Weather Notebook
Bryan Yeaton
 


 
Titanic Weather
Mon Apr 14, 2003

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Hi, I'm Bryan Yeaton for The Weather Notebook. The sinking of the Titanic 91 years ago this month, was the greatest marine disaster of the 20th Century. You've heard that before. But to the Meteorological Service of Canada, the Titanic tragedy was also the third biggest weather story of the past century, and that had prompted meteorologists like England's David Howells to ponder what happened "weatherwise" on the voyage.

Howells' study leads him to believe that Titanic enjoyed good weather through the first three days of the trip. The passengers likely strolled the decks amid light winds and mild temperatures. But on that last night, a cold front rolled in from Canada, and the evening temperature dropped from 43 degrees to near freezing. Northwest winds associated with the front also pushed a large ice field toward the fated ship.

Then, at 20 minutes before midnight, the ship hit an iceberg which may have weighed 300,000 tons. The ice sliced a gash in Titanic's hull, filling several compartments with water, and the unsinkable ship was doomed. History tells the rest: too few life rafts, stories of courage and cowardice, and death in sub-freezing waters. Ocean waters -- because of the salt -- can remain liquid to below temperatures at which pure water would freeze. The North Atlantic that night was 28 degrees. Fifteen-hundred were lost.

Writer and meteorologist Bob Henson brought us today's script. The Weather Notebook is produced by the Mount Washington Observatory, in conjunction with the National Science Foundation, and Subaru of America. The Weather Notebook's cross-country tour, 2003, was sponsored by Davis Instruments, at www.davisnet.com.

Today's Links

Davis Instruments
http://www.davisnet.com/home_flash.asp



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