How Hurricanes Were Monitored in 1933

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The discussion centers on the comparison of hurricane monitoring between the 1933 Atlantic hurricane season and the current season, which has reportedly broken records for the number of storms. It highlights the limitations of historical monitoring methods, noting that in 1933, hurricanes were not tracked by satellite, leading to potential underreporting of storms, especially those that did not make landfall. The conversation emphasizes that modern satellite technology allows for comprehensive tracking of hurricanes, ensuring that even short-lived storms are recorded, unlike in the past when many could have gone unnoticed. Participants point out that historical records relied on ship logs and ground stations, which were far less reliable, raising questions about the accuracy of storm counts from that era.
matthyaouw
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I'm hearing a lot that this Atlantic hurricane season has broken records set in 1933 for most storms. How comprehensively were hurricanes monitored in 1933? It occurs to me that several storms this year were short lived and never made landfall (see here: http://hurricane.terrapin.com/CurrentSeason.html.en ) and this has got me wondering- with how much certainty do we know how many hurricanes/storms there were in 1933 (we obviously were not monitoring them by satellite)? I've been unable to find any information on how they were tracked back then, so is it at all possible that one could have just gone un noticed, or at least not reported by ship/plane crews?
 
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Nail on the head, Matt, exactly the problem. We discussed that elsewhere. With satellite monitoring, we don't miss any hurricane anymore whereas in 1933, several hurricanes, not having made landfall, could have disappeared completely unnoticed intohe Atlantic.

In the old days there were those big black binders keeping record of the groundstations. Perhaps an odd ship log was found to enter the records but that's probably it. And then you could count the same hurricane twice (land and ship) or miss the seaborne ones completely.
 
If it wa'sn't for satellites would we have registered Danielle, Karl, Lisa, Nicole, or Otto of http://image.weather.com/images/maps/tropical/spec_trop8_720x486.jpg
 
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