will enter the eastern Caribbean, still moving westward or slightly west-northwestward. It may be weakening acutely by then as it encounters shear, or changing winds with height, that work to knock it off-kilter.

Its eventual track in the Caribbean is unknown. Jamaica and Cuba could both be in play. So could the Yucatán Peninsula. At this point, it does look like Mexico is more likely to be hit.

There’s also a potential scenario — least likely at this point — where Beryl threads the gap between Cancún and western Cuba, entering the Gulf of Mexico. The feasibility of that scenario, and range of possible impacts, won’t be known for days.

CaptainSpaceman ,

Legend

ianovic69 , in Renewable Energy 44.7% of EU Electricity Production in 2023 — Now #1!
@ianovic69@feddit.uk avatar

And yet fossil fuels are still being funded globally by our taxes, corporate profits still increase, and the planet gets hotter.

futatorius , in The Supreme Court's January 6 decision was a win for progressive protesters, too

Except that he's the one who packed the court, he'll do it more if elected, and they'll be his dutiful toadies.

Eylrid , in 'Litigate you to death': Gas giant uses new tactic which could sink environmental dissenters [Australia]

Why did I read that headline and think Jupiter was causing trouble

el_twitto ,

my thought, too

MelodiousFunk ,
@MelodiousFunk@slrpnk.net avatar

It's true that things got a little out of hand early on, but you have to admit that Jupiter's methods worked out in the end.

Infynis , in Wildfires ravaging Arctic Circle
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