Hurricane Names
hurricanes are
given names. Why is that? To help us identify storms and track them as
they move across the ocean. Remember, there can be more than one hurricane
at a time and without naming them, we could get confused and which storm
we're talking about.
For hundreds of years, hurricanes in the West Indies were
named after the particular saint's day on which the hurricane occurred.
An Australian meteorologist began giving women's names to tropical storms
before the end of the 19th century. In 1953, the U.S. National Weather
Service, which is the federal agency that tracks hurricanes and issues
warnings and watches, began using female names for storms.
In 1979, both women and men's names were used. One name
for each letter of the alphabet is selected, except for Q, U and Z. For
Atlantic Ocean hurricanes, the names may be French, Spanish or English,
since these are the major languages bordering the Atlantic Ocean where
the storm occur.
So who decides what names are used each year? The World
Meteorological Organization uses six lists in rotation. The same lists
are reused every six years. The only time a new name is added is if a
hurricane is very deadly or costly. Then the name is retired and a new
name is chosen.
National Hurricane Center
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