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		<title>Scientists create model of monster &#x27;Frankenstorm&#x27;</title>
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		<description>angelm's Blog: Scientists create model of monster &#x27;Frankenstorm&#x27;</description>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Scientists create model of monster &#x27;Frankenstorm&#x27;</title>
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			<pubDate>Sun, 24 Jan 2010 23:51:28 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>angelm</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Scientists create model of monster &#x27;Frankenstorm&#x27;<br /><br />LOS ANGELES Think the recent wild weather that hammered California was bad? Experts are imagining far worse.<br /><br />As torrential rains pelted wildfire-stripped hillsides and flooded highways, a team of scientists hunkered down at the California Institute of Technology to work on a Frankenstorm scenario a mother lode wintry blast that could potentially sock the Golden State.<br /><br />The hypothetical but plausible storm would be similar to the 1861-1862 extreme floods that temporarily moved the state capital from Sacramento to San Francisco and forced the then-governor to attend his inauguration by rowboat.<br /><br />The scenario is much larger than anything in living memory, said project manager Dale Cox with the U.S. Geological Survey.<br /><br />In the scenario, the storm system forms in the Pacific and slams into the West Coast with hurricane-force winds, hitting Southern California the hardest. After more than a week of ferocious weather, the system stalls for a few days. Another storm brews offshore and this time pummels Northern California.<br /><br />Such a monster storm could unleash as much as 8 feet of rain over three weeks in some areas, said research meteorologist Martin Ralph with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, who is part of the project.<br /><br />It makes the latest Pacific storm system look like a drop in the bucket. A weeklong siege of storms walloped California, flooding coasts and roads, spawning tornados and forcing the evacuation of about 2,000 homes below fire-scarred mountains for fear of mudslides. The National Weather Service said the storms dumped up to a foot in the mountains northwest of Los Angeles in a week.<br /><br />Weather experts say West Coast storms could get more frequent and severe with climate change. Last fall, a team of federal, state and academic experts was formed to tackle what would happen if a series of powerful storms lashed at the state for 23 days. The scenario is expected to be completed this summer and will be used in a statewide disaster drill next year.<br /><br />Ironically, the team had scheduled meetings at Caltech to learn about the fictional storm&#x27;s impact to dams, sewage treatment plants, transportation and the electrical grid. About a dozen canceled due to the storms.<br /><br />They had to deal with the real thing, said chief scientist Lucy Jones of the USGS.<br /><br />The next step is to estimate economic damages as well as the risk of landslides and coastal erosion and impact to infrastructure and the environment.<br /><br />Several scientists on storm watch were involved in the 2008 planning of a mock Big One on the San Andreas Fault that was incorporated into an earthquake preparedness drill.<br /><br />The Great Flood of 1861-1862 was believed to be the most powerful and longest series of storms in state history, lasting a month and causing severe flooding.<br /><br />The Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys were water-logged and spontaneous lakes popped up in the Mojave Desert and Los Angeles basin. Nearly a third of the young state&#x27;s taxable land was destroyed.<br /><br />Since there are few meteorological records available on the 1861-1862 events, scientists stitched together data from two recent storms to create Frankenstorm.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="/blogentry/37086">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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