Talk:Hurricane Dora (2023): Difference between revisions

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*'''Support''' merge, per nom. All of the things within this article can be summed up on the season page, fairly easy. Also it really isn't all that notable for the storm to cross three basins, as it has happened multiple times before, and again can easily be mentioned within the 2023 PHS article. As for the wildfires, Phillipe Papin (a respected meteorologist who works for the National Hurricane Center) as well as a few other meteorologists did a good analysis of this event, and pretty clearly showed that the hurricane in question had a very small role in the wildfires, only really helping to enhance a pressure gradient that was already there to some degree beforehand. In all, nothing within this article really sticks out as notable or as anything worth saving an article for, that we can't mention within the larger season page. 🌀[[User:CycloneFootball71|Cyclone]][[User talk:CycloneFootball71|'''Football''']][[Special:Contributions/CycloneFootball71|''71'']]🏈 |'''[[User:CycloneFootball71/sandbox|sandbox]]''' 05:33, 4 November 2023 (UTC)
*:Tbf, aside from the controversial contibution it gave for the hawaiian wildfires, a lot went on with Dora in terms of meteorological features: It crossed from NHC's AoR all the way to JMA's one, being the eighth (ninth?) one to do so, and only the second one to mantain hurricane/typhoon strength all the way, it sustained Category 4 winds for the longest (for a wide margin against the second place), also being the only one that mantained it for more than 100 hours, and mantained a southwestward motion for a long, long time, which is very unusual for a northern hemisphere system. It was a very odd system. [[User:ABC paulista|ABC paulista]] ([[User talk:ABC paulista|talk]]) 15:31, 4 November 2023 (UTC)
 
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