Archive: https://archive.today/eSgQW
From the post:
>High on a rocky plateau, one small nocturnal seabird is nestled in its burrow, where far below waves lap gently against the cliffs. In the blackness of night, it senses a storm brewing 1,000 miles (1609km) from the coast of Morocco. Drawing energy from the warmth of the ocean's surface, a tropical cyclone begins to form until a powerful column of rotating air is marching across the globe. The cyclone the bird senses is hundreds of miles wide, and lightning strikes speckle its outer bands, while 150mph (240km/h) winds churn the ocean waters below.
Archive: https://archive.today/eSgQW
From the post:
>>High on a rocky plateau, one small nocturnal seabird is nestled in its burrow, where far below waves lap gently against the cliffs. In the blackness of night, it senses a storm brewing 1,000 miles (1609km) from the coast of Morocco.
Drawing energy from the warmth of the ocean's surface, a tropical cyclone begins to form until a powerful column of rotating air is marching across the globe. The cyclone the bird senses is hundreds of miles wide, and lightning strikes speckle its outer bands, while 150mph (240km/h) winds churn the ocean waters below.
(post is archived)