Tropical Storm Emily
Encyclopedia
The name Emily has been used for six tropical cyclones in the Atlantic Ocean, and five tropical cyclones in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. It was used in the Eastern Pacific before the formal naming system was instituted, and then it was used on the old four-year lists.

Atlantic:
  • 1981's Hurricane Emily
    1981 Atlantic hurricane season
    The 1981 Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June 1, 1981, and lasted until November 30, 1981. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the Atlantic basin. The 1981 season was high in activity with 18 tropical depressions and...

     - crossed Bermuda
  • Hurricane Emily (1987)
    Hurricane Emily (1987)
    Hurricane Emily was the only major hurricane to develop during the below-average 1987 Atlantic hurricane season. Forming out of a tropical disturbance that moved off the west coast of Africa on September 20, the storm quickly attained hurricane status before undergoing rapid intensification...

     - caused considerable damage to Saint Vincent, Dominican Republic, and Bermuda.
  • Hurricane Emily (1993)
    Hurricane Emily (1993)
    Hurricane Emily was a Category 3 hurricane during the 1993 Atlantic hurricane season. On September 1, the storm brushed the Outer Banks of North Carolina before heading back out to sea...

     - came within 25 miles of Hatteras Island, North Carolina
  • 1999's Tropical Storm Emily
    1999 Atlantic hurricane season
    The 1999 Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June 1, 1999, and lasted until November 30, 1999. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the Atlantic basin....

     - absorbed by Hurricane Cindy without threatening land.
  • Hurricane Emily (2005)
    Hurricane Emily (2005)
    Hurricane Emily was a powerful, early season tropical cyclone that caused significant damage across the Caribbean Sea to Mexico. A Cape Verde-type hurricane, the storm formed on July 10, 2005, in the central Atlantic Ocean before passing through the Windward Islands on July 14...

     - earliest recorded Category 5 storm; caused damage in Grenada, Quintana Roo, and Tamaulipas.
  • Tropical Storm Emily (2011)
    Tropical Storm Emily (2011)
    Tropical Storm Emily was a weak Atlantic tropical cyclone that brought torrential rains to much of the Caribbean in 2011. The fifth named storm of the annual hurricane season, Emily developed from a strong but poorly organized tropical wave that tracked the open Atlantic for several days in late July...

     - caused minor damage throughout the Caribbean.


Eastern Pacific:
  • 1963's Hurricane Emily
    1950-1969 Pacific hurricane seasons
    The 1950–1963 Pacific hurricane seasons all began on May 15, 1950-65 in the northeast Pacific Ocean and on June 1, 1950-65 in the central Pacific. They ended on November 30, 1950-65...

  • 1965's Hurricane Emily
    1950-1969 Pacific hurricane seasons
    The 1950–1963 Pacific hurricane seasons all began on May 15, 1950-65 in the northeast Pacific Ocean and on June 1, 1950-65 in the central Pacific. They ended on November 30, 1950-65...

  • 1969's Tropical Storm Emily
    1950-1969 Pacific hurricane seasons
    The 1950–1963 Pacific hurricane seasons all began on May 15, 1950-65 in the northeast Pacific Ocean and on June 1, 1950-65 in the central Pacific. They ended on November 30, 1950-65...

  • 1973's Hurricane Emily
    1973 Pacific hurricane season
    The 1973 Pacific hurricane season was an event in tropical cyclone meteorology. The most important system this year was Hurricane Ava, which was the most intense Pacific hurricane known at the time. Several other much weaker tropical cyclones came close to, or made landfall on, the Pacific coast of...

  • 1977's Tropical Storm Emily
    1977 Pacific hurricane season
    The 1977 Pacific hurricane season was, at the time, the least active in recorded history. Only eight tropical storms formed, and four hurricanes; they would be tied and surpassed, respectively, by the 2010 Pacific hurricane season. There were no major hurricanes; the next time this happened would...

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK