When the Sky Breaks: Hurricanes,
Tornadoes, and the Worst Weather in the World. By Simon Winchester. Viking.
$22.99.
Although officially intended
for ages 10 and up, Simon Winchester’s When
the Sky Breaks has so much well-presented and important information in it
that parents will be as eager to read it as will their children. Weather, after
all, affects every one of us, every single day, and despite the famous
statement that everybody talks about the weather but nobody does anything about
it (Charles Dudley Warner, wrongly attributed to Mark Twain), the urge to learn
about weather and try to predict it is a strong one. Maybe we cannot do
anything about the weather itself, after all, but maybe we can better prepare
ourselves for whatever the weather may be.
Or maybe not. Weather events
are far more complicated, hence unpredictable, than most people realize, and
Winchester shows just how complicated that is. It was mathematician and
meteorologist Edward Lorenz who coined the term “the butterfly effect” to
describe major weather changes caused by small, seemingly inconsequential
events – although perhaps nothing quite as small as the flapping of a distant
butterfly’s wings – and the observation is shown to be correct, time and time
again, in Winchester’s book. For example, “Who would have thought that the
existence of the Sahara Desert, with its pale and reflective yellow sands and
equatorial heat bearing down upon it, would cause disturbances in the
atmosphere that could in turn cause storms in the Carolinas or Texas or New
York?” Yet this is exactly how hurricanes form, thanks to an event called an
African easterly wave (AEW) that is caused by air moving from the Indian Ocean
and encountering the heat and aridity of the Sahara. Winchester explains what
happens and how, and also why there are not constant
hurricanes – here his ability really shines, as he uses the example of a fully
fueled car that is ready to go anytime but does not go all the time, because
some small thing (the turning of an ignition key) is necessary to start it.
That is a small, humdrum version of the butterfly effect, one so common that
most readers will likely never have thought of it in these terms – yet it is
the very mundanity of the example that helps Winchester clarify the strangeness
and enormity of cyclonic storms.
Winchester humanizes weather
forecasting, too. Again in his section on hurricanes, he does not merely
present the inevitable discussion of the devastating storm that in 1900 smashed
into and nearly destroyed Galveston, Texas – still the deadliest hurricane in
U.S. history. What Winchester does is build his story around that of forecaster
Isaac Cline, who lived in Galveston and was largely responsible for the
erroneous forecasts of the storm’s track – but who was repeatedly right about the storm’s earlier path,
which changed in a bizarre way because of “a strange and unseen ripple in the
upper atmosphere” that the science of the time could not possibly have known
about or understood.
As the subtitle of When the Sky Breaks indicates, the book
discusses tornadoes as well as hurricanes – and also deals with cyclones, the
Southern Hemisphere version of hurricanes. The pages about Cyclone Tracy, which
hit Darwin, Australia on Christmas Day 1974, are especially harrowing. Like the
Galveston hurricane three-quarters of a century earlier, this cyclone “quite
unexpectedly…made a sharp right-angled swerve [and] bore down with withering
accuracy toward the dead center of Darwin. …Ten thousand houses, 80 percent of
the city, were totally destroyed, reduced to matchsticks and pulverized
concrete.” The death toll was modest for so intense a storm – 71 people were
killed, compared with some 8,000 in Galveston – but “Darwin was brought to its
knees,” and did not even have regular communication with the outside world for
three days. “In the end, almost the entire city of Darwin had to be evacuated.
Forty-one thousand of its forty-seven thousand inhabitants were without home,
shelter, water, food, medicine, or communication.” But the city was rebuilt,
essentially from the ground up, and today is thought to be cyclone-proof – not
that a storm as strong as Tracy has ever tested it. Yet.
That “yet” matters. The
human ability to rebuild after disaster is sorely tested by vast storms, but
rebuilding does occur, hopefully with major lessons learned – including those
discussed in When the Sky Breaks
about severe weather being both predictable and unpredictable. And that has
much to do with tornadoes. Winchester accurately describes the tornado as
“America’s national storm,” since most of the world’s tornadoes happen in the
United States. The conditions under which a tornado will form are well-known,
but the actual formation of a particular tornado remains unpredictable
– and the speed of formation and movement are such that when a tornado does
occur, there is very little time to respond. And safety is harder to come by
than in hurricanes: tornado winds are so strong that they cannot be accurately
measured, because “even the sturdiest of anemometers, or wind-speed
instruments, is invariably destroyed by the strongest tornado.” There are
plenty of photos of the destruction wrought by tornadoes and other storms in When the Sky Breaks, but this is not primarily
a picture book: it is descriptive and explanatory. The tornado section, for
instance, contains a fascinating explanation of why the “accident of geography”
of the United States makes tornadoes likelier in the U.S. than anywhere else:
the deadliest tornado ever was actually in Bangladesh in 1989, but 14 of the 50
worst have occurred in the U.S. When the
Sky Breaks is packed with information, but even with everything scientists
and researchers now know, Winchester acknowledges the limitations of
meteorology, noting that “little is certain” even though “global forecasting is
less of an enigma, less of a throw of the dice, than it once was.” The
fascinating material in this book will not make it any easier for readers to
decide what clothing to wear the day after reading it, but it will help them
understand the vast, interconnected global patterns of which their local
weather events, however severe, are just one small part.
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