User talk:Hurricanehink/Archive 4Re: ArleneThanks for that, of the non-articled storms it was Arlene which was going to have the impact section being worthwhile. It probably is B-class now with those additions (Doesn't mean I go over it though, all the storms are going to get some treatment on the non-impact info). That research you did is the best justification yet for the all-storms approach, having an article with "unknown" damages encourages research; I mean the info you found is hardly new and despite the Arlene section in the season looking poor, noone could be bothered.--Nilfanion 10:01, 1 May 2006 (UTC) I am not totally sure about the NY figures, it looks like much of the rain was from something else and Arlene's remnants contributed to it, as this (Google cached) article suggests. Is this a repeat of Stan's deaths confusion on a smaller scale? the link you found certainly mentions heavy rain from Arlene. Certainly if Arlene did drop 6 inches in places, those were already waterlogged from the previous rainstorms, so how much damage can be attributed to the remnants?--Nilfanion 10:30, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
Crossover stormsWould a tropical cyclone that passed from the central Pacific into the western count for the western Pacific's number of total storms? Icelandic Hurricane #12 22:00, 1 May 2006 (UTC) Re:BetaNo. It says that government will help with 30 million lempiras only. Later in the text are mentioned again the 30 million but it says that the government, with 30 lempiras, the emergency could be done. That could means it could be more or it could be less. The only important figures of damage are the damnificated people in that country. Listed by departments: - Gracias a Dios: 8,882 - Colón: 400 - Atlántida: 222 And thats all the information I can give about the news article juan andrés 23:18, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
HudahOkay, so now I finally have some time on my hands. Apparently Karen has some other editors now, and it should sustain itself for some time. I'm going to try Hudah again sometime in the next few days. Omni ND 18:35, 2 May 2006 (UTC) Tropical Cyclone Article Creation Alert CancelledThis cancels Ref. A. I currently am starting another project on tropical cyclones; go to my Article Laboratory in my subpages section to see a page under construction. I will put in a request for Hudah in a few minutes. The chance of the Cyclone Hudah article being created in the next 24 hours is downgraded to poor.Omni ND 18:52, 3 May 2006 (UTC) Re:Very quick questionMy calculator gives around 7500 million dollars (I think this is more correct) juan andrés 00:07, 5 May 2006 (UTC) 1997 Atlantic hurricane seasonTalking about Pauline, can someone make anything to make the 1997 Atlantic hurricane season article FA. I've been asking this for to months and a half, and I've not got reponse. juan andrés 00:12, 5 May 2006 (UTC) DISASTER HAS STRUCK!!!!My God! Is it true??? GIBBS has no archives other than 2006!! WHAT HAPPENED!!?? This is terrible! every picture from 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 2000, 01, 02, 03, 04, and 05 GONE!! AAHHHH!! --has a heart attack and dies a horrible miserable slow and painful death-- — →Cyclone1→ 21:03, 5 May 2006 (UTC)
Just so you know, everything's still there. Example: http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/rsad/gibbs/1992/1992.html . Replace the "1992" with any other year and it'll work. -- RattleMan 05:26, 6 May 2006 (UTC) Rattleman told me, too, Hink. What a relief. What i wonder about is why they unlinked from that page. hmm... →Cyclone1→ 05:31, 6 May 2006 (UTC)
Cyclone MALA was a super cycloneCyclone Mala was not a very severe cyclone. Actually some typo was made but I personally know it was a super cyclone because some websities had information saying MALA was actually a minimal super cyclone in the north Indian hurricane scale. Please do not revert my edits about Super cyclonic storm MALA that is true. User:mr.parks 19:41, 7 May 2006 (PTC)
Re:Typhoon of 1944Thanks for catching my mistake! It was in the NOAA Photo library. It says that it was captured "by a Navy ship's radar". Miss Madeline | Talk to Madeline 22:05, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
SigYou may want to put the <small> tags inside the wikilink brackets, because otherwise, the signature dies... Titoxd(?!? - help us) 22:18, 9 May 2006 (UTC) Fair useYes, the images would fall under our Fair use guideline, as they're not under the public domain. Make sure to tag them with the {{Non-free fair use in}} tag, as well as {{Unimage}}. Titoxd(?!? - help us) 00:59, 11 May 2006 (UTC)
