JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER. 1 COR 15:23-JESUS THE FIRST FRUITS-CHRISTIANS RAPTURED TO JESUS-FIRST FRUITS OF THE SPIRIT-23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.ROMANS 8:23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.(THE PRE-TRIB RAPTURE)
6.8 QUAKE IN JAPAN SUPER TYPHOON GETS READY TO DESTROY THE PHILIPPIANS.
STORMS HURRICANES-TORNADOES
OZONE DEPLETION JUDGEMENT ON THE EARTH DUE TO SIN
ISAIAH 30:26-27
26
Moreover the light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun, and
the light of the sun shall be sevenfold,(7X OR 7-DEGREES HOTTER) as the
light of seven days, in the day that the LORD bindeth up the breach of
his people,(ISRAEL) and healeth the stroke of their wound.
27 Behold,
the name of the LORD cometh from far, burning with his anger, and the
burden thereof is heavy: his lips are full of indignation, and his
tongue as a devouring fire:
MATTHEW 24:21-22,29
21 For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
22
And except those days should be shortened,(DAY LIGHT HOURS SHORTENED)
there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect’s sake (ISRAELS SAKE)
those days shall be shortened (Daylight hours shortened)(THE ASTEROID
HITS EARTH HERE)
29 Immediately after the tribulation of those days
shall the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and
the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be
shaken:
REVELATION 16:7-9
7 And I heard another out of the altar say, Even so, Lord God Almighty, true and righteous are thy judgments.
8 And the fourth angel poured out his vial upon the sun; and power was given unto him to scorch men with fire.
9
And men were scorched with great heat, and blasphemed the name of God,
which hath power over these plagues: and they repented not to give him
glory.
EZEKIEL 32:6-9
6 I will also water with thy blood the land wherein thou swimmest, even to the mountains; and the rivers shall be full of thee.
7
And when I shall put thee out, I will cover the heaven, and make the
stars thereof dark; I will cover the sun with a cloud, and the moon
shall not give her light.
8 All the bright lights of heaven will I make dark over thee, and set darkness upon thy land, saith the Lord GOD.
9
I will also vex the hearts of many people, when I shall bring thy
destruction among the nations, into the countries which thou hast not
known.
REVELATION 16:3-7
3 And the second angel poured out his
vial upon the sea; and it became as the blood of a dead man: and every
living soul died in the sea.(enviromentalists won't like this result)
4 And the third angel poured out his vial upon the rivers and fountains of waters; and they became blood.
5
And I heard the angel of the waters say, Thou art righteous, O Lord,
which art, and wast, and shalt be, because thou hast judged thus.
6
For they(False World Church and Dictator and baby murderers by abortion)
have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou hast given them
blood to drink; for they are worthy.
ISAIAH 30:26-27
26
Moreover the light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun, and the
light of the sun shall be sevenfold,(7X OR 7-DEGREES HOTTER) as the
light of seven days, in the day that the LORD bindeth up the breach of
his people,(ISRAEL) and healeth the stroke of their wound.
27 Behold,
the name of the LORD cometh from far, burning with his anger, and the
burden thereof is heavy: his lips are full of indignation, and his
tongue as a devouring fire:
MARK 13:8
8 For nation shall rise
against nation, and kingdom against kingdom:(ETHNIC GROUP AGAINST ETHNIC
GROUP) and there shall be earthquakes in divers places, and there shall
be famines and troubles: these are the beginnings of sorrows.
LUKE 21:11
11
And great earthquakes shall be in divers places,(DIFFERNT PLACES AT THE
SAME TIME) and famines, and pestilences; and fearful sights and great
signs shall there be from heaven.
2 Peter 3:6-7 Amplified Bible (AMP) (HOT SUN, NUKES ETC)
6 By these waters also the world of that time was deluged and destroyed.
7
By the same word the present heavens and earth are reserved for fire,
being kept for the day of judgment and destruction of the ungodly.
