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Talk:1948 Atlantic hurricane season

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Whoa, people! Let's not get carried away here. I mean, do we really need the seasons of the Forties? Why don't we just go back to the Galveston Hurricane while we're at it. Is there really a limit as to how far back into the deapths of hurricane history we need to go here?

-E. Brown, Hurricane enthusiast

Hey, it was on the List of Atlantic Hurricane Season, and 1949 had already been created. And in my personal opinion, the more information the better. If we could have all of the information in the world right at our fingertips you wouldn't see me complaining! bob rulz 07:05, Jan 9, 2005 (UTC)

Whoa Bob! Point taken. No need to get your knickers in a twist. I was just wondering if we needed to dive through the Best Track data to 1851, where we hit rock bottom. If that's the way we should go, then by all means let's.

-E. Brown, Hurricane enthusiast

lol, I guess I took that the wrong way bob rulz 07:15, Jan 10, 2005 (UTC)

Todo

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It needs at least a one sentence description of every storm to be a start.--Nilfanion (talk) 22:23, 21 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Improvements

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I'm working to get this article up to GA or FA standards. I've inserted sources, and the prose has been refreshened. I've added a seasonal summary; thus far, I've expanded five of the nine storms. The introduction has been lengthened, too. I hope I have made some good progress. What do you think? If anyone wants to offer some suggestions, you may post them on my talk page. This article is located in my sandbox, too. CapeVerdeWave (talk) 12:47, 1 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It's looking good. One quick thing I noticed is you cited Unisys. While that's not really a problem, I think it'd be better to either get the info from the MWR, or much more simply cite Hurdat. Also, Tropical Storm Four needs a source for the second paragraph. Hurricanehink (talk) 03:31, 2 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

GA Review

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This review is transcluded from Talk:1948 Atlantic hurricane season/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Hurricanehink (talk · contribs) 19:00, 3 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]


  • "The 1948 Atlantic hurricane season was average, featuring a total of 10 storms, which matched historical seasonal mean of ten." - this needs a reference. Ditto "and the number of intense hurricanes surpassed the average of two"
  • "The season featured one tropical storm in May, and it was among 18 tropical systems that formed in the month of May in the Atlantic basin. " - no idea where you get this info from. List of off-season Atlantic hurricanes has many more than 18. And you can't say at the time, as some storms were only discovered later.
  • "Of the 10 tropical disturbances detected operationally" - why operationally? I'm not sure the first storm was detected operationally, given that it wasn't named.
  • "A minimal hurricane struck southern Louisiana, causing tides of 5 ft (1.5 m) and winds of 78 mph (126 km/h) in New Orleans. " - when?
  • "100-mile-per-hour (161 km/h) " - why do you spell it out this time? Also, why no rounding?
  • "A Category 4 hurricane struck the Florida Keys and the Everglades, resulting in $12 million of damages in the state. After the passage of one week, another hurricane affected the region as a Category 2 storm, after crossing Cuba with winds of 125 mph (201 km/h). " - you don't say what month, and watch for rounding. The entire article could use a double check for rounding; I see problems in TS 1,
  • "The tropical system brought widespread precipitation to Hispaniola, and widespread flooding took place across the region." - don't say "widespread" twice
  • "Several people went missing in the floodwaters.[9] An estimated 80 people died." - merge?
  • Where does HURDAT say "an area of disturbed weather developed in the northern Gulf of Mexico." Use meta when in doubt, and see what wording they use for precursor. How come you don't use meta for TS 2, btw? And you don't mention the peak winds.
  • What was H3's peak? Why don't you mention it in prose?
  • "about 300 mi (483 km)" - rounding
  • Any other US effects for H3? It looks like it came very close.
  • "Among the structures damaged included Abbott and Haliburton store, which lost its roof, and the Church of England, which the storm completely destroyed." - these seem pretty trivial (the store names), and the church isn't the Church of England, but rather a. Find a different way of saying this, make it broader.
  • "Port au Port alone suffered about $200,000 in damage." - for this and the other damage total for the storm, USD or CAD?
  • "Along the shore, a number of pleasure crafts were wrecked." - what is this?
  • "Charlie continued to weaken as it approached Hattiesburg on September 5 and moved over the area with winds of 40 mph (64 km/h). " - why specify this? And why no mention of the meta data?
  • H5 could use inland effects. [1] - this shows Michigan rainfall. Also, [2] here is better Louisiana info.
  • H6 needs a ref that it was named Dog
  • "downing power lines and felled trees" - I'm not sure this makes sense grammatically. It implies "downing... felled trees", but if the trees were felled, then downing doesn't work. You could remove that word, but I'm not sure if you're going for something else.
  • "Overall, the hurricane caused eight fatalities." - 6 (from one ship) + 1 (from the other ship) + 2 = 9. Also, italicize the ship names
  • For H8, you should specify the landfall in the Florida Keys was followed by additional strengthening over water. Right now, I was confused how the storm continued to intensify after striking Florida. Maybe say the second Florida landfall was on the mainland?
  • What happened to the end of H8? You stop talking about it when it became extratropical, but there is still history afterward.
  • Did H10 affect the coast?

All in all a decent article, but some spots seem sloppy or incomplete. Still, it shouldn't be too tough to finish, so I'll leave the article on hold for now. ♫ Hurricanehink (talk) 19:00, 3 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

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