Hurricane

Published: Sept. 28, 2021, 10 a.m.

CORRECTION: In this episode, we say that there were only two names left on the 2021 list of Atlantic hurricane names until we resume use of the Greek alphabet letters. In March 2021, the World Meteorological Association decided to end the use of the Greek alphabet, and provided a list of supplementary names instead.\xa0\n\n\xa0This episode is a re-broadcast. It originally aired in November 2020.\xa0\nEvery year, the World Meteorological Organization puts out a list of 21 names for the season\u2019s hurricanes and tropical storms. But in 2020, the Atlantic hurricane season was so active that by September, we'd flown through the whole list of names and had to switch to the Greek alphabet. Thus, Hurricane Iota became the 30th named storm of the season.\nWe\u2019ve only had to dip into the Greek alphabet once before, in 2005. But the practice of naming hurricanes goes back to the 19th century, and it was a bumpy ride to land on the system we use today. In this episode: The story of a meteorologist in Australia, a novel, and a second-wave feminist from Florida\u2014and\xa0how they brought us hurricane names.\nGuests:\nChristina M. Gonzalez is a doctoral candidate in anthropology at the University of Texas at Austin.Liz Skilton\xa0is a historian and the author of\xa0Tempest: Hurricane Naming and American Culture.\nFootnotes & Further Reading:\nFor more hurricane history, check out\xa0A Furious Sky: The Five-Hundred-Year History of America's Hurricanes\xa0by Eric Jay Dolin.\nTo learn more about Roxcy Bolton and the fight to change the naming system, read Liz Skilton\u2019s article\xa0\u201cGendering Natural Disaster: The Battle Over Female Hurricane Names.\u201d\nCredits:\nScience Diction is hosted and produced by Johanna Mayer. Our editor and Senior Producer is Elah Feder. We had story editing from Nathan Tobey, and fact checking by Michelle Harris. Our composer is Daniel Peterschmidt. Chris Wood did sound design and mastered the episode. Special thanks to the Florida State Library & Archives for allowing us use footage from Roxcy Bolton\u2019s oral history interview. Nadja Oertelt is our Chief Content Officer.