Scientists have issued a stern warning about an ‘Ultra-Intense Category 6’ hurricane coming to the US.
This prediction comes from an international group of more than 60 experts who discovered the burning of burning oil has poured a similar force into the Earth system, heralding a new dark age of ‘great storms.’
An ‘Ultra-Intense Category 6’ hurricane can produce sustained winds of 192 miles per hour or more and sea level rise of more than 25 meters.
Although this is a hypothetical event, experts have called it ‘the most powerful storm the world has ever seen,’ predicting that it will start around 2100′ and will be called Hurricane Danielle.
This prediction is part of a new book Group Five: Superstorms and the Warm Seas That Feed Them where author Porter Fox presents scientific calculations and testimonies from sailors who have weathered the extreme weather.
And when Florida was hit by a hurricane this year, Danielle may take another route – New York.
The experts predicted that the storm would pass through a narrow path between Staten Island and Brooklyn’s Dyker Heights, which was last taken by Hurricane Sandy in 2012.
Fox wrote: ‘The devastation will be the greatest ever seen in the northeast, like a hurricane on the plains. India or Bangladesh than wind events in the tristate.’

An ‘Ultra-Intense Category 6’ storm can produce winds of 192 miles per hour or more and a sea level rise of more than 25 feet. Although this is a hypothetical event, experts have called it ‘the strongest hurricane the world has ever seen’. (STOCK)

And when Florida was hit by a hurricane this year, Danielle may take another route – New York
Foxs spoke to lifeguards of submariners and boatmen, such as Joey Farrell Jr and This Millerwho wash away the storms year after year with their ships.
When Hurricane Michael, a Category 5, hit the northwest FloridaMiller recalled: ‘It felt like God’s hand had come in and justly wiped out the whole world.’
‘It didn’t matter if it was a metal house, a brick house, a wooden house – there was nothing left,’ Miller told Fox. ‘The air pressure was so low that it sucked the oil out of the huge Chevron storage tanks near the marina.’
Fox’s ‘Hurricane Danielle’ will enter New York Harbor’s first is its punishing wind shear that shakes the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge.
The storm broke the three-foot-thick cables and ‘sent both lines of the road down.’
As this ‘Dangerous Phase 6’ enters New York Harbor, the entire island of Governors Island will be submerged in a ‘fortress of clear water.’
‘Most of the Freedom Tower’s windows, built to withstand gusts up to two hundred miles per hour, will explode,’ according to Fox, miraculously ‘reducing the wind and possibly saving the building.’
Keeping the walls built around Battery Park, as part of the process The $1.7 billion-plus Lower Manhattan Coastal Resiliency plan for climate changethey will be overwhelmed.
‘Sea and river water will mingle east of Tompkins Square Park as water flows freely through the streets of Chinatown, Little Italy, and the chic boutiques and bistros of NoHo and SoHo,’ Fox shared.

The experts predicted that the storm would pass through the narrow strip between Staten Island and Dyker Heights in Brooklyn, which was last taken by Hurricane Sandy in 2012.
The city’s vulnerability to flooding will come not just from storms, but from rising sea levels: an example of what the author calls ‘the combined forces of climate change.’
The book reads: ‘If Superstorm Sandy had happened in 1912 instead of 2012, it may not have flooded Lower Manhattan.
That’s because sea levels have risen about 12 inches over the past 100 years.
After landfall, Hurricane Danielle will surround the Big Apple for 48 hours, as a stronger, denser storm will blow through the warmer air.
“The storm will have decreased by 15 percent by 2100 and will be filled with 20 percent of water vapor,” Fox explained.
‘Yet from the right quadrant of the storm are gusts of up to 220 mph, strong enough to destroy the roof of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.’
With ‘plane lines and oak trees in Central Park’ uprooted, windows shattered across the city, and bridges down, the storm’s power will be divided. ’till fifty storms.’

Porter Fox – journalist and sailor – spoke to mariners, meteorologists, cruise lines and more about his new book, ‘Category Five’.
Fox said: ‘These storms will cause unexpected damage to small parts of the city, leaving carved lines in parks, neighborhoods, and streets.’
The meaning of this extraordinary energy comes from the thermal energy contained in the earth’s oceans and atmosphere greenhouse gas effect.
‘For ordinary people, a storm is a disturbance in the atmosphere, removed from the Earth except for the damage it causes,’ says the book.
‘In fact, most of the strength of hurricanes comes from the ocean-atmosphere boundary,’ according to Fox, ‘what scientists call the ‘planetary boundary.’
This is important to understand so that we can better predict what a hurricane like Danielle will one day do.
The wind from a hurricane ‘doesn’t just float on the surface of the ocean,’ said the Wolf, ‘they rely on it, pull it, and drive it forward.’
He wrote that when the water vapor rises in this way, it ‘freezes and turns into rain, causing the gradual warming that causes the hurricane to move.’
He captured the expected and dramatic scenes of many New Yorkers trapped in the skyscrapers.
“Those lucky enough to live in modern, airy high-rises in Midtown or upper Manhattan watch from the ground as streams of water flow through the streets,” he writes.
Soon, the water will overflow the city’s sewers and storm drains, and begin to destroy the complex of Manhattan, destroying electricity, internet, and cell lines.’
Fox estimated that the death toll of the ‘Ultra-Intense Category 6’ hit Gotham will reach something like 42,000 lives.
He wrote: ‘Many families were torn apart. ‘Hundreds of villages were wiped out.’
‘The factories are gone. Disabled travel. The values and possibilities of America’s great city were shattered (…) In the weeks and months ahead, residents and officials will grapple with the impossible question of whether or not to rebuild.’
The widespread damage to the city’s infrastructure, its damaged communication cables and fiber optics, its roads and bridges will make rescue operations after the incident ‘impossible.’
New York City is one of America’s most famous coastal cities, Fox reports, and many others are in similar or worse danger.
‘One silver lining: Miami residents won’t have to worry about hurricanes, seawalls, building codes, or insurance lapses in 2100, since the city will no longer exist.’