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Tropical Storm Nadine and Tropical Depression Twelve-E

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In anticipation that the remnants of TS Nadine will reconstitute in the Pacific as TD Twelve-E / TS Kristy, I have started a draft for the related systems patterned after the Tropical storms Amanda and Cristobal article.

User:Drdpw/sandbox1
Meteorological history
as Tropical Storm Nadine
FormedOctober 19, 2024
DissipatedPresent
Tropical storm
1-minute sustained (SSHWS/NWS)
Highest winds60 mph (95 km/h)
Lowest pressure1000 mbar (hPa); 29.53 inHg
Meteorological history
as Tropical Depression Twelve-E
Unknown-strength storm
1-minute sustained (SSHWS/NWS)
Overall effects
Areas affectedCentral America (especially Belize, northern Guatemala) and southern Mexico

Part of the 2024 Atlantic and Pacific hurricane seasons

Tropical Storm Nadine and Tropical Depression Twelve-E are two related, consecutive tropical cyclones that affected Belize, southern Mexico, northern Guatemala, and the latter is currently active in the eastern Pacific Ocean. The first tropical cyclone formed in the northwestern Caribbean Sea and was named Nadine. After crossing Central America, it regenerated into a second one [location] and was designated Twelve-E..[a] Nadine was the fifteenth named storm of the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season, and Twelve-E is the thirteenth tropical cyclone of the 2024 Pacific hurricane season.[b]

Nadine developed out of a broad low-pressure area over the Caribbean Sea east of Central America associated with the Central American Gyre. Its showers and thunderstorms gradually become better organized, and when the low became better defined on October 18, it was designed Potential Tropical Cyclone Fifteen. The system quickly developed a closed circulation, and was named Tropical Storm Nadine early the next day. The storm made landfall near Belize City, Belize around 16:00 UTC on October 19. Once inland, it weakened to a tropical depression several hours later over northern Guatemala, and then degenerated into a remnant low while traversing southern Mexico.

On the morning of October 20, the remnants of Nadine helped facilitate the development of a trough of low pressure in the Gulf of Tehuantepec.

[date] … Tropical Depression Twelve-E.

  1. ^ According to the NHC's protocol on cross-basin storms, any tropical cyclone that degenerates into a remnant low (or a remnant circulation) in one basin and later regenerates in another one is automatically given a new name and treated as two separate cyclones. Only storms that make the crossover as a tropical cyclone (tropical depression or stronger) will retain the same name.
  2. ^ Including One-C.

TC archives

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2023 Atlantic Hurricane Season TCRs

2023 Tropical Cyclone Advisory Archive

CPHC/WFO Honolulu Staff

 1  64 kn (74 mph; 119 km/h) – 82 kn (94 mph; 152 km/h)
 2  83 kn (96 mph; 154 km/h) – 95 kn (109 mph; 176 km/h)
 3  96 kn (110 mph; 178 km/h) – 112 kn (129 mph; 207 km/h)
 4  113 kn (130 mph; 209 km/h) – 136 kn (157 mph; 252 km/h)
 5  ≥ 137 kn (158 mph; 254 km/h)

<<—>>

  • Global Tropical Cyclones Summaries and Operational Track Data
  • Pao-Shin Chu; Peng Wu (2008). Climatic Atlas of Tropical Cyclone Tracks over the Central North Pacific (1966–2003) (PDF) (Report). University of Hawaii-Manoa. Retrieved February 6, 2024.
  • weatherusa.net/tropical
  • OPS Loop
  • WPC 2023 Storm Summaries index
  • Dec23 Atlantic Tropical Weather Discussion
  • Escobar, Amalia; Martínez, Javier Cabrera (October 23, 2023). ""Norma" Provoca Inundaciones, Cierre De Aeropuerto, Caída De Árboles Y Postes En Sonora Y Sinaloa" ["Norma" Causes Floods, Airport Closures, Fallen Trees And Poles In Sonora And Sinaloa]. El Universal (in Mexican Spanish). Mexico City. Retrieved November 2, 2023.
  • the topic's specific notability guidelines.
  • Whether to create standalone pages (covered better as part of the season article)

Notes

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References

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