MIAMI (CBSMiami) – All eyes are on the first tropical depression of the 2014 Atlantic Hurricane Season. The depression formed Monday night.
A tropical storm watch has been issued from Fort Pierce northward to just south of Flagler Beach.
A tropical storm watch means tropical storm conditions are possible within the next 24 hours to 36 hours.
As of Monday night, the area of concern is about 90 miles east of Vero Beach.
An Air Force Reserve Reconnaissance aircraft flew over the disturbance Monday. Sustained winds are between 30 and 35 mph.
According to the National Hurricane Center, the environmental conditions are becoming more conducive for additional development.
Click HERE to watch Chief Meteorologist Craig Setzer’s forecast.
The disturbance is moving southwestward at 5 mph, but will likely make a turn west by Monday night and a turn to the north by Wednesday just off the Florida coast, said meteorologists.
A turn toward the southeastern U.S. is expected by Thursday.
If the depression were to become a tropical cyclone, the storm would be called Tropical Storm Arthur.
Visit the CBS4 Tropics Page for an interactive Tropical Tracker, the newest computer model tracks and more.
http://miami.cbslocal.com/2014/06/30/tropical-disturbance-inching-closer-to-fl-likely-to-become-depression/
A tropical storm watch has been issued from Fort Pierce northward to just south of Flagler Beach.
A tropical storm watch means tropical storm conditions are possible within the next 24 hours to 36 hours.
As of Monday night, the area of concern is about 90 miles east of Vero Beach.
An Air Force Reserve Reconnaissance aircraft flew over the disturbance Monday. Sustained winds are between 30 and 35 mph.
According to the National Hurricane Center, the environmental conditions are becoming more conducive for additional development.
Click HERE to watch Chief Meteorologist Craig Setzer’s forecast.
The disturbance is moving southwestward at 5 mph, but will likely make a turn west by Monday night and a turn to the north by Wednesday just off the Florida coast, said meteorologists.
A turn toward the southeastern U.S. is expected by Thursday.
If the depression were to become a tropical cyclone, the storm would be called Tropical Storm Arthur.
Visit the CBS4 Tropics Page for an interactive Tropical Tracker, the newest computer model tracks and more.
http://miami.cbslocal.com/2014/06/30/tropical-disturbance-inching-closer-to-fl-likely-to-become-depression/
1 comment:
Want some funny? If the world really were warming? There would be fewer hurricanes. The problem, for them, is that they backed themselves against a wall with "higher hurricane activity" as a proof and have no way out. For some reason, they are choosing not to have it both ways on this topic, or are somehow barred from it. I don't get into their madness all that much, so I'm not sure what is, exactly, up with that. However, the other reason for fewer hurricanes? Weather variability that has existed, and will continue, until the world dies or is destroyed. It happens with the sun, it happens on our neighboring planets, it happens in space.
Oh, they all know it's a lie. But many of them are getting fat and rich. And it is a popular meme among non-productive elites, if probably in order to attempt a world government... which they think they will play a big part in. Chumps, all the way around. The excessively wealthy will not include them. That is why education has been so dumbed down. It is that generation, stripped of morals and even the capacity for critical thinking, and males stripped of masculinity, who are being primed for the stupid bureaucratic spots.
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