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 Headlines January 25, 2008 3:00 pm (EDT) 20:00 UTC
  • For questions and/or advises, you can write an email to the weather team in campus at: dquesada@stu.edu. Information about weather conditions around STU main campus may be seen in the Flash Application included in the main Meteorology page (click on Meteorology link above). For more weather information, just click on any of the links included within this Flash application.
 Tropical Atlantic Basin Active Hurricane Plot Tropical Atlantic GOES Infrared Satellite
Tropical Atlantic GOES Tropical Atlantic IR Satellite
 West Atlantic Infra-Red  West Atlantic Water Vapor
IR satellite Water Vapor Satellite
 Updated information from NOAA  STU preparedness information
Counterclockwise rotation
Hurricane discussion provided by NOAA researchers about
Seasonal Outlook
Expected Trajectory
Tropical Weather Discussion
Aircraft Reconnaissance
STU preparedness
 Hurricane Science Basics  Hurricane Historical Facts
hurricane development Hurricane history
A journey around the history of hurricanes, from the origins of the word hurricane to the statistics of most destructive and costly hurricanes
Hurricanes and Caribbean cultures
Most destructive and costly hurricanes
 Saffir-Simpson tropical storm scale
Category Central Pressure
mbar (in of Hg)
Wind
mph
Storm Surge
ft (m)
Damages
TD > 990 (> 29.25) < 39 none usually minor or none
TS > 985 (> 29.04) 39 - 73 none usually minor or none
H1 > 980 (> 28.94) 74 - 95 4 - 5 ( 1.5)
Mainly trees, shrubbery, and unanchored mobile homes
H2 965 - 980 (28.50 - 28.93) 96 - 110 6 - 8 (2 - 2.5)
Some trees blown down; major damage to exposed mobile homes; some damage to roofs of buildings
H3 945 - 965 (27.91 - 28.49) 111 - 130 9 - 12 (2.5 - 4)
Foliage removed from trees, large trees blown down; mobile homes destroyed; some structural damage to small uildings
H4 920 - 945 (27.17 - 27.90) 131 - 155 13 - 18 (4 - 5.5)
All signs blown down; extensive damage to roofs; complete destruction of mobile homes; flooding inland as far as 10 km (6mi); major damage to lower floors of structures near shore
H5 < 920 (< 27.17) > 155 > 18 (> 5.5)
Severe damage to windows and doors; extensive damage to roofs of homes and industrial buildings; small buildings overturned and blown away; major damage to lower floors of all structure less than 4.5m (15ft) above sea level within 500m ofshore

Last update July 30, 2007
Weather and Environmental Tracking Office
Saint Thomas University
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