About: 1901 Atlantic hurricane season (Steven's reimagined)   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/zuVKBajc-HO8H2svtHuqpQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The 1901 Atlantic hurricane season was the least active season ever recorded. From January 1 to December 31, no tropical cyclones were ever recorded in the Atlantic. This was because, due to lack of modern technology, information is often sparse, and additional tropical cyclones possibly existed but they were never recorded. Historical records also indicated that there was possibly an extreme El Nino during this time since an unusually big amount of tropical cyclones were reported in the East Pacific in 1901, although the possible El Nino can not be confirmed. Other factors that lead to no tropical cyclones being recorded were that there was an unusually low number of ships scattered across the Atlantic, after a massive attack on ships, especially American ships, in the Atlantic by the Jap

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • 1901 Atlantic hurricane season (Steven's reimagined)
rdfs:comment
  • The 1901 Atlantic hurricane season was the least active season ever recorded. From January 1 to December 31, no tropical cyclones were ever recorded in the Atlantic. This was because, due to lack of modern technology, information is often sparse, and additional tropical cyclones possibly existed but they were never recorded. Historical records also indicated that there was possibly an extreme El Nino during this time since an unusually big amount of tropical cyclones were reported in the East Pacific in 1901, although the possible El Nino can not be confirmed. Other factors that lead to no tropical cyclones being recorded were that there was an unusually low number of ships scattered across the Atlantic, after a massive attack on ships, especially American ships, in the Atlantic by the Jap
dcterms:subject
major hurricanes
  • No storms recorded
hurricanes
  • No storms recorded
dbkwik:hypothetica...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:hypothetica...iPageUsesTemplate
total fatalities
  • 0(xsd:integer)
total depressions
  • No storms recorded
last storm dissipated
  • No storms recorded
strongest storm
  • No storms recorded
total damages
  • None
first storm formed
  • No storms recorded
total storms
  • No storms recorded
abstract
  • The 1901 Atlantic hurricane season was the least active season ever recorded. From January 1 to December 31, no tropical cyclones were ever recorded in the Atlantic. This was because, due to lack of modern technology, information is often sparse, and additional tropical cyclones possibly existed but they were never recorded. Historical records also indicated that there was possibly an extreme El Nino during this time since an unusually big amount of tropical cyclones were reported in the East Pacific in 1901, although the possible El Nino can not be confirmed. Other factors that lead to no tropical cyclones being recorded were that there was an unusually low number of ships scattered across the Atlantic, after a massive attack on ships, especially American ships, in the Atlantic by the Japanese occurred only a few months before the official start of the season. All of these factors combined to produce absolutely no information recorded on tropical cyclones in the Atlantic in 1901.
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