These Atlantic hurricane names are retired
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NOLA.com |
the World Meteorological Organization is retiring the names of three particularly devastating storms that broke records and made history: Beryl, Helene and Milton
Seattle Times |
Hurricanes Helene, Milton and Beryl were so nasty last year that their names are being retired.
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TCPalm on MSNStorm name Milton retired; Hurricane Center report details its tornadoes on Treasure CoastUnited Nations and U.S. weather monitoring agencies have retired Milton as a recurring tropical storm name, citing the "death and destruction" it caused, as well as three other devastating storms to form in the Atlantic during the 2024 hurricane season.
CSU forecasters predict an above-average probability for at least one major hurricane to make landfall in the U.S. or Caribbean.
The 2024 hurricane season was another record-breaking one. The World Meteorological Organization’s (WMO) Hurricane Committee has retired three names from the Atlantic Basin list. Brianna, Holly, and Miguel will replace Beryl, Helene, and Milton on the 2030 name list. Hurricane names are retired after it causes many deaths and or significant damage.
Brianna, Holly, Miguel will replace Beryl, Helene and Milton on the rotating list of hurricane names. When a storm name is retired from the Atlantic's list, member countries of the WMO from that region select a new name.
The first hurricane forecast of the year from the experts at Colorado State University released Thursday calls for an above-average season with
It was a quiet 2024 hurricane season for Southwest Florida until late September and early October when two powerful storms hit in a 13-day span.
It was a record-setting hurricane and will rank up there with some of the previous heavy-hitting storms from hurricane seasons having come and gone. Here's a breakdown of all the collected data on the storm itself.
3don MSN
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