LUKE 21:25-26
25
And there shall be signs in the sun,(HEATING UP-SOLAR ECLIPSES) and in
the moon,(MAN ON THE MOON-LUNAR ECLIPSES) and in the
stars;(ASTEROIDS-PROPHECY SIGNS) and upon the earth distress of nations,
with perplexity;(MASS CONFUSION) the sea and the waves roaring;(FIERCE
WINDS)
26 Men’s hearts failing them for
fear,(TORNADOES,HURRICANES,STORMS) and for looking after those things
which are coming on the earth:(DESTRUCTION) for the powers of heaven
shall be shaken.(FROM QUAKES,NUKES ETC)
USGS
4.5-119 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 12:15:47 (UTC)-10.0 km
5.4-173 km SSE of Vilyuchinsk, Russia-2025-11-09 11:13:45 (UTC)-10.0 km
5.2-137 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 11:11:25 (UTC)-10.0 km
4.6-134 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 10:25:03 (UTC)-10.0 km
2.7-8 km WSW of Coquille, Oregon-2025-11-09 10:04:05 (UTC)-13.8 km
5.2-126 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 09:52:43 (UTC)-10.0 km
4.8-190 km E of Atka, Alaska-2025-11-09 09:36:50 (UTC)-43.4 km
5.7-134 km E of Miyako, Japan-2025-11-09 09:28:23 (UTC)-10.0 km
4.6-127 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 09:21:35 (UTC)-10.0 km
5.0-104 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 09:16:58 (UTC)-10.0 km
5.4-123 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 09:10:47 (UTC)-10.0 km
6.4-121 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 08:54:36 (UTC)-10.0 km
5.2-125 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 08:49:50 (UTC)-10.0 km
5.6-125 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 08:34:01 (UTC)-10.0 km
2.6-47 km S of Glacier View, Alaska-2025-11-09 08:17:48 (UTC)-12.4 km
5.9-127 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 08:14:53 (UTC)-10.0 km
5.5-107 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 08:11:25 (UTC)-10.0 km
6.8-126 km E of Yamada, Japan-2025-11-09 08:03:37 (UTC)-10.0 km
Tsunami
threat passes following magnitude 6.9 quake off Iwate-A tsunami
advisory was issued for Iwate Prefecture on Sunday evening following a
strong earthquake. The advisory was later called off, after waves
measuring 20 centimeters were recorded in some areas.A tsunami advisory
was issued for Iwate Prefecture on Sunday evening following a strong
earthquake. The advisory was later called off, after waves measuring 20
centimeters were recorded in some areas. | Japan Meteorological
Agency-STAFF REPORT-Nov 9, 2025
A magnitude 6.9 earthquake
measuring 4 on Japan's seismic intensity scale struck off the coast of
Iwate Prefecture on Sunday evening, triggering tsunami waves of 20
centimeters in some areas and prompting evacuation orders in some
municipalities.After the quake, which struck at 5:03 p.m., a tsunami
advisory was issued for Iwate Prefecture, warning of the possibility of
waves up to 1 meter. That advisory was called off shortly after 8 p.m.
The quake was initially reported as magnitude 6.7, with the Japan
Meteorological Agency later giving the revised figure.A 20 cm tsunami
was observed in Ofunato Port in Iwate at 6:25 p.m., while another 20 cm
wave was seen in Kuji Port in Iwate at 5:52 p.m., according to the
JMA.The initial quake measured shindo 4 in the city of Morioka and the
town of Yahaba in Iwate as well as in the town of Wakuya in neighboring
Miyagi Prefecture. As of 8:30 p.m., 11 more quakes had hit the same
area, including one measuring magnitude 6.3 and shindo 3.There were no
initial reports of injuries or damage following the quake.East Japan
Railway said the Tohoku Shinkansen briefly lost power and that
operations were temporarily suspended between Sendai and Shin-Aomori
stations.Tohoku Electric Power said no abnormalities were reported at
its Onagawa nuclear power plant in Miyagi Prefecture.Prime Minister
Sanae Takaichi posted a message on her X account asking people to move
away from the coast and be on alert for aftershocks and tsunami waves
that could hit the area.A JMA official said at a news conference Sunday
evening that earthquakes of similar or even stronger intensity could
occur in the next few days.
