Vorlage:Dablink Vorlage:Infobox hurricane Hurricane Nora was the fourteenth named tropical cyclone and seventh hurricane of the 1997 Pacific hurricane season. The September storm formed off the Pacific coast of Mexico, and aided by waters warmed by El Niño, eventually peaked at Category 4 intensity on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale.
Nora then took an unusual path and proceeded to make landfall twice as a hurricane in Baja California, with its remnants afterwards affecting the Southwestern United States with tropical storm-force winds, torrential rain and flooding. Nora is blamed for two direct casualties in Mexico, and persisted so far inland that it was only the third tropical cyclone to reach Arizona while tropical.
Storm history
Vorlage:Storm path Nora formed early on September 16, 1997, 290 miles (460 km) southwest of Acapulco, Mexico, from the same tropical wave that had earlier created Hurricane Erika. Due to favorable conditions associated with El Niño,[1] the tropical disturbance quickly achieved deep convection and became well-organized. By 6 a.m. UTC, the National Hurricane Center had designated the disturbance as Tropical Depression Sixteen-E. Half a day later, it had gained enough strength to be named Tropical Storm Nora.[2]
A high pressure area over northern Mexico forced the storm to move west-northwest for the first few days. During that time, Nora kept intensifying, becoming a Category 1 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale by noon UTC on September 18. Next, Nora slowed and became stationary for two days from September 18. The eye vanished, and convection began to decrease. This was presumed to have happened because of a drop in sea-surface temperatures. The cool waters temporarily weakened Nora's winds to 75 mph (120 km/h) down from a maximum of 105 mph (165 km/h).[2] After leaving the area of cool waters, Nora began moving nearly parallel to the southwestern Mexican coast. There was a period of rapid intensification and the eye reappeared. Cloud tops cooled and at midday UTC on September 21, Nora reached its peak intensity of 950 mbar and 130 mph (210 km/h) winds, a Category 4 hurricane.[2] The peak was brief as Nora then encountered cool waters in the wake of Hurricane Linda. They weakened Nora's winds to 80 mph (130 km/h) by September 23 and broke its eyewall.[2]
Nora then crossed an area of abnormally warm water near the west coast of the Baja California Peninsula. It restrengthened slightly before making its first landfall near Bahía Tortugas, Baja California.[3] When Nora was inland, the area of the storm located in the Gulf of California began to reintensify.[1] Hurricane Nora then made a second landfall about 60 miles (95 km) south-southeast of San Fernando, Baja California.[2]
At landfall, a trough was accelerating Nora northwards, causing it to reach a forward speed of 30 mph (50 km/h). Late on September 25 (UTC), still a tropical storm, it entered the continental United States at the California-Arizona state line. Nora began to weaken rapidly, and was downgraded to a tropical depression three hours later.[2] Nora reached Arizona while still tropical, becoming the third known system to do so.[4] Nora degenerated over land, and the low-level center moved towards the north-northeast. A remnant circulation aloft persisted, however, and was likely responsible for a period of near hurricane-force winds observed at the NWS Cedar City, Utah Doppler radar. The remnants gradually became more diffuse over the following two days while moving generally northeastward, through portions of Utah, Colorado, Idaho and Wyoming.[2]
Preparations
While Nora stayed off the Pacific coast of Mexico, the Mexican Servicio Meteorológico Nacional (National Meteorological Service) issued a hurricane watch for the coast between Lázaro Cárdenas, Michoacán and Puerto Vallarta,[2] and several major ports in the shoreline closed to navigation.[5] As the storm moved away from the mainland coast and towards the Baja California Peninsula, about 500 people were evacuated near Cabo San Lucas by the authorities from their homes and placed in shelters to prepare for the storm's impact. At the same time, in Sonora, another 50 were evacuated from a fishing camp in Guaymas.[6] Meanwhile, the SMN issued tropical storm warnings along the Baja California coast, as well as hurricane watches and warnings around the entire Gulf of Californa between Santa Rosalía, Baja California Sur and Bahia Kino, Sonora. [7][2]
In September 24, Arizona Governor Jane Dee Hull activated an emergency response center to prepare the state's response to the flash flooding the storm would cause on the dry desert floor,[7] and Yuma residents began to fill approximately 55,000 sandbags to contain the possible flooding.[8] Hull also actived the state's National Guard, and sent drinking water and electric generators to Yuma.[9] Further inland, the National Weather Service issued flash flood watches for western Arizona, southeastern California, southwestern Colorado, southern Nevada and southern Utah on September 26.[10]
Impact