Article boilerplateI'm not completely sure we need it, but not completely sure it would hurt either. I don't see anything particularily objectionable to that, but you may want a bit more of input in the project's talk page. Titoxd(?!? - help us) 17:42, 12 May 2006 (UTC) TCCOTFHow come no ones been checking the TCCOTF? I've posted some things-but no response. No one besides me has edited since may 2. Just trying to make sure it was still active. Icelandic Hurricane #12 21:05, 12 May 2006 (UTC) LNBS ReformattedYou should see the work that i did.HurricaneCraze32 22:03, 14 May 2006 (UTC)
Matthew,Kyle,Michael,Jose,Tanya,Marco,Gabrielle,14,Bonnie,Bob,Ella,Emmy,Frances, Caroline & Cleo.HurricaneCraze32 19:23, 15 May 2006 (UTC)
Holy MotherYou've done *a lot* of work on hurricane-related articles.. I am *very*, *very* impressed with it. Man. Everyone at work with the Tropical Cyclone WikiProject has done an outstanding job with an unbelievably comprehensive listing with maps and wow just everything. Just saying thanks for all your tireless work..! drumguy8800 - speak 03:24, 17 May 2006 (UTC) Re:Another quick questionHere, "Total de recursos" means "Total damages". And no problem, you never bother asking me. And yes, I have to admit it, I reply late because I'm very busy with school. juan andrés 03:43, 17 May 2006 (UTC) HelloI'm an user on wiki (user:Yug), and I some time do other edits under IP. If they are good please don't revert it after 1 min... That's a little too fast I think. Yug 17:34, 17 May 2006 (UTC) That was fastI just removed it! Do you have my userpage watched or something? I removed it because it was getting old, and it seems like everyone has one now. Maybe if I get more indignant responses I'll put it back. —CuiviénenT|C, Wednesday, 17 May 2006 @ 22:19 UTC RfAHello! I have decided that you deserve to be an admin and have nominated you. The link is Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Hurricanehink. Good luck! Icelandic Hurricane #12 14:52, 18 May 2006 (UTC)
Your RfAHuricanehink, I'm sorry you've decided to withdraw your candidacy. As Srikeit has said, this is not about your worth as a Wikipedian; please don't take it personally. You're a good editor and valuable asset to Wikipedia (perhaps one of the most valuable, with so many article improvements); it's just that adminship may not have been the right thing at this time. If you get some of the more admin-related tasks under your belt, I'd be happy to nominate you myself in a few months' time. Good luck, Tangotango 16:31, 18 May 2006 (UTC) In a way I'm glad that you have withdrawn your RFA. An RFA sometimes feels like an inquisition where you feel everyone's against you. This causes many useful contributors to leave Wikipedia. As I stated in my vote, your contributions to hurricane & tropical storms related article is nothing short of exceptional. Just a bit more experience in the other areas of Wikipedia & you'll have my complete support next time. Cheers & keep up the good work Srikeit(talk ¦ ✉) 16:45, 18 May 2006 (UTC) That's okI just wanted to notice you that I was an IP but that's was a good will, and not a vandalism. From that I learned on Wikipedia, we only know 2 "super typhoon" : Tip, and the currently one in China sea. I think that can be good to notice the fact they are only 2, and that's is maybe linked to the climatic growing temperatures Yug (talk) 17:57, 18 May 2006 (UTC) <bad english, but improving english :] > HelpHello, do you remember when recently, you and I Mr.Parks had a discussion about Cyclone MALA? Well, I came to ask you that on my user page, Alastor Moody, has some trouble. I was only wondering if you can help me because, do you know in your own user page that you have a user infobox? Well I have one to, but mine doesn't seem to be right. Just for now, I ask you if you can help, but if you reply to me on my user talk page and state weither you are going to help or not, I'll be glad to get your reply. I will also explain more about it later. Thank you. Alastor Moody 20:03, 18 May 2006 (PTC)
Where in the world is User:E.Brown?What happened to User:E. Brown ?, because had made no edits since April 2006 nor responded to our recent article creations. And theres nothing on his user page of the reasoning of absence (wikibreak, blocked, banned, quit?). Storm05 17:49, 19 May 2006 (UTC) Storm ImagesGrr, my schoolworks picked up at the moment so don't really have time to do major editing currently. Still I've got through 13 of the storms and just 33% of 2005's storms are starts currently - fair achievement I think (nevermind Irene an FA). Anyway, real reason for this message, the discovery of another useful source: Here's a link MODIS raw images. The L1B granule images are the ones which the NASA Earth Observatory polishes up; and those are our first choice for storm pics. It's quite time consuming to wade through all the images to find any good ones, and annoying when the storm is only half visible, like this one of 2004's Bonnie but patience does pay off - here's the unnamed 2005 subtropical storm. What do you think?--Nilfanion (talk) 19:50, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
