Catastrophic weather events are an unfortunate and persistent part of life. In fact, if it feels like these catastrophic events are happening more frequently than ever before, the data confirms that to be the case. Findings from a new study in the journal Nature demonstrate that more extreme rain events...
DebugScreen: mobile
{
"author": {
"name": "Kelly Ingersoll",
"webUrl": "/author/profile/kelly-ingersoll/",
"description": "",
"imageLarge": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f16d6fc2845f417ea0e93a3f2b6cd37d?s=136&d=mm&r=g",
"estimate": 1,
"social": [],
"articles": [
{
"uri": "/2017/03/01/planning-for-the-unpredictable-recovering-auto-losses-in-the-wake-of-catastrophic-events/",
"title": "Planning for the Unpredictable: Recovering Auto Losses in the Wake of Catastrophic Events",
"byline": "Kelly Ingersoll",
"kicker": "Analysis",
"prettyDate": "March 01, 2017",
"timeToRead": "4 minute",
"image": {
"uri": "",
"width": "",
"height": ""
},
"authors": [
{
"webUrl": "/author/profile/kelly-ingersoll/",
"name": "Kelly Ingersoll"
}
],
"kickerNode": [
{
"uri": "/analysis/",
"sectionName": "Analysis"
}
],
"summary": "Catastrophic weather events are an unfortunate and persistent part of life. In fact, if it feels like these catastrophic events are happening more frequently than ever before, the data confirms that to be the case. Findings from a new study in the journal Nature demonstrate that more extreme rain events...",
"body": null
}
]
}
}