
Joseph A. Zehnder
Writer at Encyclopaedia Britannica
Professor of Atmospheric Sciences, Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska. Source
Articles
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1 month ago |
britannica.com | Joseph A. Zehnder
Tropical cyclone - Location, Patterns, Forecasting: Tropical oceans spawn approximately 80 tropical storms annually, and about two-thirds are severe (category 1 or higher on the Saffir-Simpson scale of intensity). Almost 90 percent of these storms form within 20° north or south of the Equator. Poleward of those latitudes, sea surface temperatures are too cool to allow tropical cyclones to form, and mature storms moving that far north or south will begin to dissipate. Only two tropical ocean basins do not support tropical cyclones, because they lack waters that are sufficiently warm. The Peru Current in the eastern South Pacific and the Benguela Current in the South
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