| Literature DB >> 27898726 |
Jordan V Pino1, Robert V Rohli1, Kristine L DeLong1, Grant L Harley2, Jill C Trepanier1.
Abstract
Observations of pre-1950 tropical cyclones are sparse due to observational limitations; therefore, the hurricane database HURDAT2 (1851-present) maintained by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration may be incomplete. Here we provide additional documentation for HURDAT2 from historical United States Army fort records (1820-1915) and other archived documents for 28 landfalling tropical cyclones, 20 of which are included in HURDAT2, along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast. One event that occurred in May 1863 is not currently documented in the HURDAT2 database but has been noted in other studies. We identify seven tropical cyclones that occurred before 1851, three of which are potential tropical cyclones. We corroborate the pre-HURDAT2 storms with a tree-ring reconstruction of hurricane impacts from the Florida Keys (1707-2009). Using this information, we suggest landfall locations for the July 1822 hurricane just west of Mobile, Alabama and 1831 hurricane near Last Island, Louisiana on 18 August. Furthermore, we model the probable track of the August 1831 hurricane using the weighted average distance grid method that incorporates historical tropical cyclone tracks to supplement report locations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27898726 PMCID: PMC5127585 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0167482
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Landfall reconstruction for (a) the hurricane of 8 July 1822 and (b) storm track reconstruction for the hurricane of 10–17 August 1831.
(b) Observations of this hurricane include fort and historical documents (this study and Chenoweth [7]) and a tree-ring reconstruction [16]. Storm track is constructed using a weighted average of the distance grids of all track analogs. Bold line encompasses a weighted average distance of ≤ 2.5° of latitude. Contour lines are drawn at 1° increments out to 6.5°. Wind direction is noted via the wind barbs on the hurricane graphic.
Tropical cyclones identified.
| Tropical cyclones concurrent with HURDAT2 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | Day Month | Likely Status (landfall) | Location | Quotes from documents |
| 1915 | 28–31 September | Hurricane | Louisiana | Storm caused over 12 inches of rain in the Florida parishes of Louisiana; 8 inches in New Orleans |
| 1909 | 19–22 September | Hurricane | Louisiana | Damage from wind and tide was reported from Pensacola, FL to Galveston, TX; 350 persons killed |
| 1908 | 16–20 September | Tropical Storm | Louisiana | Heavy rain and wind along Texas/Louisiana coast; 62 mph near Galveston. Heavy rain in Cameron Parish; intense burst of rain near New Orleans |
| 1902 | 26–30 June | Hurricane | Texas | Heavy rain totals; 8 inches in some areas |
| 1898 | 2–4 October | Tropical Storm | Florida | Heavy rain totals recorded in FL, GA, and SC |
| 1896 | 6–8 July | Hurricane | Florida | Map of storm track; heavy rain totals |
| 1894 | 24–26 September | Hurricane | Florida | Heavy rain; over 11 inches of rain at some stations |
| 1890 | 26 August | Tropical Storm | Louisiana | Strong wind from the northeast |
| 1888 | 8–12 September | Tropical Storm | Florida | Storm entered Florida near Cedar Key with maximum winds near 60 mph; lowest pressure was 29.50 inches |
| 1888 | 19–20 August | Hurricane | Louisiana | Remarkable storm |
| 1887 | 17–18 October | Hurricane | Louisiana | Heavy wind |
| 1880 | 13 August | Hurricane | Texas | Gale |
| 1879 | 1 September | Hurricane | Louisiana | The great storm of the 1st…. |
| 1877 | 17–19 September | Hurricane | Louisiana | Heavy storms; wind and rain |
| 1875 | 15 September | Hurricane | Texas | Heavy rain with wind from the north and northeast |
| 1870 | 19–20 October | Hurricane | Fort Jefferson, Tortugas, Florida | Trees and fences prostrated, buildings unroofed, & debris flying in the every direction, making it dangerous to be out. At 8:15 A.M. the wind died completely out in 3 minutes, so close as to be uncomfortable, Suddenly at 9:40 A.M. it 1st in from the opposite direction, and in 20 minutes increased to a Hurricane |
| 1865 | 13 September | Hurricane | Texas | Wind 2–4 a.m. all night |
| 1863 | 28 May | Hurricane | Florida | Heavy squalls of wind and rain |
| 1859 | 19 September | Hurricane | Louisiana | Heavy rain |
| 1856 | 10–12 August | Hurricane | Louisiana | Illegible; rain mentioned |
| 1852 | 24–25 August | Hurricane | Alabama | Squally |
| 1852 | 24–25 August | Hurricane | Mississippi | Illegible; wind mentioned |
| 1837 | 6–7 October | Hurricane | Louisiana | High winds, rainy day; high winds |
| 1831 | 16–18 August | Hurricane | Louisiana | Heavy rain and high winds throughout; winds from southeast on 17th, then southwest on 18th |
| 1831 | 16–18 August | Hurricane | Louisiana | Heavy winds; river overflowing; storm continues with great violence; winds from southeast |
| 1831 | 27–29 August | Tropical Storm | Louisiana | Heavy rain; high winds from the northeast throughout; river overflowing |
| 1828 | 11–12 August | Potential | Louisiana | Rain and wind; mentioned 2 days in a row |
| 1825 | 21 September | Potential | Louisiana | Windy and rainy |
| 1822 | 8–9 July | Hurricane | Florida | Storm |
| 1822 | 7–9 July | Hurricane | Louisiana | Heavy winds which increased to great violence on the 8th; winds from the northeast |
| 1822 | 7–9 July | Hurricane | Mississippi | Rain becoming a gale; winds from the east |
| 1820 | 24–25 August | Potential | Mississippi | Rain mentioned 2 days straight |