The paths of 150 years of destructive tropical storms around the world have been mapped in a stunning image.
The graphic, looking at the globe with Antarctica in the centre, shows the intensity and location of hurricanes, cyclones and typhoons since 1851.
Data visualiser John Nelson, map manager for IDV Solutions, composed the image using archive information from the United States' National Climate Data Center.
The map shows the bulk of the most powerful storms - illustrated with larger bright green spots - originating around the equator in the Atlantic Ocean and smashing the Caribbean and southern states of the US, while other large storms can be seen to the west of Mexico, the northeastern Pacific, the Indian subcontinent, and the South Pacific and Australia. New Zealand are seen to be spared the worst of the South Pacific's storms, but is still lashed with the remnants of the region's tropical cyclones.
"Hurricanes clearly abhor the equator and fling themselves away from the warm waters of their birth as quickly as they can," Nelson said. "The void circling the image is the equator. Hurricanes can never ever cross it."