Hazel, Fifi, Cleao,
Igor and Cesar may sound like cute hamster names or entries in the
1954 book of trending baby names, but they all share one commonality: they’re
destructive hurricanes of yesteryear. But who gets to choose these names? And
are these hurricane name-dealers following prescribed scientific criteria,
or just drawing names of their dogs and kids out of a hat?
For several hundred
years, hurricanes were named after saints, in a slightly gruesome reminder
of divine justice. On July 26, 1825, Hurricane Santa Ana slammed through Puerto
Rico with exceptional violence, for example. But by the end of the 19th
century, some meteorologists began naming hurricanes after women. (No evidence
exists to show whether or not those women were past girlfriends.)
In 1953, the U.S.
abandoned a misguided plan to name storms by a phonetic alphabet (which
included Hurricanes Dog and Love) and instead officially adopted the female
storm-naming system. The Guardian picks
up the story from 1978
However the idea
that women might share the capricious, changeable temperament of storms caused
affront, so from 1979 storms were named alternately after girls and boys. The
revamped Atlantic list includes a sprinkling of Spanish and French names to
better represent the cultures being pummelled.
Today, an
international committee of the World Meteorological Organization follows a
“strict procedure” for naming hurricanes and topical storms, according to
NOAA, based on an alternating six-year system. The Guardian
elaborates:
Creating a new list
of girls’ names each year obviously taxed the imagination of (male) forecasters,
and Atlantic hurricane names came to be picked from a rotating list.
However, if a storm
is so deadly or costly—think Katrina—that future use of its name would be
inappropriate, the committee strikes its name from the list and selects another
to replace it. If an 11th hurricane had occurred in 2011, it would have been
named Katia.
But some hurricane
names have gone out of circulation without any particular reason being cited.
Before 1979, when the first permanent six-year storm name list began, some
storm names were simply dropped out of use. For example, in 1966, “Fern” was
substituted for “Frieda.”
Do you bear a
retired hurricane name? Here’s the partial list:
Retired
hurricane names by year. Photo: NOAA
Smithsonia.com
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