Hurricane Nora caused two direct deaths in Mexico and three or four indirect ones in the United States. Although the total cost of damage is not known, Nora caused up to several hundred millions of dollars of damage. The system also dumped heavy rain in the United States and Mexico, which caused flooding and power outages.[2]
Mexico
Nora killed two people in Mexico. One person was electrocuted by a downed power line in Mexicali. The other fatality occurred to a diver caught in strong underwater currents created by Nora off the coast of the San Quintin Valley.[2]
Although Nora remained well offshore from southwestern mainland Mexico, the Associated Press reported that waves to 20 ft (6 m) hit that coastline, destroying dozens of homes.[11] Nora's winds also produced rough seas and high waves, which caused in substantial beach erosion, particularly around Acapulco, Guerrero, where the Pie de la Cuesta beaches were washed away.[2] In the states of Guerrero and Jalisco, Nora tore down trees and washed away the foundations of homes, albeit not causing any injuries.[11]
About 350 to 400 people were left homeless by floodwaters in the town of Arroyo de Santa Catarina in northern Baja California. Heavy damage and flooding was reported in San Felipe, on the northwestern shore of the Gulf of California, as well as extensive beach erosion. Moreover, local roads and highways were destroyed and the town's dock was severely damaged.[12] On the northeastern shore, at Puerto Peñasco, Nora's winds blew down trees, billboards, electric wires, taco stands, and ripped sheet-metal from homes. Waves of 10 feet (3 m) were reported there.[2]
United States
In the United States, there were no direct deaths blamed on the hurricane. However, the California Highway Patrol attributed three or four traffic fatalities in southern California to the weather.[13]
Damage totals in the United States are not fully known but media summaries of Nora included a loss to agriculture preliminarily estimated at several hundred million dollars, and at least one study places the figure at $150-200 million (1997 USD).[14] About a $30–40 million (1997 USD) loss to lemon trees was estimated.[2] Even though Nora had long lost hurricane strength, near hurricane-force winds were felt at the Dixie National Forest in southwestern Utah, where strong gusts sheared off the tops of large trees. [15]
The Yuma radar indicated a small area with near 10 inches (250 mm) of rain along the northern Gulf of California coast of Baja California. In the United States, the largest total rainfall was recorded at the Harquahala Mountains in Arizona, where 11.97 inches (304 mm) of rainfall were recorded as a result of Nora, causing flash floods in western Arizona.[4]
Near Phoenix, rainfall from the storm caused the Narrows Dam, a small earthen dam, to fail.[4] In other locations in Arizona, California, Nevada, and Utah, more than 3 inches (75 mm) occurred in a few localized areas,[1] sometimes with precipitation comparable to the entire local yearly average rainfall. Flooding was also reported in Somerton, San Diego, El Centro, Palm Springs and Indio, while 12,000 people lost power in Yuma,[16] as well as Los Angeles and southwestern Utah.
See also
References
- ↑ a b c Farfán, Luis M. and Joseph Zehnder: An Analysis of the Landfall of Hurricane Nora. (PDF) Monthly Weather Review, 2001, abgerufen am 26. Februar 2006.
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n National Hurricane Center: Preliminary Report: Hurricane Nora. NOAA, 1997, abgerufen am 20. Februar 2006.
- ↑ Vorlage:Es icon Servicio Meteorológico Nacional (Mexico): Huracán Nora. Comisón Nacional del Agua, 1997, abgerufen am 21. Februar 2006.
- ↑ a b c Flood Control District of Maricopa County: TS Nora Storm Report. 1997, abgerufen am 26. Februar 2006.
- ↑ North-moving Nora lashes Baja's southern tip, Associated Press, September 23, 1997. Abgerufen am 10. April 2006
- ↑ Hurricane Nora lashes Baja California, Associated Press, September 24, 1997. Abgerufen am 11. Mai 2006
- ↑ a b Hurricane Nora to hit Baja Thursday morning, Associated Press, September 25, 1997. Abgerufen am 11. Mai 2006
- ↑ Hurricane Nora nears Mexico, Associated Press, September 24, 1997. Abgerufen am 11. Mai 2006
- ↑ Nora weakens, but heavy rains threaten U.S., Associated Press, September 25, 1997. Abgerufen am 11. Mai 2006
- ↑ Hydrometeorological Prediction Center: Storm Summary for Tropical Depression Nora, 4 a.m. EDT [[September 26]], [[1997]]. NOAA, abgerufen am 6. März 2006.
- ↑ a b Hurricane Nora lashes Mexico's Pacific coast, Associated Press, September 22, 1997. Abgerufen am 11. Mai 2006
- ↑ Hurricane Nora, San Felipe, Baja California. San Felipe, Baja California Official Website, September 1997, abgerufen am 29. März 2006.
- ↑ Nora gives Arizona a soaking, Associated Press, September 25, 1997. Abgerufen am 11. Mai 2006
- ↑ National Drought Mitigation Center: Reported Effects of the 1997-98 El Niño. University of Nebraska-Lincoln, abgerufen am 26. Februar 2006.
- ↑ Cooperative Program for Operational Meteorology, Education and Training: Nora: After Landfall (VIS). University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, abgerufen am 10. April 2006.
- ↑ Rebecca Carter: Tropical Storm Impacts on Arizona and New Mexico. Climate Assessment for the Southwest Project, Institute for the Study of Planet Earth, University of Arizona, 2002, abgerufen am 3. März 2006.