Misleading
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
Misleading
  • About Us
  • Log in
  • Don’t Mislead (Archive)
  • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
Misleading
No Result
View All Result

Is There Another Hurricane Coming and When Is Hurricane Season Over?

October 22, 2024
in Missleading
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0 0
A A
0
Is There Another Hurricane Coming and When Is Hurricane Season Over?
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

This year’s Atlantic hurricane season has been a dramatic one, with the U.S. coast repeatedly slammed by powerful storms.

The hurricane season runs between June 1 and November 30 every year, and 2024 has seen several record-breaking storms, bringing vast amounts of destruction and claiming many lives.

As the most recent hurricane of the season—the short-lived Hurricane Oscar—starts to dissipate in the Atlantic, will there be any more hurricanes in 2024?

hurricane milton space season
Image from the GOES-16 satellite of Hurricane Milton approaching Florida. There are not likely to be any more storms as powerful as Milton for the rest of the hurricane season.
Image from the GOES-16 satellite of Hurricane Milton approaching Florida. There are not likely to be any more storms as powerful as Milton for the rest of the hurricane season.
CSU/CIRA & NOAA

Hurricane Season Dates

The Atlantic hurricane season stretches from June to November because this period brings the most favorable conditions for the formation of hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean. These include warm ocean temperatures, low wind shear, and moisture in the atmosphere.

“Generally, [hurricane development] needs a warm ocean (to provide energy source for the system to grow), and little change in wind speed and direction between the upper and lower levels of the atmosphere, known as vertical wind shear (to allow the air mass to rise vertically to high levels to further develop the towering deep clouds),” Xiangbo Feng, a tropical storm expert at the U.K.’s University of Reading, told Newsweek.

The Atlantic Ocean reaches these ideal temperatures in late spring and stays warm through early fall, and wind shear is also generally low during this period, creating the perfect environment for storms to intensify.

2024 Hurricane Season Storms

First Hurricane Beryl blustered into Texas as a Category 1 storm on July 8, having reached Category 5 on its journey across the Caribbean. Beryl was the strongest July hurricane ever recorded, the first storm to ever reach Category 4 in the month of June, and the earliest Category 5 on record.

Beryl was followed by the Category 1 Hurricane Debby, which hit Florida’s Big Bend region in early August. On September 11, Hurricane Francine hit Louisiana as a Category 2, triggering flash flooding and storm surges along the Gulf Coast. Next, within two weeks of each other, came Hurricane Helene on September 26 and Hurricane Milton on October 9, both of which slammed into Florida’s western coast and caused immense flooding both along the coast and inland.

Hurricane Milton hits Florida – as seen from space.

Abundant lightning can be seen in southern Florida, where numerous tornadoes occurred today. pic.twitter.com/1X7aQCnDX5

— CIRA (@CIRA_CSU) October 9, 2024

Milton, which hit Category 5 as it approached Florida before dropping back to a Category 3 by the time it made landfall, is considered the fifth most powerful Atlantic hurricane in recorded history by central pressure, and tied for the third-strongest hurricane in Atlantic history by wind speed.

“There have only been five other years (since 1950) in which there were more than one Category 5 hurricane in a single season; 1961 (2), 2005 (4), 2007 (2), 2017 (2), and most recently 2019 (2),” the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said.

There were several other named storms and hurricanes this year, including Alberto, Ernesto, Gordon, Isaac, and Kirk, but these did not hit the U.S.

Is There Another Hurricane Coming?

Due to how late it is in the hurricane season, it may be unlikely for us to see another storm as strong as Milton in the remainder of 2024.

“Storms can intensify fast if they encounter the right conditions and that could happen at any time,” Annalisa Bracco, a professor of ocean and climate dynamics at the Georgia Institute of Technology, told Newsweek. “But we are later in the season, and that means that favorable conditions for fast intensification are less likely than when Milton happened. Wind shear tends to be stronger (on average) at the end of October compared to early September, [sea surface temperatures] are on average cooler than in August-September, etc.”

However, the weather doesn’t necessarily follow the rules, so until the hurricane season ends, we don’t truly know that we’re out of the woods.

Before the start of this year’s hurricane season, NOAA predicted that 2024 would have an 85 percent chance of an above-normal season, seeing between 17 and 25 total named storms, of which eight to 13 were forecast to become hurricanes, with four to seven become major hurricanes. A typical season sees 14 named storms, of which seven hit hurricane-strength and three become major hurricanes.

