This is due to the fact that, as the ocean is warmed up slowly from global warming, the probabilty of hurricanes increase.
Global warming may lead to an increase in the number and intensity of hurricanes because warmer ocean temperatures provide more energy for storm formation. Additionally, global warming can lead to changes in atmospheric conditions that favor the development and intensification of hurricanes.
You won't find these articles because there are none. No one believe that hurricanes are "created" by global warming. Furthermore, it is very difficult to get proof of anything in science - you can only get mountains of evidence, of which there are plenty for many processes in atmospheric science. If you want to learn about the debate over whether hurricanes are increasing in strength as a result of global warming, search for articles by Christopher Landsea or Kerry Emmanuel, although it won't be easy reading. They are probably the two most prominent researchers on the subject, and they disagree on it somewhat as well.
Decreasing as human induced Global Warming ravages the Earth.
Increasing global warming can be achieved by burning more fossil fuels, such as coal, oil, and natural gas which release greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Deforestation can also contribute to global warming by reducing the number of trees that absorb carbon dioxide. Additionally, industrial activities that release potent greenhouse gases, such as methane and nitrous oxide, can exacerbate global warming.
It's difficult to provide an exact number of seals that died specifically due to global warming in a given year. Climate change can impact seals by altering their habitats, impacting food availability, and increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events. These changes can have negative effects on seal populations, but estimating the direct impact of global warming on seal deaths is complex.
No, Hurricane Katrina caused flooding and terrible damage to humans and property, but it did not cause global warming. Global warming is caused among other things by man burning fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas) and putting greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
As Algore proposes the increasing greenhouse gases cause global warming. Global warming is the increasing of the atmospheres temperature.
Global warming may lead to an increase in the number and intensity of hurricanes because warmer ocean temperatures provide more energy for storm formation. Additionally, global warming can lead to changes in atmospheric conditions that favor the development and intensification of hurricanes.
If it can, we have not seen them developing as of yet. The number of hurricanes has risen slightly, but the strength and intensity has been shown to have decreased over the past several decades.
It has been theorized that global warming will lead to an increased number and severity of hurricanes, however weather predictions are so incredibly complex that it is currently impossible to know for certain. Some of the most recent global-warming-related predictions failed miserably (predicting an increase in hurricanes in years when the actual number actually decreased). In general, however, the theory is quite plausible since global warming would mean an increase in atmospheric energy and hurricanes are most certainly a very obvious manifestation of a very energetic atmosphere.
You won't find these articles because there are none. No one believe that hurricanes are "created" by global warming. Furthermore, it is very difficult to get proof of anything in science - you can only get mountains of evidence, of which there are plenty for many processes in atmospheric science. If you want to learn about the debate over whether hurricanes are increasing in strength as a result of global warming, search for articles by Christopher Landsea or Kerry Emmanuel, although it won't be easy reading. They are probably the two most prominent researchers on the subject, and they disagree on it somewhat as well.
A study was undertaken in 2008 to determine this every question. The study found that hurricanes follow a 60 year cycle (more or less). The year 1980 was the last low period for hurricanes. Since that date they found "a modest increase of minor hurricanes, no change in the number of major hurricanes, and a decrease in cases of rapid hurricane intensification." As a result of these findings, the researchers concluded that "if there is an increase in hurricane activity connected to a greenhouse gas induced global warming, it is currently obscured by the 60-year quasi-periodic cycle." Consequently, and in spite of the fact that (1) the hurricane record they analyzed started during the final stages of the Little Ice Age (which was the coldest period of the current interglacial), and that (2) the planet experienced a subsequent warming that has been declared by climate alarmists to have been unprecedented over the past millennium or more, they could still find no convincing real-world evidence that global warming enhances either the frequency or intensity of hurricanes occurring over the Atlantic Ocean.
Decreasing as human induced Global Warming ravages the Earth.
Increasing global warming can be achieved by burning more fossil fuels, such as coal, oil, and natural gas which release greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Deforestation can also contribute to global warming by reducing the number of trees that absorb carbon dioxide. Additionally, industrial activities that release potent greenhouse gases, such as methane and nitrous oxide, can exacerbate global warming.
The connection between freak weather and global warming. Freak weather has always happened by chance. However if the number of freak weather events continues to increase, it seems probable that the increase is caused by global warming.
It's difficult to provide an exact number of seals that died specifically due to global warming in a given year. Climate change can impact seals by altering their habitats, impacting food availability, and increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events. These changes can have negative effects on seal populations, but estimating the direct impact of global warming on seal deaths is complex.
Global warming affects the climate because it puts extra heat into the oceans and atmosphere. Heat is energy, and this energy is used to change our weather, with stronger storms and changes to wind and ocean currents. After a number of years this changed weather becomes changed climate.