UPDATE: Oct. 7,Watch Project Power Online 2017, 8:11 p.m. EDT Hurricane Nate made landfall near the mouth of the Mississippi River at about 8 p.m. ET, as a Category 1 storm with 85-mile per hour winds, the National Hurricane Center said. The storm did not intensify as much as was forecast earlier in the day Saturday, but is still bringing life-threatening storm surge flooding to coastal Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida, along with damaging winds and heavy rain.
The storm's fast movement -- at nearly 30 miles per hour at times -- set a record for the fastest forward motion of any hurricane observed in the Gulf of Mexico.
It's hard to believe that we're talking about another hurricane making landfall in the U.S., following the devastating trio of Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria. But, here we are. This time, the storm -- Hurricane Nate -- is a small, potent, and fast-moving weather system that is racing toward landfall in coastal Louisiana, Mississippi, or Alabama on Saturday night.
The storm has been intensifying steadily since Friday, becoming a hurricane overnight. Since it's still sweeping across the mild waters of the Gulf of Mexico, continued intensification is likely. Hurricane Nate is now forecast to make landfall as a Category 2 storm, with maximum sustained winds of near 105 miles per hour.
SEE ALSO: The 5 most inappropriate things Donald Trump said at a Puerto Rico disaster briefingHurricane warnings along with storm surge warnings are in effect from coastal Louisiana eastward into the Florida Panhandle. While Hurricane Nate is significantly weaker, particularly as measured by wind speed, than the monstrous Category 4 and 5 storms that have decimated areas such as Puerto Rico and the Florida Keys this season, it still poses life-threatening risks.
The area where the center of the storm is forecast to come ashore -- between New Orleans and Mobile, Alabama -- is prone to major storm surge flooding during tropical storms and even weak hurricanes. Data from Hurricane Hunter aircraft indicate that the strongest winds are confined to the eastern side of the storm, which will help maximize the storm surge potential in these areas.
Hurricane Nate will be nearing landfall around the time of high tide on Saturday night, likely bringing hurricane force onshore winds to the Gulf Coast at that time, thereby increasing the coastal flood threat.
The National Hurricane Center is predicting a reasonable worst-case scenario for storm surge flooding of at least 7 to 11 feet of water above ground level in parts of coastal Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, with lower amounts of 4 to 6 feet in coastal southern Louisiana. Flooding is also likely well to the east of the storm center, including in Pensacola, Florida, because of the strong onshore winds that will pile water onto the coast.
Here is the Hurricane Center's key message on the storm surge threat from its 11 a.m. ET update:
Nate is expected to bring life-threatening storm surge flooding near and well east of where the center makes landfall, and a storm surge warning is in effect from Morgan City, Louisiana, to the Okaloosa/Walton county line in Florida. Maximum flooding of 7 to 11 feet above ground level is expected in portions of southeastern Louisiana and along the Mississippi coast. Residents in these areas should immediately heed any evacuation instructions given by local officials.
Unlike with Hurricane Harvey, which spun over southeast Texas for days on end, this storm is absolutely roaring ahead, traveling at about 20 miles per hour. This will limit the heavy rainfall potential, though upwards of 10 inches of rain could still fall in some locations. The storm's rapid movement also means that tropical storm-force winds are likely to extend well inland on Sunday and Sunday night, potentially all the way to Atlanta.
After Hurricane Nate makes landfall on Saturday night or early Sunday, it will weaken as it moves northeast, eventually bringing heavy rain all the way to Maine by the middle of the week.
The Beatles are coming to 'Doctor Who'. The real ones already visited.Heytea removes coXiaomi set to display first EV at stores in Q1 · TechNodeKanye West is making new Yeezys out of algaeGoogle Pixel Watch 2 deal: Get $50 off at AmazonJack Ma's former assistant refutes preJack Ma's former assistant refutes preKuaishou to increase focus on property business in recent overhaul: report · TechNodeNintendo is removing Twitter / X integration from SwitchJack Ma urges Alibaba to change and reform as PDD catches up in market value · TechNodeLoongson 3A6000 CPU allegedly equivalent to Intel’s 10th Gen 4 Core processor · TechNodeThese animals went extinct in 2019Redmi debuts K70 series for its 10th anniversary · TechNodeBest Mother's Day deals 2024: Save on the Peloton bike, the Apple Watch Series 9, and moreXpeng Motors initiates wide release of assisted driving software in 20+ cities · TechNodeByteDance set to buy back shares from investors at $268 billion valuation: report · TechNodeBristol Bears vs. Saracens 2024 livestream: Watch live rugby for freeTSMC reportedly secures a processor order from Intel worth $14 billion · TechNodeTencent maintains silence on Blizzard's potential return to China · TechNodeFoxconn and Pegatron halt iPhone production in southern India amid heavy rains · TechNode 35+ headphone deals from Amazon's Black Friday sale 9 Black Friday air fryer deals: Instant Pot Vortex, more Where to Score: Classified Ads from Haight Tennessee Williams in Four Objects So Be It, See to It: From the Archives of Octavia Butler On Finally Reading Joseph McElroy’s Magnum Opus 35+ best pet deals to shop on Black Friday 2018 Whiting Awards: Rickey Laurentiis, Poetry Apple Watch data reveals we aren't sleeping enough UFO Drawings from the National Archives Incarnadine, the Bloody Red of Fashionable Cosmetics and Shakespearean Poetics The internet isn't happy with Spotify's new design Cooking with Alexandre Dumas 44 Black Friday headphone deals: AirPods Pro at record 2018 Whiting Awards: Weike Wang, Fiction 2018 Whiting Awards: Tommy Pico, Poetry Best deals March 10: Apple Watch Series 8, Shark air purifier, more Redux: Celebrating Joy Buy High, Sell Cheap: An Interview with Alejandro Jodorowsky When Frank Lloyd Wright Designed a Bookstore
2.1336s , 10135.484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Project Power Online】,Unobstructed Information Network