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I was in an F5 in 1956 in ND. There have always been big bad ones, wondering also if it is changing uppityperson May 2013 #1
I guess that's a way to refine the question: Are there going to be *more* big bad ones now villager May 2013 #3
Like you, having been through an F5 in 1966 MuseRider May 2013 #6
There have always been huge, destructive tornadoes. The Velveteen Ocelot May 2013 #2
Weather has been getting more extreme because of climate change. Gravitycollapse May 2013 #4
I also realize you can't necessarily blame *one* storm on climate change -- but the pattern will be villager May 2013 #5
They've been saying the horrific one that hit Moore, OK, has followed the path Rhiannon12866 May 2013 #7
Oddly enough, this year got off to a slow start - hedgehog May 2013 #8
It's part of climate change. Cleita May 2013 #9
Glad to hear you got lucky, but....Hartmann was definitely dead wrong on this one, sad to say. nt AverageJoe90 May 2013 #21
The snow is melting off the Andes, the poles and the Himalayas. Cleita May 2013 #28
What disinfo? AverageJoe90 May 2013 #30
He doesn't pull stuff out of his ass. Cleita May 2013 #32
My admittedly limited understanding of climate science is as follows: antigone382 May 2013 #10
If we can get the Republicans out of the house, it'd be a major boost to progress, I'd think. AverageJoe90 May 2013 #24
We won't be able to say for many years, when we have enough of a pattern. Daemonaquila May 2013 #11
I've been saying the same thing for a while now. AverageJoe90 May 2013 #25
Snow melting off the poles and highest mountains in the world. Cleita May 2013 #29
F5 in Central Texas Texasgal May 2013 #12
I don't think this is anything new... rl6214 May 2013 #13
climate change redqueen May 2013 #14
I totally believe in climate change! Texasgal May 2013 #15
oh yes, i agree... definitely redqueen May 2013 #16
Scientists believe in climate change or rather they know it's happening with those Cleita May 2013 #31
Nah, they haven't changed all that much. Not yet, anyway. n/t AverageJoe90 May 2013 #20
... redqueen May 2013 #22
Did you read the P.S., btw? AverageJoe90 May 2013 #23
The trend is not up. It may even be slightly down. These tornados have always existed. DesMoinesDem May 2013 #17
Is it just me, or is there a kind of pattern to that graph? Occulus May 2013 #26
Moore, OK in 1999 had one measured at 318 mph, the highest wind speed ever recorded FarCenter May 2013 #18
TBH, climate change may have played a small role.....but this was definitely always possible.... AverageJoe90 May 2013 #19
For chrissakes, it's not even summer yet and tornado season is Cleita May 2013 #33
I assume you meant to say late, right? AverageJoe90 May 2013 #34
Too early to tell. n/t hrmjustin May 2013 #27
Probably so. Still wouldn't hurt to keep compiling data, though. n/t AverageJoe90 May 2013 #36
Oh sure. I think it is easier to tell with Hurricanes if it is Global Warming. hrmjustin May 2013 #37
Moving the mean zipplewrath May 2013 #35
It's like blaming a particular cancer on a particular cigarette daleo May 2013 #38
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