Shindo: Japan's earthquake intensity scale-Bloomberg-Apr 21, 2016
On
April 15, the day after the first earthquake struck Kyushu, all of the
nation's major newspapers carried the same headline: "Shindo 7 in
Kumamoto." No further explanation was needed.When Japan's
earthquake-battered populace feels the ground shake, it looks to its TVs
and Twitter feeds to check not only the magnitude, but the shindo, or
shaking intensity.On every TV channel, digital overlays report the
region hit and show waves of numbers rippling away from the epicenter:
one area might register as shindo level 3, defined as "felt by most
people in that zone," another as level 4 ("most people are startled").
The first magnitude estimates typically come later.A level 7 — the
maximum on Japan's earthquake intensity scale — is a panic-inducing
event that has been recorded only four times. On each of those occasions
people were killed.While the intensity scale may seem baffling to some,
by communicating the intensity of the shaking felt in a specific area,
it offers a far more immediate indication of the potential for damage
than does the magnitude scale.Magnitude, which is the value of the
energy released at the source of an earthquake, can be a poor indicator
of the impact on the surface: A quake of a large magnitude striking deep
underground will do far less damage than a smaller one hitting at a
shallow depth."Earthquake waves are attenuated as they propagate," said
Prof. Robert Geller, a seismologist at the University of Tokyo. "They
don't attenuate much when the quake is only a few kilometers deep, right
underneath a populated area." As magnitude is inferred rather than
directly measured, he says, there are discrepancies between the
magnitude assigned by different agencies — the 1995 Kobe quake that
killed more than 6,000 people was a magnitude 6.9 according to the
United States Geological Survey, but a magnitude 7.3 according to the
Meteorological Agency in Japan. The magnitude scale is logarithmic,
indicating a difference in energy release of almost four times between
the two readings.Unlike magnitude, shindo is a relative, arbitrary
measure of the intensity of the shaking in a specific location. The
shindo right above the epicenter will typically be the highest, with the
level receding as distance grows from the epicenter.Japan’s intensity
scale runs from zero to 7, with levels 5 and 6 confusingly sub-divided
into “upper” and “lower.”The Great East Japan Earthquake on March 11,
2011, which spawned the giant tsunami that triggered the Fukushima
nuclear disaster, was felt nearly nationwide. The shindo readings ranged
from 7 in part of Miyagi Prefecture and upper 5 in parts of Tokyo to a
barely perceptible 1 in Kyushu.There have been only four occasions when a
level 7 was recorded, data from the Meteorological Agency going back to
1923 show — the March 2011 quake, the Kobe quake in 1995, the 2004
Chuetsu earthquake that killed 46 and derailed a bullet train, and last
week in Kumamoto.At level 7, the Meteorological Agency says, it is
"impossible to remain standing." People may be "thrown through the air,"
wooden buildings may fall, and even reinforced concrete walls may
collapse.Until 1996, shindo was mostly measured by the agency's staff
stationed around the country, who for more than a century reported how
strong they felt the shaking and then surveyed the extent of the damage
left behind, according to documentation on the agency's website.Now a
network of seismographs spans the country, measuring the initial P-waves
when an earthquake strikes. Agency computers collate the data and
almost instantaneously issue estimates of its size and likely
location.This network is crucial to informing Japan's early-warning
alert system. When an earthquake of a certain size is detected, warnings
are issued to iPhones, TV screens and factory lines. Trains
automatically halt, and people are given time to prepare before the more
damaging S-waves strike.The warning system has become a source of
pride, hailed in government pamphlets as a unique example of national
ingenuity."It's useful but not perfect," said Geller, "because it gives
warnings that let them stop trains for distant quakes but not for quakes
right under the track."In 2013 the agency was forced to apologize after
mistakenly warning of an impending magnitude-7.8 quake in the Kansai
region that never materialized.
JAPAN QUAKE SCALE
6-UPPER-7-ITS IMPOSSIBLE TO REMAIN STANDING OR MOVE WITHOUT CRAWLING.PEOPLE MAY BE THROWN THROUGH THE AIR.
