Wacky Weather Has Folks Wondering
Drought, Flooding, Hurricanes, Heat Add Up To Summer Of Extremes
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Play CBS Video Video Farmers, River Feeling Heat The Midwest is suffering from its worst drought since 1988, posing major threats to farmers and the economy along the Mississippi. CBS News' Cynthia Bowers reports.
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Video Extreme Weather Explained The Weather Channel's Mike Seidel explains extreme weather conditions: Northeast heat waves and massive droughts in the Midwest.
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Drought-dried corn in Missouri (CBS/EARLY SHOW)
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Weather Channel meteorologist Mike Seidel, on The Early Show Tuesday (CBS/EARLY SHOW)
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News Tools World Extremes Where are the hottest and coldest places in the world? Click to discover these and many other extreme spots on this tiny blue planet called Earth.
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Interactive Natural Disasters Discover how Earth is battered from the sky by hurricanes, tornadoes and cyclones as volcanoes and earthquakes rumble from below.
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Interactive Floods & Droughts Discover the destructiveness of floods and droughts, see this year's predictions and get tips on what to do.
There is rain in the forecast, Bowers points out. But the question remains whether it will be enough to save farmers' other major crop, soybeans, or keep the river from running out.
Weather Channel meteorologist Mike Seidel explained to The Early Show co-anchor Hannah Storm Tuesday that it's been warmer than usual in most parts of the Northeast and Midatlantic, but that comes on the heels of two cooler-than-average summers. So, "When it gets up to around 100, it just feels worse."
That said, "We are seeing more extremes, and they're even more extreme than they were before. Global warming modelers plug in warmer temperatures down the road. And what we're seeing is, down the road, if we do keep getting warmer like we're seeing, we'll see more extreme weather.
"Here's a little statistic, too: Back in the 1800s, once every seven Julys, you had a 100-degree afternoon. Now, it's one day every four Julys you see 100 in New York."
Hurricane activity has been unusually brisk as well, with nine storms already, three of them hurricanes, Seidel points out. The average is 10 storms per season.
"The forecast from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is 18 to 21 storms, nine to 11 hurricanes. So we're expecting an above-average season."
That doesn't mean any of the storms will make landfall, Seidel adds, but "Sea surface temperatures are up. We're in a period of increased tropical activity."
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




