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Todd Kimberlain:
Hurricane Earl strengths with sustained winds of135 mph in Caribbean
Brian Wagner
August 31, 2010
Hurricane Earl is gaining strength as
it brought heavy winds and rain to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands on
Monday.
Forecasters at the National Hurricane Center say Earl intensified into a
Category 4 storm late Monday as it moved into the Caribbean region.

The current Geostationary
Operational Environmental Satellite GOES-13 captured this image of
Hurricane Danielle heading for the north Atlantic (top center),
Hurricane Earl with a visible eye hitting the Leeward Islands (left
bottom) and a developing tropical depression 8 (lower right) at 1:45
p.m. EDT on Aug. 30.
Warm water
temperatures and calm upper winds are creating conditions for Earl to
strengthen even more on Tuesday.
Forecaster Todd Kimberlain says the storm is beginning to turn northwest
on a path that will take it away from land.
"The high sustained winds are now 135 mph [217.26 kph] with higher
gusts. There is some potential for Earl to strengthen a bit more," said
Kimberlain. "The good news is that, on our forecast track, the center of
Earl will be moving away from the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico
tonight. And on the forecast track, we are forecasting it to pass east
of the Turks and Caicos islands on Tuesday."
Earlier, heavy rains caused flooding in low-lying areas of Antigua, and
winds ripped out trees and blew down power lines on the nearby island of
St. Martin.
U.S. Coast Guard officials on Monday suspended all traffic in and out of
ports in the U.S. Virgin Islands and eastern parts of Puerto Rico
because of strong winds.
The
forecast shows Earl will not hit Florida or other southern U.S. states
in coming days. But forecaster Kimberlain says it is too early to tell
whether states from North Carolina to Maine are at risk.
"At this point, our forecast track does keep it offshore, but it's
probably going to get uncomfortably close, enough so that people are
going to have to pay very close attention to this," he said. "Depending
on how it plays out, there is the potential for watches and warnings."
Forecasters say another tropical storm, Fiona, has formed in the
Atlantic Ocean, and is moving on a path similar to Earl's. Experts say
Fiona might gain strength and begin to affect eastern parts of the
Caribbean by late Tuesday. |