Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tropical Storm Bill was a tropical cyclone that produced widespread rainfall across East Texas, Oklahoma, the Midwest, and Mid-Atlantic. The second named storm of the season, Bill developed from a broad area of low pressure over the northwestern Gulf of Mexico on June 16. Because the system was already producing tropical storm force winds, it ...
Though sheared, the incipient cyclone strengthened into Tropical Storm Bill twelve hours later. Banding features became better defined, especially across the northern and western quadrants of the storm, and Bill reached peak winds of 65 mph (105 km/h) early on June 15 while paralleling the Northeast United States coastline.
Tropical Storm Bill (2003), made landfall west of New Orleans killing four and causing $50 million in damages; Hurricane Bill (2009), a large Category 4 hurricane that passed Bermuda and grazed Nova Scotia before striking Newfoundland as a tropical storm; Tropical Storm Bill (2015), made landfall in southeastern Texas causing moderate damage
The latest storm, Tropical Storm Bill, had rapidly developed into Tropical Depression Two off the coast of North Carolina Monday morning. The storm was located about 335 miles east of Halifax ...
Tropical Storm Bill: June 29-July 2 2002 : The first named storm didn't appear until July 14. 2001 : The first named storm in June wasn't followed by another until Aug. 2.
Hurricane Oscar made landfall in Cuba as a Category 1 storm on Sunday, Oct. 20, but has since been downgraded to tropical storm status NOAA Tropical Storm Oscar as it hits Cuba on Oct. 20, 2024
As the storm passed Bermuda, it contained sustained winds equal to a Category 2, and ultimately struck Newfoundland as a tropical storm. After moving inland and weakening to a tropical storm, Bill began an extratropical transition; this alteration in structure was completed by 1200 UTC on August 24. Two days later, Bill's remnant low was ...
Bill, which formed as a tropical depression off the coast of North Carolina Monday morning, has been upgraded to a tropical storm Tuesday, but forecasters aren’t worried.