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Hermine was the first hurricane to directly affect the city since Hurricane Kate in 1985. [43] Throughout Leon County, 45 homes or businesses were destroyed, 187 suffered severe damage, and 259 experienced minor damage. [59] Losses across Leon County reached $10.3 million. [60] Radar image of Hurricane Hermine about 40 minutes after landfall
Hermine was the only known tropical cyclone to cross over into the North Atlantic basin in the satellite era. Though it was named in the western Gulf of Mexico, Hermine developed directly from the remnant low-pressure area associated with the short-lived Tropical Depression Eleven-E in the Eastern Pacific.
Tropical Storm Hermine was the eighth tropical cyclone and named storm of the 1998 Atlantic hurricane season. Hermine developed from a tropical wave that emerged from the west coast of Africa on September 5. The wave moved westward across the Atlantic Ocean, and on entering the northwest Caribbean interacted with other weather systems.
Tropical Storm Hermine lashed the Atlantic coast with ferocious winds and rain Saturday, while Florida attempted to clean up debris and restore power.
Overnight, the center of the storm moved farther east and away from the coast than previously forecast, said the director of the National Hurricane Center. After rampage through South, Hermine ...
Hurricane Hermine (2016) – Category 1 hurricane that made landfall in the Florida Panhandle, causing extensive damage in the Southeast U.S. Tropical Storm Hermine (2022) – weak and short-lived tropical storm that brought significant rainfall to the Canary Islands; In the South-West Indian: Cyclone Hermine (1970) – tropical cyclone ...
Tropical Storm Hermine formed off the west coast of Africa on Friday, shortly followed by Tropical Storm Ian in the Caribbean Sea, becoming the eighth and ninth tropical storms of the 2022 ...
Hurricane Betsy was the first hurricane to have damages exceeding US$1 billion. In 1960, four rotating lists of names were developed to avoid creating new lists each year, while the practice of retiring any particularly damaging storm names for 10 years continued, with 11 names deemed significant enough to be retired during the decade.