Record-high waves taller than a six-store building registered in North Atlantic
The UN’s weather agency has announced the measurement of the highest wave on record – a behemoth that towered 19 metres above the North Atlantic, informs The Guardian.
Scrutiny of data sent back by an automated buoy showed a monster wave rose at 6.00 GMT on 4 February 2013 at a remote spot between Britain and Iceland, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said.
“This is the first time we have ever measured a wave of 19 meters. It is a remarkable record,” the WMO deputy chief, Wenjian Zhang, said in a statement.
Taller than a six-store building, the mighty wave occurred after a “very strong” cold front had barreled through the area, producing winds up of 43.8 knots (81kph).
The previous record height for a wave was 18.3 m, notched up in December 2007, also in the North Atlantic.
Automated buoys are vital tools for oceanographers, sending back data on sea currents, temperatures and swells for seafarers, climate researchers and others.
The North Atlantic, from the Grand Banks underwater plateau off Canada to south of Iceland and the west of Britain, is the world’s biggest breeding ground for giant waves.
In wintertime, wind circulation and atmospheric pressure cause intense extratropical storms, often dubbed “bombs”, the WMO said.
The height of a wave is defined as the distance from the crest of one wave to the trough of the next.
The UN agency occasionally reveals quirky weather-related milestones, like its September finding that an August 2012 lightning flash in France was the longest-lasting bolt ever recorded.
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