Say a prayer everyone in south Texas. This is an overpass of Interstate 35 in New Braunfels. #TexasFlood https://t.co/QL6AaXpyQF
— Fort Worth Police OA (@FWPOA) October 31, 2015
— Rebecca Stevenson (@Rebecca_Weather) October 31, 2015
This past month (and year) has highlighted the irrelevance of science denying blogs like WUWT. Just this past week, the following have and still are being reported in the media:
- Hurricane Patricia - the most intense cyclone ever recorded in the western hemisphere
- Record almost unbelievable rainfall pelting down on Texas causing record flood levels in places, deaths, and sending someone 20 feet up a "nice little tree"
- A rare Category 4 Cyclone Chapala in the Arabian Sea
- The hottest October day ever recorded anywhere at 48.4 °C, , in South Africa
- A record hottest October in Australia
- A rare heavy hailstorm in Chinchilla, Queensland
- Record rain reaching as far as London, Ontario in the wake of Hurricane Patricia. [Note: the rain was heavy, but turns out it wasn't a record for October, let alone for the year, as Cam explained in the comments - Sou 2 November 2015]
This is the same month that saw:
- The most cyclones above Cat 3 ever recorded in the northern hemisphere in a year
- The hottest temperature in Indonesia in 2006 was equaled
- The most southerly major hurricane ever observed in the Eastern Pacific, Olaf
- Typhoon Koppu causing massive flooding and at least 41 deaths in the Philippines
- Hurricane Joaquin, which emerged in late September, fueled by very hot seas
- Record heat across southern California and up in Newfoundland
- Catastrophic 1,000 year flooding in South Carolina - have these records already been broken in Texas?
- Huge flash floods in the Riviera, claiming 20 lives
And that was just a sample from this October. September has more than its share of extreme weather, too, in this soon-to-be record-breaking hottest year on record.