FORBES 2013
FORBES 2013
Just about every type of extreme weather event is becoming less frequent and less severe in recent years as our planet continues its modest warming in the wake of the Little Ice Age. While global warming activists attempt to spin a narrative of ever-worsening weather, the objective facts tell a completely different story.
3 comments
Consider the source …
James Taylor
Contributor
I am president of the Spark of Freedom Foundation.
Counting tornadoes, huh? Funny that it’s in a financial magazine.
Adjustments in Tornado Counts, F-Scale Intensity, and Path Width for Assessing Significant Tornado Destruction
Ernest Agee and Samuel Childs
Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana
1. Introduction
Analyses of tornado intensities, their trends, and patterns of destruction through time are of great importance in the realm of climate science and to society in general. Scientists can be limited, however, by a lack of cohesive statistics in the modern tornado dataset (1950–2012).
https://doi.org/10.1175/JAMC-D-13-0235.1
Received: 12 July 2013
Final Form: 30 January 2014
Published online: 17 June 2014
https://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/full/10.1175/JAMC-D-13-0235.1
(Cited by: 22)
NOAA’s National Weather Service
Storm Prediction Center WCM Page
spc.noaa.gov – Storm Prediction Center WCM Page
A map of all tornado (red), hail (green), and thunderstorm wind gust (blue) reports from NWS offices in 2015.
Tornadoes: 1177
https://www.nsf.gov/nsb/publications/1965/nsb1265.pdf
WEATHER AN CLIMATE MODIFICATION
Repori 01 ine SPECIAL COMMISSION ON
WEATHER MOIJIFICATION
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
I cannot quite believe James Taylor
Said they in 2013….sounds like the rantings of a right wing faux science corporate desk jockey to me…