Cold Hurricanes

The most active hurricane season in the US was 1886, with seven hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico – including three during June. NASA says that year was very cold.

Re-Analysis Project

Global Temperature | Vital Signs – Climate Change: Vital Signs of the Planet

Minnesota’s deadliest tornado hit on April 14, 1886, and was followed by a rash of severe tornadoes in the Midwest during May.

Apr 16, 1886, page 1 – The Sun at Newspapers.com

The Most Destructive Tornadoes since 1872 on JSTOR

About Tony Heller

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2 Responses to Cold Hurricanes

  1. ThurmanZhou says:

    They had to go to Africa to see why 62% of the bee hives in the US died. Just as suspected, Climate Change and rising temperatures. Of course rebuttal to that article got me banned and the response was deleted. I didn’t mention Climate at all.
    I haven’t seen you on YouTube, you must be banned as well. I’ll just come here.
    Your posts are always excellent and factual. I haven’t found any in error. I like how some of the Climate experts are total idiots. I saw a clip of a Senator questioning a guy from Alaska. He had no idea how much co2 was in the atmosphere. These useful idiots have the idea that there is a lot, in reality it’s ridiculously small.

  2. Bob G says:

    I see Tony has a newspaper clipping, dateline Saint Cloud, mn, from 1886 detailing the destructiveness of a tornado that hit that area. that’s right in my backyard and it is considered a sauk rapids Minnesota tornado. Sauk rapids is essentially a suburb of St Cloud now. the tornado moved on from Sauk rapids, traveled a few miles north to Rice Minnesota where it killed more people…11 people in a wedding party including the groom. it was a bad day for South Central Minnesota…. 1886. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1886_St._Cloud%E2%80%93Sauk_Rapids_tornado_outbreak

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