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Article
The Extremely Active 2017 North Atlantic Hurricane Season
Monthly Weather Review
  • Philip J. Klotzbach, Colorado State University
  • Carl J. Schreck, III, North Carolina State University
  • Jennifer Collins, University of South Florida
  • Michael M. Bell, Colorado State University
  • Eric S. Blake, NOAA/National Hurricane Center
  • David R. Roache, University of South Florida
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2018
Keywords
  • North Atlantic Ocean,
  • Hurricanes,
  • Hurricanes/typhoons,
  • Hurricanes/typhoons
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1175/MWR-D-18-0078.1
Disciplines
Abstract

The 2017 North Atlantic hurricane season was extremely active, with 17 named storms (1981–2010 median is 12.0), 10 hurricanes (median is 6.5), 6 major hurricanes (median is 2.0), and 245% of median accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) occurring. September 2017 generated more Atlantic named storm days, hurricane days, major hurricane days, and ACE than any other calendar month on record. The season was destructive, with Harvey and Irma devastating portions of the continental United States, while Irma and Maria brought catastrophic damage to Puerto Rico, Cuba, and many other Caribbean islands. Seasonal forecasts increased from calling for a slightly below-normal season in April to an above-normal season in August as large-scale environmental conditions became more favorable for an active hurricane season. During that time, the tropical Atlantic warmed anomalously while a potential El Niño decayed in the Pacific. Anomalously high SSTs prevailed across the tropical Atlantic, and vertical wind shear was anomalously weak, especially in the central tropical Atlantic, from late August to late September when several major hurricanes formed. Late-season hurricane activity was likely reduced by a convectively suppressed phase of the Madden–Julian oscillation. The large-scale steering flow was different from the average over the past decade with a strong subtropical high guiding hurricanes farther west across the Atlantic. The anomalously high tropical Atlantic SSTs and low vertical wind shear were comparable to other very active seasons since 1982.

Citation / Publisher Attribution

Monthly Weather Review, v. 146, issue 10, p. 3425-3443

Citation Information
Philip J. Klotzbach, Carl J. Schreck, Jennifer Collins, Michael M. Bell, et al.. "The Extremely Active 2017 North Atlantic Hurricane Season" Monthly Weather Review Vol. 146 Iss. 10 (2018) p. 3425 - 3443
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jennifercollins/35/