6-LOWER-IT IS DIFFICULT TO REMAIN STANDING.
5-UPPER-MANY PEOPLE FIND IT HARD TO MOVE;WALKING IS DIFFICULT WITHOUT HOLDING ON TO SOMETHING STABLE.
5-LOWER-MANY PEOPLE ARE FRIGHTENED AND FEEL THE NEED TO HOLD ONTO SOMETHING STABLE.
4-MOST PEOPLE ARE STARTLED.FELT BY MOST PEOPLE WALKING.MOST PEOPLE ARE AWAKENED.
3-FELT BY MOST PEOPLE IN BUILDINGS.FELT BY SOME PEOPLE WALKING.MANY PEOPLE ARE AWAKENED.
More
than a million people evacuate as Super Typhoon Fung-wong threatens the
Philippines-The Philippines is still dealing with the devastation
wrought by Typhoon Kalmaegi, which left at least 204 people dead.Nov. 9,
2025, 3:10 AM EST / By The Associated Press.
MANILA, Philippines
— Super Typhoon Fung-wong, the biggest storm to threaten the
Philippines this year, started battering the country's northeastern
coast ahead of landfall on Sunday, knocking down power, forcing the
evacuation of more than a million people and prompting the defense chief
to warn many others to evacuate to safety from high-risk villages
before it's too late.Fung-wong, which could cover two-thirds of the
Southeast Asian archipelago with its 994-mile-wide rain and wind band,
approached from the Pacific while the Philippines was still dealing with
the devastation wrought by Typhoon Kalmaegi, which left at least 224
people dead in central island provinces on Tuesday before pummeling
Vietnam, where at least five were killed.Philippine President Ferdinand
Marcos Jr. has declared a state of emergency due to the extensive
devastation caused by Kalmaegi and the expected calamity from Fung-wong,
which is called Uwan in the Philippines.Fung-wong, with winds of up to
115 mph and gusts of up to 143 mph, was spotted by government
forecasters before noon Sunday over coastal waters near the town of
Pandan in eastern Catanduanes province, where torrential rains and fog
have obscured visibility. The typhoon is expected to track northwestward
and make landfall on the coast of Aurora or Isabela province later
Sunday or early Monday, state forecasters said.Tropical cyclones with
sustained winds of 115 mph or higher are categorized in the Philippines
as a super typhoon, a designation adopted years ago to underscore the
urgency tied to more extreme weather disturbances."The rain and wind
were so strong there was nearly zero visibility," Roberto Monterola, a
disaster-mitigation officer for Catanduanes, said by telephone, adding
there have been no reports of casualties so far in the island province
of more than 200,000 people.But despite calls for residents to evacuate
from disaster-prone areas Saturday, some still stayed on."Our personnel
rescued 14 people who were trapped on the roof of a house engulfed in
flood in a low-lying neighborhood," Monterola said. "A father also
called in panic, saying the roof of his house was about to be ripped off
by the wind. We saved him and four relatives."Over a million people
were evacuated from high-risk villages in northeastern provinces,
including in Bicol, a coastal region vulnerable to Pacific cyclones and
mudflows from Mayon, one of the country's most active volcanoes.Defense
Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr., who oversees the country’s disaster
response agencies and the military, warned about the potentially
catastrophic impact of Fung-wong in televised remarks Saturday. He said
the storm could affect a vast expanse of the country, including Cebu,
the central province hit hardest by Typhoon Kalmaegi, and metropolitan
Manila, the densely populated capital region which is the seat of power
and the country’s financial center.More than 30 million people could be
exposed to hazards posed by Fung-wong, the Office of Civil Defense
said.Teodoro asked people to follow orders by officials to immediately
move away from villages and towns prone to flash floods, landslides and
coastal tidal surges. “We need to do this because when it’s already
raining or the typhoon has hit and flooding has started, it’s hard to
rescue people,” Teodoro said.The Philippines has not called for
international help following the devastation caused by Kalmaegi but
Teodoro said the United States, the country’s longtime treaty ally, and
Japan were ready to provide assistance.As Fung-wong approached with its
wide band of fierce wind and rain, several eastern towns and villages
lost power, Bernardo Rafaelito Alejandro, deputy administrator of the
Office of Civil Defense said.Authorities in northern provinces to be hit
or sideswiped by Fung-wong preemptively declared the shutdown of
schools and most government offices on Monday and Tuesday. At least 325
domestic and 61 international flights have been canceled over the
weekend and into Monday, and more than 6,600 commuters and cargo workers
were stranded in at least 109 seaports, where the coast guard
prohibited ships from venturing into rough seas.Authorities warned of a
“high risk of life-threatening and damaging storm surge” of more than
nearly 10 feet along the coasts of more than 20 provinces and regions,
including metropolitan Manila.The Philippines is battered by about 20
typhoons and storms each year. The country also is often hit by
earthquakes and has more than a dozen active volcanoes, making it one of
the world’s most disaster-prone countries.