I've uploaded MODIS images of TS Gert and TD 10 (check the list page); I'm not sure I got the images quite right, but they are ok. MODIS imagery certainly has its problems, for example the image of Hurricane Katrina is a little off center because the original MODIS frame wasn't quite in the right place. Oh and on an aside on Camille's talk page I agree with what you are saying, there was recon data to support the 901 but the NHC discounted it for whatever reason - and they discounted it in best track (meaning it is unofficial). It will be borne in mind when the hurdat people reanalyse it, but I don't know how they would interpret it (If Camille was downgraded to Cat 4 I would not be shocked).--17:15, 21 May 2006 (UTC) Re:Just To Let You KnowUGH.Now i have to dump all my work!!!!!!!!!Can you check Kyle and Tanya ones?HurricaneCraze32 21:19, 21 May 2006 (UTC)
KatrinaTime to start work on the big one I think. I copied the Florida section from the Hurricane Katrina effects by region article into Katrina and left section headings for the other important areas. I think we don't need to trawl through the sources, just through the other articles in Wikipedia's Katrina series - once thats done we will be close. The only thing lacking really in Wikipedia (if not Hurricane Katrina itself) is the effects on Cuba; admittedly minor but there were some.--Nilfanion (talk) 21:47, 21 May 2006 (UTC)
Glad to see that so far there has been no reaction to the changes I did on Katrina so far... I'm trying to think what impact subsections would make sense, would this work:
Do you think that seperation works? If so what is an appropriate name for the Alabama/Florida Panhandle/Georgia section? I think Bahamas info could be added to Cuba as "Caribbean" as well...--Nilfanion (talk) 15:37, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
Caught![with hands up] You caught me! I make one little tweak when passing by and...wow! I guess I don't have the right to remain silent. I took a bit of a break. I was getting a little bored. There wasn't that much to do except chew over promising articles. Unfortunatly, you guys are probably not going to see as much of me over the next few months. I have exams coming up and a busy summer ahead of me. I'll be at the beach all June and my condo down there doesn't have internet. I'm not as much the enthusiastic pioneer as I once was. I've done my pioneering and it now seems time for me to pass the torch to the new hurricane junkies and hope they have the same passion for the subject that I do. I remain a guardian of the the hurricane archives, 2004 and back; the work I created and amplified, but I've tired of the war on the future seasons. My work will now be almost entirely on the articles that exist right now (excluding the '05 chaos). Otherwise I'm still the staunch tradionalist you're used to. I feel almost old (17 in 3 weeks). You could call almost call us old timers, since we've been here since I took the project under my wing. Remember Cyrius, Golbez, you, me, Bob Rulz, Rattleman, Tomf688, and later Jdorje? Good times, good times. What have I missed? -- §HurricaneERIC§Damagesarchive 02:16, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
More fair useSorry for taking a while to reply (I've been away for the weekend), but the images don't have a clear copyright statement, so they would need to be fair use. While they are in a Federal govt. site, they are not taken by an employee of the Federal government while fulfilling his duties, so they do not fall automatically under the public domain. The most we can claim is fair use (and we may have a very strong rationale), or try to contact the photographers (which is not easy, as he site does not identify which pictures are whose). WP:FU is the way to go here. Titoxd(?!? - help us) 20:24, 22 May 2006 (UTC) Re: That's just meanI know that Most of it sounds like his article, but I began to change it around a bit. I still haven't quite finished doing that though, and you just happened to check at the right time to see it in the middle. It should sound a lot different by tommorow afternoon. Ok, are we clear? Good. Icelandic Hurricane #12(talk) 00:19, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
Found a med stormftp://eclipse.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/isccp/b1/.D2790P/images/1984/366/Img-1984-12-31-21-MET-2-IR.jpg Here it is. Its near the north side of Africa. Tiny, orbular, but spinning kinda. Not very impressive but i found it when i was looking for south atlantic storms for my new subpage. (coincidentally enough, that big blob of convection to near S. America becomes a storm on my page). Just thought I'd let you know. →Cyclone1→ 20:46, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
