How Do Hurricanes Get Their Names? - podcast episode cover

How Do Hurricanes Get Their Names?

Aug 26, 20204 min
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Episode description

Hurricanes weren't always given names. Learn how the tradition began and how the names rotate from year to year in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff Lauren Boglebaum here. Hurricanes and typhoons, both of which are types of tropical cyclones depending on where they are, didn't always have names. They used to often be tagged with just a bunch of numbers, maybe a latitude and longitude, sometimes just an arbitrary number. Some were named after where they came ashore, like the Great Galveston Hurricane of nineteen hundred or four saints like the St. Philippe Hurricane of

eighteen seventy six. Aunt's Hurricane of eighteen forty two was dubbed for the ship it d masted. Today, though the World Meteorological Organization, or w m O, gives hurricanes short, simple names, people's given names. Since the early nineteen fifties, the w MO has coordinated with the National Hurricane Center, a division of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, to put a proper name to every one of these tropical cyclones.

There's a reason hurricanes aren't named Willy Nilly any longer, or Willie or Nilly for that matter. As the w m OS website explains, names are presumed to be far easier to remember than numbers and technical terms. Many agree that appending names to storms makes it easier for the media to report on tropical cyclones, heightens interest in warnings,

and increases community preparedness. Basically, the working theory goes that people in the path of the storms will remember and pay attention to media reports about Hurricane Elsa more than

they would Hurricane three. The ways the tropical cyclones are named worldwide varies, but here in the Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and North Atlantic region, the names come in alphabetical order off a set of six lists maintained by the w m O. The six lists rotate, so the names used in Arthur, Bertha, Chris, to All, Dolly, et cetera will come around again in But just because the lists are alphabetical doesn't mean that there are twenty six

entries on every list. Rather, there are only twenty one names per list in this region. Don't look for names beginning with q, U, x, Y, or z. If the storms really start piling on and forecasters need more than twenty one names in the same season, they turned to the Greek alphabet alpha and beta all the way through zeta.

Before nineteen seventy nine, the storms were only called by names typically given to women, but since then men's names have been introduced to the mix, and now the to alternate on each list, and those six lists stay the same unless a storm is particularly devastating, deadly, or damaging, then those hurricane names are retired, has happened with Hurricanes Andrew,

Hugo and Katrina. Nobody wants to see a warning for Hurricane Katrina pop up again, and the names Florence and Michael were also retired at the end of the twenty eighteen season after they struck North Carolina and Puerto Rico. Through the end of the tween hurricane season, eighty nine

Atlantic hurricane or tropical storm names have been retired. It's presumable that, considering the damage left behind from a Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas in twenty nineteen, it will join the list too, but we'll have to wait to find out until the meeting of the w m O Regional Association for Hurricane Committee, as the considerations for twenty nineteen

storm name retirements were not completed this year. Only five times in the past twenty five years has a hurricane season passed without a storm strong enough that its name was retired during that stretch, It's never happened and backed back years. The last year that no Storm had its name struck from the lists wasteen. Today's episode was written by John Donovan and produced by Tyler Clay. For more on this and lots of other topics, visit how stuff works dot com. Brain Stuff is a production of I

heart Radio. For more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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