Theories on Tornado and Waterspout Formation in Ancient Greece and Rome

Author:

Antonescu Bogdan1,Schultz David M.2,Ricketts Hugo M. A. M.3,Ene Dragoş4

Affiliation:

1. National Institute of Research and Development for Optoelectronics, Măgurele, Ilfov, Romania, and European Severe Storms Laboratory, Wessling, Germany

2. Centre for Atmospheric Science, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom

3. Centre for Atmospheric Science, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, and National Centre for Atmospheric Science, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom

4. National Institute of Research and Development for Optoelectronics, Măgurele, Ilfov, Romania

Abstract

Abstract Tornadoes and waterspouts have long fascinated humankind through their presence in myths and popular beliefs and originally were believed to have supernatural causes. The first theories explaining weather phenomena as having natural causes were proposed by ancient Greek natural philosophers. Aristotle was one of the first natural philosophers to speculate about the formation of tornadoes and waterspouts in Meteorologica (circa 340 BCE). Aristotle believed that tornadoes and waterspouts were associated with the wind trapped inside the cloud and moving in a circular motion. When the wind escapes the cloud, its descending motion carries the cloud with it, leading to the formation of a typhon (i.e., tornado or waterspout). His theories were adopted and further nuanced by other Greek philosophers such as Theophrastus and Epicurus. Aristotle’s ideas also influenced Roman philosophers such as Lucretius, Seneca, and Pliny the Elder, who further developed his ideas and also added their own speculations (e.g., tornadoes do not need a parent cloud). Almost ignored, Meteorologica was translated into Latin in the twelfth century, initially from an Arabic version, leading to much greater influence over the next centuries and into the Renaissance. In the seventeenth century, the first book-length studies on tornadoes and waterspouts were published in Italy and France, marking the beginning of theoretical and observational studies on these phenomena in Europe. Even if speculations about tornadoes and waterspouts proposed by Greek and Roman authors were cited after the nineteenth century only as historical pieces, core ideas of modern theories explaining these vortices can be traced back to this early literature.

Funder

Risk Prediction Initiative of the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences

Natural Environment Research Council

AXA Research Fund

Institutional Performance--Projects of Excellence Financing in RDI

National Core Programe

Research Centre for environment and Earth Observation CEO-Terra

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Global and Planetary Change

Reference64 articles.

1. Tornadoes in Romania;Antonescu;Mon. Wea. Rev.,2015

2. Tornadoes in Europe: Synthesis of the observational datasets;Antonescu;Mon. Wea. Rev.,2016

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