Current:Home > NewsThe History of Ancient Hurricanes Is Written in Sand and Mud -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
The History of Ancient Hurricanes Is Written in Sand and Mud
View
Date:2025-04-17 09:37:16
Editor’s Note: Sophie Ruehr is a freelance writer who has worked on hurricane data projects with scientists as a student and recent graduate.
When a hurricane strikes the coast, it leaves behind a lasting imprint on the landscape. It might seem small, a layer of sand at the bottom of a lake or pond, but it’s a record that’s helping scientists document thousands of years of hurricane history in areas around the world.
With that record, scientists are able to analyze how hurricane behavior over time has lined up with ocean temperature changes, providing new clues to how climate change may influence extreme storms in the future.
Over the past year and as a student fellow in 2017, I have been working with Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution scientist Jeffrey Donnelly, who uses sediment cores—tubes of sand and mud layers that are extracted from coastal lake beds—to track ancient cyclones in the Atlantic and, recently, in the islands of the South Pacific. These long records, called paleoclimate reconstructions, can help verify computer modeling studies and provide insight into the future of hurricanes.
Sediment cores from Salt Pond in Falmouth, Massachusetts, for example, contain records of hurricanes going back 2,000 years.
They show that intense hurricanes struck Cape Cod more frequently than usual from 1400 to 1675, when the western North Atlantic was relatively warm. The traces left by those ancient hurricanes also suggest the storms were more intense than those of the 20th Century.
While the cores from a single site like Salt Pond show only the local impact and often record only the more intense storms, scientists can compare them with a growing number of similar sediment cores from elsewhere along the coasts, as well as with other natural and written records of storms, to develop chronologies of hurricane activity.
In cores from Puerto Rico, Donnelly, in a study with Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann and colleagues, found a peak in Atlantic hurricane activity around the year 1000, which may have been the result of La Nina-like conditions and unusually warm waters in the tropical North Atlantic. In a similar study of sediment cores from Naples, Florida, Christian Ercolani and Joanne Muller of Florida Gulf Coast University also found evidence over the past 1000 years of increased hurricane activity when sea surface temperatures were warmer in the tropics’ main development region for hurricanes.
Hurricanes derive their energy from high sea surface temperatures, so it follows that ocean warming caused by human activities may generate more intense hurricanes. The latest National Climate Assessment projects that hurricane intensity and rainfall will increase in a warmer world. But how hurricane frequency will be affected has been less clear. This research is providing some clues.
Connections to Climate Change
Hurricanes are fairly uncommon events. Only a handful of hurricanes develop each season in the North Atlantic, and, in a particular location, a hurricane may not strike for decades. While hurricanes have been reported by ships and coastal communities for centuries, comprehensive global monitoring of hurricanes only really began with the advent of satellites in the 1970s.
“One of the problems we have with hurricanes and climate change is a limited record going back in time,” said NOAA hurricane researcher Thomas Knutson. “There are a lot of still-open questions.”
Paleoclimate reconstructions can help extend the timeline.
Knutson uses computer models to research long-term changes in hurricane behavior, on the scale of decades or centuries. When evidence from paleoclimate studies confirms model results, the models become more convincing. If a model can accurately predict past hurricanes, it should be able to predict future ones, Knutson said.
Modeling studies have suggested that hurricane activity will not necessarily increase uniformly in every region with global warming.
“There are some hot spots, but not everywhere will get more hurricanes,” Donnelly said. “It may be that there are winners and losers. This paleo perspective might provide some clues to that.”
Helping Coastal Communities Prepare
Donnelly and his team collect sediment cores from coastal sites, such as ponds or lakes, that are isolated from the ocean by a barrier beach.
Typically, “only very fine sediment is deposited in these basins. But when an intense event occurs, it washes much heavier material into the basin. It leaves a very distinct layer behind, which can be a proxy for past hurricanes,” Donnelly said.
In these settings, sediment tends to accumulate in layers. Depth, therefore, is correlated with age; the farther down you go, the further back in time. Scientists use carbon dating of organic matter found in the cores and other evidence to determine the timeline for the sandy layers.
I have been working with Donnelly to also expand that research into the South Pacific, where I have been gathering information from residents of Vanuatu about past hurricanes. That information can help verify any hurricane evidence that scientists may find in sediment cores recently collected there.
In places like Vanuatu and along the U.S. coast and in the Caribbean, having a clearer understanding of when and how ancient hurricanes struck in the past could help coastal communities better prepare for the future.
veryGood! (2227)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Willie Mays, Giants’ electrifying ‘Say Hey Kid,’ has died at 93
- A journalist traces his family tree back to ancestor who served in Black regiment in Civil War
- 10 injured, including children, after house collapsed in Syracuse, New York, officials say
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Who is part of the 'Wyatt Sicks'? These WWE stars appeared with Uncle Howdy on Raw
- US acknowledges Northwest dams have devastated the region’s Native tribes
- Run, Don’t Walk to Lands’ End for 50% Off Swimwear & 40% Off Everything Else for a Limited Time Only
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- NFL offseason grades: Bears earn top team mark as Cowboys trail rest of class
Ranking
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Aaron Judge, Yankees avoid catastrophic injury after slugger hit in hand by pitch
- Julia Roberts' Rare Photo of Son Henry Will Warm Your Heart Indefinitely
- FEMA urged to add extreme heat, wildfire smoke to list of disasters
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Dollar Tree failed to pull lead-contaminated applesauce for months, FDA says
- Detroit Pistons fire coach Monty Williams after one season that ended with NBA’s worst record
- Alaska did not provide accessible voting for those with disabilities, US Justice Department alleges
Recommendation
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Austin Butler Shares Insight Into Being an Uncle to Ashley Tisdale's Kids
More homeowners are needed to join the push to restore Honolulu’s urban watersheds
Anouk Aimée, Oscar-nominated French actress, dies at 92
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
I'm 49 and Just Had My First Facial. Here's What Happened
41-year-old man dies near bottom of Grand Canyon after overnighting in the park
NFL offseason grades: Bears earn top team mark as Cowboys trail rest of class