Hurricane Jeanne
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- This arrticle deals with the 2004 Hurricane Jeanne. For information on other storms of the same name, see Hurricane Jeanne (disambiguation).
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Formed | September 13, 2004 as Tropical Depression Eleven |
Wind Speed | 50 mph (85 km/h) |
Highest Wind Speed | 120 mph (195 km/h) on September 25, 2004 |
Category | n/a |
Highest Category | Three |
Territories affected |
Hurricane Jeanne is the tenth named storm and the sixth hurricane and sixth major hurricane of the 2004 Atlantic hurricane season. It has affected the United States Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, the south-eastern Bahamas and Florida.
Storm history
Tropical Depression Eleven formed from a tropical wave 70 miles (110 km) east-southeast of Guadeloupe in the evening of September 13, and was upgraded to Tropical Storm Jeanne the next day. It passed south of the U.S. Virgin Islands on September 15 and made landfall near Yabucoa, Puerto Rico later the same day. After crossing Puerto Rico it reached hurricane strength on September 16 near the eastern tip of the Dominican Republic on the island of Hispaniola, but fell back to tropical storm strength later that day as it moved inland across the Dominican Republic. Jeanne continued to move slowly over the Dominican Republic on September 17 before finally leaving the island late that afternoon. By that time, Jeanne had declined one more level, to tropical depression strength.
On September 18, while the system was being tracked near Great Inagua and Haiti, a new center formed well to the north-east and the previous circulation dissipated. The new center strengthened again, becoming a hurricane on September 20. Jeanne continued to meander for several days before beginning a steady westward motion toward the Bahamas and Florida.
Jeanne continued strengthening as it headed west, passing over Great Abaco in the Bahamas on the morning of September 25. Shortly after, it reached Category 3 strength. It maintained this intensity as it passed Grand Bahama during the remainder of the day. At 11:50 pm EDT September 25 (0450 UTC September 26), Jeanne made landfall on Hutchinson Island, just east of Stuart, Florida, at Category 3 strength. This is only a few miles (or km) from where Hurricane Frances struck Florida three weeks earlier.
Jeanne is the first major (category 3 or higher) storm to make landfall on the east coast north of Palm Beach, Florida and south of the Georgia–South Carolina border since at least 1899.
Current status
At 11 pm EDT on September 26 (0300 UTC Sep. 27), the center of Jeanne was located 35 miles (56 km) northwest of Gainesville, Florida, and was moving north near 14 mph (22 km/h). Jeanne has weakened to a tropical storm with sustained winds of 50 mph (85 km/h).
Jeanne is expected to continue northwest along the Gulf coast of Florida, then to turn north over the Florida Panhandle towards Georgia. As it weakens to a tropical depression over land, Jeanne's track is expected to curve to the northeast, bringing it over the Carolinas and southeastern Virginia before heading back out to sea.
Current watches and warnings
- Tropical storm warnings are in effect for:
- the west coast of Florida from Anclote Key to Apalachicola
- the east coast from Cocoa Beach to the Savannah River
Impact
Most of the 4 million inhabitants of Puerto Rico were left without power, and 600,000 without running water. Landslides caused a large amount of damage to the exotic vegetation in the Caribbean National Forest. Seven people were reported killed.
During its slow progress over the northern Dominican Republic, the storm damaged many homes in the town of Samaná. At least 18 deaths were attributed to Jeanne in this country.
Heavy rains totaling about 13 inches (33 cm) in the northern mountains of Haiti caused severe flooding and mudslides in the Artibonite region of the country, causing particular damage in the coastal city of Gonaïves, where it affected about 80,000 of the city's 100,000 residents. As of September 26, at least 1,650 people are confirmed dead. [1] Many of the dead remain unburied and relief workers have begun burying bodies in mass graves in an attempt to avoid the spread of disease. Relief workers expect the total number of dead to rise even further, as hundreds of people remain missing; some bodies may have washed out to sea and may never be recovered. The flooding occured well after the center of the storm had left Haiti, and outside the areas covered by storm warnings.
Millions in Florida were left without electricity but casualty figures have yet to be determined.
External links
- [http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/text/refresh/MIATCPAT1+shtml/ NHC's public advisory on Hurricane