The new face of major
hurricanes-Hurricane Melissa followed what has unfortunately become a
pattern for major storms: It formed late in the season, intensified
rapidly, then stalled near the coast.Oct. 29, 2025, 2:11 PM EDT-By Evan
Bush and Denise Chow.
Hurricane Melissa, which made landfall in
both Jamaica and Cuba in the last two days, followed what has
unfortunately become a familiar pattern for major storms in a warming
world.The most catastrophic storms — those with the most intense winds
and soaking rains — were once rare, but they are becoming more likely
because of climate change. And similarities are emerging among these
powerful hurricanes’ behavior and timing, too.Before Melissa hit Jamaica
as a Category 5 monster, it churned over especially warm waters — as
did other hurricanes over the past decade. This allowed it to strengthen
at blistering pace, becoming the most powerful of this year’s Atlantic
season and tying the record for strongest landfall ever in the
Atlantic.Then the storm slowed to a crawl, giving it more time to dump
rain on Jamaica, another hallmark of hurricanes on a warming planet.
Melissa’s timing, too, was notable: It formed late in the season —
hurricane activity has typically been thought to peak in early September
— as ocean heat lingered into the fall.Taken together, this behavior
makes Melissa a kind of poster child for the new normal of hurricanes,
experts said.“These storms aren’t the same storms as a couple decades
ago,” said Shel Winkley, a meteorologist at the nonprofit research group
Climate Central.It’s a shift with life-or-death consequences — one that
forecasters and officials in storm-prone areas are now watching
closely.Intensifying in a hurry-One of Melissa’s most eye-opening
characteristics is how remarkably fast it intensified. In just 18 hours,
it exploded from a tropical storm into a Category 4 Sunday, before
reaching Category 5 strength early Monday.Climate change is increasing
the risk of this “rapid intensification” pattern, which the National
Hurricane Center defines as an increase in sustained wind speeds of at
least 35 mph over 24 hours.In Melissa’s case, Winkley said, unusually
warm sea-surface temperatures in the Caribbean and high levels of
moisture in the atmosphere caused an “extreme rapid
intensification.”“We’ve gotten really good at forecasting and
understanding when hurricanes are going to make a big boost in
intensity, but with Melissa, it even exceeded the best forecast that we
can make for it in terms of wind speed,” he said.Winkley added that the
storm passed over Caribbean waters that were 2.5 degrees Fahrenheit
warmer than usual — conditions that climate change made up to 700 times
more likely.Two-and-a-half degrees Fahrenheit may not sound like a lot
when it comes to a giant hurricane, but small temperature differences
can really make a big impact,” Winkley said.Many other recent storms
have undergone rapid intensification. Last year, Hurricane Milton’s wind
speed increased by 90 mph in roughly 25 hours, and in 2022 Hurricane
Ian went through two rounds of rapid intensification before making
landfall in Florida. The list goes on: Hurricanes Idalia in 2023, Ida in
2021 and Harvey in 2017 all underwent rapid intensification, too.Fewer
hurricanes, higher impact-In the past 35 years, the number of hurricanes
and tropical cyclones that form annually has been decreasing.“We find
that the number of hurricanes globally, including typhoons, has gone
down significantly since 1990,” said Phil Klotzbach, an atmospheric
scientist who studies hurricanes at Colorado State University.But that
overall decrease is largely due to a drop in cyclone activity in the
Pacific, Klotzbach said; Atlantic hurricane activity has risen,
primarily as a result of a decades-long trend toward La Niña, a seasonal
circulation pattern that tends to weaken the high-altitude winds that
discourage hurricane formation.“La Niña is good for the Atlantic if you
like hurricanes,” Klotzbach said.When hurricanes do develop, they’re
