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Three dead in Mexico from effects of Norbert
La Paz, Mexico (AFP) Oct 12, 2008 Hurricane Norbert, which ravaged Mexico's Pacific coast before being downgraded to a tropical depression, has claimed three lives in the northwest state of Sonora, civil defense officials said Sunday. Norbert made landfall in Mexico as a category two hurricane Saturday, ripping off roofs, knocking down trees and leaving more than 20,000 homes without electricity, local authorities said. The storm was downgraded Sunday to a tropical depression after it largely dissipated, the Mexican weather service said. Norbert's wind speeds Sunday were around 65 kilometers (40 miles) per hour, with gusts of up to 85 kilometers (a little over 50 miles) per hour, the weather service said, adding that it expected the storm to peter out altogether by day's end. It had been classified upon landfall as a Category Two hurricane on the five-tiered Saffir-Simpson scale, used in the Western Hemisphere to anticipate the property damage, storm surges and flooding that a given hurricane can unleash. In the Baja California capital of La Paz, the once powerful storm knocked out power to 13,000 homes, and to 8,000 more in Ciudad Constitution, the Federal Electricity Commission reported. La Paz airport suspended operations Saturday, although the tourist resort of Los Cabos remained open. Hotel reservations were down by around 40 percent mainly in Los Cabos and Loreto, tourism officials said.
related report Norbert, which made landfall as a Category Two hurricane on the five-level Saffir-Simpson scale, came ashore at Puerto Cortes, on the Baja California peninsula around 1630 GMT, Mexico's National Weather Service said. It was later downgraded to a Category One storm with sustained winds of 150 kilometers (93 miles) per hour winds. "The entire area is being affected by hurricane strength" winds and downpours, a National Weather Service forecaster said by phone. "A man trying to cross the Miramar creek has been reported as missing after the current swept him away," the authorities in Loreto, one of the municipalities Norbert tore through, said. The storm late Saturday was over Gulf of California waters and expected to make landfall again on mainland Mexico in Sinaloa state at around midnight (0500 GMT, Sunday), the Wather Wervice said. Some 2,850 people were housed in temporary shelters. Forty percent of homes were totally or partially damaged on the islands of Margarita and Magdalena, mainly having lost their roofs, said a report from state protection services. In the Baja California capital of La Paz, the storm knocked out power to 13,000 homes, and to 8,000 more in Ciudad Constitution, the Federal Electricity Commission reported. La Paz international airport suspended its activities at midday Saturday, but the tourist resort of Los Cabos remained open. Hotel reservations were down by around 40 percent mainly in Los Cabos and Loreto, local tourism officials said. At 0300 GMT, Sunday the eye of Norbert was located about 195 kilometers (125 miles) east-northeast of Loreto, Mexico, the US-based National Hurricane Center reported. "Little change in strength is expected until landfall ... then a rapid weakening is forecast over the mountainous terrain of Mexico," the NHC said. The hurricane however is expected to dump up to 15 centimeters (six inches) of rain over the peninsula and portions of northwestern Mexico, "with possible isolated amounts of 10 inches (25 centimeters)," the NHC said. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Share This Article With Planet Earth
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Norbert now a category-three hurricane as it aims for Mexico Miami (AFP) Oct 8, 2008 Norbert has become a major hurricane with winds near 115 miles (185 kilometers) per hour, as it churns towards Mexico's tourist destination of Baja, California, the National Hurricane Center said Wednesday. |
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