Links are downThe links to 1986 Atlantic hurricane season, Tropical Storm Bret (1993) and Talk:Wikiproject Tropical Cyclones are down. How long it would be untill someone fixes the links to those articles? Storm05 15:29, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
Hurricane Fifi PictureHas there been any sign that the site (AMS) has public domain pictures? Jake52 My talk
Tropical Storm AlettaTropical Storm Aletta has formed over the Pacific Ocean. Alastor Moody 13:56 (PTC) HPC Tropical Cyclone Rainfall ProjectThis has been a one person project (ummmm...me) over the past 7 years (gasp). It took me until 3 years ago before I got help with automating the plotting of the data, and progress has been steady since. I'm glad you think I'm moving quickly. =) It seems as if I cover about 5 years of storms every year...it's the type of slow pace you expect from someone on shift work. Every so often I discover an error and have to correct it. You're the second person to ask about the U.S. Pacific island groups being added to the project, so my guess would be yes, but it is probably months away. Thegreatdr 21:39, 27 May 2006 (UTC) I have a couple more Puerto Rico/U.S. Virgin Island systems from 1995, Javier's (2004) Mexican rainfall, and a correction to Marco/Klaus 1990 to contend with this next week. Then, I'll be going backwards chronologically for the most part after they are done, unless a tropical cyclone comes along in the meantime which requires me to step back out of order, like Rita (which prompted Carla 1961), or Wilma (which prompted Isbell 1964). After I get back through the 1979 storms (there aren't many left from 1979-1982 that are not already in the TC rainfall climo), I'll add the numbered tropical depressions that struck land from 1979-1984. I'm still uncertain what to do about the September 1979 and September 1984 systems near Texas; they will likely be left alone unless the hurricane reanalysis deems them worthy at some point in the future. Thegreatdr 15:03, 28 May 2006 (UTC) I could do that for those two September cyclones, putting subtropical storm wording and a question mark. That way if they're added into the reanalysis, the rainfall is already complete. Thegreatdr 23:17, 28 May 2006 (UTC) It's certainly not as easy as it sounds, because frontal zones drape over 2/3 of the tropical cyclones that move into the United States, and sometimes upper cyclones can force the development of tropical cyclones at the surface. If the rainfall appears unconnected to the tropical cyclone on satellite images, it will likely not be considered part of the storm total rainfall. If heavy rain focuses on a draping front over a system, that will count as it would be exceptionally hard to separate out, and chances are, the next tropical cyclone that forms in that area and moves in a similar direction will also have frontal interaction, so really it is not worth separating that rainfall out of the storm total. Grace (2003) was intriguing as it was a small tropical cyclone already moving into an area where there was an ongoing rain event, so no rainfall along the front to its north was counted until it was impossible to distinguish between the frontal rainfall and the tropical cyclone rainfall. In the case of Fran (1996), this was exercised as well. Juan (1985) was the reverse; an upper cyclone booted the former tropical cyclone out to the north, but the rain continued across the Mid-Atlantic. For Juan, I cut off the rainfall when the former tropical cyclone moved out of the United States and before the upper cyclone began to induce significant rainfall. I hope this isn't too confusing. Thegreatdr 17:09, 30 May 2006 (UTC) You're right; I need a 5" isohyet in there for the maximum for Edouard (1996). Thanks for the catch. Thegreatdr 17:12, 30 May 2006 (UTC) Storm Total Rainfall for Bonnie (2004)I find that linking the rainfall that fell from Pennsylvania northward directly to Bonnie's rain shield (2004) very hard to believe. I was actually in Baltimore on the day Bonnie passed by to the east, and we had a mid-upper level deck of clouds that morning, but no rain on a day where the rain chance was forced up to 100% per the TPC track forecast. After double checking, it looks complicated, as a frontal wave was riding along a front located a few hundred miles north of Bonnie [1]. At the time of the 12z daily weather map on August 13th, the rainfall patterns for the frontal wave and Bonnie are depicted separate, even though the 24 hour precipitation plot and satellite imagery makes the two cloud/rain bands look merged. I seem to remember the rain pattern remaining separate, so I