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Published: May 29, 2008
When tropical weather threatens, agencies from the local to federal levels watch the systems and try to gauge their strength. When a hurricane is approaching land, the National Hurricane Center will begin issuing watches and warnings. Here's how to decipher those:
HURRICANE:
The storm has winds of more than 73 mph.
HURRICANE WATCH:
Hurricane-force winds of more than 73 mph are possible within 36 hours.
HURRICANE WARNING:
Hurricane-force winds are possible within 24 hours.
EYE:
This is the hurricane's roughly circular center area where the winds are comparatively lighter.
TROPICAL STORMS:
These generate winds of 39 to 73 mph. Watches and warnings also are issued for these.
LANDFALL:
The place where the center of a storm intersects with land. Because the storm's strongest winds are not in the center, an area can be greatly affected even if the storm doesn't make landfall there.
ERROR CONE:
This shows a broad path that a storm could take. Because of uncertainty in forecasting a storm's path and strength, watches and warnings cover large areas of coastline. Those alerts mean anyone in a watch or warning area could be hit by a storm.
STORM SURGE:
The abnormal rise in sea level accompanies a hurricane or other intense storm. This dome of water (often 50 to 100 miles wide) sweeps the coastline near where the hurricane's eye makes landfall.
Source: National Weather Service
MEASURING A HURRICANE
Emergency officials use the Saffir-Simpson scale to decide which areas to evacuate. It ranks hurricanes from Category 1 (minimal) to Category 5 (catastrophic).
Category 1
Wind: 74 to 95 mph
Storm surge: 4 to 5 feet
Damage: Minimal
Example: Hurricane Gaston in 2004
Category 2
Wind: 96 to 110 mph
Storm surge: 6 to 8 feet
Damage: Moderate
Example: Hurricane Frances in 2004
Category 3
Wind: 111 to 130 mph
Storm surge: 9 to 12 feet
Damage: Extensive
Example: Hurricanes Jeanne and Ivan in 2004
Category 4
Wind: 131 to 155 mph
Storm surge: 13 to 18 feet
Damage: Extreme
Example: Hurricane Charley in 2004
Category 5
Wind: 156 mph plus
Storm surge: Higher than 18 feet
Damage: Catastrophic
Example: Hurricane Andrew in 1992
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