ILLUSTRATIONS
Ivan Ray Tannehill
(
Photographic supplement follows
page 50
)
The English warship
Egmont
in the “Great Hurricane” of 1780.
The
Calypso
in the big Atlantic hurricane of 1837.
A tremendous wave breaks against the distant seawall on Florida coast at the height of a hurricane.
Typhoon buckles the flight deck of the aircraft carrier
Bennington
and drapes it over the bow.
Winds of hurricane drive pine board through the tough trunk of a palm tree in Puerto Rico, September 13, 1928.
Looking down from plane at the surface of the sea with winds of 15 knots.
Sea surface with winds of 40 knots.
Sea surface with winds of 75 knots.
Sea surface with winds of 120 knots.
Superfortress B-29 used by Air Force for hurricane hunting.
Neptune P2V-3W used by Navy for hurricane hunting.
Navy crew of hurricane hunters.
Air Force crew being briefed by weather officer before flight into hurricane.
Conditions at birth of Caribbean Charlie in 1951.
Part of a spiral squall band, an “arm of the octopus.”
Through Plexiglas nose, weather officer sees white caps on sea 1,500 feet below.
Navy aerologist at his station in nose of aircraft on hurricane mission.
Radar operator and navigator.
Maintenance crew goes to work on B-29 after return from hurricane mission.
City docks at Miami after passage of Kappler’s Hurricane in September, 1945.
Positions of crew members in B-29 on hurricane mission.
Part of scope showing typhoon by radar.
Looking down into the eye of Hurricane Edna on September 7, 1954.
Looking down at the central region of Typhoon Marge in 1951.
Weather officer in nose of aircraft talking to pilot and radar operator.
The engineer in a B-29 on hurricane reconnaissance.
The two scanners ready to signal engine trouble the instant it shows up.
The new plane (B-50) to be used by the Air Force for hurricane reconnaissance.
THE HURRICANE HUNTERS
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