2011 Atlantic Hurricane Season will be Active
Have more US Landfalls
By Gina Cherundolo, AccuWeather.com Staff Writer
Mar 30, 2011; 7:11 AM ETShare | AccuWeather.com Hurricane Center meteorologists, led by Meteorologist and Hurricane Forecaster Paul Pastelok, are predicting an active season for 2011 with
more impact on the U.S. coastline than last year.
The team is forecasting
a total of 15 named tropical storms, eight of which will attain hurricane status and three of which will attain major hurricane status (Category 3 or higher).In a normal year, there are 10 tropical storms, six of which become hurricanes and two of which become major hurricanes, or attain winds that exceed 110 mph.
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This Season's Concern Areas
As with most Atlantic hurricane seasons, the areas where storms are most likely to make landfall shift as the season progresses.
This year,
the early season threat area will be the western Gulf of Mexico and the southern portion of the Caribbean. Within this zone,
the higher concern for landfalls will be along the Texas and Louisiana coastlines.
As for the mid-to-late season zones,
the eastern Gulf and Caribbean will be the focus. The higher concern areas will be
the Florida Peninsula to the Carolinas.
"What we see is there is
a clustering of storm impacts over the southeastern US, and that's the reason why we earmarked this as a concern area," said Kottlowski.
Another
mid-to-late season concern for landfalls will be northern New England and the Canadian Maritimes.
"We feel that this season, there will be a higher potential for impacts across the southern part of the Basin into the Gulf of Mexico during the first part of the season," Pastelok stated. "This
higher potential for impacts shift farther north into the southeast U.S. during the latter half of the season."
Hurricane season officially begins June 1 and ends Nov. 30.
Sigh!Read more here:
http://www.accuweather.com/blogs/news/story/47289/2011-atlantic-hurricane-season.asp