don't plan on adding that swath of rainfall across Pennsylvania and New England into the Bonnie graphic. The most you can say is that the frontal wave tapped the tropical connection into Bonnie, like the NCDC article states. If those type of rain patterns were included in the storm total rainfall graphics, both Lili's (1996 and 2002) which indirectly led to rainfall events in New England, would have to be included, even though the storms were several hundred miles away to the southeast. Is this slicing the cheese to thin? Maybe. Keep in mind that there are tropical cyclone researchers that think I include too much frontal rainfall into the climatology as it is and is likely why no one else has tackled tropical cyclone rainfall graphics on an organized storm-by-storm basis since 1955. They are likely the same ones that think Stan wasn't directly related to the thousands of deaths in Central America, even though everything looks very clearly related to Stan's circulation on satellite imagery; their and my only source of data for Central America. Thegreatdr 17:38, 30 May 2006 (UTC) Yep...storms that affect the extremities of the region are the easiest. =) Thegreatdr 22:13, 30 May 2006 (UTC) Just as a general matter of interest, do you know quite where Image:1944 Cane Damage.jpg originally comes from? I just noticed that it's using an image copyright tag that I got caught up in a debate about on Commons a couple of weeks back - a couple of us spotted that the tag is actually wrong and images that fit the tag descriptions may well not be public domain after all: only work from the Library of Congress collections specifically marked as "presumed P.D." is actually likely to be. What surprised me is that usually these images contain a link to a Library of Congress URL and it is possible to check the status there, whilst this picture's source is listed as a page in a (presumably copyrighted) book. Does the book have a photograph index that states that their source was the Library of Congress Collections? Did it specifically say whether it's public domain? I've just realised that if there are more images like this, where a reviewing Wikipedian (or Commoner, I guess, over there!) has no easy way to check the copyright status, it will be even harder than anticipated to clean up the category when the migration to an accurate, copyright-free template occurs! :-/ It'd be really handy if you could find a way to confirm that this one really is public domain... might stop a bamboozled license-checker bringing it up on your talk page later! TheGrappler 12:32, 28 May 2006 (UTC)
Someone has kindly promoted it to a GA. Could you look at it one more time and tell me if it should be A-class? I've also put it up for peer review, so if you have any suggestions, please put them there. Thanks =). —CuiviénenT|C|@ on Tuesday, 30 May 2006 at 13:22 UTC Article formattingDear Tropical cyclone editor, As a member of the Tropical Cyclone Wikiproject, you are receiving this message to describe how you can better tropical cyclone articles. There are hundreds of tropical cyclone articles, though many of them are poorly organized and lacking in information. Using the existing featured articles as a guide line, here is the basic format for the ideal tropical cyclone article.
Good luck with future writing, and if you have a question about the above, don't hesitate to ask.
Didn't take you long to notice that Hink did it? Sure thing I will help back to 2003, I agree with you on it going faster; I'm just trying to psyche myself up for Ophelia at the moment. Check the Ophelia graphics archive and see how badly they forecast that storm and then contrast it with the TCR where they say they forecast it well, you can see why I'm not looking forward to the storm history for it. On the (short) newsletter - yeah I think I'll say as much when I can get round to it (procrastination...) By the way, that table isn't actually a todo list; I plan to extend it right back to the start of naming in the Atlantic, simply to summarise article quality (doesn't mean I think there should be articles on all the storms).--Nilfanion (talk) 23:13, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
Featured writer's barnstar
A lot1) Whats this WPTC newsletter? 2) I redirected Tanya for now. 3) Can you check my reformatted 1887 page under "Page Reformatting Section"? 4) Is Emmy/Frances ready yet?HurricaneCraze32 19:20, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
6(Reply to 1)- How do you make a newsletter on Wikipedia?HurricaneCraze32 20:02, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
8) You know i'm not active in Wikiproject.HurricaneCraze32 20:07, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
HEYDude, you left me hanging. |
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