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climatejustice.social

Zeitpunkt              Nutzer    Delta   Tröts        TNR     Titel                     Version  maxTL
Mi 03.07.2024 00:00:14     9.861      -1      533.860    54,1 Climate Justice Social    4.2.9... 5.000
Di 02.07.2024 00:01:45     9.862      +3      532.959    54,0 Climate Justice Social    4.2.9... 5.000
Mo 01.07.2024 00:00:55     9.859       0      532.218    54,0 Climate Justice Social    4.2.9... 5.000
So 30.06.2024 00:01:08     9.859       0      531.316    53,9 Climate Justice Social    4.2.9... 5.000
Sa 29.06.2024 00:00:41     9.859       0      530.380    53,8 Climate Justice Social    4.2.9... 5.000
Fr 28.06.2024 00:01:13     9.859       0      529.566    53,7 Climate Justice Social    4.2.9... 5.000
Do 27.06.2024 00:01:14     9.859      +1      528.803    53,6 Climate Justice Social    4.2.9... 5.000
Mi 26.06.2024 00:00:05     9.858      -1      528.265    53,6 Climate Justice Social    4.2.9... 5.000
Di 25.06.2024 00:00:06     9.859      +1      527.431    53,5 Climate Justice Social    4.2.9... 5.000
Mo 24.06.2024 00:00:11     9.858       0      526.485    53,4 Climate Justice Social    4.2.9... 5.000

Mi 03.07.2024 16:00

More on the scary reality of what Hurricane Beryl is teaching us...
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Beryl transformed from a tropical depression to a Category 4 hurricane in two days, faster than any hurricane has ever done before the month of September. It is the easternmost hurricane to emerge in the tropical Atlantic Ocean in the month of June. It’s the first storm to strengthen to Category 4 in the Atlantic in June, and now the earliest on record to hit Category 5.

"Hurricane Beryl is not normal, in any way, shape, or form,” said Ryan Truchelut, a meteorologist in Tallahassee, Florida.

We’re only a month into the Atlantic hurricane season, and already, the boundaries that normally govern it are breaking. The cause is abnormally hot ocean waters — warmed by El Niño last year, but also by centuries of burning fossil fuels.

Monster hurricanes like Beryl shouldn't happen this early. They shouldn't arise in this particular part of the Atlantic basin. And they shouldn't be intensifying at such astonishing rates, before the season has even gotten into full swing. But they are, and will probably continue to do so as long as our oceans continue to simmer.
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FULL ARTICLE -- theatlantic.com/science/archiv

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