Home Page  
 Home | News | Weather | Programming | Sports | Station Info | Employment | Contact Us | Contests
Powered by Movable Type 3.36
Hosted by LivingDot

« August 2004 | Main | October 2004 »

September 25, 2004

MIDWEST FALL COLORS UPDATE

FALLCOLORS.jpg

Dear Tom,
Has this cool summer had an effect on when trees typically change their colors?
Michael Stack, Lake Zurich
Dear Michael,
That exact topic has resurfaced among forest professionals—park rangers, botanists, and the DNR agents that issue the fall color outlooks. Since fall colors are mostly triggered by length of day, seasonal color change should occur about the same time each year, but it doesn’t. Spring, summer, and early fall rainfall leading up to the change plays a role, and here in Chicago trees were stressed by the variability of rainfall, suggesting an early change. However, in other parts of the Midwest the rainfall was near normal, and still the fall colors are changing early after such a cool summer. Areas in the northern highlands of Wisconsin/Minnesota, which received an August freeze areleading the quick change.

FLORIDA HURRICANES & CHICAGO’S SEPTEMBER TEMPERATURES

SIDEMAPS0926.jpg

September 24, 2004

UNDERSTANDING “MEAN SEA LEVEL”

FEATURE0925.jpg

September 23, 2004

PERSISTENT STORMS IN 2004

FEATURE0923.jpg

Hurricane Crossing Atlantic to Europe

Greetings Tom,
Has a hurricane ever crossed the Atlantic and landed in Europe?
Martin Mockenhaupt, Buffalo Grove, Ill.
Dear Martin,
Occasionally, the remnants of hurricanes lose their tropical features as they traverse the north Atlantic and slam into northwest Europe, where they are known as “tempests”. Most storms bring squally weather with strong winds and heavy rainfall. Sometimes they wreak havoc: in 1996 remains of Hurricane Lili hit Britain with 90 m.p.h. winds, while in 1998 the worst storm in over a century raked the Netherlands and Belgium. These tempests normally occur late in the hurricane season. The current Hurricane Karl may ultimately reach Europe. A similar scenario occurs in the Pacific former typhoons trek eastward at high latitudes and slash the northwest U.S./southwest Canada.

• View all September 2004 entries

« August 2004 | Main | October 2004 »