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Hurricane Javier was a powerful tropical cyclone whose remnants brought above-average rainfall totals across the western United States in September 2004. Javier was the tenth named storm, the sixth hurricane and the final major hurricane of the 2004 Pacific hurricane season. Javier was also the strongest hurricane of the 2004 season, with 150 ...
A tropical wave crossed Central America on July 8, developing into a tropical depression at 12:00 UTC on July 12 while located about 335 mi (539 km) southwest of Zihuatanejo, Mexico; six hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Blas. Steered swiftly northwestward around a mid-level ridge over the southwestern United States ...
Hurricane Javier (1980) – stayed in the open ocean. Hurricane Javier (1986) – produced high waves in southern California. Hurricane Javier (1992) – dissipated south of Hawaii. Tropical Storm Javier (1998) – made landfall in southwestern Mexico, dissipated shortly after moving ashore.
In addition to Isis, Tropical Storm Javier moved ashore the coast of Jalisco in Mexico; the country also experienced indirect effects from four other storms, all of which remained offshore. One tropical cyclone, Hurricane Lester , affected Central America, causing two deaths in Guatemala , and later brought heavy rains to southern Mexico.
– The tropical depression that had formed 18 hours prior strengthens into Tropical Storm Javier about 355 mi (575 km) south-southwest of Salina Cruz, Oaxaca. [ 7 ] September 12
Tropical Storm Javier and then Hurricane Kay both formed off the coast of southwestern Mexico during the first week of the month and paralleled the coast offshore. Kay, the longer-lived and stronger of the two, became the first tropical cyclone to extend its effects northward into Southern California since Nora in 1997 . [ 10 ]
More than 42 million people in Florida, Georgia and Alabama were under hurricane and tropical storm warnings, the National Weather Service said. ... – Javier Zarracina, Ramon Padilla, Stephen J ...
Tropical Storm Javier and Hurricane Newton both made landfall in Mexico, with the latter being responsible for at least nine fatalities as it came ashore near Baja California Sur. Hurricane Ulika was a rare and erratic storm which zig-zagged across 140°W a total of three times.