Overcast
60°
Morris, IL
Overcast|Forecast »

Hurricane, cyclone or storm, Sandy in a class by itself

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(MCT) PHILADELPHIA — Sandy, now spinning its way toward retirement, shared similarities with a legendary predecessor, the “Perfect Storm” of October 1991. But meteorologists say the two differed in one important respect: Sandy was far worse.

“This storm is going to be in a class of its own,” Louis W. Uccellini, director of the National Centers for Environmental Prediction, said Tuesday.

That might get an argument from some on the mainland, but probably not from residents and property owners along the Jersey Shore, or the inhabitants of the new Venice of the Northeast, New York City.

In the coming weeks, Sandy’s legacy will become more evident as bills for federal disaster relief start piling up.

In an extraordinary move, without waiting for damage surveys, President Barack Obama already has declared a “major” disaster for New Jersey and New York coastal areas. Damage could reach $20 billion, according to Eqecat Inc., a California insurance-modeling company.

Sandy’s statistical accomplishments are impressive. Record power outages (3.7 million customers in the region); record-low air pressure over Philadelphia, evidence of the storm’s intensity; new standards for storm surges; and an all-time high-water mark on the Delaware River at Philadelphia (10.2 feet).

But it was Sandy’s behavior that has the meteorological community buzzing. Sandy defied the traditional rules of weather by moving from east to west, and that peculiar path probably had something to do with blunting its effects away from the coast, especially north and west of the city.

And its peculiar nature — an explosive combination of hurricane and nor’easter-like cyclone — had everything to do with the flood tides at the Shore and the inundation and shutdown of the New York subway system.

Sandy was so strange that meteorologists are unsure what to call it. The National Hurricane Center has determined that even though its peak winds were strong enough to qualify as a hurricane when it made landfall, it was behaving too much like a winter-type storm by then to be called tropical.

Hurricanes are not snowmakers, but on Tuesday a Sandy-related blizzard was raging in the mountains of West Virginia. Sandy was circulating so much cold air that temperatures did not get out of the 40s in gloomy Philadelphia on Tuesday, even though winds were from the usually warmer southeast.

Previous Page|1|||

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all