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Talk:1862 Atlantic hurricane season

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GA Review

[edit]
This review is transcluded from Talk:1862 Atlantic hurricane season/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: TropicalAnalystwx13 (talk · contribs) 21:58, 19 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Hey, GeorgeC, I'll get to this later tonight. TropicalAnalystwx13 (talk) 21:58, 19 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

  • Why isn't the number of tropical storms, hurricanes, and major hurricanes displayed in the infobox?
  • "The 1862 Atlantic hurricane season featured six tropical cyclones, only one of which made landfall." - do you know how this compares to the average of the time?
  • "The season comprised three tropical storms and three hurricanes, none of which became major hurricanes." - "comprised" is a weird word to use.
  • "The second and third systems were active in mid-August and in September respectively, both were in the western Atlantic Ocean and both reached Category 2 intensity on the modern-day Saffir-Simpson hurricane wind scale" -> "The second and third systems were active in mid-August and mid-September, respectively, and both attained Category 2 intensity at their peaks [on the...]" or something like that.
  • "Neither made a landfall and are only known from ship reports." - no need to note they were noted by ship reports, you explain that in the first paragraph. Remove "a" after "made" and combine this with the previous sentence.
  • "A forth tropical cyclone caused flooding in Saint Lucia and brought heavy rain to parts of Barbados on October 5, but its track prior to that date is unknown." - fourth.
  • "accumulated cyclone energy" should be capitalized if I'm not mistaken. I did a Google search and most NOAA sites had it capitalized.
  • "Based on reports from four ships, a tropical storm is known to have existed for two days in mid-June off the east coast of the United States" - East Coast should be capitalized.
  • "On September 12, a Spanish ship, the Julian de Unsueta was de-masted by a strong gale and thrown onto her beam ends." - Comma after the ship name. The ship is not a girl.
  • "On September 13, the barks Montezuma and Gazelle were also both de-masted by a hurricane near Barbados." - Change "bark" to "barque" and link it; it's better known as such.
  • "Based on these reports, the track begins about 500 miles (800 km) northeast of the Virgin Islands on September 12 and ending on September 20 off the coast of Novia Scotia." - begins -> began, ending -> ended.
  • A Category 1 hurricane was first seen on October 14 approximately 310 miles (500 km) west of Bermuda" - Modern-day Category 1.
  • "It struck the schooner Albert Treat, throwing her onto her beam ends." - The boat is not a girl.
  • "The schooner suffered considerable damage and three men were lost." - Lost as in they died, or lost as in they went missing?
  • "The next day, further north, the bark Acaciawas struck by the hurricane but managed to make it to safety." - What kind of damage?
  • "Throughout October 16 the hurricane traveled northward, parallel to the east coast of the United States" - East Coast should be capitalized.
  • "The ship Oder reported losing her sails in a hurricane off Sable Island that day." - The ship is not a girl.
  • "The storm became extratropical around midday on October 16 and had dissipated completely by October 17." - link extratropical and remove "had".
  • "Based on meteorological records kept by an officer of the U.S. steamer James Adger, which were recovered in 2003" - This needs rewording.
  • "A major hurricane is a storm that ranks as Category 3 or higher on the Saffir–Simpson Hurricane Scale." (notes) - Change to Saffir-Simpson hurricane wind scale.