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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: Road Walker who wrote (200783)9/8/2004 2:09:50 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) of 1574848
 
Some hurricane statistics you probably didn't need to know. <g>

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Fla. watches warily as next storm churns

By Patrick O'Driscoll, USA TODAY

Hurricane Ivan is steaming west toward the Caribbean with 135-mph winds; it could reach Florida on Sunday if its path drifts north.

Hurricane Charley blasted the state last month, killing 27 people and causing $7.2 billion in damage. Frances, larger but less powerful, struck Sunday and is blamed for 18 deaths in Florida and Georgia. It caused an estimated $4 billion in damage and has left millions without electricity. (Related story: Tempers flare amid heat, long lines)

Experts predicted in April that this year's hurricane season could be one of the worst ever, fueled partly by unusually warm water in the Atlantic. There were eight named tropical storms in August, tying the U.S. record for most in a month. The hurricane season runs from June through November.

Hurricane expert William Gray, who heads the Tropical Meteorology Project at Colorado State University, says the warm-water effect is one of two major factors in this year's above-average onslaught. The other is a lack of the west winds that can stop hurricanes from forming off Africa.

Forecasters say it's too soon to say whether Ivan will hit Florida. But the State Emergency Operations Center has alerted all agencies to prepare for it. The National Hurricane Center says if Ivan reaches the Caribbean, that sea's warm water will be like "high-octane gas for hurricanes."

President Bush asked Congress for $2 billion in emergency aid for Florida. The president will visit Florida today.

"It almost seems like we've got a 'Kick Me' sign on the state here," National Hurricane Center Director Max Mayfield told the Associated Press.

What's left of Frances soaked Georgia and the Carolinas and is pushing into Virginia, West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

Hurricane season is at its height this week. On average, the season peaks Sept. 9-11. Ten named storms is average for a whole season. There have been nine already this year.

usatoday.com
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