arcticfire wrote:Well I'm in the camp of taking any pre 1940 hurricain data with a huge grain of salt personally. However even if the old data is correct it matters not.
None.
I think the pre 1940 data may not only be fairly accurate but maybe understated. I'm sure there were storms that went unaccounted for.
In 1886 there were 12 storms and in 1887 there were 19. In 1886 three hurricanes struck the same area of the FL panhandle and another N of Tampa. That same year four hit TX (Brownsville, near Corpus, near Port Arthur and just near where Rita hit. Was that GW?
Was the 1935 Key West monster or the 1926 Miami storm GW?
In the 1940's there were 24 hurricanes (10 majors) that hit the US. So far, with a little more than half the decade over, we have had 12 hurricanes hit the US (5 majors). We are just now in a cycle similar to the 30's-60's as has been predicted. Cycles are cycles and we are in one of higher frequency. Sometimes cycles become extreme. In 1933 they didn't blame GW and so far that year is still the record holder for the number of cyclones.
I also think that we just don't know enough of the previous climates in the earlier centuries to judge. While I question the source of that chart above, I think there were other warm perioids and this just might be one of them.