Social media users are citing an April 2024 article from a fictional website as evidence that Hurricane Milton, which as of Oct. 8 was headed for landfall in southwest Florida, was planned.
The plan was updated more than 10 years later in Project Phoenix 2.0, which included a tabletop exercise and supplemental videos showing the hypothetical devastation of "Hurricane Phoenix." ...
They used a hypothetical Category 6, with a minimum threshold of 192 mph, to study hurricanes that have occurred in the ...
The rapidly developing hurricane that shows no signs of stopping won’t technically become a Category 6 because the category ...
Hurricane Milton rapidly intensified to a peak wind speed of 180 mph on Oct. 7, winds strong enough to make it a Category 5 hurricane. The storm lost some intensity as it began to grow and is now ...
"We found that five storms had exceeded this hypothetical Category 6, and that all of them were recent, since 2013," Wehner ...
Fortunately, after Wednesday night, according to NHC hurricane specialist Andrew Hagen, the percentage chance that these gale-force winds will spiral into a still hypothetical Hurricane Nadine are ...
the hypothetical category would begin at about 192 mph, and several storms since 2013 would have been put in the category. Most have been in waters near the Philippines in Asia, but Hurricane ...
The plan was updated more than 10 years later in Project Phoenix 2.0, which included a tabletop exercise and supplemental videos showing the hypothetical devastation of "Hurricane Phoenix." In real ...