Hurricane Debby (1988)

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Hurricane Debby - Tropical Depression 17-E
Category 1 hurricane (SSHS)
Debby near landfall.

Debby near landfall.
Formed August 31, 1988
Dissipated September 8, 1988
Highest
winds
75 mph (120 km/h) (1-minute sustained)
Lowest pressure 991 mbar (hPa; 29.28 inHg)
Fatalities 20 direct
Damage Unknown
Areas
affected
Mexico
Part of the
1988 Atlantic hurricane season

Hurricane Debby was the eighth tropical depression, fourth storm and the first hurricane of the 1988 Atlantic hurricane season. A notability, Debby was one of the shortest-south of Tuxpan, Mexico, becoming the first hurricane to make landfall there since Hurricane Anna in the 1956 Atlantic hurricane season. Before, three storms in the 1955 season also made landfall there, Gladys, Hilda and Janet.[1]

Contents

[edit] Storm History

Storm path
Storm path

[edit] Hurricane Debby

A strong tropical wave formed off of Africa's northwest coast on the 15th of August. As the wave moved westward a split area of the wave became Tropical Depression Seven near the Lesser Antilles.[1] That system moved westward and became Tropical Storm Chris days later. The leftover wave continued westward and entered the Caribbean Sea as a disorganized center of showers. During the night of August 29, some convection came together and a low-level center appeared over the Yucatan Peninsula. The center moved into the Bay of Campeche and was declared a 1.5 on the Dvorak Scale and was estimated to become Tropical Depression Eight at that time, 1800 UTC August 30.[1]

Banding came together and outflow patterns organized on September 1. Tropical Depression Eight moved westward and development increased, becoming Tropical Storm Debby on September 2.[1] Debby moved towards Tuxpan, Mexico at 6 knots while an Air Force Reconnissance aircraft found winds of 90 mph at 1500-feet levels and 80 mph at the surface of the storm, upgrading Debby into the first hurricane of the season on September 2. At that point, Debby's small center was only 30 nautical miles from Mexico.[1] No more reconnissance aircrafts were deployed prior to landfall and forecasters depended on satellite imagery, which called little change in strength. Debby made landfall in Tuxpan, Mexico on September 3 at 0000 UTC. Debby weakened over Mexico's mountainous terrain, but was able to keep its bonding to become Tropical Depression Seventeen-E in the Eastern Pacific basin.[1]

[edit] Tropical Depression 17-E

Debby becoming 17E on September 7.
Debby becoming 17E on September 7.

As Hurricane Debby entered the Eastern Pacific, it became Tropical Depression 17-E on September 5.[1] Little movement occurred, leaving it stationary off the coast of Manazillo.[2] Even though Tropical Depression 17-E was a poorly organized cyclone, the possibility that it could still become a tropical storm in the small and narrow Gulf of California was possible. Six hours after that forecast, wind shear appeared and with the close proximity to land, the forecast changed to staying as a depression.[3]

At this point, Tropical Depression 17-E was under the influence of a low-level trough and weak steering currents. A new low level center appeared on September 7, causing locally heavy rains and producing a new chance for Tropical Depression 17-E to develop into a storm. Also at this point, Tropical Depression 17-E was hard to track through sattilite imagery. Tropical Depression 17-E came close to land, so the prediction to become a storm was doubtful and landfall was expected within 48 hours. Wind shear caused Tropical Depression to dissipate on September 8 near La Paz.[4]

[edit] Preparations

Multiple warnings and/or watches were released in accordance with Hurricane Debby. The first was a storm warning for Santa Cruz to Veracruz on September 2.[1] Part of it was discontinued the same day from Santa Cruz to Punto Jerez. The rest was discontinued a few hours later. The Punto Jerez to Veracruz area was put under a hurricane warning on September 2 and was discontinued that night.[1] Tropical Storm and Hurricane Warnings were put in place, but were soon discontinued. Strike probabilities were low for land excepting Brownsville, Texas which got a 5 percent chance of Debby passing within 65 miles of it. Over 30 thousand people were evacuated, many in Veracruz.[1]

[edit] Impact

Reports for Tuxpan, Mexico, a city of 120 thousand people were non-existant and all that is known for there is that locally heavy flooding occurred.[1] Three of the ten deaths reported by Debby were caused by a landslide in Papalanta crushed two homes. Three storm-related deaths were reported with house-crushing landslides in Poza Rica. Four people died and sixteen were injured in a town north of Mexico City when a mudslide crushed some homes. Ten other people were killed in Veracruz with over 25000 - 50000 without shelter. Emergency crews worked in a hurry to get shelter for them.[5][6] Debby caused power outages in Tuxpan, Poza Rica and several other places. In Poza Rica, debris caused water runoffs to be blocked.[1] Mud and rocks blocked roads and dozens were rescued from house and car flooding. There was major damage, mainly in eight communities.[6]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l National Hurricane Center (1988-11-27). Hurricane Debby/Tropical Depression 17E Prelimary Report. National Hurricane Center. Retrieved on March 20, 2007.
  2. ^ Harold P. Gerrish (1988-09-06). Tropical Depression 17E Discussion 1. National Hurricane Center. Retrieved on March 20, 2007.
  3. ^ B. Max Mayfield (1988-09-07). Tropical Depression 17E Discussion 6. National Hurricane Center. Retrieved on March 20, 2007.
  4. ^ Gross (1988-09-08). Tropical Depression 17E Discussion 8. National Hurricane Center. Retrieved on March 20, 2007.
  5. ^ Reuters (1988-09-05). MEXICO FLOODS KILL AT LEAST 20, OFFICIALS SAY. Dallas News. Retrieved on March 20, 2007.
  6. ^ a b Associated Press (1988-09-05). STORMS LEAVE 50,000 HOMELESS IN MEXICO. Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved on March 20, 2007.

[edit] External links

Tropical cyclones of the 1988 Atlantic hurricane season
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Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale
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