Including Oscar, we have seen 15 named storms so far, 10 hurricanes, and four major hurricanes, meaning that there could still be some surprises on the way.

Storms To Keep an Eye on Right Now

There are currently no storms or depressions in the Atlantic other than Tropical Storm Oscar, which was a Category 1 hurricane when it made landfall in Cuba. This storm is expected to disappear in the next few days.

5am EDT Tue Key Messages for Tropical Storm #Oscar. The main threat is heavy rain across portions of the southeastern #Bahamas, as well as the Turks & Caicos Islands. Although rains have eased over eastern #Cuba, flooding from rain that already occurred is still a concern.

More… pic.twitter.com/QlsoiHT0Jf

— National Hurricane Center (@NHC_Atlantic) October 22, 2024

“Oscar could dissipate later today, or merge with an extratropical low-pressure system within the next couple of days,” the National Hurricane Center said.

If any other depressions strengthen into a tropical storm or hurricane this year, they will be named Patty, Rafael, Sara, Tony, Valerie, and William.

Do you have a tip on a science story that Newsweek should be covering? Do you have a question about hurricanes? Let us know via science@newsweek.com.

Previous Post

Giuliani ordered to turn over apartment, valuables to defamed election workers

Next Post

Richard N. Winfield, Noted First Amendment Lawyer for AP, Dies at 91

Related Posts

SOAS Director Warns: Forget Oil — Trump’s War Might Blow Up Helium and Fertilizer Supplies Too 
Don’t Mislead

SOAS Director Warns: Forget Oil — Trump’s War Might Blow Up Helium and Fertilizer Supplies Too 

May 18, 2026
Three ‘girls,’ zero humans. ‘Shunned at a Funeral’ fooled the internet with flawless vocals, fake concerts, and now they want your money. When the band doesn’t exist, the scam writes itself. Don’t Contribute!
Don’t Mislead

Three ‘girls,’ zero humans. ‘Shunned at a Funeral’ fooled the internet with flawless vocals, fake concerts, and now they want your money. When the band doesn’t exist, the scam writes itself. Don’t Contribute!

May 12, 2026
ABC Flags Massive Pre‑Speech Trades — Regulated Market or Misleading Free‑For‑All
Don’t Mislead

ABC Flags Massive Pre‑Speech Trades — Regulated Market or Misleading Free‑For‑All

May 9, 2026
CTO Robert Hensley Breaks It Down: The Neon Gas Nobody Noticed—and the Country Sitting on a Mountain of It
Don’t Mislead

CTO Robert Hensley Breaks It Down: The Neon Gas Nobody Noticed—and the Country Sitting on a Mountain of It

May 8, 2026
Looks Real. Feels Real. Isn’t Real. The Rise of Ghost Keypads
Don’t Mislead

Looks Real. Feels Real. Isn’t Real. The Rise of Ghost Keypads

May 2, 2026
Winery Linked to Ilhan Omar and her Spouse Suddenly Files Termination — Misleading Timing or Just Coincidence?
Don’t Mislead

Winery Linked to Ilhan Omar and her Spouse Suddenly Files Termination — Misleading Timing or Just Coincidence?

April 30, 2026
Next Post
Richard N. Winfield, Noted First Amendment Lawyer for AP, Dies at 91

Richard N. Winfield, Noted First Amendment Lawyer for AP, Dies at 91

Are 1-ounce gold bars a safe investment this October?

Please login to join discussion
Misleading

Misleading is your trusted source for uncovering fake news, analyzing misinformation, and educating readers about deceptive media tactics. Join the fight for truth today!

TRENDING

SOAS Director Warns: Forget Oil — Trump’s War Might Blow Up Helium and Fertilizer Supplies Too 

LATEST

SOAS Director Warns: Forget Oil — Trump’s War Might Blow Up Helium and Fertilizer Supplies Too 

Three ‘girls,’ zero humans. ‘Shunned at a Funeral’ fooled the internet with flawless vocals, fake concerts, and now they want your money. When the band doesn’t exist, the scam writes itself. Don’t Contribute!

ABC Flags Massive Pre‑Speech Trades — Regulated Market or Misleading Free‑For‑All

  • About Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2025 Misleading.
Misleading is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Log in
  • Don’t Mislead (Archive)
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2025 Misleading.
Misleading is not responsible for the content of external sites.