more likely to turn into major storms as the seas warm.“We’ve seen an
increase of those reaching Category 4 and 5,” Klotzbach said.Melissa was
the third Category 5 hurricane this year — the first time in two
decades that more than two storms of such power have formed in the same
season.Zachary Handlos, an atmospheric scientist at the Georgia
Institute of Technology, said that although warmer seas in the future
will be more conducive to hurricanes, a warmer atmosphere will force
changes to the high-altitude winds that can prevent or destroy
hurricanes. These winds could strengthen in some locations and weaken in
others, he said: “It’s not a very straightforward answer.”How these
trends will play out remains an active area of research and scientific
dispute.A longer hurricane season-It’s not lost on experts that the
strongest hurricane of the season hit just days before Halloween.“We’re
pretty late into the season at this point. Things should be starting to
wind down,” said Derrick Herndon, a researcher in the Tropical Cyclone
Research Group at the University of Wisconsin.The Caribbean has always
been a hotspot for powerful, late-season hurricanes, but they’re
becoming even more likely, Klotzbach said — he recently submitted
research showing the trend for peer review. At the same time, hurricane
data in the era of satellite observations (from 1971 to 2022) suggests
that hurricane season is beginning earlier in the year, too.The fall
hurricane pattern has been fueled by the long-term trend toward the La
Niña pattern, Klotzbach added, which itself is likely the result of a
combination of climate change and natural variability.La Niña weakens
high-altitude winds at a time when Caribbean waters are still hot,
setting the stage for storms in late October and early November, he
said: “It loads the dice toward these robust hurricanes.” Hurricane
Melissa was exacerbated by warmer-than-usual waters off Jamaica’s
southern coast.“If you’re going to get a really intense hurricane in the
Atlantic, it’s going to probably be in this part of the world,” Herndon
said.In the past, such a storm would typically have churned up cold
water from below the surface and stifled its own growth, according to
Andy Hazelton, a hurricane modeler and associate scientist with the
University of Miami’s Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric
Studies. But this year, ocean heat is elevated both at the surface and
as deep as 200 feet below, he said, so Melissa simply churned up more
heat and energy.Storms are stalling-Just before or after landfall,
hurricanes are now more likely to stall and dump immense amounts of
rain, according to a study published last year. Other research suggests
their forward speed has gotten slower overall, though this remains a
topic of debate.Hurricane Melissa followed the pattern, stalling off the
coast of Jamaica as it continued to build intensity. On Tuesday
morning, the day of its first landfall, the storm was moving at just
around 2 mph. Forecasters expected up to 30 inches of rainfall in parts
of Jamaica, which is more than a third of its annual average.Scientists
have not reached a consensus about why some storms are moving more
slowly, but some have theorized that it’s because climate change has
weakened atmospheric circulation patterns.Hurricane Harvey in 2017 was a
dramatic example of the consequences of such stalling: When it parked
over Houston, the storm dropped about 5 feet of rain in some locations.
The pattern is particularly problematic because a warmer atmosphere can
absorb and deliver more rainfall.“For every 1 degree Fahrenheit of
warming, the atmosphere can hold onto 4% more moisture,” Winkley said.
“Warmer oceans not only boost the intensity of hurricanes, but it allows
for more evaporation, so it’s putting more of that rain-making moisture
into the atmosphere for these hurricanes to absorb and then
unleash."Evan Bush is a science reporter for NBC News.
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